The Oklahoman

Exxon, Chevron each disappoint with profit and production figures

- Bloomberg BY KEVIN CROWLEY

ExxonMobil and Chevron, the two biggest U.S. oil explorers, both missed Wall Street’s profit and production estimates, spurring a stock sell-off for both as wary investors hit the lifeboats.

Exxon fell 15 cents short of fourth-quarter earnings estimates by analysts, while Chevron was 55 cents shy. While both have moved to boost growth with a series of discoverie­s announced in the last year, the latest results show the effort hasn’t yet kicked in.

The production misses by the two U.S.-based drillers reflect their dependence on output from outside the country, which lagged during the final three months of 2017. Both companies are now pushing to overcome that gap with an aggressive push into America’s fertile shale plays and, in Exxon’s case, into Latin America. Still, investors remain unimpresse­d.

“One word: disappoint­ing,” is how Brian Youngberg, a St. Louisbased analyst at Edward Jones & Co., described the results. “Chevron was close on production but Exxon was a significan­t miss,” he said. “The company continues to be challenged on that side.”

Exxon slid 4.5 percent to $84.18 on Friday. Chevron was down 5.7 percent.

While Exxon has long held that choosing to produce lower-cost oil is more important than the volume of output, the latter remains a key metric for investors, according to Cowen & Co. Exxon said it has no plans to resume a share buyback program to return capital to shareholde­rs.

Meanwhile, Chevron’s production of oil and gas equated to 2.74 million barrels, less than the 2.802 million analysts expected. The company, though, said it found enough untapped fields to replace 155 percent of the crude and gas it pumped last year, the highest reserves replacemen­t since 2011.

Exxon’s per-share net income, excluding a one-time gain from U.S. tax code changes, was 88 cents, well short of the $1.03 average of 20 estimates from analysts in a Bloomberg survey. Chevron’s per-share earnings, excluding onetime items, amounted to 67 cents, far below the $1.22 average of 19 estimates from analysts in a Bloomberg survey.

The fourth-quarter results hit as both Exxon CEO Darren Woods and Chevron’s CEO Mike Wirth, who stepped into the role on Thursday after being named CEO-in-waiting in September, are gearing up for significan­t production growth over the next three years.

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