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		Chevron profit nearly quadruples as oil prices surge
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		 [April 29, 2022]  By 
		Sabrina Valle 
 HOUSTON (Reuters) -Chevron Corp's 
		first-quarter profit nearly quadrupled from the same period a year ago, 
		easily surpassing Wall Street's forecasts as oil and gas prices surged 
		following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
 
 The second-largest U.S. oil producer on Friday posted adjusted earnings 
		of $6.5 billion, or $3.36 per share, 8 cents above Wall Street's mean 
		estimate of $3.27, according to Refinitiv. Chevron earned $1.7 billion, 
		or 90 cents per share, in the same quarter last year.
 
 The world's largest energy companies have profited handsomely on the 
		back of rising oil and gas prices, which surged in February as Moscow 
		planned its advance on Ukraine.
 
 The global benchmark Brent averaged $114 per barrel in the first 
		quarter. Energy supplies have tightened around the globe as demand has 
		rebounded to near pre-pandemic levels.
 
 Chevron's revenue rose 70% to $54.4 billion in the first quarter, above 
		the Refinitiv consensus of $47.9 billion.
 
 The producer is using its massive profit to raise investments in 
		production and in renewable fuels, return cash to shareholders and pay 
		down debt.
 
		The company's U.S. oil and gas production rose by 10% from the year-ago 
		period. Russia's output has dipped after the United States and allies 
		imposed heavy sanctions on Moscow. The United States is the world's 
		largest crude oil producer, but output has grown slowly in 2022 even as 
		prices have increased. 
		
		 
		In the first quarter, Chevron pumped a record of 692,000 barrels of oil 
		and gas per day (boed) in the Permian, the top U.S. unconventional 
		basin, and boosted full-year guidance to a range of 700,000 to 750,000 
		boed.
 "Chevron is doing its part to grow domestic supply," Chevron's Chief 
		Executive Mike Wirth said in an earnings release.
 
 The revenues from higher oil prices could be used to return cash to 
		shareholders, expand Chevron's low-carbon business and pay down debt, 
		Chief Financial Officer Pierre Breber told Reuters.
 
		
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			The Chevron logo is seen in Los Angeles, California, United States, 
			April 12, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo 
            
			 
"First is the dividend. The second is investing in the business. Third is 
maintaining a balanced strong balance sheet. And then the fourth is returning 
excess cash to shareholders," he said.
 Chevron earlier this year increased its dividend payments by 6% to $1.42 per 
share and increased its buyback program to $10 billion annually.
 
The company has the capacity to raise buybacks further but Chevron is aiming at 
a level it can maintain when the oil industry goes through a downturn, Breber 
said.
 "We have a very clear plan" to deliver high returns to shareholders while 
decreasing carbon emissions, Breber told Reuters by phone. "We continue to stay 
on this path."
 
 Chevron plans to raise investments and acquisitions this year by more than 50% 
from 2021, which may include deals in lower-carbon ventures like natural gas and 
renewable fuels.
 
 RBC Capital Markets said earlier this month that Chevron could be interested in 
buying a liquefied natural gas (LNG) facility on the U.S. Gulf Coast as it 
expands its natural gas business. The company declined to comment in 
speculations.
 
 Chevron recently expanded its renewable fuels business by buying Renewable 
Energy Group and signed an agreement with agricultural giant Bunge North 
America. Its has also invested in hydrogen, carbon capture and offsets 
businesses, with plans to build 30 hydrogen fueling stations in California.
 
 Chevron's shares were down 0.5% to $161 in premarket trading.
 
 (Reporting by Sabrina Valle; Editing by Richard Pullin)
 
 
				 
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