U.S. petroleum giants slash capital budgets after oil price crash

Agence France-Presse

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

U.S. petroleum giants slash capital budgets after oil price crash

AFP

ExxonMobil reduces capital spending by 30% to around $23 billion for 2020, while Chevron further trims its capital spending to $14 billion

NEW YORK, USA – ExxonMobil and Chevron announced deep spending cuts on Friday, May 1, as the petroleum industry girds for a potentially prolonged downturn due to low commodity prices in the wake of the coronavirus crisis.

Both United States oil giants announced the belt-tightening moves as they reported 1st quarter results, a period that saw oil prices retreat, but which preceded the first-ever drop in US crude futures to negative territory in April.

The two US giants said they were preserving cash to maintain a dividend for investors. On Thursday, April 30, European rival Royal Dutch Shell cut its dividend for the first time since the 1940s.

“COVID-19 has significantly impacted near-term demand, resulting in oversupplied markets and unprecedented pressure on commodity prices and margins,” said ExxonMobil chief executive Darren Woods.

“While we manage through these challenging times, we are not losing sight of the long-term fundamentals that drive our business. Economic activity will return, and populations and standards will increase, which will, in turn, drive demand for our products and recovery of the industry.”

ExxonMobil reported a $610-million loss for the 1st quarter, compared with $2.4 billion in profits in the year-ago period. Revenues fell 11.7% to $56.2 billion.

The loss included $2.9 billion in non-cash costs on inventory and assets because of low commodity prices.

US oil futures have remained volatile since closing in negative territory for the first time on April 20. While major oil producers have reached agreement to trim output, analysts have said the market remains brittle due to weak demand in the wake of coronavirus shutdowns.

ExxonMobil reduced capital spending by 30% to around $23 billion for 2020 and will trim operating expenses by 15%.

The company will slow some projects in the US Permian Basin and Mozambique, as well as expansions of downstream and chemical plants. The company “continues to monitor market developments and evaluation additional reduction steps,” ExxonMobil said.

Downstream boosts Chevron

Chevron reported 1st quarter profits of $3.6 billion, up 35.9% from the year-ago period. Revenues fell 10.5% to $31.5 billion.

Although oil and natural gas prices were lower than in the year-ago period, the company’s downstream division scored much higher profits due in part to lower crude prices.

Still, the company’s press release noted that “financial results in future periods are expected to be depressed as long as current market conditions persist.”

Chevron announced it was further trimming 2020 capital spending by $2 billion to $14 billion in response to the operating environment. The company in late March had slashed the budget by 20%.

“Chevron is responding to these unprecedented challenges by making changes to what we control, and with a commitment to protect the long-term health and value of the company,” said chief executive Mike Wirth. 

Shares of ExxonMobil fell 1.3% to $45.86 in pre-market trading, while Chevron shed 0.6% to $91.45. – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!