埃克森美孚、雪佛龙利润下滑,但二叠纪之痒依然存在

埃克森美孚和雪佛龙公司作为美国超级巨头,均报告第二季度利润下降,尽管它们仍在继续向二叠纪盆地开采石油。

埃克森美孚公司(Exxon Mobil Corp.)雪佛龙公司(Chevron Corp.)报告称,第二季度利润下降——总计下降了41亿美元——因为美国超级巨头经受住了大宗商品市场的波动,而大宗商品市场的波动也同样影响了规模较小的同行。

埃克森美孚第二季度盈利为 78.8 亿美元,较上一季度的 114.3 亿美元下降 31%。总部位于德克萨斯州斯普林的石油巨头埃克森美孚 7 月 28 日宣布,与 2022 年同季度相比,埃克森美孚的盈利从 178.5 亿美元暴跌 55%。

总部位于加利福尼亚州的雪佛龙公司也面临着同样的情况。雪佛龙公司 7 月 28 日宣布,本季度利润为 60.1 亿美元,较第一季度 65.7 亿美元下降 8%,较去年同期 116.2 亿美元下降 76%。

两家公司均表示,上游变现率下降和成品油销售利润率下降对第二季度收益产生了负面影响。尽管如此,两家公司仍继续在二叠纪盆地以侧翼速度运行,产量创历史新高。

埃克森美孚指出,天然气产量下降对季度盈利能力产生了不利影响。

去年夏天,俄罗斯入侵乌克兰严重扰乱了全球能源市场,天然气价格飙升至 9 美元/MMBtu 以上。

此后,天然气价格大幅下跌:预计 2023 年亨利中心天然气价格平均为 2.62 美元/MMBtu,即每千立方英尺 2.72 美元,而 2019 年平均价格为 6.42 美元/MMBtu,即每千立方英尺 6.67 美元。根据能源信息管理局的数据,到 2022 年

埃克森美孚首席执行官达伦·伍兹(Darren Woods)在事先准备好的讲话中表示,由于供应增加、需求减少和天气温和,天然气价格在第二季度回到了10年区间内。

埃克森美孚第二季度上游业务总盈利为 45.8 亿美元,较上季度的 64.6 亿美元下降 29%,较去年同期的 113.7 亿美元下降 59%。埃克森美孚表示,其美国上游业务盈利总计 9.2 亿美元,低于上季度的 16.3 亿美元和去年同期的 37.5 亿美元。

雪佛龙在美国上游业务的盈利总额为 16.4 亿美元,低于上季度的 17.8 亿美元和一年前的 33.7 亿美元。国际上游收入约为33亿美元。

分析师此前预计,埃克森美孚和雪佛龙第二季度将面临比上一季度更多的阻力,而且环境也比去年石油和天然气行业获得巨额利润时更具挑战性。

TD Cowen分析师在一份研究报告中写道,埃克森美孚 7 月初向美国证券交易委员会提交的初步业绩表明,天然气变现收益和炼油利润将分别比预期低 10 亿美元左右

摩根士丹利研究分析师在雪佛龙上周末发布初步业绩后报告称,尽管受到大宗商品价格低迷的不利影响,但雪佛龙第二季度的业绩表现强劲,超出了每股收益和现金流指标的普遍预期。


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抽水二叠纪

埃克森美孚和雪佛龙均报告称,​​二叠纪盆地的石油和天然气产量创历史新高,该盆地是美国 48 个州的最高产油区。

埃克森美孚首席财务官凯西·米克尔斯 (Kathy Mikells) 在准备好的讲话中表示,第二季度埃克森美孚二叠纪产量增至创纪录的 620,000 桶油当量/日。这高于二叠纪第一季度 615,000 桶油当量/天的产量


相关: 全速前进:雪佛龙第二季度创下二叠纪产量纪录


埃克森美孚、雪佛龙利润下滑,但二叠纪之痒依然存在
埃克森美孚表示,其二叠纪盆地区域的多井平台走廊和立方体开发正在推动更高的价值并促进复苏。来源:埃克森美孚投资者介绍

埃克森美孚的总产量同比增长20%,增长动力来自二叠纪盆地和圭亚那;第二季度圭亚那的总产量达到创纪录的 38 万桶/天。

雪佛龙公司在 7 月 23 日出人意料地提交的一份文件中披露,该公司二叠纪盆地的日产量为 772,000 桶油当量,创下了新的季度记录,比去年同期高出 11%。

该公司二叠纪油气产量环比增加约55,000桶油当量/日,打破了一些分析师的预测

雪佛龙首席执行官迈克·沃斯(Mike Wirth)在公司准备好的讲话中表示,“预计下季度的产量将大致持平,然后在第四季度再次增长,符合我们的全年指导方针。”

雪佛龙二叠纪盆地的产量大约有一半是由公司运营的;余额是非经营性的或与特许权使用费生产挂钩的。

原文链接/hartenergy

Exxon Mobil, Chevron Profits Slump, but Permian Itch Persists

Exxon Mobil and Chevron Corp. each reported declines in second-quarter profits as the U.S. supermajors even as they continue to pump the Permian Basin.

Exxon Mobil Corp. and Chevron Corp. reported a drop in second-quarter profits — combined, a $4.1 billion drop — as the U.S. supermajors weathered volatile commodity markets that have similarly affected their smaller peers.

Exxon booked earnings of $7.88 billion during the second quarter, down 31% from $11.43 billion last quarter. Compared to the same quarter in 2022, Exxon’s earnings plummeted 55% from $17.85 billion, the Spring, Texas-based oil giant announced July 28.

California-based Chevron was in the same boat. With earnings of $6.01 billion for the quarter, Chevron was down 8% from the company’s first quarter haul of $6.57 billion — and 76% from $11.62 billion earned a year ago, the company announced July 28.

Both companies said that lower upstream realizations and a decline in margins on refined product sales negatively impacted second-quarter earnings. Despite that, both companies continue to run at flank speed in the Permian Basin, pumping record volumes.

Exxon noted that lower natural gas realizations had adverse effects on quarterly profitability.

Natural gas prices spiked to more than $9/MMBtu last summer after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine significantly disrupted global energy markets.

Since then, gas prices have fallen dramatically: Henry Hub natural gas prices are expected to average $2.62/MMBtu, or $2.72 per thousand cubic feet, during 2023—down from an average of $6.42/MMBtu, or $6.67 per thousand cubic feet, in 2022, according to data from the Energy Information Administration.

In prepared remarks, Exxon CEO Darren Woods said that natural gas prices moved back inside their 10-year range during the second quarter due to higher supply, reduced demand and milder weather.

Exxon saw total upstream earnings of $4.58 billion in the second quarter, down 29% from $6.46 billion last quarter and 59% from $11.37 billion a year ago. Exxon’s U.S. upstream earnings totaled $920 million, down from $1.63 billion last quarter and $3.75 billion a year prior, Exxon said.

For Chevron, U.S. upstream earnings totaled $1.64 billion, down from $1.78 billion last quarter and $3.37 billion a year ago. International upstream earnings were about $3.3 billion.

Analysts had anticipated that Exxon and Chevron would face more headwinds in the second quarter than the last—and significantly more challenging environment than last year, when the oil and gas industry raked in outsized profits.

Exxon’s preliminary results filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission in early July signaled that earnings from natural gas realizations and refining margins would each come in around $1 billion lower than forecasts, analysts at TD Cowen wrote in a research report.

Despite headwinds from low commodity prices, Chevron’s brought in a stronger second quarter that topped consensus estimates on earnings per share and cash flow metrics, Morgan Stanley Research analysts reported after Chevron released preliminary results last weekend.


RELATED: Analysts: Exxon-Denbury Deal Adds Meaningful CCS Scale for the Future


Pumping the Permian

Both Exxon and Chevron reported record oil and gas production in the Permian Basin, the top oil-producing region in the Lower 48.

Exxon’s Permian production grew to a record 620,000 boe/d during the second quarter, Exxon CFO Kathy Mikells said in prepared remarks. That’s up from 615,000 boe/d of Permian output during the first quarter.


RELATED: Full Throttle: Chevron Hits Record Permian Production in 2Q


Exxon Mobil, Chevron Profits Slip, but Permian Itch Persists
Exxon said its multi-well pad corridors and cube development on its Permian Basin acreage is driving higher value and boosting recovery. (Source: Exxon Mobil investor presentation)

Exxon’s total production is up 20% year over year, with the growth being driven by the Permian and Guyana; gross production in Guyana reached a record 380,000 bbl/d during the second quarter.

Chevron’s Permian Basin production of 772,000 boe/d set a new quarterly record—11% higher than the same quarter a year ago, the company disclosed in a surprise filing on July 23.

The company’s Permian oil and gas output increased by about 55,000 boe/d quarter-over-quarter, crushing some analyst predictions.

“We expect next quarter’s production to be roughly flat before growing again in the fourth quarter, on track with our full-year guidance,” Chevron CEO Mike Wirth said in the company’s prepared remarks.

Roughly half of Chevron’s Permian production is company-operated; the balance is non-operated or tied to royalty production.