CR
California Resources Corp (CRC)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 delivered resilient operations with net production of 137 MBoe/d (78% oil), adjusted EBITDAX of $338M, free cash flow of $188M, and a 5% dividend hike to $0.405/share; total operating revenues fell sequentially to $855M on lower derivative gains and higher taxes other than income .
- Significant beats/misses vs S&P Global consensus: EPS beat ($1.46 vs $1.27*) and adjusted EBITDAX exceeded expectations by management commentary, while revenue was modestly below consensus (actual $878M* vs $887M*); note CRC reports EBITDAX (not EBITDA), creating definitional differences (S&P EBITDA consensus $334M* vs actual $231M*) .
- Strategic momentum: early redemption of all remaining 2026 notes ($122M), $400M 7% 2034 notes raised to refinance Berry at close, borrowing base reaffirmed, elected commitments increased to $1.45B, liquidity $1.154B; Moody’s upgrade and Fitch positive outlook .
- Guidance: Q4 2025E net production 131–135 MBoe/d, adjusted EBITDAX $220–$260M; preliminary 2026 plan averages four rigs, $280–$300M D&C/workover capital, ~2% entry-to-exit production decline; dividend raised to $0.405/share .
- Catalysts: dividend increase, improving regulatory tailwinds (CO2 pipelines, permitting), Capital Power MOU (up to 3 MMTPA CO2), Berry merger progress (Q1 2026 close expected) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Electricity margin surged to $90M (from $53M in Q2), supported by strong internal generation and pricing, lifting cash flows and offsetting commodity derivative headwinds .
- Adjusted net income and adjusted EPS grew QoQ ($123M, $1.46 diluted vs $98M, $1.10), and adjusted EBITDAX rose to $338M; CEO: “solid results… disciplined approach… positions us to create further value” .
- Balance sheet strengthened: redeemed remaining 2026 notes ($122M), increased revolver commitments to $1.45B, liquidity $1.154B; CFO emphasized net leverage ~0.6x and rating agency upgrades to Ba3/positive outlook .
What Went Wrong
- Total operating revenues declined QoQ and YoY ($855M vs $978M and $1,353M), with GAAP net income down to $64M (vs $172M and $345M), reflecting lower derivative gains and higher taxes other than income .
- Net loss from commodity derivatives swung to $(23)M (vs +$157M in Q2), adding earnings volatility despite hedge benefits; CFO cited continued downside protection from hedges .
- Operating costs and G&A increased QoQ ($316M and $87M vs $295M and $79M), although adjusted G&A was $82M; this partially offset margin gains from electricity .
Financial Results
Segment results:
KPIs and realized prices:
Estimate comparisons (S&P Global):
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “California's energy and regulatory environment is improving... strengthening oil and gas permitting, authorizing CO2 pipelines, and extending the Cap and Invest program… CRC is well positioned” .
- CFO: “We generated adjusted EBITDAX of $338M and free cash flow before changes in working capital of $231M… net leverage is at 0.6x and total liquidity exceeded $1.1B” .
- CEO on CCS/power: “California needs clean, reliable baseload power… pairing natural gas generation with CCS is a practical and scalable path” .
- CEO on base decline: “We can now move our annual base decline assumption to 8–13%, down from 10–15%” .
- CEO on Berry: “This deal… will add assets adjacent to our current positions, creating meaningful synergies” .
Q&A Highlights
- PPAs and power hub: Management sees “significant scale on the map” with Capital Power and Hull Street; focus on “the right deal at the right time” for firm, clean baseload power near demand centers .
- 2026 decline cadence: Four rigs from Jan 1; steady performance expected across 2026 as workovers/sidetracks drive declines shallower .
- PDP decline drivers: Injection focus (Bell Ridge), AI-based remote surveillance (Elk Hills) reduce downtime; conventional reservoirs allow predictable decline management .
- Maintenance capital: CRC standalone maintenance capital now “below $500M”; Berry historically maintained ~flat with ~$70M (post-close to be updated) .
- Huntington Beach: Entitlements progressing; 800-unit plan; abandonment cost previously guided $200–$250M (2023 number) with monetization targeted ~2028 .
Estimates Context
- EPS beat: Q3 2025 adjusted EPS $1.46 vs S&P consensus $1.27*, likely prompting upward revisions to FY EPS and cash generation assumptions.
- Revenue modest miss: Q3 2025 actual $878M* vs $887M* consensus; lower derivative gains weighed on reported GAAP operating revenues ($855M) .
- EBITDA discrepancy: S&P “EBITDA” actual $231M* below $334M* consensus, but CRC’s reported adjusted EBITDAX was $338M, and management stated a consensus beat, highlighting definitional differences .
- Forward outlook: Q4 2025E EBITDAX $220–$260M and preliminary 2026 stability may temper near-term EBITDA estimates but support longer-term EPS/cash flow per share given improved base decline and regulatory backdrop .
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Electrification tailwinds and policy shifts are creating real optionality: CCS-enabled baseload power partnerships (Capital Power MOU) and improving permitting (SB 237, pipelines) support a multi-year growth and cash flow narrative .
- Cash return durability: Dividend increased 5% to $0.405; >$200M remaining buyback capacity through mid-2026; balance sheet flexibility and low leverage enable opportunistic repurchases .
- Operations resilient: Q3 electricity margin and realized gas prices improved; adjusted EBITDAX and free cash flow grew QoQ despite derivative losses, showcasing internal margin levers .
- 2026 visibility: Four rigs, majority workovers/sidetracks, ~2% entry-to-exit decline—capital intensity improving with lower base decline assumptions; hedges (~64% oil) underpin cash flow stability .
- Berry merger synergies and refinancing plan de-risk integration: $400M 2034 notes earmarked to retire Berry debt; close targeted Q1 2026; expect operational synergies adjacent to current footprint .
- Watch definitional differences in consensus (EBITDA vs EBITDAX): CRC’s reporting and guidance use EBITDAX; model alignment matters for beat/miss interpretation .
- Near-term trading implication: Dividend hike and ratings momentum vs softer revenue headline—stock likely sensitive to policy updates (permitting bill), power PPA announcements, and Berry merger milestones .