CHEVRON CORP (CVX) Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 headline: net income $3.24B ($1.84 diluted EPS), adjusted earnings $3.63B ($2.06), with $722M FX gain; special items totaled ~$1.12B (severance/impairments) . Cash from operations was $8.7B; free cash flow $4.4B .
- Sequential softness driven by lower refining/chemicals margins, timing effects, and upstream items (ARO revisions, inventory valuation); CFO: “Adjusted earnings were [about $900M] lower QoQ” and “foreign currency gains were $720M” . U.S. Downstream posted a loss (-$348MM) amid weaker margins and severance/impairment charges .
- Strategic catalysts intact: first oil at TCO FGP with ramp to ~1 Mboe/d within ~3 months, TCO distributions guided to ~$5B in 2025 and ~$6B in 2026; GoM Anchor/Whale online, Ballymore mid-2025; Permian exceeded 1 Mboe/d in December and targets 9–10% growth in 2025 while prioritizing FCF .
- Capital returns and guidance: dividend raised 5% to $1.71/qtr; buybacks to remain $10–$20B/year; organic capex to stay in $14–$16B range; targeting $2–$3B structural cost reductions by end-2026 .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- TCO first oil and rapid ramp: “FGP adds 260,000 bpd… expect full production ~1 Mboe/d within the next 3 months,” enabling higher affiliate distributions ($5B 2025; $6B 2026) and confirmed by the first-oil press release .
- U.S. upstream execution: Q4 U.S. production hit a record 1,646 Mboe/d; Permian volume topped 1 Mboe/d in December; 2025 Permian growth guided to 9–10% with capex moderation to emphasize FCF .
- Portfolio/cost agenda: 2024 production records (7% global, 19% U.S.), asset sales closed, dividend raised, and $2–$3B structural cost reduction target reiterated .
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What Went Wrong
- Downstream weakness: U.S. Downstream lost $348MM in Q4 on lower refined product margins, higher opex (severance), and impairments; International Downstream earnings also fell YoY .
- QoQ earnings decline: CFO cited lower refining/chem margins, timing effects, and upstream ARO and inventory valuation items lowering adjusted earnings vs Q3 .
- Cash flow ex-WC headwinds: CFFO ex-WC $5.3B vs $8.3B in Q3; CFO flagged ~$1.5B Canadian sale-related tax in CFFO ex-WC, ~$0.5B special-item cash impact, and
$0.5B other factors ($2.5B total headwind) .
Financial Results
Headline metrics vs prior year and prior quarter (units indicated)
Segment earnings ($USD Millions)
KPI snapshot
Operational KPIs (selected)
Notes on non-GAAP: adjusted earnings exclude impairments, decommissioning, severance, unusual tax, pension items, FX; Q4 special items were $(1,115)MM after-tax; FX +$722MM .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We expect to add $10 billion of annual free cash flow in 2026, led by growth in advantaged upstream assets… with additional production from FGP and… Anchor and Whale continue to ramp up.” — Mike Wirth, CEO .
- “Organic CapEx is expected to remain within our $14–$16 billion guidance range… Affiliate CapEx is expected to trend down further… We’re targeting $2–$3 billion in structural cost reductions by the end of 2026.” — Eimear Bonner, CFO .
- “We announced a 5% increase in the dividend… marking the 30th consecutive year with an annual increase… intend to maintain a buyback range of $10–$20 billion per year.” — Eimear Bonner, CFO .
- On AI power: “We operate nearly 5 GW of reliable… power… We don’t envision ourselves as a merchant power player… behind-the-meter doesn’t further tax an already taxed distribution infrastructure.” — Mike Wirth, CEO .
- “In 2024, we delivered record production, returned record cash to shareholders and started up key growth projects.” — Mike Wirth (news release) .
Q&A Highlights
- Cash flow quality: CFO walked through ~$2.5B of Q4 CFFO ex-WC headwinds (Canada tax ~$1.5B, special items ~$0.5B, affiliate/commercial ~$0.5B) to normalize underlying run-rate into 2025 .
- TCO distributions/guidance: $5B (2025) and $6B (2026) to Chevron including loan repayments and dividends; OpEx expected to trend down as steady-state achieved .
- Permian strategy: December exceeded 1 Mboe/d; 2025 growth 9–10%, lower in 2026; shift from growth to sustained FCF at >1 Mboe/d with lower capex intensity .
- Downstream outlook: Q4 was a “perfect storm” of weak margins, inventory accounting, turnarounds, and impairments; lighter turnarounds planned in 2025 .
- Capex discipline: Capex could land anywhere within $14–$16B based on opportunity set; continued capital efficiency and portfolio optimization; buybacks maintained .
Estimates Context
- We attempted to retrieve S&P Global (Capital IQ) consensus for Q4 2024 EPS/Revenue/EBITDA but were unable to due to API request limits at the time of query. We therefore do not present vs-consensus beats/misses here. Values would be sourced from S&P Global when available.
- Primary EPS Consensus Mean (Q4 2024): unavailable due to limit (S&P Global)*
- Revenue Consensus Mean (Q4 2024): unavailable due to limit (S&P Global)*
- EBITDA Consensus Mean (Q4 2024): unavailable due to limit (S&P Global)*
- Implications: Given downstream margin pressure and Q4-specific cash flow headwinds, Street estimates for 2025 segment mix/FCF may drift higher on upstream ramps (TCO/GoM) and lower affiliate capex, while near-term downstream estimates could reset lower pending margin recovery .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- 2025–2026 FCF acceleration credibly underpinned by TCO (FGP/WPMP) ramp and GoM startups; management guides to +$10B annual FCF by 2026 and higher TCO distributions ($5B/$6B) — strong medium-term cash return support .
- Near-term earnings/cash softness is largely transitory (special items, tax/timing, downstream margins); management detailed normalized cash flow bridge and expects production growth to be 2H-weighted in 2025 .
- Capital returns remain priority: dividend raised to $1.71; buybacks $10–$20B/year maintained; balance sheet conservative (net debt ratio ~10%) enabling through-cycle distributions .
- Permian entering FCF-harvest mode: >1 Mboe/d plateau, 2025 growth 9–10%, capex moderation to drive durable FCF .
- Watch downstream recovery and execution on cost-out: $1.5–$2.0B savings targeted in 2025 (toward $2–$3B by 2026) with tech/standardization and portfolio actions . A downstream margins rebound would be upside to earnings leverage .
- New AI power initiative offers optionality with limited capex displacement and potential CCS integration; behind-the-meter model avoids grid bottlenecks and could open a differentiated growth adjacency .
- Risk watchlist: Hess arbitration timeline, downstream margins, policy shifts; management underscores confidence in Hess position and a more balanced U.S. energy policy stance .
References: Q4 2024 8-K earnings press release and attachments ; Q4 2024 earnings call transcript ; Supplemental press releases on TCO first oil and AI power JV ; Prior quarters Q3 2024 8-K and call ; Q2 2024 call for trend context .
*Values retrieved from S&P Global (Capital IQ) when available.