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Big Oil earnings: Chevron and Exxon beat, but the barrel did not do all the work

Equities 5 minutes to read
Ruben Dalfovo
Ruben Dalfovo

Investment Strategist

Key takeaways

  • Chevron and Exxon beat expectations, helped by higher oil prices and strong core assets.

  • Cash returns stayed large, but Chevron trimmed buybacks while Exxon held steady.

  • The lesson for investors is simple: oil helps, but execution still matters.


Chevron and Exxon Mobil reported first-quarter results on 1 May 2026, and the first lesson is that higher oil prices do not automatically produce a clean victory. They help, of course. Oil companies do not complain when the barrel gets more expensive. But this quarter also came with war disruption, cargo delays, accounting timing effects and weaker pockets in refining and chemicals.

Brent crude settled at 114.01 USD on 30 April 2026, down 3.4%, after touching 126.41 USD earlier in the day. That was the highest level since March 2022, driven by worries around the Iran war and disruption near the Strait of Hormuz. Against that backdrop, Chevron and Exxon both beat earnings expectations, but neither result was as simple as “oil up, profits up”.

The market reaction was muted at the time of writing. Investors welcomed the earnings beats, but the response stayed measured as they looked through war disruption, cargo timing effects and weaker refining pockets.

The beat was real, but the route was messy

Exxon and Chevron both beat expectations, but the story was not simply “oil price up, profits up”. Exxon reported adjusted earnings per share of 1.16 USD, ahead of the 0.96 USD Bloomberg consensus, while revenue and other income reached 85.14 billion USD, also ahead of expectations. Production was broadly in line with expectations at 4.59 million barrels of oil equivalent per day, supported by growth in Guyana and the Permian Basin.

Chevron also came in ahead of expectations, with adjusted earnings of 2.8 billion USD, or 1.41 USD per share. Reported earnings were lower, at 2.2 billion USD, but the operating picture was stronger than the headline suggests. Worldwide production rose 15% from last year, while United States production rose 24%, helped by the Hess acquisition, the Gulf of America and the Permian Basin.

The important point for investors is that both companies showed strength in the parts of the business that matter most over time: production growth, large advantaged assets and cash generation. But the quarter also came with a few oil-stained footnotes.

The main complication was what both companies call timing effects. In plain English, these are accounting mismatches between financial contracts and the physical oil or gas cargoes that have not yet completed delivery. The loss appears in the accounts now, while the related physical transaction may show up later. It is the sort of detail that makes energy accounting a niche hobby, and not a particularly social one.

For Exxon, these unfavourable timing effects were 3.9 billion USD. For Chevron, they were around 2.9 billion USD. That helps explain why reported profit looked weaker than the underlying business in some areas. It also explains the measured market reaction: investors liked the earnings beats, but they still had to look through accounting noise, war-related disruption and weaker refining pockets before giving full credit.

Cash return remains the anchor

Big Oil is no longer valued only on how much it can produce. It is also judged on what it gives back to shareholders and how much it reinvests in future production. That makes cash flow the key exam paper.

Exxon generated 2.7 billion USD of free cash flow. Free cash flow means cash left after running the business and investing in long-term assets. Exxon returned 9.2 billion USD to shareholders, including 4.3 billion USD in dividends and 4.9 billion USD in buybacks. It also kept its 2026 buyback plan at 20 billion USD.

Chevron returned 6.0 billion USD to shareholders, with 3.5 billion USD in dividends and 2.5 billion USD in buybacks. That was still a large return, but the buyback was lower than the previous quarter. Some investors may have hoped for an increase given the oil-price surge. Chevron’s answer was more cautious: higher prices help, but one strong quarter does not change the capital-return playbook. In energy, discipline is not glamorous, but it tends to age better than enthusiasm.

That caution matters. Management does not want to raise buybacks based only on a short-term spike in commodity prices. For long-term investors, that is not necessarily bad. A company that treats temporary oil prices as permanent income can end up with a very expensive habit.

Production strength, refining pain

The clearest operational bright spot for both companies was production from advantaged assets. Exxon continues to benefit from Guyana and the Permian Basin. Chevron is getting a visible lift from Hess, which brings exposure to Guyana, and from growth in the United States.

The weak spot was downstream. Downstream means refining, marketing and selling fuels and other products. Chevron’s downstream business posted a loss of 817 million USD, versus a profit of 325 million USD a year earlier. International downstream was especially weak, hurt by lower refined-product margins, timing effects and higher transport costs.

Exxon’s energy products segment also reported an adjusted loss of 556 million USD, compared with a profit of 827 million USD a year earlier. Chemicals were soft too, with adjusted net income down 60% from last year. This matters because integrated oil companies are supposed to have several engines. When oil production is strong but refining and chemicals are weak, the machine still moves, but not every cylinder fires.

Risks

The first risk is geopolitical. Exxon has more Middle East exposure than Chevron, and management said a full second-quarter closure of the Strait of Hormuz would cut upstream production by about 750,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day. That is not a footnote. That is a large operational hole.

The second risk is oil-price reversal. A higher crude price supports cash flow, but it can fall quickly if supply routes reopen, demand weakens or traders decide the panic cupboard is overstocked.

The third risk is cost discipline. Higher prices can hide cost inflation, project delays and weaker refining economics. Investors should watch capital spending, production costs, refining margins and whether timing effects really unwind as companies expect.

Investor playbook

  • Separate reported profit from underlying cash flow. The two can diverge sharply in volatile oil markets.
  • Watch buyback discipline. Higher crude prices should not automatically mean higher repurchases.
  • Compare production growth with capital spending. More barrels matter only if returns stay attractive.
  • Treat energy as a portfolio diversifier, not a one-way bet on geopolitics.

The barrel shouts, cash answers

Chevron and Exxon gave investors a useful reminder: Big Oil is both simpler and more complicated than it looks. Higher crude prices help, but they do not remove operational risk, accounting noise, refining weakness or geopolitical disruption. The better question is not whether oil prices rose this quarter. They did.

The better question is whether management converted a volatile market into durable cash, sensible investment and disciplined shareholder returns. On that test, both companies did enough to reassure the market, but not enough to end the debate. The barrel made the noise. The cash register still gets the final word.


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