Chevron profit drops on lower oil output, maintenance

Updated 02 November 2012
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Chevron profit drops on lower oil output, maintenance

NEW YORK: Chevron Corp. posted much lower-than-expected quarterly earnings as maintenance exacerbated a steady decline in oil and natural gas production and as a huge fire at one of the company’s California plants hit the refining business.
Shares of the second-largest US oil company fell more than 1 percent in early trading.
Increasing output has been a struggle for many big oil companies, including Exxon Mobil Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell Plc. With oil and gas assets tightly controlled by the countries where they are located, the majors are left to drill in pricier regions on land and offshore.
Chevron’s third-quarter oil and gas production fell to 2.52 million barrels of oil equivalent per day from 2.60 million bpd a year earlier. On quarter-to-quarter basis, the production number declined for the third period in a row.
Net income in the quarter fell to $ 5.25 billion, or $ 2.69 per share, from $ 7.83 billion, or $ 3.92 per share, a year earlier.
Earnings dropped 17 percent to $ 5.1 billion in the oil and gas production business and plunged 65 percent to $ 689 million in the refining, or downstream, operation.
“Downstream was the primary culprit behind the miss,” Simmons & Co. analysts said in a note to investors. The reported profit included about $ 600 million from an asset sale gain, offset by a negative foreign exchange impact, they said.
Leaving out certain items, Chevron earned $ 2.55 per share, compared with the analysts’ average estimate of $ 2.83, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Chief Executive Officer John Watson said the earnings were weighed down by heavy planned oilfield maintenance. Pricing for the company’s output was also weaker, in part because of the now-oversupplied US market for natural gas liquids. The quarter’s average Brent oil price of $ 110 per barrel was down $ 2 from a year earlier.
A storm cut into Gulf of Mexico production, while planned maintenance in Kazakhstan and the United Kingdom caused the majority of the production decline outside the US, according to Chevron.
The company had already warned last month that the crude unit at its oldest refinery in Richmond, California, would remain offline through the fourth quarter after it was badly damaged in an Aug. 6 fire.
Shares of Chevron were down 1.2 percent at $ 110.10 in early trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

 


Saudi Arabia’s foreign reserves rise to a 6-year high of $475bn

Updated 22 February 2026
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Saudi Arabia’s foreign reserves rise to a 6-year high of $475bn

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s foreign reserves climbed 3 percent month on month in January to SR1.78 trillion, up SR58.7 billion ($15.6 billion) from December and marking a six-year high.

On an annual basis, the Saudi Central Bank’s net foreign assets rose by 10 percent, equivalent to SR155.8 billion, according to data from the Saudi Central Bank, Argaam reported.

The reserve assets, a crucial indicator of economic stability and external financial strength, comprise several key components.

According to the central bank, also known as SAMA, the Kingdom’s reserves include foreign securities, foreign currency, and bank deposits, as well as its reserve position at the International Monetary Fund, Special Drawing Rights, and monetary gold.

The rise in reserves underscores the strength and liquidity of the Kingdom’s financial position and aligns with Saudi Arabia’s goal of strengthening its financial safety net as it advances economic diversification under Vision 2030.

The value of foreign currency reserves, which represent approximately 95 percent of the total holdings, increased by about 10 percent during January 2026 compared to the same month in 2025, reaching SR1.68 trillion.

The value of the reserve at the IMF increased by 9 percent to reach SR13.1 billion.

Meanwhile, SDRs rose by 5 percent during the period to reach SR80.5 billion.

The Kingdom’s gold reserves remained stable at SR1.62 billion, the same level it has maintained since January 2008.

Saudi Arabia’s foreign reserve assets saw a monthly rise of 5 percent in November, climbing to SR1.74 trillion, according to the Kingdom’s central bank.

Overall, the continued advancement in reserve assets highlights the strength of Saudi Arabia’s fiscal and monetary buffers. These resources support the national currency, help maintain financial system stability, and enhance the country’s ability to navigate global economic volatility.

The sustained accumulation of foreign reserves is a critical pillar of the Kingdom’s economic stability. It directly reinforces investor confidence in the riyal’s peg to the US dollar, a foundational monetary policy, by providing SAMA with ample resources to defend the currency if needed.

Furthermore, this financial buffer enhances the nation’s sovereign credit profile, lowers national borrowing costs, and provides essential fiscal space to navigate global economic volatility while continuing to fund its ambitious Vision 2030 transformation agenda.