Exxon Mobil shares slump as the oil major tells investors to brace for higher spending

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Exxon Mobil issued new financial guidance on Wednesday, saying its profit potential and ability to generate cash look better than they did last year. But Exxon’s stock price slumped as the company prepared investors for an increase in spending in the coming years.

Exxon Senior Vice President Neil Chapman says the company can drill offshore cheaply because equipment and service rates are depressed following a period of relatively low exploration activity during the oil price downturn.

Commenting on Wednesday’s stock price slide, CFRA energy analyst Stewart Glickman said much of the industry is doing more with less capital spending. While Exxon is boosting spending and production, other drillers are increasing output while still cutting expenditures, he said.

“Exxon is so big it has to replace a lot of barrels every year. They’re probably thinking with a longer-term focus than most” exploration and production companies, he said

In addition to guidance on production and capital spending, investors were also hoping Exxon would return cash to shareholders by buying back stock, said Pavel Molchanov, equity analyst at Raymond James.

“Exxon has been the only supermajor in recent quarters without an active buyback program (beyond simply offsetting dilution), and management is still not giving any clarity on when it might resume. The lack of buyback clearly remains a source of frustration for investors,” he said in an email.

The Irving, Texas-based energy giant expects earnings to grow by $4 billion this year. That compares with profit growth of $1.1 billion last year, before accounting for the effects of U.S. tax reform.

Exxon believes its annual earnings potential will increase by 140 percent between 2017 and 2025, compared with its outlook for 135 percent growth last year. Exxon now thinks its earnings potential between this year and 2025 is about $9 billion higher than previously forecast.

“Given the success we experienced last year and the progress we’re making on our plans, we have even greater confidence in our ability to grow value for our shareholders,” Exxon chairman and CEO Darren Woods said in a statement before the event.

The oil major expects its annual cash flow from operations — a key measure of financial health in the oil industry — to hit $60 billion by 2025.

Exxon upped its overall cash flow forecast by $24 billion from last year, with about $15 billion of the increase coming from anticipated sales of the company’s assets. This year, Exxon expects cash flow from operations and asset sales to grow by $5 billion.

The company says a major profit and cash flow driver will be its wells in the Permian Basin, the top U.S. shale field. On Tuesday, Exxon said it expects its oil and natural gas production from the Permian to grow to about 1 million barrels of oil equivalent per day, a nearly 80 percent increase from last year’s investor day forecast.

Exxon has been stitching together large patches of continuous land in the region underlying western Texas and southeastern New Mexico.

“That enables you to develop resources on a very large and very efficient scale, and it allows you apply the Exxon Mobil machine,” Chapman said, referring to the company’s history of developing large, complex projects.

— CNBC’s Patti Domm contributed reporting to this story.

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