
Chevron slashed $5 billion from its investment budget and shut down its share buyback program Friday as the crude price plunge continued to savage budgets of oil industry powerhouses.
Chevron said it would spend $35 billion on exploration and production projects, 13 percent less than last year, in response to the nearly 60 percent fall of the oil price since the middle of 2014 due to a global glut.
In addition, after spending $5 billion on share repurchases in 2014 -- a program that shores up the company's share price, benefiting stockholders -- chief financial officer Patricia Yarrington said the program would be frozen this year.
"Given the change in market conditions, we are suspending our share repurchase program for 2015," she announced as the company presented its fourth-quarter earnings.
The company turned in its poorest quarter, profits-wise, since 2009, "largely due to the sharp decline in crude oil prices," said chairman and chief executive John Watson.
Revenues for the three months dropped 17.9 percent from a year earlier to $42.1 billion, and net income sank 30.0 percent, to $3.5 billion.
The company produced the same amount of oil as it did a year ago -- an average of 2.58 million barrels a day in the quarter -- but the average sales price was $66 a barrel, compared with $90 a year ago.
Watson said earnings were helped by gains in refining operations.
"Improved downstream results and higher gains on asset sales related to our divestment program partially offset the effect of lower crude prices," he said in a statement.
"We enter 2015 with the financial strength to meet the challenges of a volatile crude price environment and with significant efforts underway to manage to a lower cost structure and capital spend rate."
Chevron shares took a small hit from the news, falling 0.8 percent in afternoon trade to $102.16.
On Thursday another US oil leader, ConocoPhillips, announced the second sharp reduction in exploration spending in two months as oil prices showed no sign of rebounding.
And Anglo-Dutch giant Royal Dutch Shell unveiled plans to slash spending by more than $15 billion over the next three years after posting lower annual profits on tumbling oil prices.
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