Sunil Mathew
Analyst · Wolfe Research. Please go ahead
Thank you, Richard. In the first quarter of 2026, we generated adjusted earnings of $1.06 per diluted share, and reported earnings of $3.13 per diluted share. The difference was largely driven by the gain on the OxyChem sale, partially offset by the impact of derivative losses and early debt retirement premiums. Strong operational execution along with higher commodity prices enabled us to generate approximately $1.7 billion of free cash flow before working capital in the first quarter, and we exited the quarter with more than $3.8 billion of unrestricted cash. Even with oil prices roughly in line with 2025, we generated approximately 52% higher free cash flow from continuing operations, demonstrating our continued focus on cost and operational efficiency. We had higher first-quarter working capital use driven primarily by higher receivables associated with stronger oil prices in March. This was in addition to normal first-quarter items, including semiannual interest payments, annual property taxes, and compensation plan payments. As Vicki and Richard highlighted, our Oil & Gas and Midstream segments delivered exceptional results and exceeded our original expectations. Our production averaged 1.43 million BOE per day in the quarter, exceeding the high end of guidance. Strong base and new well performance in the Permian and Rockies, along with strong uptime in the Gulf Of America, drove domestic outperformance, exceeding the midpoint of guidance by 33 thousand BOE per day. This was partially offset by lower international production due to Middle East disruptions and PSC impacts due to higher oil prices. We also continue to deliver on our cost efficiency targets. Domestic lease operating expense outperformed at $7.85 per BOE, a 5% improvement compared to our first quarter guidance, due to maintenance schedule optimization in the Gulf Of America and higher production. Our Midstream segment outperformed in the first quarter, generating positive earnings on an adjusted basis of approximately $400 million above the midpoint of guidance. This was driven by gas marketing optimization and higher sulfur prices at Alosund, partially offset by lower sulfur sales. We also benefited from higher crude marketing margins due to timing impacts of cargo sales and fluctuations in commodity prices, which are offset in mark-to-market. While the duration of these impacts remains uncertain, our performance highlights the ability of our Midstream business to capture value during periods of volatility. We have continued to make significant progress on our deleveraging. We reduced principal debt below the $14.3 billion level announced on our last call, and today, our principal debt stands at $13.3 billion. This brings a go-forward run rate on interest payments to $845 million per year, which is approximately $550 million lower than our interest payment in 2025. This progress reflects the strength and durability of our free cash flow and our continued commitment to disciplined capital allocation. Our near-term cash flow priority is to reduce principal debt to $10 billion. Reaching this milestone will further strengthen the balance sheet and enhance our financial flexibility across cycles. As discussed on our fourth quarter call, near-term debt maturities remain low, with $450 million due through 2029. This provides meaningful support through periods of market volatility. In the current environment, higher oil prices are generating incremental cash flow that continues to support this deleveraging path. After we achieve the $10 billion principal debt milestone, we will reassess our cash flow priorities based on the macro environment, including the appropriate balance between building cash on the balance sheet ahead of preferred equity redemption in August 2029, additional principal debt reduction, and opportunistic share repurchases. Any increase in reinvestment would be driven by clear macro conditions and supported by continued cost and operating efficiency. Until these conditions are met, we intend to remain disciplined and balanced in how we deploy incremental cash flow. We are well positioned to increase reinvestment from a highly advantaged resource base at the appropriate time. Let me briefly comment on hedging. We have not historically been active in hedging as we believe we create shareholder value over the long term by maintaining exposure to commodity prices. That said, we have selectively hedged under specific circumstances. In February, prior to the conflict escalation in the Middle East, we put in place a modest amount of oil hedges using costless collars. At that time, we saw increased downside oil price risk and an opportunity to take measured action to preserve operational momentum and support our 2026 capital plan with a steady development program and without using the balance sheet. We hedged 100 thousand barrels of oil per day from March through December 2026 with a floor of $55 WTI and a volume-weighted average ceiling of approximately $76 WTI. This was primarily an operational decision and not a change in our hedging strategy. As volatility increased and prices moved higher, we stopped adding new hedges and do not intend to do more. Looking ahead to the second quarter, we expect performance to remain strong, reflecting disciplined execution and durable efficiency gains across our domestic portfolio. Our forward outlook incorporates a few discrete impacts driven primarily by two factors. First, in the Middle East, modest operational constraints at Alosan are expected to impact volumes. These began in mid-March and are anticipated to normalize before the end of the second quarter. In addition, higher prices under PSC terms will result in lower net production. Second, we executed transactions to further optimize our EOR portfolio, increasing working interest in our core operated floods while divesting scattered noncore fields and associated facilities. While this lowers our EOR production modestly, these actions are free cash flow accretive, shifting the portfolio toward higher-margin, oilier production and meaningfully lower operating costs. Overall, this improves both the quality and durability of our EOR asset base. Strong U.S. onshore execution is expected to partially offset the impact of our EOR portfolio optimization. In the Permian, unconventional production is expected to increase in the second quarter, supported by higher activity and resilient base performance. In the Rockies, second quarter volumes are expected to be roughly flat excluding prior-period adjustments. In the Gulf Of America, second quarter volumes are expected to decline modestly, reflecting planned facility maintenance and the beginning of tropical weather season. As a result of the Middle East disruptions and strategic EOR actions, we are adjusting the midpoint of full-year production guidance to 1.44 million BOE per day. We are maintaining our previous guidance for domestic lease operating expense, as increasing CO2 cost pressure related to higher oil prices is offset by the benefits of the EOR optimization transactions. Turning to Midstream, we expect earnings to remain strong in the second quarter, driven by gas marketing optimization opportunities, given the wide Waha-to-Gulf Coast natural gas spread seen quarter to date. Our guidance assumes impacts to sulfur sales in the quarter due to disruption in logistics from the ongoing Middle East conflict. We expect sales to normalize in the second half of the year, recognizing conditions in the region can change quickly. Given strong performance year to date, we are raising the midpoint of full-year Midstream guidance to $1.1 billion, an increase of approximately $800 million from the full-year guidance provided on our last call. We continue to expect the Waha-to-Gulf Coast spread to narrow later this year as additional pipeline capacity comes online, and we believe we remain well positioned to capture marketing optimization opportunities as they emerge. Capital spending in the first quarter was in line with our 2026 plan, with activity weighted toward the first half of the year. We are maintaining our full-year capital guidance range of $5.5 billion to $5.9 billion, with second quarter capital expected to be higher than the first quarter. Even in a highly dynamic macro environment, our outlook remains strong. Our short-cycle U.S. onshore portfolio continues to be a key competitive advantage, with low breakevens enabling efficient, stable activity while providing significant capital flexibility in extreme price scenarios. We complement our U.S. unconventional onshore investments with selective lower-decline, mid-cycle investments that reduce sustaining capital and strengthen cash flow durability across price environments. Together with continued balance sheet progress and disciplined capital allocation, we are well positioned for the future, delivering strong, consistent operational results, providing resilience through volatility, and the ability to opportunistically return capital. I will now turn the call back to Vicki.