This article first appeared on GuruFocus.
Chevron Corporation, which headquarter is in Houston (Texas), is a major oil company that traces its roots back to the renowned Standard Oil Company, founded by John D. Rockefeller in 1870.
In 1911, the Standard Oil Company was split into 34 smaller companies by the U.S. Supreme Court due to violation of federal antitrust laws. Chevron was one of these successor companies, originally known as Standard Oil of California.
In 1984, Standard Oil of California officially changed its name to Chevron Corporation.
Chevron is specialised in the production and sale of oil & gas products.
Its organisation is divided into two business segments:
The upstream business unit, which primarily consists of the exploration, development, production and transportation of crude oil and natural gas (oil production is a consolidated business for the upstream segment, while natural gas is considered a growing activity).
The downstream business unit, which primarily consists of the refining and marketing of oil and gas products.
During the first six months of 2025, company’s worldwide net oil-equivalent production averaged 3.37 million barrels per day (+2% compared to the same period of 2024), thanks to the increasing production in the Permian Basin, TCO, and the Gulf of America.
Chevron focuses its business mainly in the United States (no other country accounted for 10% or more of the company’s total sales and other operating revenues), where more than half of its workforce is also employed (Chevron reported a total of 45,298 employees at the end of 2024).
In the first six months of 2025, Chevron recorded sales and other operating revenues for an amount of $90,476m ($96,154m for the same period of 2024) and cost of revenues for an amount of $63,935m ($66,703 in 2024).
The gross profit result was $26,541 million, EBIT was recorded at $12,772 million, and the net income for the period was $6,027 million.
Chevron CAPEX analysis: from Permian efficiency to Guyana growth
The American-based Company has a leading position in a mature business, and it generates solid cash flows from its operating activities that it uses to pay dividends, repurchase its stock and invest in long-term projects.
It is a stock that well-respected investors select for the dividend income it offers to its shareholders like Warren Buffet, Bill Gates, and Arnold Van Den Berg who have Chevron inside their portfolio in this moment.
In this article, we analyse the CAPEX investments made by the Company over the last five years and explain which businesses we expect will support cash generation in the future.