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Chevron’s Profit and Sales Soar

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Times Staff Writer

ChevronTexaco Corp. said Friday that its fourth-quarter profit nearly doubled as record energy prices made up for lower oil and natural gas production.

The San Ramon, Calif., oil company reported net income of $3.44 billion, or $1.63 a share, up from $1.74 billion, or 82 cents, a year earlier. Revenue, fueled by the high oil and gasoline prices that have plagued consumers, soared 41% to $42.7 billion.

“Our fourth-quarter performance capped a year of record earnings for our company,” Chief Executive Dave O’Reilly said.

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At the same time, quarterly production declined 9%, ChevronTexaco said. The drop came in part because of asset sales and hurricane damage to pumping facilities in the Gulf of Mexico.

Several analysts said the reduced production, a situation shared by other major oil companies, was not likely to repeat in coming quarters.

“The company has told us they expect to see production increase by 3% a year,” said analyst Jacques Rousseau of Friedman Billings Ramsey & Co. “On an absolute basis, they had a great quarter.”

Although ChevronTexaco’s results exceeded the average forecast of $1.40 a share by analysts surveyed by Thomson First Call, the company’s shares fell 34 cents to $53.72 on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday. Analysts said investors were disappointed about ChevronTexaco’s oil-production decline on a day when many other oil shares also slumped on reports of softening crude oil prices.

Average fourth-quarter prices for crude oil and natural gas in the United States and abroad were up 40%, the company said. Crude-oil futures in New York hit a record high of $55.17 a barrel in October.

Rousseau said the company’s biggest gains came from its service station operations in Europe and its oil refining businesses in Asia.

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But West Coast gasoline prices also contributed heavily to the quarter’s performance, Chief Financial Officer Steve Crowe said in a conference call with analysts. The nation’s second-largest oil company said its U.S. gasoline sales unit made $372 million in the fourth quarter, nearly five times the $77 million it earned a year earlier.

The quarterly earnings boost enabled the company to cut debt during the period by $1.3 billion, to a total of $11 billion, repurchase $750 million of its stock and pump $400 million into its pension plans, O’Reilly said.

For the full year, the company earned $13.3 billion, or $6.28 a share, up 85% from $7.2 billion, or $3.48, a year earlier. Revenue rose 28% to $155.3 billion from $121.3 billion.

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