Commodities April 9, 2026 07:16 AM

Chevron Sees $1.6B-$2.2B Q1 Upstream Earnings Lift on Iran-Linked Price Spike

Company flags higher commodity prices and constrained volumes as key drivers of quarter-over-quarter profit improvement

By Avery Klein
Chevron Sees $1.6B-$2.2B Q1 Upstream Earnings Lift on Iran-Linked Price Spike

Chevron expects its upstream segment to record a $1.6 billion to $2.2 billion increase in earnings in the first quarter compared with the fourth quarter of 2025, citing a jump in oil and gas prices tied to volatility from the Iran war. Brent crude averaged $78.38 per barrel in Q1, and Chevron’s production is forecast to average 3.8 to 3.9 million barrels of oil-equivalent per day amid regional disruptions and downtime at a Kazakhstan project.

Key Points

  • Chevron forecasts a $1.6 billion to $2.2 billion rise in upstream earnings in Q1 versus Q4 2025, driven by higher oil and gas prices linked to the Iran war.
  • Brent crude averaged $78.38 per barrel in Q1, a 24% increase from the prior three months, according to LSEG.
  • Chevron’s net oil-equivalent production is expected to average 3.8 to 3.9 million barrels per day, with volumes affected by downtime at the Tengizchevroil project and reduced output in parts of the Middle East.

Overview

Chevron has projected a material quarter-over-quarter improvement in upstream earnings for the first quarter versus the fourth quarter of 2025, with the company estimating an increase of between $1.6 billion and $2.2 billion. The firm attributes that gain to elevated oil and gas prices driven by market volatility connected to the Iran war.

Price environment and market shock

The conflict, which began on February 28, produced a sharp spike in hydrocarbon prices. Oil prices rose as much as 65% during the period, and some Middle Eastern oil and gas fields halted production after the Strait of Hormuz - a passage that carries about one-fifth of global energy flows - was effectively closed. Those developments fed higher commodity realizations that underpin Chevron’s stated earnings uplift.

Benchmark pricing and production

Benchmark Brent crude averaged $78.38 per barrel in the first quarter, representing a 24% increase from the prior three months, based on data compiled by LSEG. At the same time, Chevron expects net oil-equivalent production to average between 3.8 million and 3.9 million barrels per day for the quarter. The company noted that output was affected by downtime at the Tengizchevroil project in Kazakhstan and by reduced production in parts of the Middle East.

Implications

Higher realized prices provided an offset to production pressures, resulting in the company’s projected upstream earnings improvement range. Chevron’s guidance frames the net effect of both price and volume dynamics for the quarter without specifying further line-item detail.


Note: The company’s estimates reflect the direct links between commodity prices and upstream earnings and the concurrent operational impacts from regional and asset-specific disruptions.

Risks

  • Operational disruptions - downtime at specific assets such as Tengizchevroil and reduced output in parts of the Middle East have directly lowered volumes and could continue to weigh on production, affecting energy and upstream sector results.
  • Geopolitical volatility - the Iran war and related events that closed the Strait of Hormuz contributed to extreme price swings, creating uncertainty for commodity markets and energy companies’ near-term earnings.

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