Exxon Mobil CEO: Guyana will go down as one of the best deepwater developments in industry history

    Exon Mobile out with first quarter
    results this morning the company earning
    $26 a share for the first quarter that
    was shy of the consensus estimate of 220
    Revenue did beat expectations though at
    $ 83.1 billion and uh joining us right
    now for an exclusive interview is Darren
    Woods he’s Exon Mobile’s chairman and
    CEO and Darren welcome thank you for
    being here today good morning Becky good
    to be here so I why don’t you talk a
    little bit about what happened during
    the quarter the stock is off by about
    1.4% um Revenue was stronger than
    anticipated but the earnings per share
    was below what the street was looking
    for well if you look at the business and
    our operations they delivered uh exactly
    in line with our plan in fact in some
    cases they
    outperformed uh you can see that in our
    cash flow from operations which exceeded
    consensus by about a billion dollar the
    the myths the street had for our
    earnings are a function of some non-cash
    tax and inventory adjustments which we
    tend to see quarter on quarter
    occasionally and they this this quarter
    they happen to stack up but uh we feel
    really good about the operations and
    what the business is delivering one of
    the highlights that you point out is the
    gross production numbers that you’re
    seeing now in Guyana 600,000 oil
    equivalent barrels a day there I mean
    that has turned out to be a hugely
    important stake for you yeah it’s I
    think a great example of uh the
    capability of this organization and each
    of the different sectors coming together
    our technology company operations
    company our projects company coming
    together to make these things possible
    we deliver these projects at an industry
    leading Pace uh we deliver them ahead of
    schedule below budget and when we bring
    them on the operations team start
    optimizing and we tend to reset what we
    think is possible and very safely raise
    the production to a point where we are
    now running uh those three ships uh
    those production units at a rate higher
    than what we made the investment
    decision on so extremely proud of that
    of course we’ve got three more in the
    works to feel really good about so this
    is a tremendous uh example of what the
    organization is capable of doing but the
    the production that you’ve seen in
    Guyana is I’m sure part of the reason
    that you’re involved now in this
    arbitration with with chevron chevron
    wants to buy hes hes is a 30%
    partnership in that deal with you you
    guys have a 45% stake in it um what’s
    the arbitration over and what do you
    think’s likely to happen here so I think
    great context uh for that discussion and
    if you look at Guyana and the
    development there I think it will go
    down as one of the best deep water
    developments in the history of the
    industry so a lot of value that’s been
    created through the hard work of the
    partners but specifically with our
    engineering organization and our
    projects organization so understand uh
    why chevron’s interested in
    participating in such an attractive uh
    development the the partnership that
    exists today is is run or uh defined by
    a joint operating agreement that
    agreement gives existing Partners rights
    when they’re are changes in controls um
    the Chevron hess uh
    transaction ignored those rights we’re
    we’re standing up for the rights to make
    sure we protect the value that we’ve
    created there to make sure we understand
    what the Guyana assets the value of
    those assets are in the Chevron H
    transaction and make sure that we have
    line of sight to how best optimize value
    for our shareholders I’m I’m sure you
    understand chevron’s position I’m sure
    they’ve explained it to you they they
    are saying that there’s a h subsidiary
    that won’t change and they think that
    that is enough to satisfy what they are
    calling a contract language dispute um
    that they think is something that’s
    routinely put in and usually is not
    taken up by the other partners how is
    this different how do you think it’ll
    play out well I am familiar with their
    argument in their interpretation we
    wrote the Jaa uh so we have a pretty uh
    clear line of sight as to the intent and
    the circumstances that um apply and the
    language that applies to these
    circumstances so we feel pretty
    confident in our interpretation and
    frankly that’s the point of the
    arbitration the joa allows for that it’s
    understandable that Partners from time
    to time can have a different
    interpretation of that we’ll take it
    through the arbitration process and
    we’ll let the facts speak for themselves
    would you put in a bid yourself if
    arbitration allowed you to do that you
    you guys are still caught up with
    Pioneer Natural Resources trying to
    digest that major acquisition would you
    have the money to go ahead and try and
    put a bid in for these assets as well I
    I’ve made it clear in the past that you
    know this is not a a play for H we’re
    not interested in transaction on H this
    is really around protecting the value
    that we’ve created as part of that
    development making sure that the
    preemption rights that we believe exist
    in the joa are recognized and confirmed
    and then understand what the value
    they’re putting on that asset is and
    then what the options are to um maximize
    the value to your shareholder so I what
    does that mean d I’m sorry just to dig
    into it does that mean you’re not
    looking to buy Hess outright but you
    would be looking to buy these assets or
    you just want to be compensated and
    maybe push for a higher deal for those
    assets where you guys are comp
    considered as well I think there are a
    lot of options on the table Becky I’m
    not limiting myself to anyone we’re
    going to look and see what the cash
    value of that first of all we’ll confirm
    the rights of preemption and then we’ll
    look to see what the cash value of this
    asset is within that transaction and
    then we’ll explore the opportunities uh
    that are available to us Darren while
    you’re here definitely want to talk to
    you about what you’re seeing in the
    demand for oil these days we we’ve
    gotten a few concerning numbers that GDP
    number that was below expectations
    yesterday there was a lower than
    expected manufact uring index number um
    are you seeing any sort of a Slowdown
    and and what do you see on the global
    stage no I would tell you actually uh
    the first quarter was stronger than
    frankly we had anticipated um and so the
    first quarter looks good as we look
    forward through the rest of the year our
    expectations is we’re going to see a
    demand growth for oil uh probably hit
    another record this year last year it
    hit a record uh this year we expect it
    to hit another record Transportation
    fuel demand is is very healthy and in
    fact if you look at the first quarter
    refining margins that make petroleum
    products from crude uh it was the second
    highest uh first quarter margin we’ve
    seen over the last 10 years so very uh
    constructive first quarter for refining
    we’re in a dip now as we head to the
    transition to the summer driving season
    so we’ll see how that picks up going in
    nothing indicates that that’s coming off
    the crude markets look um fairly well
    supplied but but balanced uh natural gas
    is a little long right now but I think
    that’s a short-term issue the one Market
    that we see some weakness in from a
    margin standpoint is chemical and it’s
    not a function of the demand and the
    demand growth it’s a function of the
    supply that’s coming on so frankly we
    see a a relatively um positive outlook
    for for the businesses that we’re in our
    industry

    Darren Woods, Exxon Mobil chairman and CEO, joins ‘Squawk Box’ to discuss the company’s quarterly earnings results, importance of the company’s Guyana assets, oil demand outlook, impact of geopolitical tensions on oil prices, and more.

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