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Chevron profit up on asset exchange, refineries

NEW YORK — Chevron Corp. posted a 41 percent gain in net income for the fourth quarter as the company produced more oil and gas, improved the performance of its refinery business and realized a gain from swapping assets in an Australian natural gas field.

Chevron Corp. posted net income of $7.2 billion for the quarter on revenue of $60.6 billion. That’s up from $5.1 billion on revenue of $60 billion a year ago.

On a per-share basis, Chevron earned $3.70. Analysts had expected the company to earn $3.06 per share, according to FactSet, but analysts had not factored in the $1.4 billion gain from Chevron’s asset exchange.

Stacey Hudson, an analyst at Raymond James, estimates the exchange was worth 72 cents per share, which would put Chevron’s adjusted earnings 8 cents below what analysts had expected but 40 cents higher than the fourth quarter of last year. Chevron’s results were also helped by the sale of the company’s fuels marketing operations in the Caribbean.

Excluding the gain from the Australian asset sale Chevron’s net income rose 14 percent in the quarter.

Hudson described the results as “solid.” Chevron shares fell 4 cents in early trading to $115.11.

Chevron’s production rose to 2.67 million barrels of oil and gas per day for the quarter, up just slightly from a year ago but up substantially from the 2.5 million the company produced in the third quarter of last year. For the year, Chevron produced an average of 2.64 million barrels per day, down from 2.67 million barrels per day in 2011.

Production has been hurt by the temporary closure of the company’s Brazilian offshore project in what is known as the Frade field. It has been closed since oil was found to be seeping from the field in November 2011 and again in March 2012.

Chevron’s chemicals and refining operations improved because input costs at the plants including crude oil, natural gas and natural gas liquids fell while the prices for the refined fuels and chemicals rose. Chevron’s refinery output in the U.S. fell by 75,000 barrels per day, however, after an August fire at its Richmond, Calif. plant shut down a processing unit.

Larger rival Exxon Mobil Corp. reported a 6 percent increase in fourth-quarter earnings to $9.95 billion.

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