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Oil Giants Stay the Course Amid Iran Conflict
2 May
Summary
- Global oil supplies are tightening significantly due to the Iran war.
- Major oil companies maintain existing spending plans, not boosting production.
- Gasoline prices have surged to their highest levels since summer 2022.

The escalating conflict involving Iran has led to a significant tightening of global oil supplies, prompting a sharp rise in U.S. gasoline prices to $4.39 per gallon, the highest since summer 2022. Major publicly traded oil companies, including ExxonMobil and Chevron, have signaled they will not alter their existing spending plans in response to the crisis, nor have they heeded calls to boost oil and gas production.
Executives from these companies cite extreme market volatility and unpredictability as reasons for maintaining their current capital expenditure strategies. Instead of new investments, these firms have prioritized returning capital to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases. This approach has led to only modest growth in oil and gas production over the past few years, despite the current supply crunch.
Refineries are operating at full capacity to capitalize on elevated oil prices, with companies like Exxon and Chevron reporting strong first-quarter earnings that exceeded expectations. Despite the ongoing supply disruptions and the potential for prolonged price increases, the companies are maintaining a disciplined approach to capital spending, focusing on maximizing returns from existing operations rather than initiating new production projects.