Despite delivering better-than-expected first-quarter results, ConocoPhillips faced selling pressure in early trading after announcing reduced production targets for the remainder of 2026.
The Houston-based energy giant reported adjusted quarterly profit of $1.89 per share, comfortably exceeding the FactSet consensus estimate of $1.68. Reported earnings registered at $1.78 per share.
Quarterly net income totaled $2.18 billion, representing a significant decline from the $2.85 billion recorded in the corresponding quarter of 2025. This contraction stems primarily from weakened natural gas pricing in the Permian Basin alongside diminished production volumes.
ConocoPhillips, COP
The company’s average realized price per barrel of oil equivalent stood at $50.36, marking a 5.6% decrease compared to Q1 2025. Daily production reached 2.31 million barrels of oil-equivalent, representing an 80,000 barrel-per-day reduction year-over-year.
Management noted that improved cost efficiency helped cushion the impact of lower revenues.
The most significant development for market participants wasn’t contained in the earnings report itself, but rather in what the company omitted from its forward projections.
ConocoPhillips made the strategic decision to remove Qatar entirely from both second-quarter and full-year production guidance, pointing to unpredictability stemming from escalating Middle East tensions.
The company’s Q2 production forecast now calls for 2.19 million to 2.22 million barrels of oil-equivalent daily. This represents a notable decrease from the 2.31 million barrels produced in the first quarter.
Management also trimmed its annual production outlook to a range of 2.3 million–2.33 million barrels daily, down from the previous projection of 2.33 million–2.36 million barrels per day.
Shares of COP declined approximately 1.8% during Thursday’s premarket session, trading near $126.10. This pullback followed a solid 3.2% advance in the prior regular trading session.
Oil prices simultaneously retreated from earlier highs, falling back after briefly touching four-year peaks.
Prior to Thursday’s premarket decline, COP had rallied roughly 37% year-to-date through Wednesday’s market close.
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