Each week we run a DCF (Discounted Cash Flow) model on a company from our watchlist. This week’s pick: Chevron Corporation (CVX).
Profile
Chevron is a globally integrated energy company spanning upstream oil and gas exploration, production, refining, chemicals, LNG infrastructure, and emerging lower-carbon energy investments. Its revenue base is primarily commodity-driven, with upstream earnings leveraged to crude oil and natural gas prices while downstream refining and chemicals provide partial cyclical balance. Chevron’s asset base includes long-lived hydrocarbon reserves, large-scale refining capacity, global LNG export infrastructure, and disciplined capital allocation focused on shareholder returns through dividends and buybacks. The company continues investing selectively in carbon capture, hydrogen, and renewable fuels while maintaining a strong balance sheet and conservative leverage profile.
DCF Analysis Inputs:
Discount Rate: 9%
Terminal Growth Rate: 2.5%
WACC: 9%
Forecasted Free Cash Flows (in billions USD)
2025: $15.5 → PV: $14.2
2026: $16.0 → PV: $13.5
2027: $16.5 → PV: $12.8
2028: $17.0 → PV: $12.0
2029: $17.5 → PV: $11.4
Total Present Value of FCFs = $63.9B
Terminal Value Calculation
Using perpetuity growth model with 2029 FCF = $17.5B: TV = (17.5 × 1.025) ÷ (0.09 − 0.025) = $276.0B. Present Value of Terminal Value = $179.4B
Enterprise Value
Enterprise Value = $63.9B + $179.4B = $243.3B
Net Debt
Cash & Equivalents: ~$6.8B. Total Debt: ~$24.5B. Net Debt ≈ $17.7B
Equity Value & Per-Share Value
Equity Value = $243.3B – $17.7B = $225.6B. Ordinary Shares Outstanding: ~1.79B. Intrinsic Value per Share ≈ $126
Conclusion
DCF Value: ~$126. Current Price: ~$181. Margin of Safety: ~–30%
Chevron remains one of the most financially disciplined integrated energy majors, supported by high-quality upstream assets, strong free cash flow generation across commodity cycles, and a shareholder-friendly capital allocation framework anchored by dividends and buybacks. Its LNG exposure, refining capacity, and long-duration reserves provide resilience relative to smaller exploration-focused peers. However, under conservative DCF assumptions reflecting normalized commodity pricing and moderate long-term growth, CVX currently trades above estimated intrinsic value. The market valuation appears to incorporate sustained energy price strength, capital return stability, and confidence in Chevron’s operational execution. While the company’s balance sheet strength, dividend durability, and global energy infrastructure position remain attractive, valuation suggests limited margin of safety at current levels for strictly value-oriented investors.




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