Chevron Hikes Its Dividend – But It’s Less Than Expected

Chevron Hikes Its Dividend – But It’s Less Than Expected


Chevron Corp (CVX) announced a 4.0% dividend per share (DPS) hike to $7.12 annually on Jan. 30, slightly lower than my expectation of a 5% hike to $7.18. CVX stock has risen 20% since mid-December. It could be fully valued as it has reached my price target. This article will discuss how shareholders can play CVX.

CVX closed at $176.90 on Friday, Jan. 30, up $5.71 (+3.34%), and up $24.39 or+16.1% year-to-date from $152.41 on Dec. 31, 2025.

CVX stock - last 3 months - Barchart
CVX stock – last 3 months – Barchart

Moreover, since its recent low point of $146.75 on Dec. 16, 2025, CVX is up $30.05, a 20.5% gain in just a month and a half.

Clearly, investors have been anticipating a dividend per share (DPS) hike. But just a 4.09% quarterly DPS hike from $1.71 (i.e., $6.84 annually) to $1.78 ($7.12)?

I wrote a Barchart article on Dec. 21, 2025, discussing why I thought Chevron would increase the DPS by 5% to $7.18. After all, last year, it hiked the DPS by 8 cents per share or 4.9% from $1.63 quarterly to $1.71. So, expecting a 5% increase to almost $1.80 (i.e., $1.795, or an increase of about 8 cents) seemed likely.

Moreover, Chevron had made a statement in its Nov. 12, 2025, investor day presentation that “Chevron has led its peers in dividend per share growth over the last 25 years with an average annual increase of 7%.”

I discussed this in my Nov. 23, 2025, Barchart article, “Chevron’s Latest 5-Yr Plan Implies a Major Dividend Hike – CXX Stock Looks Cheap.”

So, what happened? Reality happened. Cash flow was lower than expected. So, management kept the dividend hike at the low end of expectations. That could have big ramifications for CVX stock.

Excluding working capital changes, operating cash flow was 15.2% higher at $34.9 billion vs. $30.3 billion for the full year. However, adjusted free cash flow (FCF), after capex and other adjustments, was 5.2% lower at $20.2 billion vs. $21.3 billion.

This decline was worse for Q4. Adj. FCF was $4.2 billion, vs. $8.0 billion last year, down 47.5% YoY. This can be seen on page 10 of the Q4 release.

Q4 and 2025 adj. FCF - Chevron release Jan. 31, 2026 - page 10
Q4 and 2025 adj. FCF – Chevron release Jan. 31, 2026 – page 10

It was also 40% lower than the $7.0 billion in adj. FCF last quarter (see page 9 of Q3 release). In other words, this decline, if it continues, could make a higher dividend increase take up a larger portion of free cash flow.

For example, assuming about 2 billion shares outstanding (the company has not yet filed its 10-Q filing), the new $7.12 annual DPS will cost Chevron $14.24 billion.


finance.yahoo.com
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