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ConocoPhillips Q1 2026 Earnings Beat Expectations, but Stock Falls on Qatar Output Cut

ConocoPhillips reported Q1 2026 net income of $2.2 billion with adjusted EPS of $1.89, beating market consensus. However, year-over-year profit declined and Middle East uncertainty prompted the company to cut full-year production guidance, triggering a stock decline.

전영빈··Updated May 6, 2026 at 18:00·5 min read
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AIKey Summary
  • ConocoPhillips posted $2.2B Q1 earnings and $1.89 adjusted EPS beating forecasts, but profit fell 21% year-over-year
  • Qatar production cuts and downward full-year guidance triggered a stock decline despite the earnings beat

ConocoPhillips (COP) reported Q1 2026 adjusted EPS of $1.89, exceeding market expectations, according to an SEC 8-K filing.


Q1 Results at a Glance

ConocoPhillips posted Q1 net income of $2.2 billion, down from $2.8 billion in the prior-year quarter. The decline was driven by lower natural gas prices and reduced production volumes.

  • Net Income: $2.2 billion, down from $2.8 billion year-over-year
  • EPS (GAAP): $1.78; Adjusted EPS: $1.89, beating market consensus
  • Operating Cash Flow (CFO): $5.4 billion
  • Cash and Short-term Investments: $6.7 billion
  • Average Realized Price per Barrel: $50.36, down 6% from $53.34 in the prior-year quarter

Forward Guidance

The company excluded Qatar from Q2 production guidance due to Middle East conflict impacts. Q2 production target is 2.185 to 2.215 million barrels per day (BOE/d). Full-year production guidance was lowered to 2.295 to 2.325 million BOE/d. The company set 2026 capital expenditures at $12.0 to $12.5 billion, a range reflecting uncertainty around Middle East conditions and Qatar project timing. CEO Ryan Lance stated, 'We achieved strong financial and operational performance amid macroeconomic volatility,' and reaffirmed the company's target to return 45% of annual operating cash flow to shareholders.


Market Reaction

ConocoPhillips stock declined following the earnings release, despite adjusted EPS beating expectations. The pullback was driven by Qatar production disruptions and the resulting downward revision to full-year guidance. Media outlets including Barron's noted that while earnings exceeded forecasts, the lower guidance dampened investor sentiment. The company returned a total of $2.0 billion to shareholders in Q1, comprised of $1.0 billion in share buybacks and $1.0 billion in dividends. Q2 quarterly dividend was set at $0.84 per share, payable June 1st.


Segment Performance

  • Total Production: 2.309 million BOE/d, down 80,000 BOE/d year-over-year
  • Lower 48 U.S. Production: 1.453 million BOE/d
  • — Delaware Basin: 698,000 BOE/d
  • — Eagleford: 367,000 BOE/d
  • — Midland Basin: 200,000 BOE/d
  • — Bakken: 183,000 BOE/d
  • Alaska Willow Project: 50% construction completion achieved
  • Equatorial Guinea LNG: Third-party gas contract executed; facility lifespan extended 10+ years

This article was auto-generated from SEC 8-K filings and external news reports for rapid dissemination of key data following the announcement. Review official company filings before making trading decisions.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Why did ConocoPhillips stock fall if earnings beat expectations?

While adjusted EPS of $1.89 exceeded market consensus, the company cut full-year production guidance to 2.295–2.325 million BOE/d due to Qatar disruptions. Investors focused on future profit headwinds rather than the current beat, causing the stock decline.

What is adjusted EPS and how does it differ from reported EPS?

EPS measures profit per share. Adjusted EPS excludes one-time costs and special items to reflect core operations. Q1 reported EPS was $1.78 versus adjusted EPS of $1.89 because litigation and settlement charges reduced the GAAP figure.

Why is Qatar production important to ConocoPhillips?

ConocoPhillips operates in Qatar's Northern Gas Field. Middle East instability caused production delays, prompting the company to exclude Qatar from Q2 guidance entirely, reducing full-year production by roughly 200,000 BOE/d.

How does ConocoPhillips return cash to shareholders?

The company uses two methods: dividends (Q2 set at $0.84/share) and share buybacks. In Q1, it returned $2.0B total—$1.0B buybacks and $1.0B dividends—targeting 45% of annual operating cash flow for shareholder returns.

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