Thread regarding Chevron Corp. layoffs

Venezuela

It looks like Chevron will be the largest benefactor of the change in Venezuela. The only company that stayed after Chavez kicked out all the other companies. Will those companies lay claim to their stolen assets? Thoughts?


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| 3013 views | | 16 replies (last January 7) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1ke549s5v

16 replies (most recent on top)

The margins on the bbls of gunk that comes out of Venezuela with WTI in the $50s will be pathetic.

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Post ID: @qe+1ke549s5v

"...it's because they do not value experienced and talented professionals." This has been the case in Chevron since at least 2015. It's why you can't name a single person in upstream who has discovered a drop of oil in their career. It's why anemic management surround themselves with recent-hire "advisors" who have no experience to advise on anything other than where to go for lunch. It's why we have the best diversity but poorest performance amongst our peers. It's the naive hope that we can rev up Venezuela production in time to make up for the inevitable Permian decline.

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Post ID: @qb+1ke549s5v

@OP Ali Moshiri has way more experience and contacts in Venezuela than the current CVX management regime and he is making a move. This opportunity will slip through Chevron's hands due to incompetent management and poor timely decision making. There is a reason that CVX is dead last in performance among the oil companies...it's because they do not value experienced and talented professionals.

https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/former-chevron-executive-seeks-2-billion-venezuelan-oil-projects-ft-reports-2026-01-05/

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Post ID: @pm+1ke549s5v

@gn - More like VC that just bought Citgo…
https://www.commondreams.org/news/paul-singer-venezuela

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Post ID: @kn+1ke549s5v

You can be sure Chevron is scrounging the rosters right now to come up with someone with Venezuelan background to take over as country manager. Same as India, Mexico, and Brazil.

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Post ID: @jr+1ke549s5v

Uncertainty in Venezuela will be around for at least several years. Just look at post-Assad Syria, post-Hussein Iraq, post-Allende Chile. Even if given US approval to invest in Venezuela, companies will be reluctant until stability is reached. Add to that PDVSA (like PEMEX) was viewed as a cash cow and did little infrastructure investment. It'll be an uphill and $$$-intensive effort to resurrect oil production in Venezuela to pre-Chavez levels.

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Post ID: @jq+1ke549s5v

Co-mies btfo

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Post ID: @jh+1ke549s5v

I mean, we just sold a bunch of oil to Orban and Hungary. So I would say the morals left already.

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Post ID: @hx+1ke549s5v

This whole thing was done specifically to benefit Chevron and Exxon

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Post ID: @gn+1ke549s5v

I don't know if Chevron will ever recover their public image after this.

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Post ID: @g9+1ke549s5v

If Chevron jumps straight in, surely got to question the values of this company

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Post ID: @g6+1ke549s5v

Sounds like MW got a call from daddy T before the abduction. Allegedly

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Post ID: @f4+1ke549s5v

They’ll have to take money away from the precious dividend to fund the capital budget increase so doubtful.

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Post ID: @f2+1ke549s5v

How low will oil go?

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Post ID: @b6+1ke549s5v

@OP You will be retired before anything of substance changes in the oil fields of Venezuela. The current low price of crude oil, the undesirable heavy crude in those fields, and political uncertainty means no meaningful investment for the foreseeable future.

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Post ID: @aa+1ke549s5v

Now we can see why CEO loves the orange man

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Post ID: @a5+1ke549s5v

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