ValoreQ4, 24Q1, 25Q2, 25Q3, 25Q4, 25Q1, 26TTMSpese di vendita, generali e amministrative1.58 B1.22 B889 M1.52 B1.49 B1.07 B4.97 BRicerca e sviluppo———————Reddito operativo6.06 B5.58 B-22.71 B-21.98 B-20.75 B11.61 B-53.84 BProventi non operativi, Totale683 M53 M-489 M-6 M-290 M2.97 B2.19 BOneri finanziari, al netto degli interessi capitalizzati199 M212 M274 M370 M361 M345 M1.35 BProventi non operativi, esclusi gli oneri finanziari484 M-159 M-763 M-376 M-651 M2.63 B838 MEntrate/uscite straordinarie———————Utile al lordo delle imposte6.75 B6.4 B4.68 B6.39 B5.26 B4.69 B21.03 BQuota di utile688 M820 M536 M981 M663 M745 M2.92 BImposte2.8 B2.07 B1.63 B1.8 B1.75 B1.65 B6.84 BInteressi di minoranza20 M12 M25 M74 M75 M83 M257 MAltri proventi/oneri al netto delle imposte170 M534 M-583 M-3 M210 M382 M6 MUtile netto al lordo delle attività cessate3.24 B3.5 B2.49 B3.54 B2.77 B2.21 B11.01 BAttività cessate———————Utile netto3.24 B3.5 B2.49 B3.54 B2.77 B2.21 B11.01 BRegolazione della diluizione———————Dividendi privilegiati———————Utile netto diluito attribuibile agli azionisti ordinari3.24 B3.5 B2.49 B3.54 B2.77 B2.21 B11.01 BUtile base per azione (EPS base)1.852.011.451.831.361.125.76Utile diluito per azione (EPS diluito)1.8421.451.821.361.115.74Numero medio di azioni ordinarie in circolazione1.81 B1.74 B1.72 B1.94 B1.85 B1.98 B—Azioni diluite in circolazione1.82 B1.75 B1.72 B1.95 B1.86 B1.99 B—EBITDA11.03 B9.71 B8.49 B11.2 B10.48 B9.75 B39.92 BEBIT6.06 B5.58 B4.15 B5.41 B4.6 B3.95 B18.11 BCosto del fatturato30.15 B28.61 B26.86 B27.4 B25.35 B28.27 B107.87 BAltri costi del venduto———————Ammortamento e svalutazione (liquidità)4.97 B4.12 B4.34 B5.78 B5.88 B5.81 B21.82 B
Chevron Corporation Common Stock
Chevron Corporation is an American multinational energy corporation predominantly specializing in oil and gas. The second-largest direct descendant of Standard Oil, and originally known as the Standard Oil Company of California, it is active in more than 180 countries.
Founded originally in Southern California during the 1870s, after the breakup of Standard Oil, Socal grew quickly on its own by continuing to acquire companies and partnering with others both inside and outside of California, eventually becoming one of the Big Oil companies that dominated the global petroleum industry from the mid-1940s to the 1970s. In 1985, Socal merged with the Pittsburgh-based Gulf Oil and rebranded as Chevron; the newly merged company later merged with Texaco in 2001.
Chevron is one of the largest companies in the world and the second-largest oil company based in the United States by revenue, only behind fellow Standard Oil descendant ExxonMobil. Within oil and gas, Chevron is vertically integrated and is involved in hydrocarbon exploration, production, refining, marketing and transport, chemicals manufacturing and sales, and power generation.