KEY POINTS
  • Shares of Chevron rose after the company announced a plan to repurchase $3 billion worth of stock from shareholders each year.
  • Chevron reported second-quarter results that fell short of expectations on both the top and bottom line.
  • Profits more than doubled from a year ago, boosted by Chevron's business producing oil and gas and pressured by weakness in its refining segment.
A Chevron gas station in San Francisco.

Chevron reported quarterly profit and revenue that fell short of Wall Street's expectations, but the company's stock still rose after the oil major announced it would begin buying back $3 billion of its stock from shareholders each year.

The plan to return cash to investors is another sign that Chevron is moving past a bruising period of low oil prices. The company's profits have steadily improved as commodity prices rebound, and now Chevron says it believes the buyback program is sustainable so long as oil market conditions don't take a dramatic turn for the worse.