Skip to main content

Canadian Natural Posts Record 2025 Production and Boosts Dividend as It Tightens Net Debt Target

Tipranks - Sat Mar 7, 12:22PM CST

Claim 70% Off TipRanks Premium

Canadian Natural ( (TSE:CNQ) ) has shared an announcement.

Canadian Natural reported that 2025 was its strongest operational year, with record annual production of 1.571 million BOE/d, including 1.146 million bbl/d of liquids, and record output from its oil sands mining, upgrading and thermal in situ assets. The company also expanded through accretive acquisitions, notably the Palliser Block, Montney assets near Grande Prairie and, as of November 1, 2025, full ownership of the Albian oil sands mines via an asset swap with Shell.

Financially, Canadian Natural delivered 2025 net earnings of about $10.8 billion, adjusted net earnings of $7.4 billion and adjusted funds flow of $15.5 billion, while reducing net debt by roughly $2.7 billion to just under $16 billion. It returned approximately $9.0 billion to shareholders through dividends, share buybacks and debt reduction, repurchased 33.5 million shares, and exited 2025 with strong leverage metrics and about $6.3 billion of liquidity.

In the fourth quarter of 2025, the company posted net earnings of about $5.3 billion, record quarterly production of 1.659 million BOE/d and record quarterly liquids output of 1.215 million bbl/d, supported by 620,000 bbl/d of zero-decline synthetic crude from oil sands mining and upgrading. Operating costs in both oil sands mining and corporate liquids remained competitive, underscoring the efficiency of its long life, low-decline asset base.

The board approved a 6.4% increase to the quarterly dividend to $0.625 per share, taking the annualized payout to $2.50 and extending Canadian Natural’s 26-year streak of dividend growth, with a 20% compound annual growth rate over that period. Reflecting higher production and reserves, directors also revised the free cash flow allocation policy so that once net debt falls below $16 billion, a larger share of free cash flow will be directed to share repurchases, effectively accelerating direct returns to shareholders.

Canadian Natural reported year-end 2025 proved reserves of 15.91 billion BOE and proved plus probable reserves of 20.75 billion BOE, up about 4% and 3% respectively from 2024. With roughly 73% of proved reserves categorized as long life, low decline, the company cited reserve life indices of 31 years (proved) and 40 years (proved plus probable), supported by industry-leading finding, development and acquisition costs that reinforce its long-term growth and cash generation profile.

The most recent analyst rating on (TSE:CNQ) stock is a Buy with a C$70.00 price target. To see the full list of analyst forecasts on Canadian Natural stock, see the TSE:CNQ Stock Forecast page.

Spark’s Take on TSE:CNQ Stock

According to Spark, TipRanks’ AI Analyst, TSE:CNQ is a Outperform.

Canadian Natural’s strong financial performance and positive earnings call sentiment are the most significant factors driving the score. The company’s robust operational efficiency, strategic acquisitions, and consistent dividend growth further enhance its attractiveness. Technical indicators support a bullish outlook, while valuation metrics suggest the stock is reasonably priced.

To see Spark’s full report on TSE:CNQ stock, click here.

More about Canadian Natural

Canadian Natural Resources Limited is a major Canadian oil and gas producer with a large, diversified portfolio spanning oil sands mining and upgrading, thermal in situ operations, light oil, natural gas and liquids-rich plays. The company focuses on long life, low-decline reserves that support stable, high-volume production and cash flow, positioning it as a key player in North American heavy and synthetic crude as well as natural gas markets.

Average Trading Volume: 15,625,355

Technical Sentiment Signal: Buy

Current Market Cap: C$129.1B

Learn more about CNQ stock on TipRanks’ Stock Analysis page.

Disclaimer & DisclosureReport an Issue

This article contains syndicated content. We have not reviewed, approved, or endorsed the content, and may receive compensation for placement of the content on this site. For more information please view the Barchart Disclosure Policy here.
This section contains press releases and other materials from third parties (including paid content). The Globe and Mail has not reviewed this content. Please see disclaimer.