By Erin Ailworth 

Chesapeake Energy Corp. shares plunged 10% Wednesday as the U.S. shale driller missed earnings expectations and told investors that it would scale back its rig operations to 2004 levels.

Chesapeake is the latest energy company to cut back in light of falling crude-oil and natural gas prices. The company will reduce capital expenditures by 37% this year to between $4 billion and $4.5 billion. It will also drop the number of rigs drilling for new oil and gas finds by about 38% to between 35 and 45 rigs.

During the fourth quarter of 2014 Chesapeake pumped more oil and gas, but higher production couldn't offset the lower prices it fetched for fuel. The company earned a profit of $639 million, or 81 cents a share, on revenue of $5.05 billion. But excluding extraordinary items earnings were 11 cents per share, and analyst polled by Thomson Reuters were expecting them to be around 24 cents a share.

Chesapeake has struggled to recover from years of aggressive spending as the land-grab approach the company pioneered for oil and gas drilling meant it spent more than its wells generated in profit. But under Doug Lawler, who joined as chief executive in June 2013, the company has been selling assets to pay down its debts.

Mr. Lawler told analysts and investors on a call to discuss earnings that Chesapeake's team of "value barbarians" have striven to bring the company's costs in line after years of overspending. Even so, the company will continue to outspend its cash flow in 2015, although that gap has been shrinking in recent years.

In June, the company completed its spinoff of its oil-field service business into a separate, publicly traded company now known as Seventy Seven Energy Inc. In December, Chesapeake completed the sale of a large slice of its gas business in the Marcellus and Utica shale formations in West Virginia and southwest Pennsylvania to Southwestern Energy Co. for $5.38 billion.

Chesapeake is dialing back its remaining Marcellus gas operations in the face of extremely low prices. Gas in the region has sold for less than $1 per thousand cubic feet at times this winter. The company shut in 250 million cubic feet a day of Marcellus gas in December and expects that curtailment to stay in place for all of 2015. The company will only run one drilling rig in the area this year, down from five rigs operating there last year.

Analysts repeatedly questioned executives Wednesday about the company's plans for the $5 billion it made on that deal, and Mr. Lawler said the company could use the money to pay down debt or fund its exploration program or acquire new properties or another company.

"As I've told our employees many times, the transformation that has occurred at Chesapeake over the past 18 months has prepared us for such a time as we see today," he said.

Angela Chen contributed to this article.

Write to Erin Ailworth at Erin.Ailworth@wsj.com

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