Key Highlights
- Q1 adjusted earnings per share reached $1.16, surpassing the analyst consensus of $0.98
- Top-line revenue increased 2.4% year-over-year to $85.1 billion, exceeding projections of $81.1 billion
- Conflict in the Middle East reduced quarterly output by 6% and resulted in $700M in undelivered cargo losses
- Reported net income fell to $4.2B from $7.7B in the prior-year period — the weakest performance since Q1 2021
- Chief Executive Darren Woods emphasized Exxon’s enhanced resilience and capacity to navigate market volatility
Shares of Exxon Mobil (XOM) advanced 0.6% to $155.23 during Friday’s premarket session following the energy giant’s stronger-than-anticipated first-quarter performance.
The equity reached all-time peaks near $176 earlier in the year before retreating to the $154 range. Friday’s quarterly report provided shareholders with renewed confidence.
Adjusted per-share profit registered at $1.16, comfortably above the Wall Street consensus of $0.98. Total revenue expanded 2.4% from the same period last year to $85.1 billion, exceeding analyst forecasts of $81.1 billion.
However, a closer examination of the unadjusted figures reveals additional complexity.
Reported net income declined to $4.2 billion from $7.7 billion in Q1 2025. This marks the company’s weakest bottom-line result since early 2021.
The decline stemmed primarily from ongoing hostilities in the Middle East, which have affected Exxon more significantly than many competitors. Approximately 20% of the company’s hydrocarbon production originates from this region — among the highest concentrations of any major oil producers. By contrast, Chevron indicated that less than 5% of its output comes from Middle Eastern operations.
Regional Conflict Impacts Operations
Iranian strikes damaged two liquefied natural gas installations in Qatar where Exxon maintains ownership interests. These disruptions reduced first-quarter output by 6% relative to the preceding quarter.
The corporation also absorbed a $700 million setback from shipments that could not be completed due to the regional turmoil. This charge was excluded from the adjusted earnings calculation.
Additionally, Exxon recorded substantial losses related to financial derivatives — an accounting mechanism that mandates paper losses on hedging instruments prior to physical delivery completion. Chief Financial Officer Neil Hansen noted these timing-related effects generally reverse within several months, although predicting future impacts remains challenging.
When excluding all timing-related factors and undelivered shipments, Hansen indicated that core net income actually expanded compared to the previous year.
Permian and Guyana Deliver Strong Performance
While Middle Eastern operations faced challenges, Exxon’s flagship assets demonstrated solid performance.
Permian Basin output continued its upward trajectory, while Guyana production established a fresh quarterly record. These two regions represent the company’s most valuable upstream portfolios.
Free cash generation totaled $2.7 billion for the quarter, declining from $8.8 billion in the year-earlier period. The company distributed $4.3 billion in shareholder dividends and repurchased $4.9 billion in shares during the three-month span.
Capital spending reached $6.2 billion, consistent with full-year projections.
Chief Executive Darren Woods characterized the results as evidence that Exxon has become “a fundamentally stronger company than it was just a few years ago, built to perform through disruption and across market cycles.”
Analysts are expected to seek clarity on the restoration timeline for damaged Middle Eastern facilities during Friday’s investor conference call.

