8-K

EXXON MOBIL CORP (XOM)

8-K 2026-01-30 For: 2026-01-30
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Added on April 02, 2026

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

FORM 8-K

CURRENT REPORT

Pursuant to Section 13 OR 15(d) of The Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported): January 30, 2026

Exxon Mobil Corporation

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

New Jersey 1-2256 13-5409005
(State or other jurisdiction<br>of incorporation) (Commission<br>File Number) (IRS Employer<br>Identification No.)

22777 Springwoods Village Parkway, Spring, Texas 77389-1425

(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code)

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (972) 940-6000

(Former name or former address, if changed since last report)

Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:

☐ Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)

☐ Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)

☐ Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))

☐ Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

Name of Each Exchange
Title of Each Class Trading Symbol on Which Registered
Common Stock, without par value XOM New York Stock Exchange
0.524% Notes due 2028 XOM28 New York Stock Exchange
0.835% Notes due 2032 XOM32 New York Stock Exchange
1.408% Notes due 2039 XOM39A New York Stock Exchange

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an emerging growth company as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act of 1933 (§230.405 of this chapter) or Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (§240.12b-2 of this chapter).

Emerging growth company ☐

If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. ☐

Item 2.02 Results of Operations and Financial Condition
Item 7.01 Regulation FD Disclosure
The following information is furnished pursuant to both Item 2.02 and Item 7.01.
The Registrant hereby furnishes the information set forth in its News Release, dated January 30, 2026, announcing full-year 2025 results, a copy of which is included as Exhibit 99.1, and furnishes the information in the related 4Q25 Investor Relations Data Summary, a copy of which is included as Exhibit 99.2. Material available by hyperlink from the News Release is not deemed to be furnished herewith or included in this filing.

INDEX TO EXHIBITS

Exhibit No. Description
99.1 Exxon Mobil Corporation News Release, dated January 30, 2026, announcing full-year 2025 results.
99.2 4Q25 Investor Relations Data Summary.
104 Cover Page Interactive Data File (formatted as Inline XBRL).

SIGNATURE

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.

EXXON MOBIL CORPORATION
Date: January 30, 2026 By: /s/ LEN M. FOX
Len M. Fox
Vice President, Controller and Tax<br>(Principal Accounting Officer)

4

Document

f8k991001x0x0.gif EXHIBIT 99.1
4Q 2025 Earnings Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE January 30, 2026

ExxonMobil Announces 2025 Results

•Generated industry-leading earnings of $28.8 billion and cash flow from operations of $52.0 billion1

•Delivered EPS2 of $6.70, or $6.99 excluding identified items reflecting industry-leading CAGR of 21% since 20191

•Highest annual Upstream production in more than 40 years and record refinery throughput3 supported industry-leading annual shareholder distributions of $37.2 billion1

•Delivered 10 of 10 key projects4; adding $3 billion of earnings on a constant price and margin basis5

•Generated $15.1 billion in cumulative Structural Cost Savings since 2019, more than all other IOCs combined1

•Achieved 2030 plans for Corporate greenhouse gas emissions and flaring intensity reductions6

Results Summary
4Q25 3Q25 Change<br>vs<br>3Q25 Dollars in millions (except per share data) 2025 2024 Change<br>vs<br>2024
6,501 7,548 -1,047 Earnings (U.S. GAAP) 28,844 33,680 -4,836
7,256 8,058 -802 Earnings Excluding Identified Items (non-GAAP) 30,109 33,464 -3,355
1.53 1.76 -0.23 Earnings Per Common Share ² 6.70 7.84 -1.14
1.71 1.88 -0.17 Earnings Excluding Identified Items Per Common Share (non-GAAP) ² 6.99 7.79 -0.80

SPRING, Texas – January 30, 2026 – Exxon Mobil Corporation today announced fourth-quarter 2025 earnings of $6.5 billion, or $1.53 per share. Earnings excluding identified items were $7.3 billion, or $1.71 per share. Cash flow from operating activities was $12.7 billion and free cash flow was $5.6 billion. Shareholder distributions totaled $9.5 billion, including $4.4 billion of dividends and $5.1 billion of share repurchases. For the full-year 2025, the company reported earnings of $28.8 billion and distributed $37.2 billion to shareholders, including $17.2 billion of dividends and $20.0 billion of share repurchases, consistent with previously announced plans.

"ExxonMobil is a fundamentally stronger company than it was just a few years ago, and our 2025 results demonstrate that," said Darren Woods, ExxonMobil chairman and chief executive officer. "Our transformation is delivering a more resilient, lower-cost, technology-led business with structurally stronger earnings power, grounded in advantaged assets, disciplined capital allocation, and execution excellence."

"We're capturing more value from every barrel and molecule we produce and building growth platforms at scale - creating a long runway of profitable growth through 2030 and beyond."

"That growth is underpinned by disciplined capital allocation and an industry-leading balance sheet that gives us unmatched flexibility to invest through the cycle and consistently deliver industry-leading returns."

1 Earnings, earnings per share, earnings excluding identified items per share, earnings per share excluding identified items CAGR, and cash flow from operations compare IOCs' reported results or FactSet consensus as of January 28, 2026. Shareholder distributions compare IOCs' reported results or Bloomberg consensus as of January 28, 2026. IOCs' structural cost savings reflect reported cost savings from public filings.

2 Earnings per share (EPS) figures assume dilution.

3 Highest full-year global refining throughput, on a same-site basis, since the merger of Exxon and Mobil.

4 All key projects have successfully commenced start-up, including mechanical completion.

5 Earnings refers to full-year 2026 and are adjusted to 2024 $65/bbl real Brent (assumes annual inflation of 2.5%) and 10-year average Energy, Chemical, and Specialty Product margins, which refer to the average of annual margins from 2010-2019.

6 Based on 4Q 2025 preliminary data. ExxonMobil’s plans regarding GHG emissions reductions by 2030 can be found in our 2025 Advancing Climate Solutions report. Methane intensity reductions plans are expected to be achieved by the end of 2026.

Full-year Earnings Driver Analysis

chart-bfc6b5a0806b472c81f.jpg

YE24 Cash (U.S. GAAP) to YE25 Cash Flow

chart-63f9347c7d5f4059b47.jpg

Financial Highlights

•Full-year earnings totaled $28.8 billion compared to $33.7 billion in 2024. Earnings excluding identified items from impairments, restructuring charges, asset sales, and tax-related items were $30.1 billion versus $33.5 billion in 2024. Weaker crude prices and chemical margins, higher depreciation, growth-related costs, and lower interest income decreased earnings. These impacts were partially offset by advantaged volume growth, structural cost savings, higher industry refining margins, and favorable timing effects.

•Since 2019, the company has achieved $15.1 billion in cumulative Structural Cost Savings, exceeding all other IOCs combined, including $3.0 billion in 2025. Structural Cost Savings are expected to reach $20 billion by 2030.

•Return on capital employed was 9.3% for the year and has averaged ~11% since 2019, leading the IOCs.1

•The company generated strong full-year cash flow from operations of $52.0 billion, with a ~10% CAGR since 2019 — both leading IOCs, and free cash flow of $26.1 billion. The company also delivered industry-leading total annualized shareholder returns of ~29% over the past five years.1

•Shareholder distributions of $37.2 billion included $17.2 billion of dividends, the second highest among S&P 500 companies2, and $20.0 billion of share repurchases. ExxonMobil plans to repurchase $20 billion of shares through 2026, assuming reasonable market conditions.

•The Corporation declared a first-quarter dividend of $1.03 per share, payable on March 10, 2026, to shareholders of record of Common Stock at the close of business on February 12, 2026. The company increased its fourth-quarter dividend by 4% and has grown its annual dividend-per-share for 43 consecutive years.

•The company's industry-leading debt-to-capital and net-debt-to-capital ratio were 14.0% and 11.0%, respectively, with a period-end cash balance of $10.7 billion.3

•Cash capital expenditures totaled $29.0 billion, including $2.6 billion of acquisitions; $28.4 billion was for additions to property, plant, and equipment. The company expects cash capital expenditures of $27-$29 billion in 2026.4

1 ROCE for ExxonMobil is 2025 full-year. ROCE for IOCs' reported results and estimated using available year-to-date third-quarter annualized figures. Cash flow from operations compare IOCs' reported results or estimated using FactSet consensus as of January 28, 2026. Total shareholder return compares to each IOC as of December 31, 2025.

2 Dividend payments based on publicly available filings.

3 Net debt is total debt of $43.5 billion less $10.7 billion of cash and cash equivalents excluding restricted cash. Net-debt to-capital ratio is net debt divided by the sum of net debt and total equity of $266.6 billion. Period-end cash balance includes cash and cash equivalents including restricted cash. Net debt-to-capital and debt-to-capital are estimated using Bloomberg consensus as of January 28, 2026.

4 The investment range for 2026 excludes advances and collections not related to capital expenditures or equity investments, for example, supply and marketing related advances and associated collections.

EARNINGS AND VOLUME SUMMARY BY SEGMENT
Upstream
--- --- ---
4Q25 3Q25 Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) 2025 2024
Earnings/(Loss) (U.S. GAAP)
753 1,228 United States 5,063 6,426
2,764 4,451 Non-U.S. 16,291 18,964
3,517 5,679 Worldwide 21,354 25,390
Earnings/(Loss) Excluding Identified Items (non-GAAP)
1,224 1,228 United States 5,534 6,786
3,186 4,451 Non-U.S. 16,713 18,389
4,410 5,679 Worldwide 22,247 25,175
4,988 4,769 Production (koebd) 4,736 4,333

•Upstream full-year earnings were $21.4 billion versus $25.4 billion in 2024. Identified items in 2025, primarily impairments, decreased earnings by $1.1 billion versus 2024. Excluding identified items, earnings decreased $2.9 billion from weaker crude realizations, lower base volumes from divestments, and higher depreciation, partially offset by advantaged volume growth in the Permian and Guyana, structural cost savings, and derivative mark-to-market timing effects.

•Fourth-quarter earnings were $3.5 billion, a decrease of $2.2 billion from the third quarter. Weaker crude realizations, identified items mainly from impairments, and seasonally higher expenses were partially offset by advantaged volumes growth in Guyana and the Permian, and structural cost savings.

•Full-year net production reached its highest level in more than 40 years at 4.7 million oil-equivalent barrels per day. Production from the Permian, at 1.6 million oil-equivalent barrels per day, and Guyana, which exceeded 700,000 gross barrels per day, achieved annual records. Advantaged assets in the Permian, Guyana, and LNG represented 59% of production in 2025, an increase of approximately 7 percentage points from 2024.

•Net production in the fourth quarter reached 5.0 million oil-equivalent barrels per day, with advantaged assets setting new quarterly production records, including 1.8 million oil-equivalent barrels per day in the Permian and Guyana approaching 875,000 gross barrels per day.

•The company advanced three major developments this year: Yellowtail, the fourth and largest Guyana development, started up four months ahead of schedule in the third quarter and under budget; Bacalhau, the company's first offshore Brazil development, started up in the fourth quarter; and Golden Pass LNG, where Train 1 achieved mechanical completion late in the year, with first cargoes expected in the first quarter.

Energy Products
4Q25 3Q25 Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) 2025 2024
Earnings/(Loss) (U.S. GAAP)
1,012 858 United States 2,992 2,099
2,378 982 Non-U.S. 4,431 1,934
3,390 1,840 Worldwide 7,423 4,033
Earnings/(Loss) Excluding Identified Items (non-GAAP)
1,130 858 United States 3,110 2,133
1,777 982 Non-U.S. 3,830 1,821
2,907 1,840 Worldwide 6,940 3,954
5,804 5,692 Energy Products Sales (kbd) 5,593 5,418

•Energy Products full-year 2025 earnings were $7.4 billion, an increase of $3.4 billion compared to last year. Higher earnings were driven by stronger industry refining margins, structural cost savings, net favorable identified items mainly from asset sales, and record refinery throughput.1 The record throughput was supported by lower scheduled maintenance and growth from advantaged projects. Higher expenses related to growth projects partially offset the increase in earnings.

•Fourth-quarter earnings totaled $3.4 billion, an increase of more than 80%, or $1.6 billion, compared with the third quarter. The earnings improvement was driven by higher industry refining margins from stronger diesel and gasoline crack spreads, identified items mainly from asset sales, favorable year-end inventory effects, record North America refinery throughput1 and volume growth from advantaged projects, and favorable timing effects. Improvements to earnings were partially offset by higher seasonal expenses, identified items related to impairments, and growth-related project costs.

•Advantaged projects progressed during the year, delivering volume and mix uplift, including the start-up of the Strathcona renewable diesel facility, Singapore Resid Upgrade, which converts lower-value fuel oil to higher-value distillates, and Fawley Hydrofiner, which converts lower-value distillates to higher-value diesel for the UK market.

Chemical Products
4Q25 3Q25 Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) 2025 2024
Earnings/(Loss) (U.S. GAAP)
64 329 United States 903 1,627
(345) 186 Non-U.S. (103) 950
(281) 515 Worldwide 800 2,577
Earnings/(Loss) Excluding Identified Items (non-GAAP)
144 329 United States 983 1,670
(155) 186 Non-U.S. 87 1,002
(11) 515 Worldwide 1,070 2,672
5,743 5,520 Chemical Products Sales (kt) 21,303 19,392

•Chemical Products full-year earnings were $800 million, a decrease of $1.8 billion versus 2024. Results reflected weaker industry margins, impairment-related identified items, and higher spend, including the China Chemical Complex ramp-up, partially offset by additional structural cost savings, and record high-value product sales.2

•Fourth-quarter earnings decreased $796 million versus the third quarter to a loss of $281 million or $11 million excluding identified items. Lower margins, impairment-related identified items, and higher seasonal spend were partially offset by net favorable tax impacts.

•The company expanded higher-value capacity throughout the year, bringing online additional performance chemicals at the wholly-owned, world-scale China Chemical Complex, and starting up two advanced recycling facilities, increasing plastic waste processing capacity to more than 250 million pounds per year.

1 Highest annual global refining throughput on a same-site basis and highest quarterly North America throughput since the merger of Exxon and Mobil.

2 Based on comparing year-to-date and quarterly high-value product sales since 2019.

Specialty Products
4Q25 3Q25 Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) 2025 2024
Earnings/(Loss) (U.S. GAAP)
233 354 United States 1,200 1,576
449 386 Non-U.S. 1,657 1,476
682 740 Worldwide 2,857 3,052
Earnings/(Loss) Excluding Identified Items (non-GAAP)
221 354 United States 1,188 1,580
461 386 Non-U.S. 1,669 1,485
682 740 Worldwide 2,857 3,065
1,919 1,932 Specialty Products Sales (kt) 7,791 7,666

•Specialty Products delivered strong earnings from its portfolio of high-value products. Full-year earnings were $2.9 billion, a decrease of $195 million compared to last year. Higher expenses, including spending to develop markets for carbon materials and ProxximaTM resins, and unfavorable foreign exchange were partially offset by record high-value product sales volumes1 and structural cost savings.

•Fourth-quarter earnings of $682 million were down $58 million from the prior quarter. Higher seasonal expenses were partially offset by higher margins from lower feed costs.

•The company expanded advantaged capacity in 2025, highlighted by start-up of the Singapore Resid Upgrade which employs new-to-the-world technology to convert low-value molecules into high-value lubricant products. The company also more than tripled production capacity of its ProxximaTM resins, with applications expanding across rebar, coatings, automotive, and oil and gas.

Corporate and Financing
4Q25 3Q25 Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) 2025 2024
(807) (1,226) Earnings/(Loss) (U.S. GAAP) (3,590) (1,372)
(732) (716) Earnings/(Loss) Excluding Identified Items (non-GAAP) (3,005) (1,402)

•Corporate and Financing full-year net charges were $3.6 billion compared to $1.4 billion in the prior year. Excluding identified items related to restructuring charges, year-to-date net charges of $3.0 billion increased $1.6 billion compared to last year due to lower interest income, unfavorable foreign exchange, and increased pension-related expenses.

•Fourth-quarter net charges of $807 million decreased $419 million versus the third quarter. Excluding identified items related to restructuring charges, net charges were $732 million, which were comparable to the third quarter.

1 Based on comparing year-to-date and quarterly high-value product sales since 2019.

CASH FLOW FROM OPERATIONS AND ASSET SALES EXCLUDING<br><br>WORKING CAPITAL
4Q25 3Q25 Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) 2025 2024
6,609 7,768 Net income/(loss) including noncontrolling interests 29,764 35,063
7,715 6,475 Depreciation and depletion (includes impairments) 25,993 23,442
(2,728) (152) Changes in operational working capital, excluding cash and debt (7,728) (1,826)
1,083 697 Other 3,941 (1,657)
12,679 14,788 Cash Flow from Operating Activities (U.S. GAAP) 51,970 55,022
1,020 139 Proceeds from asset sales and returns of investments 3,158 4,987
13,699 14,927 Cash Flow from Operations and Asset Sales (non-GAAP) 55,128 60,009
2,728 152 Less: Changes in operational working capital, excluding cash and debt 7,728 1,826
16,427 15,079 Cash Flow from Operations and Asset Sales excluding Working Capital (non-GAAP) 62,856 61,835
(1,020) (139) Less: Proceeds from asset sales and returns of investments (3,158) (4,987)
15,407 14,940 Cash Flow from Operations excluding Working Capital (non-GAAP) 59,698 56,848
FREE CASH FLOW
--- --- --- --- ---
4Q25 3Q25 Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) 2025 2024
12,679 14,788 Cash Flow from Operating Activities (U.S. GAAP) 51,970 55,022
(7,450) (8,727) Additions to property, plant, and equipment (28,358) (24,306)
(3,160) (501) Additional investments and advances (4,133) (3,299)
2,457 610 Other investing activities including collection of advances 3,406 1,926
1,020 139 Proceeds from asset sales and returns of investments 3,158 4,987
20 23 Inflows from noncontrolling interest for major projects 88 32
5,566 6,332 Free Cash Flow (non-GAAP) 26,131 34,362
RETURN ON AVERAGE CAPITAL EMPLOYED
--- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) 2025 2024 2023 2022 2021 2020
Net income/(loss) attributable to ExxonMobil (U.S. GAAP) 28,844 33,680 36,010 55,740 23,040 (22,440)
Financing costs (after-tax)
Gross third-party debt (1,360) (1,106) (1,175) (1,213) (1,196) (1,272)
ExxonMobil share of equity companies (165) (196) (307) (198) (170) (182)
All other financing costs – net 2,072 (252) 931 276 11 666
Total financing costs 547 (1,554) (551) (1,135) (1,355) (788)
Earnings/(loss) excluding financing costs (non-GAAP) 28,297 35,234 36,561 56,875 24,395 (21,652)
Total assets (U.S. GAAP) 448,980 453,475 376,317 369,067 338,923 332,750
Less liabilities and noncontrolling interests share of assets and liabilities
Total current liabilities excluding notes and loans payable (63,034) (65,352) (61,226) (68,411) (52,367) (35,905)
Total long-term liabilities excluding long-term debt (75,783) (75,807) (60,980) (56,990) (63,169) (65,075)
Noncontrolling interests share of assets and liabilities (8,895) (8,069) (8,878) (9,205) (8,746) (8,773)
Add ExxonMobil share of debt-financed equity company net assets 2,793 3,242 3,481 3,705 4,001 4,140
Total capital employed (non-GAAP) 304,061 307,489 248,714 238,166 218,642 227,137
Average capital employed (non-GAAP) 305,775 278,102 243,440 228,404 222,890 234,031
Return on average capital employed – corporate total (non-GAAP) 9.3% 12.7% 15.0% 24.9% 10.9% (9.3)%
Average since 2019: Return on average capital employed (non-GAAP) 10.6%
CASH CAPITAL EXPENDITURES
--- --- ---
4Q25 3Q25 Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) 2025 2024
7,450 8,727 Additions to property, plant, and equipment 28,358 24,306
3,160 501 Additional investments and advances 4,133 3,299
(2,457) (610) Other investing activities including collection of advances (3,406) (1,926)
(20) (23) Inflows from noncontrolling interests for major projects (88) (32)
8,133 8,595 Total Cash Capital Expenditures (non-GAAP) 28,997 25,647
4Q25 3Q25 Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) 2025 2024
Upstream
3,674 5,843 United States 15,907 11,276
2,709 1,771 Non-U.S. 8,752 8,985
6,383 7,614 Total 24,659 20,261
Energy Products
289 182 United States 752 705
436 260 Non-U.S. 955 1,513
725 442 Total 1,707 2,218
Chemical Products
338 180 United States 843 671
212 95 Non-U.S. 552 1,212
550 275 Total 1,395 1,883
Specialty Products
221 65 United States 381 145
86 44 Non-U.S. 242 263
307 109 Total 623 408
Other
168 155 Other 613 877
8,133 8,595 Worldwide 28,997 25,647
CALCULATION OF STRUCTURAL COST SAVINGS
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Dollars in billions (unless otherwise noted) 2019 2025
Components of Operating Costs
From ExxonMobil’s Consolidated Statement of Income<br>(U.S. GAAP)
Production and manufacturing expenses 36.8 42.4
Selling, general and administrative expenses 11.4 11.1
Depreciation and depletion (includes impairments) 19.0 26.0
Exploration expenses, including dry holes 1.3 1.0
Non-service pension and postretirement benefit expense 1.2 0.4
Subtotal 69.7 81.0
ExxonMobil’s share of equity company expenses (non-GAAP) 9.1 10.6
Total Adjusted Operating Costs (non-GAAP) 78.8 91.6
Total Adjusted Operating Costs (non-GAAP) 78.8 91.6
Less:
Depreciation and depletion (includes impairments) 19.0 26.0
Non-service pension and postretirement benefit expense 1.2 0.4
Other adjustments (includes equity company depreciation <br>and depletion) 3.6 6.2
Total Cash Operating Expenses (Cash Opex) (non-GAAP) 55.0 59.0
Energy and production taxes (non-GAAP) 11.0 14.9
Market Activity/ Other Structural Cost Savings
Total Cash Operating Expenses (Cash Opex) excluding Energy and Production Taxes (non-GAAP) 44.0 +4.9 +10.3 -15.1 44.1

This press release references Structural Cost Savings, which describes decreases in cash opex excluding energy and production taxes as a result of operational efficiencies, workforce reductions, divestment-related reductions, and other cost-saving measures, that are expected to be sustainable compared to 2019 levels. Relative to 2019, estimated cumulative Structural Cost Savings totaled $15.1 billion which included an additional $3.0 billion in 2025. The total change between periods in expenses above will reflect both Structural Cost Savings and other changes in spend, including market drivers, such as inflation and foreign exchange impacts, as well as changes in activity levels and costs associated with new operations, mergers and acquisitions, new business venture development, and early-stage projects. Structural Cost Savings from new operations, mergers and acquisitions, and new business venture developments are included in the cumulative Structural Cost Savings. Estimates of cumulative annual Structural Cost Savings may be revised depending on whether cost reductions realized in prior periods are determined to be sustainable compared to 2019 levels. Structural Cost Savings are stewarded internally to support management's oversight of spending over time. This measure is useful for investors to understand the Corporation's efforts to optimize spending through disciplined expense management.

ExxonMobil will discuss financial and operating results and other matters during a webcast at 8:30 a.m. Central Time on January 30, 2026. To listen to the event or access an archived replay, please visit www.exxonmobil.com. On February 2, 2026, ExxonMobil plans to publish a new Individual Investors webpage. This will be available at www.investor.exxonmobil.com. On February 20, 2026, ExxonMobil plans to publish an update to its Company Overview and Investment Case presentation. Updated materials will be available at www.investor.exxonmobil.com/news-events/investor-presentation.

Selected Earnings Driver Definitions

Advantaged volume growth. Represents earnings impact from change in volume/mix from advantaged assets, advantaged projects, and high-value products. See frequently used terms on page 12 for definitions of advantaged assets, advantaged projects, and high-value products.

Base volume. Represents and includes all volume/mix drivers not included in advantaged volume growth driver defined above.

Structural cost savings. Represents after-tax earnings effect of Structural Cost Savings as defined on page 9, including cash operating expenses related to divestments.

Expenses. Represents and includes all expenses otherwise not included in other earnings drivers.

Timing effects. Represents timing effects that are primarily related to unsettled derivatives (mark-to-market) and other earnings impacts driven by timing differences between the settlement of derivatives and their offsetting physical commodity realizations (due to LIFO inventory accounting).

Cautionary Statement

Statements related to future events; projections; descriptions of strategic, operating, and financial plans and objectives; statements of future ambitions, future earnings power, potential addressable markets, or plans; and other statements of future events or conditions in this release are forward-looking statements. Similarly, discussion of future carbon capture, transportation and storage, as well as lower-emission fuels, hydrogen, ammonia, lithium, direct air capture, ProxximaTM resins, carbon materials, low-carbon data centers, and other low carbon and new business plans to reduce emissions of ExxonMobil, its affiliates, and third parties, are dependent on future market factors, such as continued technological progress, stable policy support and timely rule-making and permitting, and represent forward-looking statements. Actual future results, including financial and operating performance; potential earnings, cash flow, or rate of return; total capital expenditures and mix, including allocations of capital to low carbon and other new investments; realization and maintenance of structural cost reductions and efficiency gains, including the ability to offset inflationary pressure; plans to reduce future emissions and emissions intensity; ambitions to reach Scope 1 and Scope 2 net zero from operated assets by 2050, to reach Scope 1 and 2 net zero in heritage Permian Basin unconventional operated assets by 2030 and in Pioneer Permian assets by 2035, to eliminate routine flaring in-line with World Bank Zero Routine Flaring, to reach near-zero methane emissions from its operated assets and other methane initiatives, and to meet ExxonMobil’s emission reduction goals and plans, divestment and start-up plans, and associated project plans as well as technology advances, including the timing and outcome of projects to capture, transport, and store CO2, produce hydrogen and ammonia, produce lower-emission fuels, produce lithium, produce ProxximaTM resins, create new advanced carbon materials, and use plastic waste as feedstock for advanced recycling; cash flow, dividends and shareholder returns, including the timing and amounts of share repurchases; future debt levels and credit ratings; business and project plans, timing, costs, capacities and returns; resource recoveries and production rates; and planned Pioneer and Denbury integrated benefits, could differ materially due to a number of factors. These include global or regional changes or imbalances in the supply and demand for oil, natural gas, petrochemicals, and feedstocks and other market factors, economic conditions and seasonal fluctuations that impact prices, differentials, and volume/mix for our products; changes in any part of the world in laws, taxes, or regulations including extraterritorial environmental and tax regulations, trade sanctions, and timely granting of governmental permits, licenses, and certifications; developments or changes in government policies supporting lower carbon and new market investment opportunities or policies limiting the attractiveness of future investment such as the additional European taxes on the energy sector and unequal support for different methods of emissions reduction; variable impacts of trading activities on our margins and results each quarter; changes in interest and exchange rates; actions of co-venturers or partners, competitors and commercial counterparties, including suppliers and customers; the outcome of commercial negotiations, including final agreed terms and conditions; the ability to access debt markets; the ultimate impacts of public health crises, including the effects of government responses on people and economies; reservoir performance and optimization, including variability and timing factors applicable to unconventional resources, the success of new unconventional technologies, and the ability of new technologies to improve the recovery relative to competitors; the level and outcome of exploration projects and decisions to invest in future reserves; timely completion of development and other construction projects and commencement of start-up operations, including reliance on third-party suppliers and service providers; final management approval of future projects and any changes in the scope, terms, or costs of such projects as approved; government regulation of our growth opportunities; or government actions in pursuit of national energy and security policies or priorities affecting our business; war, civil unrest, armed hostilities, attacks against the company or industry and other political or security disturbances, including disruption of land or sea transportation routes or distribution or shipping channels; expropriations, seizures, or capacity, insurance, export, import or shipping limitations imposed directly or indirectly by governments or laws; changes in market, national or regional tariffs or disruption, realignment or breaking of current or historical trade or military alliances or global trade and supply chain networks; opportunities for potential acquisitions, investments or divestments and satisfaction of applicable conditions to closing, including timely regulatory approvals; the capture of efficiencies within and between business

lines and the ability to maintain near-term cost reductions as ongoing efficiencies without impairing our competitive positioning; unforeseen technical or operating disruptions or difficulties and unplanned maintenance; the development and competitiveness of alternative energy and emission reduction technologies; the results of research programs and the ability to bring new technologies to commercial scale on a cost-competitive basis; and other factors discussed under Item 1A. Risk Factors of ExxonMobil’s 2024 Form 10-K.

Actions needed to advance ExxonMobil’s 2030 greenhouse gas emission-reductions plans are incorporated into its medium-term business plans, which are updated annually. The reference case for planning beyond 2030 is based on ExxonMobil’s Global Outlook (Outlook) research and publication. The Outlook is reflective of the existing global policy environment and an assumption of increasing policy stringency and technology improvement to 2050. Current trends for policy stringency and deployment of lower-emission solutions are not yet on a pathway to achieve net-zero by 2050. As such, the Outlook does not project the degree of required future policy and technology advancement and deployment for the world, or ExxonMobil, to meet net zero by 2050. As future policies and technology advancements emerge, they will be incorporated into the Outlook, and ExxonMobil's business plans will be updated accordingly. References to projects or opportunities may not reflect investment decisions made by ExxonMobil or its affiliates. Individual projects or opportunities may advance based on a number of factors, including availability of stable and supportive policy, permitting, technological advancement for cost-effective abatement, insights from the company planning process, and alignment with our partners and other stakeholders. Capital investment guidance in lower-emission investments is based on our corporate plan; however, actual investment levels will be subject to the availability of the opportunity set and public policy support, and focused on returns.

Frequently Used Terms and Non-GAAP Measures

This press release includes cash flow from operations and asset sales (non-GAAP). Because of the regular nature of our asset management and divestment program, the company believes it is useful for investors to consider proceeds associated with the sales of subsidiaries, property, plant and equipment, and sales and returns of investments together with cash provided by operating activities when evaluating cash available for investment in the business and financing activities. A reconciliation to net cash provided by operating activities for the 2024 and 2025 periods is shown on page 6.

This press release also includes cash flow from operations excluding working capital (non-GAAP), and cash flow from operations and asset sales excluding working capital (non-GAAP). The company believes it is useful for investors to consider these numbers in comparing the underlying performance of the company's business across periods when there are significant period-to-period differences in the amount of changes in working capital. A reconciliation to net cash provided by operating activities for the 2024 and 2025 periods is shown on page 6.

This press release also includes Earnings/(Loss) Excluding Identified Items (non-GAAP) and Earnings/(Loss) Excluding Identified Items Per Common Share (non-GAAP), which are earnings/(loss) excluding individually significant non-operational events with, typically, an absolute corporate total earnings impact of at least $250 million in a given quarter. The earnings/(loss) impact of an identified item for an individual segment may be less than $250 million when the item impacts several periods or several segments. Earnings/(loss) excluding Identified Items does include non-operational earnings events or impacts that are generally below the $250 million threshold utilized for identified items. When the effect of these events is significant in aggregate, it is indicated in analysis of period results as part of quarterly earnings press release and teleconference materials. Management uses these figures to improve comparability of the underlying business across multiple periods by isolating and removing significant non-operational events from business results. The Corporation believes this view provides investors increased transparency into business results and trends and provides investors with a view of the business as seen through the eyes of management. Earnings excluding Identified Items is not meant to be viewed in isolation or as a substitute for net income/(loss) attributable to ExxonMobil as prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP. A reconciliation to each of corporate earnings and segment earnings are shown for 2025 and 2024 periods in Attachments II-a and II-b. Earnings per share amounts are shown on page 1 and in Attachment II-a, including a reconciliation to earnings/(loss) per common share – assuming dilution (U.S. GAAP).

This press release also includes total taxes including sales-based taxes. This is a broader indicator of the total tax burden on the Corporation’s products and earnings, including certain sales and value-added taxes imposed on and concurrent with revenue-producing transactions with customers and collected on behalf of governmental authorities (“sales-based taxes”). It combines “Income taxes” and “Total other taxes and duties” with sales-based taxes, which are reported net in the income statement. The company believes it is useful for the Corporation and its investors to understand the total tax burden imposed on the Corporation’s products and earnings. A reconciliation to total taxes is shown in Attachment I-a.

This press release also references free cash flow (non-GAAP). Free cash flow is the sum of net cash provided by operating activities, net cash flow used in investing activities excluding cash acquired from mergers and acquisitions, and inflows from noncontrolling interests for major projects from financing activities. This measure is useful when evaluating cash available for financing activities, including shareholder distributions, after investment in the business. Free cash flow is not meant to be viewed in isolation or as a substitute for net cash provided by operating activities. A reconciliation to net cash provided by operating activities for the 2024 and 2025 periods is shown on page 6.

This press release also references total cash capital expenditures (non-GAAP). Cash capital expenditures are the sum of additions to property, plant and equipment; additional investments and advances; and other investing activities including collection of advances; reduced by inflows from noncontrolling interests for major projects, each from the Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows. The company believes it is a useful measure for investors to understand the cash impact of investments in the business, which is in line with standard industry practice. A breakdown of cash capex is shown on page 8.

References to resources or resource base may include quantities of oil and natural gas classified as proved reserves, as well as quantities that are not yet classified as proved reserves, but that are expected to be ultimately recoverable. The term “resource base” or similar terms are not intended to correspond to SEC definitions such as “probable” or “possible” reserves. A reconciliation of production excluding divestments, entitlements, and government mandates to actual production is contained in the Supplement to this release included as Exhibit 99.2 to the Form 8-K filed the same day as this news release.

The term “project” as used in this news release can refer to a variety of different activities and does not necessarily have the same meaning as in any government payment transparency reports. Projects or plans may not reflect investment decisions made by the company. Individual opportunities may advance based on a number of factors, including availability of supportive policy, technology for cost-effective abatement, and alignment with our partners and other stakeholders. The company may refer to these opportunities as projects in external disclosures at various stages throughout their progression.

Advantaged assets (Advantaged growth projects) when used in reference to the Upstream business, includes Permian, Guyana, and LNG.

Advantaged projects refers to capital projects and programs of work that contribute to Energy, Chemical, and/or Specialty Products segments that drive integration of segments/businesses, increase yield of higher value products, or deliver higher than average returns.

Base portfolio (Base) in our Upstream segment, refers to assets (or volumes) other than advantaged assets (or volumes from advantaged assets). In our Energy Products segment, refers to assets (or volumes) other than advantaged projects (or volumes from advantaged projects). In our Chemical Products and Specialty Products segments, refers to volumes other than high-value products volumes.

Compound annual growth rate (CAGR) represents the consistent rate at which an investment or business result would have grown had the investment or business result compounded at the same rate each year.

Debt-to-capital ratio is total debt divided by the sum of total debt and equity. Total debt is the sum of notes and loans payable and long-term debt, as reported in the Consolidated Balance Sheet.

Government mandates (curtailments) are changes to ExxonMobil’s sustainable production levels as a result of production limits or sanctions imposed by governments.

High-value products include performance products and lower-emission fuels.

IOCs, unless stated otherwise, includes each of BP, Chevron, Shell and TotalEnergies.

Lower-emission fuels are fuels with lower life cycle emissions than conventional transportation fuels for gasoline, diesel and jet transport.

Net-debt-to-capital ratio is net debt divided by the sum of net debt and total equity, where net debt is total debt net of cash and cash equivalents, excluding restricted cash. Total debt is the sum of notes and loans payable and long-term debt, as reported in the consolidated balance sheet.

Performance products (performance chemicals, performance lubricants) refer to products that provide differentiated performance for multiple applications through enhanced properties versus commodity alternatives and bring significant additional value to customers and end-users.

Shareholder distributions are the Corporation's distributions of cash to shareholders in the form of both dividends and share purchases. Shares are acquired to reduce shares outstanding and to offset shares or units settled in shares issued in conjunction with company benefit plans and programs. For the purposes of calculating distributions to shareholders, the Corporation includes only the cost of those shares acquired to reduce shares outstanding.

Total shareholder return (TSR) is defined by FactSet and measures the change in value of an investment in common stock over a specified period of time, assuming dividend reinvestment. FactSet assumes dividends are reinvested in stock at market prices on the ex-dividend date. Unless stated otherwise, total shareholder return is quoted on an annualized basis.

This press release also references Structural Cost Savings, for more details see page 9.

Unless otherwise indicated, year-to-date (“YTD”) means as of the last business day of the most recent fiscal quarter.

Reference to Earnings

References to corporate earnings mean net income attributable to ExxonMobil (U.S. GAAP) from the consolidated income statement. Unless otherwise indicated, references to earnings, Upstream, Energy Products, Chemical Products, Specialty Products and Corporate and Financing earnings, and earnings per share are ExxonMobil’s share after excluding amounts attributable to noncontrolling interests.

Exxon Mobil Corporation has numerous affiliates, many with names that include ExxonMobil, Exxon, Mobil, Esso, and XTO. For convenience and simplicity, those terms and terms such as Corporation, company, our, we, and its are sometimes used as abbreviated references to specific affiliates or affiliate groups. Similarly, ExxonMobil has business relationships with thousands of customers, suppliers, governments, and others. For convenience and simplicity, words such as venture, joint venture, partnership, co-venturer, and partner are used to indicate business and other relationships involving common activities and interests, and those words may not indicate precise legal relationships. ExxonMobil's ambitions, plans and goals do not guarantee any action or future performance by its affiliates or Exxon Mobil Corporation's responsibility for those affiliates' actions and future performance, each affiliate of which manages its own affairs.

Throughout this press release, both Exhibit 99.1 as well as Exhibit 99.2, due to rounding, numbers presented may not add up precisely to the totals indicated.

f8k991001x0x0.gif ATTACHMENT I-a
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF INCOME
(Preliminary)
Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) Three Months Ended December 31, Twelve Months Ended December 31,
2025 2024 2025 2024
Revenues and other income
Sales and other operating revenue 80,039 81,058 323,905 339,247
Income from equity affiliates 966 1,127 5,064 6,194
Other income 1,303 1,241 3,269 4,144
Total revenues and other income 82,308 83,426 332,238 349,585
Costs and other deductions
Crude oil and product purchases 44,205 46,393 184,248 199,454
Production and manufacturing expenses 12,145 10,833 42,424 39,609
Selling, general and administrative expenses 3,028 2,617 11,128 9,976
Depreciation and depletion (includes impairments) 7,715 6,585 25,993 23,442
Exploration expenses, including dry holes 543 186 1,007 826
Non-service pension and postretirement benefit expense 78 31 400 121
Interest expense 163 297 603 996
Other taxes and duties 6,400 6,671 25,167 26,288
Total costs and other deductions 74,277 73,613 290,970 300,712
Income/(Loss) before income taxes 8,031 9,813 41,268 48,873
Income tax expense/(benefit) 1,422 1,858 11,504 13,810
Net income/(loss) including noncontrolling interests 6,609 7,955 29,764 35,063
Net income/(loss) attributable to noncontrolling interests 108 345 920 1,383
Net income/(loss) attributable to ExxonMobil 6,501 7,610 28,844 33,680
OTHER FINANCIAL DATA
Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) Three Months Ended December 31, Twelve Months Ended December 31,
2025 2024 2025 2024
Earnings per common share (U.S. dollars) 1.53 1.72 6.70 7.84
Earnings per common share - assuming dilution (U.S. dollars) 1.53 1.72 6.70 7.84
Dividends on common stock
Total 4,366 4,371 17,231 16,704
Per common share (U.S. dollars) 1.03 0.99 4.00 3.84
Millions of common shares outstanding
Average - assuming dilution 4,238 4,413 4,305 4,298
Taxes
Income taxes 1,422 1,858 11,504 13,810
Total other taxes and duties 7,341 7,594 28,930 29,894
Total taxes 8,763 9,452 40,434 43,704
Sales-based taxes 5,732 5,614 21,978 22,676
Total taxes including sales-based taxes 14,495 15,066 62,412 66,380
ExxonMobil share of income taxes of equity companies (non-GAAP) 386 610 2,046 3,197
f8k991001x0x0.gif ATTACHMENT I-b
--- --- ---
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
(Preliminary)
Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) December 31, 2025 December 31, 2024
ASSETS
Current assets
Cash and cash equivalents 10,681 23,029
Cash and cash equivalents – restricted 158
Notes and accounts receivable – net 44,562 43,681
Inventories
Crude oil, products and merchandise 22,979 19,444
Materials and supplies 3,323 4,080
Other current assets 1,837 1,598
Total current assets 83,382 91,990
Investments, advances and long-term receivables 45,317 47,200
Property, plant, and equipment – net 299,373 294,318
Other assets, including intangibles – net 20,908 19,967
Total Assets 448,980 453,475
LIABILITIES
Current liabilities
Notes and loans payable 9,296 4,955
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities 60,911 61,297
Income taxes payable 2,123 4,055
Total current liabilities 72,330 70,307
Long-term debt 34,241 36,755
Postretirement benefits reserves 8,847 9,700
Deferred income tax liabilities 40,216 39,042
Long-term obligations to equity companies 542 1,346
Other long-term obligations 26,178 25,719
Total Liabilities 182,354 182,869
EQUITY
Common stock without par value
(9,000 million shares authorized, 8,019 million shares issued) 46,150 46,238
Earnings reinvested 482,494 470,903
Accumulated other comprehensive income (10,863) (14,619)
Common stock held in treasury
(3,840 million shares at December 31, 2025, and 3,666 million shares at December 31, 2024) (258,395) (238,817)
ExxonMobil share of equity 259,386 263,705
Noncontrolling interests 7,240 6,901
Total Equity 266,626 270,606
Total Liabilities and Equity 448,980 453,475
f8k991001x0x0.gif ATTACHMENT I-c
--- --- --- --- ---
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
(Preliminary)
Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) Twelve Months Ended December 31,
2025 2024
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Net income/(loss) including noncontrolling interests 29,764 35,063
Depreciation and depletion (includes impairments) 25,993 23,442
Changes in operational working capital, excluding cash and debt (7,728) (1,826)
All other items – net 3,941 (1,657)
Net cash provided by operating activities 51,970 55,022
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
Additions to property, plant, and equipment (28,358) (24,306)
Proceeds from asset sales and returns of investments 3,158 4,987
Additional investments and advances (4,133) (3,299)
Other investing activities including collection of advances 3,406 1,926
Cash acquired from mergers and acquisitions 754
Net cash used in investing activities (25,927) (19,938)
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES
Additions to long-term debt 2,311 899
Reductions in long-term debt (1,108) (1,150)
Additions to short-term debt 2,359
Reductions in short-term debt (5,404) (4,743)
Additions/(reductions) in commercial paper, and debt with three months or less maturity 1,895 (18)
Contingent consideration payments (79) (27)
Cash dividends to ExxonMobil shareholders (17,231) (16,704)
Cash dividends to noncontrolling interests (935) (658)
Changes in noncontrolling interests (704) (791)
Inflows from noncontrolling interests for major projects 88 32
Common stock acquired (20,273) (19,629)
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities (39,081) (42,789)
Effects of exchange rate changes on cash 532 (676)
Increase/(Decrease) in cash and cash equivalents (including restricted) (12,506) (8,381)
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period (including restricted) 23,187 31,568
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period (including restricted) 10,681 23,187
ATTACHMENT II-a
--- --- --- --- ---
KEY FIGURES: IDENTIFIED ITEMS
4Q25 Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) 2025 2024 2019
6,501 Earnings/(Loss) (U.S. GAAP) 28,844 33,680 14,340
Identified Items
(1,700) Impairments ¹ (1,855) (608)
720 Gain/(Loss) on sale of assets 720 415 3,655
288 Tax-related items 288 409 1,080
(64) Restructuring charges (419)
(755) Total Identified Items (1,265) 216 4,735
7,256 Earnings/(Loss) Excluding Identified Items (non-GAAP) 30,109 33,464 9,605
Earnings/(Loss) Excluding Identified Items CAGR vs. 2019 (non-GAAP) 21%
¹ Includes charge of 640 million associated with the optimization of materials and supply inventory. Materials and supplies impacts are included in production and manufacturing expenses on the Consolidated Statement of Income.
4Q25 Dollars per common share 2025 2024 2019
1.53 Earnings/(Loss) Per Common Share (U.S. GAAP) ¹ 6.70 7.84 3.36
Identified Items Per Common Share ¹
(0.40) Impairments ² (0.43) (0.14)
0.17 Gain/(Loss) on sale of assets 0.17 0.10 0.86
0.07 Tax-related items 0.07 0.09 0.25
(0.02) Restructuring charges (0.10)
(0.18) Total Identified Items Per Common Share ¹ (0.29) 0.05 1.11
1.71 Earnings/(Loss) Excluding Identified Items Per Common Share (non-GAAP) ¹ 6.99 7.79 2.25
Earnings/(Loss) Excluding Identified Items Per Common Share CAGR vs. 2019 (non-GAAP) ¹ 21%
¹ Assuming dilution.
2 Includes charge of 640 million associated with the optimization of materials and supply inventory. Materials and supplies impacts are included in production and manufacturing expenses on the Consolidated Statement of Income.

All values are in US Dollars.

ATTACHMENT II-b
KEY FIGURES: IDENTIFIED ITEMS BY SEGMENT
Fourth Quarter 2025 Energy Products Chemical Products Specialty Products Corporate & Financing Total
Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) Non-U.S. U.S. Non-U.S. U.S. Non-U.S. U.S. Non-U.S.
Earnings/(Loss) (U.S. GAAP) 2,764 1,012 2,378 64 (345) 233 449 (807) 6,501
Identified Items
Impairments ¹ (422) (153) (113) (130) (190) (18) (12) (1,700)
Gain/(Loss) on sale of assets 720 720
Tax-related items 34 (6) 50 30 (11) 288
Restructuring charges (64) (64)
Total Identified Items (422) (118) 601 (80) (190) 12 (12) (75) (755)
Earnings/(Loss) Excl. Identified Items (non-GAAP) 3,186 1,130 1,777 144 (155) 221 461 (732) 7,256
1 Includes charge of 640 million associated with the optimization of materials and supply inventory. Materials and supplies impacts are included in production and manufacturing expenses on the Consolidated Statement of Income.

All values are in US Dollars.

Third Quarter 2025 Upstream Energy Products Chemical Products Specialty Products Corporate & Financing Total
Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) U.S. Non-U.S. U.S. Non-U.S. U.S. Non-U.S. U.S. Non-U.S.
Earnings/(Loss) (U.S. GAAP) 1,228 4,451 858 982 329 186 354 386 (1,226) 7,548
Identified Items
Impairments (155) (155)
Restructuring charges (355) (355)
Total Identified Items (510) (510)
Earnings/(Loss) Excl. Identified Items (non-GAAP) 1,228 4,451 858 982 329 186 354 386 (716) 8,058
2025 Energy Products Chemical Products Specialty Products Corporate & Financing Total
--- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) Non-U.S. U.S. Non-U.S. U.S. Non-U.S. U.S. Non-U.S.
Earnings/(Loss) (U.S. GAAP) 16,291 2,992 4,431 903 (103) 1,200 1,657 (3,590) 28,844
Identified Items
Impairments ¹ (422) (153) (113) (130) (190) (18) (12) (155) (1,855)
Gain/(Loss) on sale of assets 720 720
Tax-related items 34 (6) 50 30 (11) 288
Restructuring charges (419) (419)
Total Identified Items (422) (118) 601 (80) (190) 12 (12) (585) (1,265)
Earnings/(Loss) Excl. Identified Items (non-GAAP) 16,713 3,110 3,830 983 87 1,188 1,669 (3,005) 30,109
1 Includes charge of 640 million associated with the optimization of materials and supply inventory. Materials and supplies impacts are included in production and manufacturing expenses on the Consolidated Statement of Income.

All values are in US Dollars.

2024 Upstream Energy Products Chemical Products Specialty Products Corporate & Financing Total
Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) U.S. Non-U.S. U.S. Non-U.S. U.S. Non-U.S. U.S. Non-U.S.
Earnings/(Loss) (U.S. GAAP) 6,426 18,964 2,099 1,934 1,627 950 1,576 1,476 (1,372) 33,680
Identified Items
Impairments (360) (48) (34) (59) (43) (52) (4) (8) (608)
Gain/(Loss) on sale of assets 385 30 415
Tax-related items 238 172 (1) 409
Total Identified Items (360) 575 (34) 113 (43) (52) (4) (9) 30 216
Earnings/(Loss) Excl. Identified Items (non-GAAP) 6,786 18,389 2,133 1,821 1,670 1,002 1,580 1,485 (1,402) 33,464
f8k991001x0x0.gif ATTACHMENT III
--- --- --- --- ---
KEY FIGURES: UPSTREAM VOLUMES
4Q25 3Q25 Net production of crude oil, natural gas liquids, bitumen and synthetic oil, thousand barrels per day (kbd) 2025 2024
1,663 1,512 United States 1,522 1,248
919 863 Canada/Other Americas 835 784
3 3 Europe 3 3
148 145 Africa 142 209
774 830 Asia 800 713
24 27 Australia/Oceania 25 30
3,531 3,380 Worldwide 3,329 2,987
4Q25 3Q25 Net natural gas production available for sale, million cubic feet per day (mcfd) 2025 2024
3,435 3,440 United States 3,364 2,887
21 23 Canada/Other Americas 27 101
289 265 Europe 299 352
113 118 Africa 114 152
3,598 3,157 Asia 3,354 3,322
1,286 1,332 Australia/Oceania 1,283 1,264
8,743 8,334 Worldwide 8,442 8,078
4,988 4,769 Oil-equivalent production (koebd) ¹ 4,736 4,333
1 Natural gas is converted to an oil-equivalent basis at six million cubic feet per one thousand barrels.
f8k991001x0x0.gif ATTACHMENT IV
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KEY FIGURES: MANUFACTURING THROUGHPUT AND SALES
4Q25 3Q25 Refinery throughput, thousand barrels per day (kbd) 2025 2024
1,983 1,964 United States 1,927 1,865
408 425 Canada 402 399
1,000 1,055 Europe 1,002 1,039
480 471 Asia Pacific 460 432
189 191 Other 188 165
4,060 4,106 Worldwide 3,979 3,900
4Q25 3Q25 Energy Products sales, thousand barrels per day (kbd) 2025 2024
2,899 2,875 United States 2,852 2,722
2,905 2,817 Non-U.S. 2,740 2,696
5,804 5,692 Worldwide 5,593 5,418
2,369 2,331 Gasolines, naphthas 2,290 2,251
1,838 1,791 Heating oils, kerosene, diesel 1,791 1,769
386 395 Aviation fuels 383 355
233 241 Heavy fuels 220 200
978 934 Other energy products 910 844
5,804 5,692 Worldwide 5,593 5,418
4Q25 3Q25 Chemical Products sales, thousand metric tons (kt) 2025 2024
1,805 1,695 United States 6,977 7,038
3,938 3,825 Non-U.S. 14,326 12,354
5,743 5,520 Worldwide 21,303 19,392
4Q25 3Q25 Specialty Products sales, thousand metric tons (kt) 2025 2024
443 474 United States 1,894 1,922
1,476 1,458 Non-U.S. 5,897 5,745
1,919 1,932 Worldwide 7,791 7,666
f8k991001x0x0.gif ATTACHMENT V
--- --- --- --- ---
KEY FIGURES: EARNINGS/(LOSS)
Results Summary
4Q25 3Q25 Change<br>vs<br>3Q25 Dollars in millions (except per share data) 2025 2024 Change<br>vs<br>2024
6,501 7,548 -1,047 Earnings (U.S. GAAP) 28,844 33,680 -4,836
7,256 8,058 -802 Earnings Excluding Identified Items (non-GAAP) 30,109 33,464 -3,355
1.53 1.76 -0.23 Earnings Per Common Share ¹ 6.70 7.84 -1.14
1.71 1.88 -0.17 Earnings Excluding Identified Items Per Common Share (non-GAAP) ¹ 6.99 7.79 -0.80
¹ Assuming dilution.
3Q25 to 4Q25 Earnings Driver Analysis
---

chart-40a8d8e5e6d44330b0f.jpg

3Q25 to 4Q25 Cash Flow

chart-be1fcdf366b6417c80b.jpg

f8k991001x0x0.gif ATTACHMENT VI
KEY FIGURES: EARNINGS/(LOSS) BY QUARTER
Dollars in millions (unless otherwise noted) 2025 2024 2023 2022 2021
First Quarter 7,713 8,220 11,430 5,480 2,730
Second Quarter 7,082 9,240 7,880 17,850 4,690
Third Quarter 7,548 8,610 9,070 19,660 6,750
Fourth Quarter 6,501 7,610 7,630 12,750 8,870
Full Year 28,844 33,680 36,010 55,740 23,040
Dollars per common share¹ 2025 2024 2023 2022 2021
First Quarter 1.76 2.06 2.79 1.28 0.64
Second Quarter 1.64 2.14 1.94 4.21 1.10
Third Quarter 1.76 1.92 2.25 4.68 1.57
Fourth Quarter 1.53 1.72 1.91 3.09 2.08
Full Year 6.70 7.84 8.89 13.26 5.39
1 Computed using the average number of shares outstanding during each period; assuming dilution.

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f8k991001x0x015.gif EXHIBIT 99.2
To assist investors in assessing 4Q25 results, the following disclosures have been made available in the 8-K filing:
4Q25 INVESTOR RELATIONS DATA SUMMARY (PAGE 1 of 2) Effective Income Tax Rate 4Q25 3Q25 2Q25 1Q25
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Effective Income Tax Rate, % 21 % 32 % 34 % 34 %
Common Shares Outstanding, millions 4Q25 3Q25 2Q25 1Q25
At quarter end 4,179 4,217 4,263 4,310
Weighted-average - assuming dilution 4,238 4,285 4,331 4,372
Upstream Volume Driver Analysis, koebd 4Q25 vs 3Q25 2025 vs 2024
Prior Period 4,769 4,333
Entitlements - Net Interest 8 (33)
Entitlements - Price / Spend / Other 61 45
Government Mandates (1)
Divestments (13) (133)
Growth / Other 163 525
Current Period 4,988 4,736
Upstream Realization Data 4Q25 3Q25 2Q25 1Q25
United States
ExxonMobil
Crude ($/b) 58.57 63.56 62.58 69.41
Natural Gas ($/kcf) 1.75 2.36 2.41 3.38
Marker Benchmarks
WTI ($/b) 59.23 65.03 63.87 71.46
Henry Hub ($/mbtu) 3.55 3.07 3.44 3.65
Non-U.S.
ExxonMobil
Crude ($/b) 57.46 62.58 62.01 68.12
Natural Gas ($/kcf) 9.60 9.62 10.23 10.17
Marker Benchmarks
Brent ($/b) 63.69 69.07 67.82 75.66
TTF ($/mbtu) 10.77 11.75 12.40 14.64
The above numbers reflect ExxonMobil’s current estimate of volumes and realizations given data available as of the end of the fourth quarter of 2025. Volumes and realizations may be adjusted when full statements on joint venture operations are received from outside operators. ExxonMobil management assumes no duty to update these estimates.
Product Solutions Marker Benchmark Data 4Q25 3Q25 2Q25 1Q25
Energy Products
Indicative Refining Margin ($/b) 18.3 17.5 13.6 11.5
Chemical Products
North American Polyethylene ($/T) 759 812 821 879
Asia Pacific Polyethylene ($/T) 822 840 837 856
Asia Pacific LVN ($/T) 564 588 576 658
USGC Ethane ($/T) 196 171 178 202
The above markers reflect the average prices from the quarter. Indicative Refining Margin, NA PE, AP PE, AP LVN, and USGC Ethane from Platts, part of S&P Global Commodity Insights. NA PE, AP PE, AP LVN, and USGC Ethane historical prices were updated to reflect simple averages. Marker associated sensitivities developed for forward-looking analysis and in relation to full-year results. For any given period, the accuracy of the earnings sensitivity will be dependent on the price movements of individual types of crude oil, natural gas, or products, results of trading activities, project start-up timing, maintenance timing, taxes and other government take impacts, price adjustment lags in long-term gas contracts, and crude and gas production volumes. Accordingly, changes in benchmark prices only provide broad indicators of changes in the earnings experienced in any particular period. Refer to "Modeling Toolkit" tab on the Investor Relations page of our website at www.exxonmobil.com for more information.
f8k991001x0x015.gif EXHIBIT 99.2
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4Q25 INVESTOR RELATIONS DATA SUMMARY (PAGE 2 of 2)
Natural gas sales, mcfd ¹ 2025 2024 2023
United States 6,466 5,602 4,656
Canada/Other Americas 20 105 88
Europe 3,369 2,847 2,521
Africa 113 150 128
Asia/Middle East 4,113 3,735 3,497
Australia/ Oceania 1,021 1,043 1,119
Worldwide natural gas sales 15,102 13,483 12,009
1 Natural gas sales include 100 percent of the sales of ExxonMobil and majority-owned affiliates and ExxonMobil’s ownership of sales by companies owned 50 percent or less. Numbers include sales of gas purchased from third parties.
Refining capacity, and utilization ² 2025 2024 2023
Average refining capacity, kbd ³
United States 1,967 1,964 1,940
Canada 434 434 433
Europe 1,076 1,196 1,315
Asia Pacific 659 659 770
Other 200 200 200
Worldwide average refining capacity 4,336 4,453 4,658
Utilization of refining capacity, %
United States 98 95 95
Canada 93 92 94
Europe 93 87 89
Asia Pacific 70 65 65
Other 94 83 75
Worldwide utilization of refining capacity 92 88 87
2 Excludes refining capacity for a minor interest held through equity securities in the Laffan Refinery in Qatar, for which results are reported in the Upstream segment.<br><br>3 Refining capacity is the stream-day capability to process inputs to atmospheric distillation units under normal operating conditions, less the impact of shutdowns for regular repair and maintenance activities, averaged over an extended period of time. These annual averages include partial-year impacts for capacity additions or deletions during the year. Any idle capacity that cannot be made operable in a month or less has been excluded. Capacity volumes include 100 percent of the capacity of refinery facilities managed by ExxonMobil or majority-owned subsidiaries. At facilities of companies owned 50 percent or less, the greater of either that portion of capacity normally available to ExxonMobil or ExxonMobil’s equity interest is included.
Throughout this press release, both Exhibit 99.1 as well as Exhibit 99.2, due to rounding, numbers presented may not add up precisely to the totals indicated.