Exxon Mobil Schedules Q4 2025 Results Release and Conference Call

XOMXOM

Exxon Mobil will release its Q4 2025 financial results on Friday, January 30, 2026 at 5:30 am CT via Business Wire. A live conference call with Darren Woods, Kathy Mikells, incoming CFO Neil Hansen and Jim Chapman follows at 8:30 am CT, with replay and presentation archived online.

1. ExxonMobil Sets January 30 Release for Q4 2025 Results

ExxonMobil will publish its fourth quarter 2025 financial results on Friday, January 30, 2026, via a Business Wire press release scheduled for 5:30 a.m. Central Time on investor.exxonmobil.com. Darren Woods, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, will be joined by Kathy Mikells, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; Neil Hansen, who assumes the CFO role February 1; and Jim Chapman, Vice President, Treasurer and Investor Relations, for a live conference call beginning at 8:30 a.m. CT. The presentation can be accessed by webcast or by dialing into a toll-free line using passcode 8057011. An archived replay and comprehensive supplemental financial data will follow on the company’s investor site.

2. Leadership Transition Bolsters Financial Oversight

Effective February 1, 2026, Neil Hansen will take over as Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, succeeding Kathy Mikells, who has served in the role since 2021. Hansen joins ExxonMobil with more than 25 years of financial and operational experience across the energy sector, including a recent tenure overseeing global treasury functions and corporate risk management. The leadership handoff positions ExxonMobil to maintain capital discipline through its planned $30 billion annual investment program and a targeted dividend increase later this year, while enhancing analytical rigor around project returns in the Permian Basin and Guyana developments.

3. Trump’s Venezuela Stance and Investor Implications

President Trump’s public warning that he is “inclined” to bar ExxonMobil from future opportunities in Venezuela follows CEO Darren Woods’s description of the country as “uninvestable” without fundamental legal reforms. By forgoing potential deals that could require $10 billion to $20 billion in upfront rehabilitation costs, ExxonMobil shields itself from significant political and operational risks tied to Venezuela’s asset nationalizations. Investors stand to benefit from the company’s decision to prioritize high-margin assets, preserve cash for dividends and share repurchases, and avoid exposure to heavy-crude processing challenges and uncertain recovery of past arbitration awards.

Sources

SBFBR
+6 more