Current:Home > MarketsExxon announced record earnings. It's bound to renew scrutiny of Big Oil -NextFrontier Finance
Exxon announced record earnings. It's bound to renew scrutiny of Big Oil
Ethermac Exchange View
Date:2025-04-09 15:27:38
ExxonMobil earned nearly $56 billion in profit in 2022, setting an annual record not just for itself but for any U.S. or European oil giant.
Buoyed by high oil prices, rival Chevron also clocked $35 billion in profits for the year, despite a disappointing fourth quarter.
Energy companies have been reporting blockbuster profits since last year, after Russia's invasion of Ukraine sent oil prices sharply higher.
"Of course, our results clearly benefited from a favorable market," CEO Darren Woods told analysts, nodding to high crude prices for much of 2022.
But he also gave his company credit for being able to take advantage of those prices. "We leaned in when others leaned out," he said.
'More money than God'
The high profits have also revived perennial conversations about how much profit is too much profit for an oil company — especially as urgency over the need to slow climate change is mounting around the world.
Exxon's blockbuster earnings, announced Monday, will likely lead to more political pressure from the White House. Last year President Biden called out Exxon for making "more money than God."
The White House and Democrats accuse oil companies of hoarding their profits to enrich shareholders, including executives and employees, instead of investing the money in more production to ease prices at the gas pump.
Last year, between dividends and share buybacks, Exxon returned $30 billion to shareholders, while Chevron paid out more than $22 billion. Exxon plans to hold production flat in 2023, while Chevron plans to increase production by 0 to 3%.
Monster profits are back
If you do the math, Exxon made some $6.3 million in profit every hour last year — more than $100,000 every minute. That puts Exxon up with the Apples and the Googles of the world, with the kind of extraordinary profits most companies could never dream of earning.
Or rather, it puts Exxon back up in that rarefied territory. Exxon used to be the largest company in the world, reliably clocking enormous profits.
In 2020, when the pandemic triggered a crash in oil prices, energy companies took huge losses. Exxon recorded an annual loss of $22 billion, its first loss in decades. It was, humiliatingly, dropped from the Dow Jones.
A tiny upstart investor group called Engine No. 1 challenged Exxon's management, accusing the company of not moving fast enough to adjust to a world preparing to reduce its use of oil.
In this David vs. Goliath showdown, David won the battle, with Engine No. 1's nominees replacing three Exxon board members. But Goliath isn't going anywhere.
Profits prompt scrutiny, criticism
Whenever oil companies are thriving, suspicions that they are fundamentally profiteering are not far behind.
Those accusations have become especially charged because Russia's invasion of Ukraine were central to the drive-up in crude oil prices last year. Europe has imposed windfall taxes on energy companies, clawing back 33% of "surplus profits" from oil and gas companies to redistribute to households.
Exxon has sued to block that tax, which it estimates would cost around $1.8 billion for 2022.
Meanwhile, in the U.S., California is considering a similar windfall tax. President Biden has threatened oil companies with a "higher tax on their excess profits" and other restrictions if they don't invest their windfall earnings in more production. But it's unclear whether the administration can follow through on such a threat.
On Tuesday, the White House issued a statement excoriating oil companies for "choosing to plow those profits into padding the pockets of executives and shareholders."
Investors, meanwhile, aren't complaining. They continue to pressure companies to return more profits to investors and spend relatively less of it on drilling.
"Lower-carbon" ambitions
Both Exxon and Chevron emphasized their carbon footprints in their earnings calls, a major shift from the not-so-distant past, when oil companies uniformly denied, minimized or ignored climate change when talking to investors.
But their responses to climate change focus on reducing the emissions from oil wells and pipelines, or making investments in "lower-carbon" technologies like hydrogen and carbon capture — not on a rapid transition away from fossil fuels, as climate advocates say is essential.
veryGood! (3868)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- UPS worker tracked fellow driver on delivery route before fatal shooting, police say
- Man indicted after creating thousands of AI-generated child sex abuse images, prosecutors say
- Kyle Larson faces additional obstacles to completing historic IndyCar/NASCAR double Sunday
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- Courteney Cox: Designing woman
- Diversity jobs at North Carolina public universities may be at risk with upcoming board vote
- Centrist challenger ousts progressive prosecutor in DA race in Portland, Oregon
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Savannah police arrest suspect in weekend shootings that injured 11 in downtown square
Ranking
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- Study says more Americans smoke marijuana daily than drink alcohol
- My dying high school writing teacher has one more lesson. Don't wait to say thank you.
- Federal rules expanded to protect shoppers who buy now, pay later
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Study says more Americans smoke marijuana daily than drink alcohol
- Pacers coach Rick Carlisle takes blame for Game 1 loss: 'This loss is totally on me'
- New NASA Mission Tracks Microscopic Organisms in the Ocean and Tiny Particles in the Air to Monitor Climate Change
Recommendation
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
Olympian Mary Lou Retton Responds to Backlash Over Her Daughters Crowdsourcing Her Medical Funds
White House pushes tech industry to shut down market for sexually abusive AI deepfakes
Biden administration cancels $7.7 billion in student debt for 160,500 people. Here's who qualifies.
What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
For a Memorial Day barbecue, update side dishes to keep the flavor, lose some fat
Court halts foreclosure auction of Elvis Presley's Graceland home: 'Irreparable harm'
'We're not going out of business': As Red Lobster locations close, chain begins outreach