ExxonMobil makes money every time someone buys crude oil, natural gas, petroleum products, or petrochemicals. The company pulls oil and gas out of the ground, refines and processes it, then sells it to customers around the world — from fuel for cars and planes to chemicals used in plastics and packaging. Every barrel sold, every cubic foot of gas delivered, every petrochemical shipped generates a payment. The company also sells specialty products and is building newer businesses like carbon capture, hydrogen, and lithium. Because customers consume these products and come back to buy more, revenue flows in constantly — but the amount changes depending on global energy prices. The diagram below traces where the money goes.
How ExxonMobil Makes Money
flowchart TD
A["Explore and Drill\nOil and Natural Gas"] --> B["Refine into Fuels\nChemicals and Specialty Products"]
B --> C["Sell to Customers\n$323.9B revenue"]
C --> D["Operating Cash Flow\n$52.0B"]
D --> E["Free Cash Flow\n$23.6B"]
E --> F["Research\n8,000+ Active Patents"]
F --> A
F --> B
E --> G["New Businesses\nCarbon Capture, Hydrogen, Lithium"]
G --> C
Five years of financial data tell a clear story: ExxonMobil's results move up and down with energy prices, and 2022 was the peak. Revenue hit $413.7 billion that year, driven by surging oil and gas prices. Cash from operations reached $76.8 billion. Since then, prices have cooled and revenue has pulled back. By 2025, revenue was $332.2 billion — about 20% lower than the 2022 peak. Free cash flow, the money left after the company spends on keeping its operations running, has fallen every year since 2022.
Free Cash Flow (2021–2025, $B)
Free cash flow spiked in 2022 when oil prices surged, then declined each year through 2025. All figures from XBRL filings.
The declining free cash flow matters because ExxonMobil funds its new businesses — carbon capture, hydrogen, lithium — from the cash its traditional oil and gas operations generate. When that cash shrinks, there is less money to put toward the future. The company's net debt tells a similar story. It fell sharply from $40.9 billion in 2021 to just $10.0 billion in 2023, showing the business used its 2022 windfall to pay down what it owed. But since then, net debt has climbed back up.
Net debt more than tripled in two years as free cash flow fell and spending continued. Source: XBRL filings.
The biggest risk is the one ExxonMobil cannot control: the price of oil and gas. When prices drop, profits shrink across the whole business. When prices rise, the refining and chemicals divisions — which buy oil as a raw material — can actually get squeezed. This creates a situation where no price level is perfect for every part of the company at the same time.
What Is Commodity Price Volatility?
A commodity is a raw material like oil or gas that is bought and sold in huge quantities worldwide. Its price is set by global supply and demand — not by any one company. When lots of oil is available, prices fall. When supply is tight or demand surges, prices rise. Because ExxonMobil both produces and uses oil, price swings hit different parts of the business in opposite ways.
Beyond prices, ExxonMobil faces restrictions on where it can operate. U.S. government sanctions can block the company from doing business in certain countries or with certain partners. Competitors who face fewer restrictions can step into those markets instead. Climate policy adds another layer of uncertainty. Governments around the world are setting carbon taxes, requiring more electric vehicles, and limiting fossil fuel use. These rules could reduce demand for ExxonMobil's core products over time.
8,000+
Active patents held worldwide at end of 2025 — the company's technology base that supports both traditional and newer low-emission businesses.
ExxonMobil is betting that new businesses like carbon capture, hydrogen, and lithium will eventually grow large enough to matter. But these technologies are expensive to develop and need both cost breakthroughs and government support to succeed at scale. The company's 10-K filing is direct about this: if those markets do not develop as expected, the investments could lose money. Meanwhile, the oil and gas business that funds all of this is generating less free cash flow each year.
What Is Carbon Capture?
Carbon capture means collecting carbon dioxide — a greenhouse gas — before it enters the atmosphere and storing it underground or using it in industrial processes. Governments and companies see it as one way to reduce emissions without stopping industrial activity entirely. It is expensive today, and no one knows yet whether it can be made cheap enough to use widely.
2022
milestone
The Windfall Year
In 2022, surging energy prices pushed ExxonMobil's revenue to $413.7 billion and free cash flow to $58.4 billion — both the highest figures in the five-year period. The company used the cash to pay down debt and accelerate investment in lower-emission businesses. That single year shaped the financial position the company carries into its current strategy.
ExxonMobil also faces legal risks. Courts in the United States allow large financial damages, and groups opposed to oil and gas production have been using lawsuits to try to reduce the company's output. The legal costs and potential judgments add an unpredictable expense on top of everything else.
ExxonMobil holds over 8,000 active patents worldwide and employs people from more than 160 nationalities. Its career employees stay an average of about 30 years — an unusual level of stability for a company this size.
The Bet
Oil and gas demand stays high enough, for long enough, to keep generating the cash that funds ExxonMobil's push into carbon capture, hydrogen, lithium, and other newer businesses — before those businesses can stand on their own. Free cash flow has fallen from $58.4 billion in 2022 to $23.6 billion in 2025. If oil prices stay low or climate policy tightens faster than expected, the cash engine shrinks further. And if the newer businesses need more time or money than planned to become profitable, there is a widening gap between what the old business earns and what the new one needs.
Open question
ExxonMobil is a massive, mature oil and gas business that is slowly building a second act in lower-emission energy. Its traditional business is profitable but cyclical — great when oil prices are high, painful when they are not. Its newer businesses are real but unproven at scale. Net debt has climbed from $10.0 billion to $32.9 billion in just two years, and free cash flow has been falling every year since 2022. Can ExxonMobil's oil and gas cash flows hold up long enough — and at a high enough level — to fund the transition to new businesses before climate policy, falling prices, or both force the pace of change faster than the company can manage?
Compiled · 10-K · FY2025
Commodity Price Volatility
ExxonMobil's earnings depend heavily on oil, natural gas, and petrochemical prices, which swing up and down based on global supply and demand. Big price drops can hurt the company's profits and reserves, while big price increases can harm profits in the refining and chemical divisions.
Government Restrictions and Sanctions
U.S. and other governments restrict where ExxonMobil can do business and with whom. These sanctions and access limitations can block the company from operating in certain countries or working with certain partners, giving competitors who face fewer restrictions a business advantage.
Climate Policy and Energy Transition Requirements
Governments worldwide are adopting rules to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from oil and gas products. These policies—including carbon taxes, electric vehicle mandates, and restrictions on fossil fuels—could make ExxonMobil's traditional products less profitable or less in demand.
New Technology Development Risk for Clean Energy
ExxonMobil is investing in new lower-emission businesses like carbon capture, hydrogen, and lithium. These technologies must become cost-effective at large scale and gain government policy support to succeed. If they don't develop as expected or markets don't grow, these investments could lose money.
Legal and Litigation Exposure
The company faces lawsuits in countries like the United States that allow large financial damages and penalties. Groups opposed to oil and gas are using courts to try to reduce the company's production, and the company could face major legal costs and judgments.
10-K Item 1A · Risk Factors