ExxonMobil, Chevron resist Trump calls to boost oil output
Oil prices rise to $126 a barrel, while US petrol prices surge past $4 a gallon, undermining Trump’s pledge to bring them below $2
ExxonMobil and Chevron have defied calls from the White House to increase oil production, resisting pressure from an administration that is struggling to end the biggest energy crisis in decades, reports Financial Times.
Exxon's chief financial officer, Neil Hansen, told the FT there had been "no change" to the company's strategy in the Permian Basin, the dominant US oil and gas region.
Chevron's finance chief Eimear Bonner said, "The crisis has not prompted any change to any of our plans."
Their comments came as the groups released their first-quarter results today (1 May).
The Iran war has slashed production across the Gulf and hit refining operations in the Middle East and beyond, triggering an energy shock that threatens to fuel inflation across the world.
Moreover, oil prices on Thursday rose to $126 a barrel, the highest level since the start of the war, while US petrol prices have soared to more than $4 a gallon, undermining President Donald Trump's campaign pledge to bring them below $2 and make life cheaper for Americans.
The government has released oil from the strategic petroleum reserve and called for more drilling from the industry, but the two US supermajors are holding firm on their prewar strategies, reports Financial Times.
"There's really no need for us to shift up because we're already up, we're already in high gear," Hansen said.
"That doesn't mean we aren't looking at the potential to expand that but there are limitations," he added.
Bonner said, "We could grow in the Permian, but that's not the strategy we have. Our strategy is to grow free cash flow, not grow production."
"You wouldn't expect us to be changing our plans significantly on the back of eight weeks of disruption," she added
Exxon reported net income of $4.2bn in the three months to the end of March, down 46% on the same period a year ago in a drop that was primarily the result of a $3.9bn paper loss on hedges linked to cargoes that have not yet been delivered. The company said it expected the mismatch to unwind in future months as contracts were completed.
The oil group has the highest exposure to the crisis in the Middle East, with operations in the United Arab Emirates and Qatar accounting for 20% of its oil production last year.
Exxon in April warned that the conflict would cause a loss of 6% of its global production in the first quarter.
"This quarter demonstrated that ExxonMobil is a fundamentally stronger company than it was just a few years ago, built to perform through disruption and across market cycles," chief executive Darren Woods said in a statement. Exxon said it would pay a second-quarter dividend of $1.03 a share.
Less exposed Chevron reported net income of $2.2bn in the first quarter, a 37% drop over the same period last year, but said it had $2.9bn worth of paper losses.
The company's production rose by 500,000 barrels a day compared with the first quarter of 2025 as a result of the integration of US oil and gas producer Hess, higher production in the "Gulf of America" and growth in the Permian Basin.
Shares of Chevron and Exxon, which have risen almost 30% this year, were both down 1% in New York.
Both Exxon and Chevron, whose chief executive Mike Wirth was among a group of executives who met Trump this week, said they were running their refineries at record rates, capitalising on the high price of diesel and other refined products.
