Revenue for the third-quarter decreased by only 1% year-over-year to $90 billion, while cash flow from operations reached $17.6 billion.
Despite record production levels, weak refining margins and lower commodity prices impacted the company's profits. Average oil prices dropped by about 17% compared to last year.
Compared to other oil giants, ExxonMobil has fared relatively well. Earlier this week BP reported a massive drop in net profit in the third quarter of the year, falling to $206 million from last year's $4.86 billion.
ExxonMobil's production increased by approximately 25% year-over-year to an average output of approximately 4.6 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd).
The company's $60 billion acquisition of Pioneer Natural Resources earlier this year boosted its production in the Permian Basin. The increased output, thanks to the acquisition, contributed to about $8.6 billion in ExxonMobil's third-quarter profit.
Since 2019, the company has managed to cut structural costs by $11.3 billion as it remains focused on efficiency and sustainability.
"We delivered one of our strongest third quarters in a decade," said ExxonMobil CEO Darren Woods.
"Our industry-leading results1 continue to demonstrate how our enterprise-wide transformation is improving the structural earnings power of the company. In the Upstream, we've doubled the profitability of the barrels we produce on a constant price basis5. In Product Solutions, we've high-graded our refining footprint and increased high-value product sales. And across the entire company, we've achieved $11.3 billion of structural cost savings since 2019," Woods added.
The ExxonMobil board also raised quarterly dividend to 99 cents, a 4.2% increase.