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Exxon to push ahead with spending plans despite investor concerns

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NEW YORK, (Reuters) - Two years into an ambitious growth plan to revive earnings at the largest U.S. oil company, Exxon Mobil Corp said yesterday it would stick to its plans to “lean in” to spending even as its shares have lagged those of competitor­s, which are cutting costs.

Oil prices have fallen more than 20% this year, natural gas is at its lowest price since the 1990s and the industry’s long-term outlook is clouded by a push toward cleaner fuels. The entire oil industry has fallen out of favor with investors, but Exxon, once the industry’s cash flow and profit leader, has tumbled particular­ly hard.

The company is “mindful of the current market environmen­t,” but will stay with its strategy of “leaning in to this market when others have pulled back,” Exxon Chief Executive Darren Woods said at the company’s annual investor day meeting. He first laid out plans to improve profit through investment in 2018, and Thursday’s message did not diverge from that.

The industry faces a drop in demand for its products this year as the coronaviru­s spreads globally, but “the longer term horizon is more clear,” Woods said, arguing that improving living standards mean the world will need more oil.

But Exxon’s total share return is minus 26% over the last five years, far behind the other global oil majors, according to Refinitiv Eikon data, while the broader S&P 500 Index has returned 49%.

The company plans to spend between $30 billion and $35 billion a year through 2025. Spending will rise from $31 billion last year to about $33 billion this year, though Woods said that number could dip if the company needs to adjust for market conditions or if costs come in lower.

Exxon is “playing the long game,” said Anish Kapadia of Palissy Advisors, hoping that its peers’ underinves­tment means commodity prices will rise and it will profit.

“However, this is not a strategy that investors are going to buy in to today as they are more focused on where commodity prices are at currently,” Kapadia said, adding, “There is a fear in the market that global demand for hydrocarbo­ns will stagnate or fall” given investor focus on climate.

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