Logo of Aramco, officially the Saudi Arabian Oil Group, Saudi petroleum and natural gas company, seen on the second day of the 24th World Petroleum Congress at the Big 4 Building at Stampede Park, on September 18, 2023, in Calgary, Canada.
Artur Widak | Nurphoto | Getty Images
Saudi Aramco on Tuesday posted a 0.9% jump in third-quarter profit on the back of higher production even as prices remained under pressure.
Here are Aramco’s third-quarter 2025 results compared with LSEG consensus estimates:
- Adjusted net income: 104.92 billion Saudi riyals ($27.98 billion) vs. 98.47 billion Saudi riyals
 - Revenue: 418.16 billion vs. 411.26 billion Saudi riyals
 
The results come as Aramco faces a profit squeeze amid weaker oil prices, except for a short-lived surge in the second quarter triggered by tensions between Israel and Iran.
“We increased production with minimal incremental cost, and reliably supplied the oil, gas and associated products our customers depend on, driving strong financial performance and quarterly earnings growth,” Aramco CEO Amin Nasser said.
Year-to-date, spot prices of the U.S. West Texas Intermediate are down over 16%, data from FactSet showed. Similarly, the global benchmark Brent is down over 12%.
Over the weekend, OPEC+ announced a modest increase in oil production for December and decided to halt further hikes during the first quarter of next year. The cartel members agreed to raise their December production target by 137,000 barrels per day, matching the hike for October and November.
Since April, OPEC+ has raised its output targets by approximately 2.9 million barrels per day but began easing the pace of these increases in October over expectations of a market glut.
Adding to the complexity, new Western sanctions on Russia, a key OPEC+ member, are posing difficulties for the group’s production strategy, as Moscow faces limits in boosting output after the U.S. imposed additional restrictions on the country’s major oil producers Rosneft and Lukoil.
Aramco recently completed its acquisition of a 22.5% stake in Petro Rabigh, Reuters reported, from Japan’s Sumitomo Chemical for $701.8 million, bringing the Saudi company’s total ownership to roughly 60%. The oil giant also recently acquired a minority stake in artificial intelligence company HUMAIN, which is majority owned by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.
