MP
Marathon Petroleum Corp (MPC)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 adjusted EPS was $3.01, below S&P Global consensus of $3.16, while sales materially exceeded consensus; GAAP diluted EPS was $4.51 and adjusted EBITDA was $3.206B, with net income attributable to MPC of $1.370B . Estimates retrieved from S&P Global.*
- Refining & Marketing delivered strong cash generation: margin $17.60/bbl, 95% utilization, and 3.005 mbpd net throughput; Midstream adjusted EBITDA grew 5% YoY to $1.709B .
- Management announced a 10% quarterly dividend increase and highlighted expected $2.8B annual distributions from MPLX, covering MPC dividends and standalone capex; $926M returned to shareholders in Q3, including $650M in buybacks .
- Q4 2025 outlook guides to crude throughput of 2.905 mbpd, refining operating costs of $5.80/bbl, turnaround expense of $420M, distribution costs of ~$1.575B, and corporate costs of $240M; management cited normalization of jet/diesel spreads and butane blending as tailwinds for capture .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- R&M strength: adjusted EBITDA of $1.762B and margin $17.60/bbl, with 95% utilization and several refineries achieving monthly throughput records; CEO emphasized “strong cash generation” and commercial optimization .
- Midstream growth: adjusted EBITDA rose to $1.709B (+5% YoY) on higher rates/throughputs and acquisitions; MPLX distributions expected at $2.8B annually, supporting capital returns at MPC .
- Capital returns and dividend: $926M returned in Q3, including $650M in repurchases; announced 10% quarterly dividend increase as confidence in outlook and cash generation .
What Went Wrong
- Margin capture: sequential decline to 96% (from 105% in Q2) driven by West Coast clean product margin compression (~40%), jet-to-diesel inversion, and downtime of Galveston Bay REZID hydrocracker; management expects normalization in Q4 .
- Renewable Diesel: continued losses with segment adjusted EBITDA of $(56)M amid weaker margins and higher feedstock costs; utilization improved to 86% but policy uncertainty persists .
- Distribution and operating costs: refining operating costs rose to $5.59/bbl; Q4 distribution cost guidance of ~$1.575B reflects commercial routing to higher-margin markets, raising costs near term .
Financial Results
Consolidated Results (Q1 → Q2 → Q3 2025)
Segment EBITDA (Q1 → Q2 → Q3 2025)
Refining KPIs (Q1 → Q2 → Q3 2025)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “In the third quarter, Refining & Marketing delivered strong cash generation… MPLX will provide $2.8 billion of annualized distributions to MPC that we expect to cover our dividends and standalone capital spending” — CEO Maryann Mannen .
- “We are off to a good start in the fourth quarter… jet and product margins [back to] normal… butane inventory build in 3Q will be a tailwind in the fourth quarter” — Executive remarks .
- “We believe MPC is positioned to deliver industry-leading cash generation through all parts of the cycle” — CEO .
- “We do not see taking on debt at MPC to buy back stock as something that we would do” — CEO .
Q&A Highlights
- Capture drivers: West Coast accounted for >50% of capture change; clean product margins fell ~40%; REZID downtime ~2% system headwind; normalization expected in Q4 .
- Capital return stance: Buybacks remain primary lever; supported by $2.8B MPLX distributions; no intent to lever for buybacks .
- Renewable Diesel: Operating at 86% utilization; margins pressured by feedstock costs; policy uncertainties (D4 RINs, LCFS, foreign feedstock limits) persist; PTC largely reflected .
- Crude differentials: Expect sour diffs to widen slightly in Q1; depressed WCS prices a positive; broader tailwinds across ANS, Bakken, Syncrude .
- West Coast market structure: advantaged feedstock and logistics; LAR project benefits; pipeline proposals viewed as ambitious (earliest ~2029) .
Estimates Context
- Q3 2025: Adjusted EPS of $3.01 versus S&P Global consensus $3.16 (miss); Sales and other operating revenues of $34.81B versus $31.71B consensus (beat). S&P’s EBITDA consensus was ~$3.07B; company reported adjusted EBITDA of $3.206B (methodology differs; S&P “actual” EBITDA prints lower) . Estimates retrieved from S&P Global.*
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Where estimates may adjust:
- EPS models likely trim near-term capture assumptions for West Coast and factor REZID downtime impact; Q4 guidance and commentary on normalization should support partial recovery .
- Revenue trajectories may rise on stronger product cracks and throughput, particularly if diesel export dynamics remain favorable .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Q3 delivered strong sales and adjusted EBITDA with a softer capture; setup for Q4 improves as jet/diesel normalizes and butane blending assists margins; throughput guided to 2.905 mbpd .
- Midstream remains a cash flow anchor, with $2.8B of annual MPLX distributions expected to fund dividends and capex, underscoring a durable capital return framework .
- West Coast positioning is advantaged (feedstocks, logistics, LAR intertie project), but quarter-to-quarter volatility can be elevated; watch for capture rebound as REZID returns .
- Renewable Diesel is operationally stable but still loss-making; management curtailing growth capex; policy outcomes (credits, foreign feedstocks) are key 2026 catalysts .
- No willingness to lever for buybacks; expect continued buybacks paced by cash generation and MPLX distributions; dividend growth trajectory supported by falling share count and MPLX .
- Crude diffs (WCS, ANS, Bakken, Syncrude) and export economics are tailwinds; monitor sour widening into Q1 and Gulf Coast export pull-through .
- Tactical implication: near-term strength in Q4 margins and improved capture could be a positive trading catalyst; medium-term thesis rests on integrated value chains and midstream growth driving peer-leading cash returns .