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DATE

Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026 at 12 p.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • President and Chief Executive Officer — Mark Lashier
  • Executive Vice President, Midstream — Don Baldridge
  • Executive Vice President, and Chief Financial Officer — Kevin Mitchell
  • Executive Vice President, Refining — Rich Harbison
  • Executive Vice President, Marketing and Commercial — Brian Mandell
  • Vice President, Investor Relations — Sean Maher

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TAKEAWAYS

  • Reported Earnings -- $2.9 billion, or $7.17 per share, including a $239 million pretax impact from Los Angeles refinery accelerated depreciation.
  • Adjusted Earnings -- $1 billion, or $2.47 per share, flat sequentially versus the previous quarter.
  • Operating Cash Flow -- $2.8 billion, with a $780 million working capital benefit from inventory reduction, partially offset by lower prices impacting receivables and payables.
  • Shareholder Returns -- $756 million in the quarter, of which $274 million was share repurchases.
  • Capital Spending -- $682 million in the quarter, funding both growth and sustaining projects.
  • Net Debt to Capital Ratio -- 38% at quarter-end.
  • Segment Earnings Drivers -- Sequential gains in refining, renewable fuels, and midstream, nearly offset by declines in chemicals and marketing and specialties.
  • Midstream Adjusted EBITDA -- Approximately $1 billion for the year, up 40% since 2022, with execution of Coastal Bend and Dos Picos Two cited as key contributors.
  • Run-Rate Adjusted EBITDA Guidance -- $4.5 billion targeted for midstream by year-end 2027, based on ongoing organic expansions including new gas plants and pipeline capacity.
  • Refining Adjusted Controllable Cost per Barrel -- $5.96 in Q4, with a target of approximately $5.50 by 2027; excluding Los Angeles idling costs, Q4 would have been $5.57 per barrel.
  • WRB Acquisition Impact -- Full consolidation increased exposure to Canadian heavy crude differentials by 40%; management estimates each $1 widening in heavy crude differential adds $140 million annual earnings.
  • Asset Portfolio Actions -- Acquired remaining 50% of WRB, sold 65% interest in Germany and Austria retail marketing, and idled the Los Angeles refinery in 2025.
  • Heavy Oil Processing -- System operating at maximum heavy crude utilization, with anticipated benefit to economics even as clean product yield is modestly reduced.
  • System-Wide Refining Capacity Increases -- Structural upgrades in four refineries resulted in a 25,000 barrels per day total increase, raising system capacity by approximately 2%.
  • 2026 Operating Guidance -- Global O&P utilization expected in the mid-90% range; refining utilization anticipated in the low 90% range; turnaround expense forecasted at $170 million-$190 million for Q1 and $550 million-$600 million for the full year.
  • Dividends and Debt Framework -- Dividend commitment around $2 billion per year, capital spend projected at $2.4 billion, with the balance of operating cash flow allocated to share buybacks and debt reduction under a 50%+ shareholder return policy.
  • Chemicals Segment EBITDA -- $845 million share from CPChem in 2025, with management citing US base plant utilization at 90% compared to 65% in Asia Pacific and Europe.
  • Asset Monetization -- Over $5 billion in assets monetized in 2025.
  • Western Gateway Pipeline Progress -- First open season completed with shipper commitments; current efforts focused on expanding delivery points into the LA market and securing further customer commitments.
  • Safety -- Management reported 2025 as the best safety year on record for the company.

SUMMARY

Phillips 66 (PSX +4.46%) reported significant portfolio repositioning in 2025, highlighted by the full acquisition of WRB, divestiture of European marketing interests, and the idling of the Los Angeles refinery. Management stated these moves advance a multi-year cost streamlining and capital allocation strategy designed to maximize asset value, boost system flexibility, and focus on competitive market segments. The company prioritized returning over half of net operating cash flow to shareholders through dividends and buybacks while signaling strong midstream earnings growth and clarified pathways to achieve a more integrated, lower-cost, and expansion-ready refining and logistics portfolio.

  • Management described a visible line of sight to a 2027 midstream adjusted EBITDA run-rate of $4.5 billion, primarily from organic project delivery, with "the real step changes" in earnings expected as new gas plants and expansions fill and ramp up.
  • Cost reduction initiatives in refining are underpinned by over 300 active projects, with the company tracking toward a $5.50 per barrel controllable cost target, which is "directionally heading towards that $5.50 target that we're up" according to refining leadership.
  • Full exposure to Canadian heavy oil has materially increased, with management highlighting that "each dollar is worth $140 million in yearly earnings" following the WRB consolidation.
  • Turnaround costs for 2026 include full-year WRB integration, with management stating the increase is driven by basis change and not underlying operational escalation, and annual per-barrel turnaround guidance remains unchanged when normalized for these factors.
  • System-wide refining flexibility and reliability have been structurally improved, as projects in Bayway, Billings, and Sweeny have lifted stated capacities by 25,000 barrels per day, allowing for higher utilization and margin capture when market conditions permit.
  • The Western Gateway pipeline project garnered regulatory and commercial backing, with open seasons yielding customer commitments and management characterizing the project as a potential post-2027 midstream growth lever not yet included in forecasts.
  • Management signaled that asset divestitures and targeted M&A remain on the table, stating that select opportunities would be considered if they enhance competitive positioning in key regions such as the Gulf Coast or Mid Continent.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • WRB: A joint venture refinery previously co-owned by Phillips 66 and Cenovus Energy, now fully consolidated by Phillips 66 following the acquisition of the remaining 50% interest.
  • Clean Product Yield: The proportion of high-value refined products (such as gasoline, distillates, and jet fuel) produced from crude oil processing, excluding heavier residuals and byproducts.
  • Crack Spread: The price differential between crude oil and the finished petroleum products refined from it, indicating refining margin potential.
  • Turnaround Expense: Planned maintenance and upgrade spending to temporarily shut down processing units for inspection, repair, or improvement in refineries.
  • PAD II: Petroleum Administration for Defense District II, a geographic designation for the Midwest US refining and distribution region.
  • NGL: Natural Gas Liquids, hydrocarbon liquids extracted from natural gas production, including ethane, propane, butane, and natural gasoline.
  • O&P Utilization Rate: The operating rate for Olefins & Polyolefins units—the main chemical production facilities for ethylene, polyethylene, and related petrochemicals.
  • VGO Project: A plant improvement involving Vacuum Gas Oil optimization at a refinery, designed to enhance feedstock flexibility and yields.
  • CPChem: Chevron Phillips Chemical Company, a joint venture co-owned by Phillips 66 that operates petrochemical plants and projects globally.
  • Western Gateway: A pipeline infrastructure project targeting expanded refined product delivery from the US Gulf Coast and Mid Continent into the California market.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Mark Lashier: Thank you, Sean. Welcome everyone to our fourth quarter earnings call. We delivered strong financial and operating results, reflecting our continued focus on world-class operations. Our disciplined approach to improving refining performance has delivered high utilization rates, record clean product yields, and enhanced flexibility. In midstream, we achieved another quarter of record NGL and fractionation volumes driven by our Coastal Bend and Dos Picos Two expansions. More importantly, our team remains focused on continuous improvement. We are lowering our cost structure and increasing reliability so that we can maximize profitability in any market environment. Moving to slide four, safe, reliable operations coupled with disciplined investment generate compelling shareholder returns. Safety is foundational.

I'm pleased to report that 2025 was our best year ever for safety performance. I'm very proud of our employees for their commitment to safety. I would like to congratulate them on a job well done. In 2025, we optimized our portfolio through multiple strategic actions. We acquired the remaining 50% interest in the WRB joint venture, sold a 65% interest in the Germany and Austria retail marketing business, and idled the Los Angeles refinery. We also improved our competitive position in midstream with the acquisition of Coastal Bend and expansion of Dos Picos Two. The strong operating results are a reflection of a concerted multiyear plan and we're not done yet.

In refining, we're targeting adjusted controllable cost per barrel to be approximately $5.50 on an annual basis by 2027. We've also streamlined our business to focus on the areas where we have a competitive advantage. As an example, our acquisition of the remaining 50% interest in WRB increased our exposure to Canadian heavy crude differentials by 40%. These differentials have widened by approximately $4 a barrel since the announcement of the acquisition. Phillips 66 assets are well-positioned to capture opportunities in markets across the value chain. Combining operating excellence, an integrated portfolio, and our disciplined capital allocation mindset, we will continue to deliver shareholder returns across commodity cycles. Last quarter, Rich discussed the progress and future of refining.

This quarter, Don will share more about our plans in midstream.

Don Baldridge: Thanks, Mark. In midstream, we've built an asset base that offers flexibility and reliability for our customers. We've increased adjusted EBITDA by 40% since 2022, and we've delivered approximately $1 billion of adjusted EBITDA in 2025. Our growth and our performance are a result of disciplined execution that has created a competitive wellhead-to-market value chain. Over the past four years, we have high-graded and simplified our portfolio. We bought in PSXP and DCP and we expanded the Sweeney Hub. Additionally, our recent Pinnacle and Coastal Bend acquisitions are performing above expectations, both operationally and financially, improving our acquisition multiple by about a half a turn. We intend to deliver increasing returns, improve customer service, and enhance reliability.

Moving to slide six, the platform that we have developed has paved the way to growth opportunities that provide line of sight to a run-rate adjusted EBITDA of approximately $4.5 billion by year-end 2027. We anticipate adding a gas plant about every twelve to eighteen months due to our attractive footprint in the Permian Basin. For example, we commissioned the Dos Picos Two gas plant in 2025, and we announced the Iron Mesa gas plant, which is expected to be in service in early 2027. These plant volumes support our NGL growth. We completed the first phase of our Coastal Bend pipeline expansion and we are bringing online incremental capacity of 125,000 barrels a day in late 2026.

In addition to these larger projects, we continue to identify low-capital, high-return organic growth opportunities across multiple basins. We are positioned to deliver mid-single-digit adjusted EBITDA growth, which will support our corporate capital allocation priorities. Our team continues to execute at a high level on a day-to-day basis. We have great momentum to deliver on our growth plans. Now, I'll turn the call over to Kevin.

Kevin Mitchell: Thank you, Don. On slide seven, midstream adjusted EBITDA covers two important priorities: a secure, competitive, and growing dividend of approximately $2 billion and sustaining capital of approximately $1 billion. This leaves the balance of cash flows available for accretive growth opportunities, share repurchases, and debt reduction. Further, at our targeted debt level of $17 billion, total debt would be approximately three times the adjusted EBITDA for Midstream and Marketing and Specialties, leaving Refining essentially debt-free. We remain committed to a conservative balance sheet and to returning greater than 50% of net operating cash flow to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases. On slide eight, fourth-quarter reported earnings were $2.9 billion or $7.17 per share.

Adjusted earnings were $1 billion or $2.47 per share. Both reported and adjusted earnings include the final $239 million pretax impact of accelerated depreciation associated with idling the Los Angeles refinery. Capital spending for the quarter was $682 million, generating $2.8 billion of operating cash flow. We returned $756 million to shareholders, including $274 million of share repurchases. Net debt to capital was 38%. I will now cover the segment results on slide nine. Total company adjusted earnings were flat for the quarter at $1 billion, with sequential improvements in refining, renewable fuels, and midstream, mostly offsetting decreases in chemicals, and marketing and specialties. Midstream results increased mainly due to higher volumes, partly offset by lower margins.

In chemicals, results decreased mainly due to lower polyethylene margins driven by lower sales prices. Refining results benefited from the acquisition of WRB. Additionally, we saw higher realized margins in the Gulf Coast, partly offset by weaker Central Corridor crack spreads. Marketing and specialties results decreased primarily due to the sale of a 65% interest in the Germany and Austria retail marketing business and seasonally lower domestic margins, partly offset by higher UK margins and lower costs. Renewable fuels results improved primarily due to higher realized margins, including inventory impacts, partly offset by lower credits. Slide 10 shows cash flow for the fourth quarter.

Cash from operations of $2.8 billion included a $780 million working capital benefit due to an inventory reduction, partly offset by the impact of falling prices on our net receivables and payables position. We received $1.5 billion from the sale of a 65% interest in the Germany and Austria retail marketing business. We repaid over $2 billion in debt and acquired the remaining 50% interest in WRB. We funded $682 million of capital spending and returned $756 million to shareholders through share repurchases and dividends. Our ending cash balance was $1.1 billion. Looking ahead to 2026 on slide 11, in the first quarter, we expect the global O&P utilization rate to be in the mid-90s.

We anticipate corporate and other costs to be between $400 million and $420 million. Beginning in 2026, costs associated with the idled Los Angeles refinery will be reported in corporate and other. In refining, we expect the worldwide crude utilization rate to be in the low 90s. Turnaround expense is expected to be between $170 million and $190 million. For the full year, we expect turnaround expenses to be between $550 million and $600 million. Utilization rates and turnaround expenses by region are provided in the appendix. We expect corporate and other costs to be between $1.5 billion and $1.6 billion. Depreciation and amortization is expected to be between $2.1 billion and $2.3 billion.

Moving to slide 12, Mark will now provide some final thoughts. We will then open the line for questions, after which Sean will wrap up the call.

Mark Lashier: 2025 was a pivotal year for Phillips 66. Over the last four years, we've been laser-focused on improving performance and advancing our strategy. We reduced costs, simplified the company, and made tough decisions. We streamlined leadership, reduced headcount, outsourced work, and rationalized our refining footprint. In 2025, we began to see the benefits of the discipline. Solid, consistent results, which we're excited to build upon. We monetized more than $5 billion of assets and leaned into our integrated portfolio. We built a competitive wellhead-to-market position in midstream and we raised the bar in refining. Our teams responded, and we're driving toward world-class performance. And we're excited about what we'll do. Our assets work together. They complement one another.

And our people maximize their value. We built a culture of ownership and accountability. We've challenged every employee to step up and aligned incentives so more of our people think and act like owners. Going forward, our priorities are clear: safe, reliable operations, continuous improvement, and disciplined capital allocation that returns cash to shareholders now while funding accretive returns that generate even more cash over time. This is a competitive business, and we have to earn investors' trust every day. We have momentum, and we're confident that we can rise to the challenge and deliver for our shareholders. Results matter, and in 2025, you've seen a positive inflection point in our results. And the best is yet to come.

Operator: Thank you, Mark. We will now begin the question and answer session. We open the call for questions. As a courtesy for all participants, please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. If you have a question, please press star then one on your touch-tone phone. If you wish to be removed from the queue, please press star then two. If you are using a speakerphone, you may need to pick up the handset first before pressing the numbers. Once again, if you have a question, please press star then one on your touch-tone phone. The first question comes from Steve Richardson with Evercore ISI. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Steve Richardson: Hi. Thank you. I was wondering if we could start on the Central Corridor, please. Can you talk about your outlook for Mid Continent products and opportunities you see on the feedstock side, particularly now that you have a quarter plus of WRB consolidated? Appreciate the comment in the prepared remarks about the 40% increase in exposure to Canadian heavies. But wondering if we could dig in there first, please.

Brian Mandell: Hey, Steve. This is Brian. In PAD II, we have our maximum integration between our refining, midstream, and marketing assets. You probably know, we're one of the largest importers of Canadian crude and from a crude perspective, PAD II is the first stop for this advantaged heavy Canadian crude. We also have crude optionality with various Cushing crude grades and advantage crudes directly from the wellhead in PAD II. And the widening heavy dips are a tailwind, a strong tailwind for the business. And as you heard in the intro, we've seen those dips widen by $4 since our purchase of WRB. Our sensitivities indicate that each dollar is worth $140 million in yearly earnings for the crude dip.

Additionally, PAD II is expected to have the most robust demand profile for the next decade with gasoline stable and with diesel and jet continuing to grow. We have really well-positioned assets in the market, and we have a strong supply of Canadian and other crudes and good product demand. So margins should be very supportive. Also, the ability of our commercial team to extract optionality from the assets and extract optionality from the integration of the assets provides additional value. And then finally, I'd say the Western pipeline will help raise demand for PAD II products to fill short in PAD V.

Steve Richardson: That's great. Thanks, Brian. I was wondering if we could follow up a little bit on costs. You've shown pretty good incremental progress on controllable refining costs this quarter, particularly relative to last year's fourth quarter. Can you talk about your 2026 priorities on the cost outlook? This is probably for Rich, but particularly as you have, you know, really improved utilization rate and clean product yield so significantly.

Rich Harbison: Yeah. Thanks. This is Rich. You know, maybe I'll just start with a little bit of a recap of the fourth quarter, which is really setting the base for the 2026 performance, and it has some really good highlights here to show. We were $5.96 in the fourth quarter, which is clearly a nice improvement quarter over quarter, and directionally heading towards that $5.50 target that we're up. You know, regionally, we saw some volume on the denominator side change. So, of course, we have the Los Angeles refinery idling and then the WRB acquisition. So those have subtle impacts on the calculation. The primary headwinds we saw in the fourth quarter were really the natural gas pricing had increased.

That was about a 13¢ a barrel headwind for us. But also, the Los Angeles refinery idling was also a big expense. We had a lot of expense there as we wound down that operation and put it in a safe position. And we had essentially no barrels throughput through that. So if we were to exclude that cost from our calculation for the fourth quarter, our actual fourth-quarter performance was around $5.57 a barrel. So very strong performance by the organization even in the headwinds of this. So, you know, I'm very optimistic. We're on track for this $5.50 target.

You know, going forward in '26, you know, the idling of the Los Angeles refinery will have a positive influence on an annualized basis of about 30¢ a barrel. So that's a positive tailwind for us. And also, probably as important is our organization and the continuous improvement effort our organization has really built into how we do our business day in and day out. And we're targeting another 15¢ a barrel reduction on that by year-end 2026. We've got over 300 initiatives that we're working on and a very solid track record of capturing value from this program. So all this is resulting in what I see as a very positive change in the business, honestly.

You know, we've got these organizational changes and work processes that we've put in place. And we've got dedicated resources that are challenging the status quo of everything we do each and every day, trying to find a better way to do it. Driving inefficiencies out, eliminating waste. You know? Of course, the foundation with all this is reliability. You've got to be in the market to capture the market, and we're seeing continued progress on our reliability programs. And we have a very safe operation as well with an organization that is committed to safety. So we're making great progress. I'm very excited about it. I think the cost profile is heading in the right direction.

And we're not done yet.

Steve Richardson: Great. Thanks very much.

Operator: We now turn to Neil Mehta with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Neil Mehta: Just building on the operations and refining. You talked about operating costs. Can you spend a little time on turnaround specifically last year? I think you were able to beat your turnaround guide. In Q1, it looks like you know, you're gonna be running in the low nineties utilization, which is probably better than a lot of your peers. Just your perspective on how you're managing through the turnarounds and what you're looking to be best in class there.

Rich Harbison: Hey, Neil. This is Rich, and thanks for the question. And I think I've given a few questions on this. Right? One thing I want to make clear is the 2025 guidance for turnarounds did not include WRB. The 2026 guidance includes 100% WRB. So there is a little bit of basis difference on these turnarounds. So you see a slight uptick in total turnaround cost, but full inclusion of the WRB assets in that. So when I think about 2026 and how that's going to move, you know, we see ourselves in a relatively low part of the cycle on the turnarounds.

You know, the TAs are focused primarily in the Central Corridor with a smaller effort in the Gulf Coast area, and 2026 first-quarter TAs, and that's highlighted in our enhanced information provided at the back end of the presentation here, which is giving you some insight into the quarterly or the geographic location of the turnarounds that we're providing. So we do see a fairly light turnaround cycle even though the dollars go up a little bit, it's really that inclusion of WRB into it that's reflecting it. And the other thing to think about, you know, we've often guided to 75¢ a barrel as the impact of our turnarounds.

And there is a slight if you were to take WRB and look at it in isolation, but that's being offset by the idling of the Los Angeles refinery. So there's essentially no material change to that guidance on an annual basis either, Neil.

Neil Mehta: Yeah. Thank you. And then, Kevin, follow-up for you. I think, Kevin, you talked about this eight-two-two-two framework. I thought that was a helpful way or moniker for thinking about the cash flow associated with the business. So I guess one of the questions as you guys are working down the debt towards the 30% net debt target, you're at 38% right now, is what's the capacity to buy back stock? And so if you could walk through that framework, that would be helpful.

Kevin Mitchell: Yeah, Neil. It's I actually think it's pretty straightforward because we've laid out the debt target and also the 50% or greater of operating cash flow returned to shareholders through the dividend and share buybacks. So the dividend, which is secure, competitive, and growing, is right around $2 billion per year. The capital program, and we continue to be very disciplined around how we think about the capital program and the execution against that. The capital budget is $2.4 billion. So that's the second of the twos, so slightly over $2 billion. And then the balance is available for debt reduction and buybacks.

And so when you think about an $8 billion operating cash flow, then that means there's just shy of $4 billion available for debt reduction and buybacks, and it would split approximately equally between the two, slightly weighted towards share buybacks if you think about that 50% calculation. And of course, you can change if the operating cash flow is it will be what it is, and it can flex up or down from that level, but the framework is there and in place.

And so we think that we should be able to reduce debt by somewhere in the order of one and a half billion per year for the next two years, and that's excluding any additional flex we have with any asset dispositions that we have not baked into our plan. We have not communicated any targets around that, but we continue to work through the portfolio and options we have to monetize non-core, non-strategic assets that may be worth more to others than to us.

Neil Mehta: Thanks, Kevin.

Operator: We now turn to Doug Leggett with Wolfe Research. Mark, I'm sure you want to probably pass this off to one of the operations guys, but I'm afraid I want to ask you an obvious question about spreads, about Venezuela, about WCS, and so on. And I guess my question is quite simple. Are these what's the actual dynamic that's going on in the Gulf Coast from Phillips' perspective? Are you seeing physical barrels beyond the sequestered cargoes that were obviously taken to begin with, and are they competitive? And what I'm really trying to understand is the market overreacting here?

Because WCS normally widens in the wintertime, and we haven't really seen a ton of physical barrels show up yet. So we're trying to figure out what the market is pricing in here if it's, you know, everybody, you know, is competing for these barrels at the same time, including places like India and so on. Any color you could offer on your experience would be appreciated, and I've got a fully open operations list.

Rich Harbison: Yeah, Doug. Hey. Thanks for the question. Yes. We're getting a lot of interest in the impact of Venezuelan crude, and certainly, we welcome the advent of more crude into the system. We've got the flexibility, as you know, to process Venezuelan crude. In fact, I think we've publicly stated we can process about 250,000 barrels a day. And if you look at that as a percentage of our total crude processing capacity, I think we're more heavily weighted, more opportunity there than our peers. So we're quite interested in being able to do that. And ultimately, we do think that there is an impact on WCS spreads.

And there are cargoes of Venezuelan crude coming into the US even before Maduro was removed, there were cargoes coming in, and we participated in that from time to time when the economics dictated it. And as you know, we're gonna look at the economics. We're gonna run our models and if it makes sense to process it or not. But we've got the capacity there. We don't have to spend a dime to get there, and we're ready to go. I'll let Brian dig into the numbers a little more.

Brian Mandell: Of course. I agree with everything Mark said. We were buying Venezuelan crude prior to Maduro. We're buying Venezuelan crude now, taking it to our refineries. But even if the Venezuelan crude doesn't come to our refineries, it's the global market. It's gonna impact heavy crude differentials. Even if on WCS, if you take a look at WCS, 2025 differentials versus this year's actuals and forward curve, $3.50 weaker in 2026 this year. So the market is a forward market. It's looking at barrels coming on, and it's processing and thinking about what the differential should be, not just for Venezuelan crude, but for all crudes.

I would say, you know, we as Mark said, we look at relative crude values. So when we're thinking about crudes, whether we bring in Venezuelan crude or some other crude, we're thinking about the cost of the crude, the crude type, the value of the products the crude makes, transportation costs, the specific refinery that the crude is going to. And we have a lot of flexibility about what crudes we can run in all our refineries. We also have a strong commercial organization, and that allows us to redo the crude slate, you know, as the market dictates. So that's also a help.

But you know, I would also one other final point that I haven't heard people talk about, which is the heavy naphtha. As more heavy naphtha is sent to the US Gulf Coast for blending crudes, it's likely to be a benefit to the gasoline margins, particularly when we're moving into gasoline season.

Doug Leggett: No. I appreciate the answers, guys. Maybe just a clarification very quickly. I'm trying to understand if it's the physical market that's driven the widening or the expectation from the physical market. Or is this paper markets bidding out in the future? But the physical hasn't shown up yet? I'm trying to understand if it's already happening. If this is more speculative that's driving these gaps, the gap that we've seen around what's normally a winter spread on WCS.

Brian Mandell: I would say both. The barrels are coming into the market, both in the domestic market and foreign markets, and it's the expectation of continued barrels into the markets.

Doug Leggett: Okay. My quick follow-up, Mark, just on your comments about the final utilization. Obviously, reliability was under the spotlight for quite a while. You guys have stepped up there, and I think Neil already observed on this question. My question is simply when we think about your run rate going forward, what would you have us think about the range of utilization? It obviously moved up. What should we think about as the go-forward sustainable utilization rate?

Rich Harbison: Yeah. I'll let Rich tackle that. He's got some good metrics there. Okay. So utilization, obviously, we've been focused on enhancing our reliability in our programs that underlie that continued long utilization. So utilization is really two things in my mind. One is the equipment has to be available to run. And then the market needs to be there. So the market will be what it'll be. But when it comes to our ability to run, we're seeing some really good progress with these reliability programs.

So much so we've actually even looked at our capacities as an organization and did some noodling on it, and we've concluded the fact that we've had some structural changes in four of our refineries. And you're gonna see us release some increased capacities and maybe even in the supplemental data on this presentation. But there's two primary reasons. One is demonstrated improved operating rates at two of the refineries, and projects that have been implemented at two other refineries. So at our Billings refinery, we're gonna move the capacity of that facility from historic 66,000 barrels a day stated capacity to 71,000 barrels a day. At the 217,000 barrels a day to 228,000 barrels a day.

And on the project side, we've talked about both of these projects, and I think in 2025, they were both commissioned and have both their capability to meet the design parameters. So at the Bayway facility, we've talked about the VGO, the native VGO project. That has also unlocked some crude capacity for us. And we're gonna move the Bayway refinery up to 275 barrels a day capacity from 258 and then the Sweeney refinery from 277 to 265 related to the sour crude flex project, which we've talked a lot about over time. 25,000 barrels a day increase in capacity across the system, about a 2% increase.

So when we think about utilization and then as a factor of capacity, you could see us using the equipment even at a higher level than what we have historically reported on. And I would just add to that, Doug, there's been a concerted effort around turnarounds. You've seen our turnarounds become more disciplined, and we're taking work out of the turnarounds. The work's still getting done, but we're finding creative ways to get it done outside of turnaround so it shortens that duration and the financial impact.

And we've been using things like machine learning that we reduced the spend on turnarounds in our forecast, I believe, mid-year substantially, and I think we still beat that throughout the year because we're getting better and better at using those tools to better implement our turnarounds to manage the impact on utilization. So that's underlying some of that performance as well.

Doug Leggett: Right. Mark, thanks so much for the answer. You're the reason we're having a panel on this exact topic at our conference in a few weeks. So thanks, guys. Ready for our answer.

Rich Harbison: I appreciate that.

Operator: We now turn to Lloyd Burn with Jefferies. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Lloyd Burn: Hey, afternoon, guys, Mark. Thank you for taking the questions. Maybe you guys could start with just an update on Western Gateway. And the open season and then any I know you guys are extending the destination to LA, but any hurdles, next steps, you know, where are you in permitting, all that stuff.

Don Baldridge: Hey, Lloyd. This is Don Baldridge. I appreciate the question. Yeah. To unpack that a bit, you know, we had a first open season positive response. We received multiple shipper commitments, which, you know, really gives us a solid base of volume and some certainty there. And as you mentioned, what we're doing now in this second open season, it's really an extension as opposed to or expansion instead of an extension because what we've done is we've expanded the delivery points all the way into the California market, specifically the LA market, which is really the heart there, California demand.

That plus being able to reach back into the Gulf Coast where we have made arrangements to be able to pull the product in from the Gulf Coast to the Explorer pipeline to reach the Western Gateway path. And as you know, we're a 22% owner of Explorer, so there's some benefit there. And so, you know, now prospective customers, they really have the ability to reach a very liquid demand center in the LA market, be able to reach back to supply origins both in the Mid Continent as well as the Gulf Coast. We think that is really a compelling offer. That's what this second open season is primarily focused on.

And what I'd emphasize for you is that looks liquidity, that's really, I think, what's gonna help drive additional interest in this project. Like I said, we received commitments in the first open season. We're expected to get additional commitments for this path that would really be the Gulf Coast, Mid Continent to LA. The feedback's been positive. Yeah. I think the folks that we are actively engaged with along this project see the market developing a lot like we do where the West Coast begins to look a lot like the East Coast where you have it's supplied by a few refineries.

Some imports that are waterborne, and then you have a pipeline which delivers really competitively priced, attractive, reliable American-produced fuel to that market. So that's what we think is really exciting about this. We're obviously actively working through the scoping and design phase and feel real confident in terms of the ability to execute. It's really right now, securing third-party supply commitments with the right contract terms and such to give us the right returns to be able to execute the project.

Lloyd Burn: That's great. And the support from the state's been pretty good.

Don Baldridge: I mean, from my experience, this is one of the unique projects, and I've been in the pipeline business for most of my career. But to have the amount of support from regulatory folks, elected folks, both state and federal, this one is a first to have that type of just kind of unilateral support and understanding for this type of project, the design, the capacity, timing, all of it makes a lot of sense to most of the folks that we talk to.

Lloyd Burn: That's awesome. Thank you, Don. And a quick follow-up, I think, to maybe Steve's question. Clean product yields have been really strong. And just the sustainability of that, the catalyst optimization, and then whether the Central Corridor will help with respect to those yields going forward.

Rich Harbison: Yeah. This is Rich. Thanks. So, you know, that's been a real focus for us. You know, we just talked a little bit about utilization and capacity, and that's really focused on the front end, the crude side of the business. The utilization and clean product yields component of that is a continued now focus for us. And we've taken time to evaluate every key unit that we have in our system. And we're using the discipline that we use for the crude unit utilization part of the business and applying that discipline now to all the downstream units that we have.

And what you're seeing is the results of this effort starting to creep into the numbers here, and you'll see it in the clean product yield component of that. We had a record year this year annually for clean product yield, which is not an easy thing to achieve in a system as large as ours. But what it is each organization is taking a detailed look at every one of these conversion units and making sure that we are converting to the highest product value that we can. So I feel it's structural. It's a structural change in our business, and I see it as very sustainable.

And I also see it as we're gonna see continued progress on this as we move forward here. Part of it driven by the organization's performance, the other part driven by our smart small capital, high return investment opportunities.

Lloyd Burn: Great. Thank you, guys.

Operator: We now turn to Manav Gupta with UBS. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Manav Gupta: Congrats on a lot of positive developments, including the debt pay down and cost reductions. My question here is when we look at the midstream earnings, you can let me know if I'm wrong, but I think you've almost doubled them in the last two years. So how should we think about the midstream portfolio going away? We assume, like, the organic 5% or something like mid-single-digit organic growth in midstream and a possibility of good bolt-on deals if they come along, like, help us understand the growth path for midstream from here on.

Mark Lashier: Yeah. Manav, this is Mark. You're absolutely right. You've seen that kind of growth in our earnings. There have been a number of things that historically have factored into that, certainly organic, but I think really the big upside has been the inorganic things that we acquired that opened up a larger organic playing field. So you've seen that with Dos Picos. You've seen that with Coastal Bend, and we'll continue to look for opportunities like that. But the current focus to get us to that four and a half is organic opportunities. And Don can walk you through what that looks like going forward.

Don Baldridge: Yeah. Manav, I could just say, I think we are right where I expected us to be from a run-rate EBITDA, you know, right around that billion dollars. And maybe to kind of unpack how that looks over the next couple of years, I expect this to be about this billion-dollar run rate. We'll have some, you know, quarter-to-quarter variability a bit with commodity prices that are, you know, sensitive in our G&P business. So what the realized prices are, as well as, you know, just our contract and volume mix when that we factor in fee escalations and recontracting and spot rates and such.

And the real step changes will be these organic growth projects that we have been talking about. And when those come online and fill up here in the latter part of '26 and into '27, those will be the big earning contributors. That's what really takes us to that 4.5 billion dollar run rate by the end of '27. And what I'd highlight for you, and I think you heard it a bit from Mark, is the momentum that we have within our midstream business.

As you know, I came in from the DCP acquisition, and I could tell you we are a much different midstream business today than we were just a few years ago because of the platform that we built. Like Mark mentioned, some of these acquisitions, putting this platform together, we are a dramatically better midstream company. We have, you know, really great response from our customers. They see the breadth and the quality of the service and the reliability that we are executing on. So we're getting a lot more deal flow. We see that as what really gives me a lot of confidence in hitting our target at 4.5 billion by '27.

Also, you're seeing the deal pipeline fill up for things past '27, like a potential expansion of Corpus Christi's frac, like the Western Gateway. And so those types of projects that are starting to come to fruition in our deal pipeline give me a lot of confidence that this is a sustainable growth rate of that mid-single-digit, not only to '27 but well beyond '27.

Manav Gupta: Perfect. So my quick follow-up here is a little bit on the refining macro. And we started 2025 with a very bearish outlook and things improved and refiners massively outperformed S&P in 2025. Now you're starting '26 with a very similar sentiment that for some reason, people are overly bearish on refining. But the way the setup is looking, it's still looking pretty constructive to us. And year to date, refiners have again massively outperformed S&P. You have definitely outperformed S&P. I'm just trying to understand what's your refining macro outlook and do you believe that we could have another good year in 2026 as we did in 2025?

Brian Mandell: Yeah. We couldn't agree with you more, Manav. We are very bullish. If you look toward the start of spring turnarounds, we believe the refining system will have trouble keeping up with demand. First, demand continues to keep growing in 2026. And if you look at global net refinery additions, they are less than global demand growth. We also see new refinery builds weighted to the very end of the year, and they'll probably slip into 2027. Second, we had very low unplanned turnarounds in 2025, and it'd be hard for unplanned outages for the US refining system to be much lower, particularly with, as you point out, that recent high utilization.

So couple this with the widening of the heavy dips and the benefit of that to our system, and we are very constructive margins for the year.

Manav Gupta: Thank you so much.

Operator: We now turn to Theresa Chen with Barclays. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Theresa Chen: Hi. On the midstream front, how do you view the likelihood of increased ethane projection in the Permian following the start-up of multiple residue gas pipelines in 2026 and beyond? What implications could that have for your NGL volumes and margin realizations over time? And given your integrated strategy on translating this potential development to the chemical side, if Gulf Coast ethane availability tightens, could incremental upstream rejection ultimately affect the feedstock advantage for Gulf Coast crackers?

Don Baldridge: Theresa, this is Don. I think our view on the dynamics in the Permian with more gas pipelines coming on, our view is that the ethane will have to continue to get priced so that sufficient recoveries are there to feed the demand in the Gulf Coast. And so we don't see a material change in rejection versus recovery in the Permian with the new gas pipelines coming on. Obviously, we, through our CPChem ownership, we've got some big demand coming on from an ethane standpoint as we turn on the Golden Triangle project in 2027 when it really starts commissioning and has that flow.

And so I think we see this as continuing to balance out as gas prices rally, might see some ethane obviously price with that so it stays in recovery. But that's pretty much how I see it.

Theresa Chen: Thank you.

Operator: We now turn to Paul Cheng with Scotiabank. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Paul Cheng: Hey, guys. Good morning. I think this is the first one. Maybe it's for Mark. You guys have done a lot in improving your refining operation. So end of this point with your house is gradually, I think, getting into the shape that you want. Do you believe you could be a good consolidator in the refining industry? And do you have the desire to do it if there's a good refining asset that is available that you may be able to add to the system and be able to enhance? So what kind of criteria you may be looking at?

Secondly, if we look at your heavy oil, I assume that in the first quarter, you're going to run more heavy oil given the discount. So, yes, the first quarter that you are already maxing out capability or that you actually think you still have excess capacity for the remaining of the year comparing to the first quarter level. And as you increase your heavy oil processing, would that in any shape or form impact your light product yield, as well as your overall footprint level? Thank you.

Mark Lashier: Paul, I'll add to your second question first and maybe invite others to pile on. But we are maxed out heavy. We are taking full advantage of what's out there. And of course, there is an impact on clean product yield. And so we recognize that, and then it's beneficial to the economic or we wouldn't be shifting that direction. On your first question, the improving refining operational performance, thank you for recognizing that. It's true. And I would say that what you're seeing, what you saw in '25 and we'll build on that momentum in '26, the precursors to that were set in motion almost four years ago.

And we've been very diligent, and the results also reflect the momentum that we have because we're not just waking up today and thinking about what we can do tomorrow. These things have been building and building over the last four years, and so there's much more to come. Much more to do, much more to accomplish. And could M&A take a role in that? Certainly, we've shown that for the right value creation opportunity like we saw with WRB, we would add our refining capabilities.

I think they're fairly rare and maybe could call them unicorns, but if there are the occasional unicorns that come up, we would certainly take a look at it if it added to our competitive advantage, particularly in the Mid Continent or Gulf Coast, we would certainly take a hard look at things.

Paul Cheng: Thank you.

Operator: Thanks, Paul. We now turn to Sam Margolin with Wells Fargo. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Sam Margolin: Hi. Thanks for taking the question. Maybe turning it back to midstream, you made a comment, you alluded to this post-2027 growth opportunity. And, you know, we have the 2027 EBITDA target out there, but it does seem just like underpinned by fundamental trends, GORs, and underlying production and efficiency trends, there is gonna be a tail to your midstream growth opportunity. And really, the question is how you are gonna frame that on the spending side. You know, you've got some organic projects that are starting up this year and next. Feels sort of like a peak spend, maybe there's some operating leverage and some infill in those new assets. Or there's an opportunity to accelerate spend.

So just a question about how you know, the midstream gas opportunity extends past 2027 and what that means for your capital framework.

Don Baldridge: Sure. You know, the way I think about that, we've built this platform that has this, you know, now, I think, an organic opportunity flywheel that continues to bring additional opportunities that are low capital, high return, being able to add incremental volumes to our system. And we'll continue to have some of these chunkier build-outs, and we've talked about a gas plant every year or so. I think we're on that pace, you know, additional fractionator. We're on that kind of pace where we'll have those types of additions. But in the interim, just, you know, lower capital, higher return, both we kind of build out extensions of what we have from a platform.

I think we'll continue to carry today. And so what I'd probably step back and just tell you is that momentum and that platform that we see is just being able to generate those kinds of projects that will carry us beyond '27 and be able to continue on that mid-single-digit. But I'd also say it's not just in our NGL business. We're seeing opportunities in and around our crude to clean value chain that we continue to stay focused on. And those are a lot of optimization projects around our pipes and terminals. So the breadth of which we can execute within the midstream space is pretty impressive and pretty exciting.

Kevin Mitchell: Hey, Sam. It's Kevin. I also just that. The Western Gateway, if that's a project that moves ahead, that is not in any of our current projections. And so that just further adds to the potential for growth post-2027 if that goes ahead.

Sam Margolin: Understood. Okay. Thank you. And then maybe just a follow-up on chems. It's an industry issue, not a CPChem or a PSX issue. But there is more capacity coming and, you know, maybe just your latest thoughts on chems both strategically after this slate of projects you have come online and then in the near term, you know, mitigating some of these commodity challenges?

Mark Lashier: Certainly. I think that CPChem is focused on getting those big projects up and operating. They do see them being quite accretive even in this environment, and they need to get those online and generating value. But CPChem has shown that they're quite resilient during this downturn, generating our share of their EBITDA $845 million in 2025. And what needs to happen and is happening in the marketplace is pretty large-scale rationalization on the order of 20 million tons per year. And that would get the industry back to 85% utilization. Now I'd note that right now, the US base is running at 90%.

And so the US is leveraging its cost advantages, its capabilities while Asia Pacific and Europe are running at about 65%. So they're on the bubble. They're on the ropes. And that's where we think the bulk of the rationalization needs to occur. We saw 5 million metric tons a year come off in '25. We expect another five to seven coming out of Southeast Asia in this year and next, and then an additional rationalization of naphtha crackers in Europe to tighten things up. And then the new builds that are out there beyond what we see at Golden Triangle and Roscoe Fon are primarily in China, and there's not a lot of clarity around those.

When they will come up. There were, you know, stories of them being operational but not actually being run in '25. And so that's a little bit fuzzier, and typically, it takes longer for those assets to come on, and they will be they'll only be brought on when the Chinese think that they might be useful. And so that continues to push out.

Sam Margolin: Thanks so much.

Mark Lashier: You're welcome.

Operator: We now turn to Matthew Blair with TPH. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Matthew Blair: Great. Thank you, and good morning. Maybe to stick on chems here. Could you talk a little bit more about the modeling considerations for your Gulf Coast cracker and PE plant that's scheduled to come online later this year? Do you think that Q3 is a good start-up target and if so, how long would that take to ramp? In terms of the sales split, would that be completely oriented to the export market, or do you think, like, a fifty-fifty domestic export split would be reasonable? And then finally, for the ethane supply, does that all come from PSX, or do you have any sort of contracts with third-party ethane providers? Thanks.

Mark Lashier: Yeah. Thanks, Matt. Those assets should be commissioning and really starting up in the fourth quarter and then ramping up through at least the first half of '27. And given where we are today, it's gonna be largely export-oriented, and certainly initially, they'll always want to repatriate as much of that volume as they can. But starting up, it'll be primarily export-oriented. As far as the sourcing of ethane, the majority of it is coming from us, but they certainly have connectivity to ensure that they have the best possible situation and multiple sources of ethane.

Matthew Blair: Sounds good. And then you've mentioned the LA shutdown impact on op costs in the fourth quarter. Would we found very helpful. Do you have a similar number, if there is one, on the LA shutdown impact for margin capture in the fourth quarter? And I guess the reason I ask is if I look at your margin capture in 2025 versus 2024, it looks like it came down about a percentage point, and some of your peers are talking about other margin capture increased year over year.

And, of course, you know, these indicators aren't exactly apples to apples, but maybe you could just help us understand if there were any sort of unique headwinds to your margin capture in 2025. Thank you.

Rich Harbison: This is Rich. Los Angeles refinery, when we step back and look at it, you know, when we're making the decision here to the fate of the asset and the operation, it was very clear to us on two things. One, the cost to produce was very high. And the materiality of the earnings was very low. If not negative, in a number of cases. So and the outlook on capital recapitalization of the asset was also very high. So when I think about it, it is not material to the earnings side of the business, the shutdown.

And the market capture on an overall system base if you think about it, it was a 135,000 barrel a day facility and a 2 million barrel a day operation. So it was not extraordinarily material either on the overall system. So I would say nonmaterial in market capture and nonmaterial on earnings.

Matthew Blair: Got it. Thank you.

Operator: We now turn to Jason Gabelman with TD Cohen. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Jason Gabelman: Yeah. Hey. All of my questions have been answered, but maybe if I could just touch on the midstream guidance because it sounded like the ramp-up from the new projects wouldn't really hit until the second half of this year. So wondering if you're seeing any headwinds in the first half from recontracting on the NGL pipes and if that's something that'll be a feature in future years. And then also, anything specifically in 4Q that resulted in a step-up in OpEx, which looked a bit high? Thanks.

Don Baldridge: Hey, Jason. Yeah. In terms of the first half of this year, I think we're gonna see ourselves pretty close and pretty flat on that billion-dollar quarter run rate. I think that's pretty well set. You know, that factors in, like you mentioned, some contract renewals that factor in contract fee escalations are all in there. So I think that will stay fairly steady, and you'll see the uptick really when we start filling in some of these organic growth projects. And in terms of OpEx for the fourth quarter, that's really just sort of timing and seasonality.

I think if you look at us over multiple quarters and years, you know, we spent a lot of time talking about extracting cost out of the refining business, and some of those successes have blended over into the midstream because the team there has also been able to grab some efficiencies through the scale that we've built and be able to leverage what we have at Phillips in total. And so we're seeing a really, I think, a healthy operating discipline there from a cost standpoint. But there's obviously some seasonality and some quarter-to-quarter timing, but really pleased with the performance from an operation standpoint.

Jason Gabelman: Alright. I'll leave it there. Thanks.

Operator: This concludes the question and answer session. I'll now turn the call back over to Sean Maher for closing comments.

Sean Maher: Thank you all for your interest in Phillips 66. If you have any questions or feedback after today's call, please feel free to reach out to Kirk or myself.