NYSE:XOM

Exxon Mobil Edges Higher After Bank of America Upgrades Stock to Buy

Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM) shares rose modestly on Tuesday after Bank of America upgraded the energy giant to Buy from Neutral and set a $154 price target.

The upgrade comes as oil markets adjust to a changing geopolitical landscape following the recent U.S.-Iran agreement, which has helped push crude prices lower by reducing concerns about supply disruptions in the Middle East. Despite the decline in oil prices, Bank of America appears to see value in Exxon Mobil's diversified operations, strong balance sheet, and ability to generate significant cash flow across commodity cycles.

The firm's bullish stance suggests confidence that Exxon can continue delivering shareholder returns through dividends and buybacks while benefiting from its scale, low-cost production base, and growing portfolio of high-return projects, particularly in Guyana and the Permian Basin.

The relatively muted share-price reaction indicates that investors are balancing the positive analyst upgrade against a softer near-term outlook for crude prices. However, Exxon remains one of the industry's strongest cash generators and is widely viewed as being better positioned than many peers to navigate periods of commodity price volatility.

With Bank of America's $154 price target implying meaningful upside from current levels, the upgrade highlights continued optimism that Exxon can create value even as energy markets transition from geopolitical-driven supply concerns toward a greater focus on underlying demand and economic growth trends.
Exxon Mobil Shares Fall as Oil Prices Slide on U.S.-Iran Peace Deal Optimism

Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM) shares fell 4% after TD Cowen reiterated its Buy rating, as investors focused on the sharp decline in crude oil prices following reports that the United States and Iran are moving closer to a formal peace agreement.

Brent crude dropped nearly 5% to around $83 per barrel after news that the two countries had reached a framework agreement aimed at ending hostilities and reopening the Strait of Hormuz, a critical route for global energy shipments. The decline reflects the unwinding of the geopolitical risk premium that had supported oil prices in recent months.

Energy stocks broadly came under pressure as lower oil prices could reduce near-term earnings expectations for major producers. Exxon, one of the world's largest integrated oil companies, is also sensitive to changes in crude prices.

Despite the pullback, TD Cowen maintained its Buy rating on Exxon, arguing that the company's long-term growth strategy remains intact. The firm continues to see value in Exxon’s diversified portfolio, strong balance sheet, and production growth initiatives, even as near-term commodity prices fluctuate.

The market reaction suggests investors are prioritizing the immediate impact of falling oil prices over analyst optimism. Going forward, Exxon shares are likely to remain closely tied to developments surrounding the U.S.-Iran negotiations and the direction of global crude markets.
Exxon Mobil Corporation (NYSE: XOM) will release its first quarter 2026 financial results on Friday, May 1, 2026
ExxonMobil Board Unanimously Recommends Redomiciling the Company from New Jersey to Texas
Exxon Mobil Corporation announced that its board unanimously recommends moving the company’s legal domicile from New Jersey to Texas, aligning its legal base with where its headquarters and core operations have been located since 1989. The proposal, which requires shareholder approval at the 2026 annual meeting, would not change ExxonMobil’s operations, management, assets, strategy, or employee locations.

The company said Texas offers a regulatory and legal environment more supportive of business, including modern corporate statutes and the Texas Business Court designed to resolve complex corporate disputes efficiently. CEO Darren Woods stated that aligning the company’s legal home with its operating base in a state closely connected to its workforce and operations could help maximize shareholder value.

ExxonMobil currently has a large presence in Texas, where about 30% of its global employees and roughly 75% of its U.S. workforce are located. The company’s historical link to New Jersey dates back to the incorporation of Standard Oil of New Jersey in 1882, but the board noted it has not held a meeting in the state for more than four decades.
Source: Business Wire
ExxonMobil reported strong full-year 2025 results, supported by record production, disciplined cost control, and robust shareholder returns.

The company generated earnings of $28.8 billion and cash flow from operations of $52.0 billion in 2025, with earnings per share of $6.70, or $6.99 excluding identified items. Upstream production reached its highest level in more than 40 years, while refinery throughput set a new record, enabling total shareholder distributions of $37.2 billion, split between $17.2 billion in dividends and $20.0 billion in share repurchases.

ExxonMobil also delivered all 10 key projects on schedule, added an estimated $3 billion in earnings capacity on a constant price basis, and achieved $15.1 billion in cumulative structural cost savings since 2019. The company confirmed progress toward its 2030 greenhouse gas and flaring intensity reduction targets and announced a quarterly dividend of $1.03 per share, extending its dividend growth streak to 43 consecutive years.
Exxon Mobil Corporation announced that it will release its fourth-quarter 2025 financial results on Friday, January 30, 2026, before U.S. markets open.

Source: Business Wire
Exxon Mobil Corporation outlined key factors expected to influence fourth-quarter 2025 results relative to the third quarter, emphasizing that these are directional considerations rather than earnings guidance.

Management expects lower liquids and gas prices to weigh on upstream results, partially offset by stronger industry margins and timing effects. Planned and seasonal factors include impacts from scheduled maintenance, year-end inventory effects, and identified items such as divestment gains, impairments, restructuring charges, and tax-related items across segments.

The company noted that these estimates exclude underlying operating performance and other variables such as foreign exchange, unplanned downtime, or broader macroeconomic shifts. ExxonMobil plans to release full 4Q 2025 financial results on January 30, 2026, via its website and an SEC Form 8-K filing.
Exxon Mobil Corporation raised its 2030 corporate plan, saying its ongoing transformation will deliver higher profits, stronger cash flow and faster emissions intensity reductions without increasing capital spending. At constant prices and margins, the company now targets 25 billion dollars in earnings growth and 35 billion dollars in cash flow growth between 2024 and 2030, 5 billion dollars higher than its prior plan for each metric, while expecting return on capital employed to exceed 17 percent and cumulative surplus cash flow to reach roughly 145 billion dollars by 2030.

Upstream output is projected to rise to 5.5 million barrels of oil equivalent per day by 2030, with “advantaged” assets in the Permian, Guyana and LNG contributing about 3.7 million barrels of oil equivalent per day, or 65 percent of volumes; Permian production alone is expected to double to around 2.5 million barrels of oil equivalent per day, helped by technology-driven recovery gains and higher Pioneer Natural Resources synergies now estimated at 4 billion dollars annually. In Product Solutions, ExxonMobil aims for more than 9 billion dollars in incremental earnings by 2030 versus 2024, including about 4 billion dollars from advantaged projects and with high-value fuels, chemicals, lubricants and new products such as Proxxima systems and carbon materials projected to generate over 40 percent of segment earnings.

The company also lifted its cumulative structural cost-savings goal to 20 billion dollars versus 2019 and said all 2030 corporate greenhouse gas emissions intensity targets are now expected to be achieved by 2026, including earlier reductions in GHG and flaring intensity and faster progress on methane. Through its Low Carbon Solutions business, ExxonMobil highlighted roughly 9 million tonnes per year of third-party CO₂ already under contract in its carbon capture and storage portfolio, the start-up of its first large-scale end-to-end CCS system on the U.S. Gulf Coast and plans to invest around 20 billion dollars in lower-emission opportunities from 2025 to 2030, including CCS-enabled data centers, hydrogen, lithium, low-carbon fuels and advanced carbon materials.
ExxonMobil Posts $7.5 Billion Q3 Profit, Boosts Dividend Amid Strong Operations

ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM) reported third-quarter 2025 earnings of $7.5 billion, or $1.76 per share, up from $7.1 billion in Q2. Operating cash flow reached $14.8 billion, with $9.4 billion returned to shareholders through dividends and buybacks. The company increased its fourth-quarter dividend to $1.03 per share. ExxonMobil highlighted record output in Guyana exceeding 700,000 barrels per day and near-record Permian production of 1.7 million barrels per day. CEO Darren Woods said the company remains on track with key projects and continues to lead in efficiency, innovation, and shareholder returns.
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