XOM

Exxon Mobil Price

XOM
$162,36
-$1,01(-%0,61)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-07 18:24 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-07 18:24, Exxon Mobil (XOM) is priced at $162,36, with a total market cap of $688,07B, a P/E ratio of 18,06, and a dividend yield of %2,44. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $161,75 and $166,24. The current price is %0,37 above the day's low and %2,33 below the day's high, with a trading volume of 6,29M. Over the past 52 weeks, XOM has traded between $101,18 to $176,41, and the current price is -%7,96 away from the 52-week high.

XOM Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$163,37
Market Cap$688,07B
Volume6,29M
P/E Ratio18,06
Dividend Yield (TTM)%2,44
Dividend Amount$1,03
Diluted EPS (TTM)6,65
Net Income (FY)$28,84B
Revenue (FY)$323,90B
Earnings Date2026-05-01
EPS Estimate1,80
Revenue Estimate$80,44B
Shares Outstanding4,21B
Beta (1Y)0.288
Ex-Dividend Date2026-02-12
Dividend Payment Date2026-03-10

About XOM

Exxon Mobil Corporation explores for and produces crude oil and natural gas in the United States and internationally. It operates through Upstream, Downstream, and Chemical segments. The company is also involved in the manufacture, trade, transport, and sale of crude oil, natural gas, petroleum products, petrochemicals, and other specialty products; manufactures and sells petrochemicals, including olefins, polyolefins, aromatics, and various other petrochemicals; and captures and stores carbon, hydrogen, and biofuels. As of December 31, 2021, it had approximately 20,528 net operated wells with proved reserves. The company was founded in 1870 and is headquartered in Irving, Texas.
SectorEnergy
IndustryOil & Gas Integrated
CEODarren W. Woods
HeadquartersSpring,TX,US
Employees (FY)58,00K
Average Revenue (1Y)$5,58M
Net Income per Employee$497,31K

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Exxon Mobil (XOM) is currently trading at $162,36, with a 24h change of -%0,61. The 52-week trading range is $101,18–$176,41.

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Hot Posts About Exxon Mobil (XOM)

EqunixHub

EqunixHub

04-03 07:23
#国际油价走高 The $140 Shock: How the Iran–US Escalation on April 3 Just Rewrote Global Market Rules Just when the world thought energy markets had stabilized after two years of painful adjustments, a single day changed everything. On April 3, the attack on the Beik Road Bridge in Karaj—and Iran’s swift retaliatory strike—ignited a crude oil price explosion that market veterans will remember for decades. By settlement, WTI crude had surged 15%, breaking past $110 for the first time since 2022. But the real shock came from spot Brent crude: prices briefly soared past $140, a level untouched since the all-time highs of the 2008 financial crisis. This is not just another headline. This is a structural shift. And if you hold stocks, crypto, commodities, or simply pay for gasoline and heating, you need to understand what comes next. Part One: The Conflict – From Tensions to Uncontrolled Escalation? The attack on the Beik Road Bridge in Karaj was not a minor skirmish. The bridge is a strategic artery in northern Iran, critical for both civilian logistics and military movement near the Alborz mountains. While details remain fluid, initial reports confirm that the strike bore hallmarks of a precision operation—plausibly linked to enhanced US or allied intelligence assets. Iran’s retaliation came within hours. That speed is significant. Tehran has historically observed a “strategic patience” doctrine, but this time, the response was immediate and public. Ballistic missile and drone launches targeted regional assets linked to US forces. The message was clear: the old red lines have moved. So, has the conflict become uncontrollable? Not yet—but the margin for error has vanished. The Iran–US shadow war has flirted with open conflict for years. However, the Karaj attack represents a potential “tripwire event.” Unlike previous provocations (tanker seizures, drone shoot-downs, base bombings), this one occurred inside Iran’s core territory, not in Syria, Iraq, or international waters. Three indicators suggest we are now in uncharted territory: 1. Retaliatory symmetry is broken. Past exchanges followed an escalatory ladder. Now, a bridge attack inside Iran draws immediate missile fire. Next time, a military facility could trigger a direct strike on a US asset in the Gulf. 2. Energy choke points are now active battlegrounds. The Strait of Hormuz—through which 20% of global oil passes—has been placed on unofficial war alert. Shipping insurance premiums for tankers exiting the Gulf rose over 300% within 24 hours. 3. Diplomatic silence. Neither the UN nor major powers have issued effective de-escalation statements. The silence suggests back-channel talks have collapsed. In short: the conflict is not yet an all-out regional war, but it has exited the controllable phase. We are now in a high-intensity crisis mode, with a non-zero probability of direct US–Iran engagement within weeks. Part Two: Global Energy Crisis – Déjà Vu or Something Worse? The energy crisis of 2021–2022 was driven by post-pandemic demand, supply chain chaos, and the initial shock of the Russia-Ukraine war. This time, the cocktail is more dangerous. Why this oil shock differs from 2022: · Supply elasticity is zero. In 2022, the world still had strategic reserves (the US released over 180 million barrels from the SPR), spare OPEC+ capacity, and a functioning Russian energy export system (sanctions aside). Today: US SPR is at its lowest level since 1983. OPEC+ spare capacity is concentrated in Saudi Arabia and the UAE, both now openly hesitant to ramp up in the middle of a US–Iran war that could draw them in. · Brent at $140 is not a spike—it’s a signal. Spot prices crossing $140 means physical buyers are panic-bidding for actual cargoes, not just futures contracts. That indicates real supply interruption fears, not speculative froth. · Iranian oil is gone from global markets. Before this escalation, Iran was exporting 1.5–1.7 million barrels per day (bpd), much of it to China via shadow fleets. Those flows have now effectively stopped. Tankers are idling, and China is reluctant to accept cargoes that could trigger secondary sanctions. · The Houthi factor. Yemen’s Houthi forces, aligned with Iran, have already launched drone attacks on Saudi oil facilities in the past. Another major strike on Abqaiq (the world’s largest oil processing plant) would remove 5–7 million bpd overnight. That threat is now priced at a non-zero probability. Real-world impact forecast: · US average gasoline price: likely to hit $5.50–$6.50 per gallon within 4–6 weeks. · European natural gas: will surge again as LNG tankers are diverted to Asia, which is now bidding up prices to replace lost Iranian and potential Gulf crude. · Emerging markets: India, Turkey, and much of Southeast Asia face current account crises and currency devaluation risks. This is not merely a “reemerging” energy crisis. It is a new, more brittle energy order where the last safety nets have already been used. Part Three: Did You Catch the Oil Rally? Strategy Lessons For traders who positioned before April 3, the 15% WTI surge delivered extraordinary returns. But catching a move like this is less about luck and more about understanding structural triggers. Who made money? · Long-term holders of physical oil ETFs (USO, BNO) who accumulated during the $70–$80 range. · Options traders who bought out-of-the-money calls with 30–60 day expirations on WTI or Brent. · Energy sector equity investors (XLE, CVX, XOM) who recognized that geopolitical risk premia had collapsed to irrational lows in March. But holding oil now is a different game. Post-spike, three strategies emerge: 1. The momentum trade (high risk): If Brent holds above $130 for three consecutive sessions, the next technical target is $160–$180. This requires the conflict to expand, not contract. Use tight stops (5–7%). 2. The volatility sell (advanced): Sell out-of-the-money put spreads on oil companies. Implied volatility is extreme. Premiums are high. If prices stabilize or pull back modestly, you capture time decay. 3. The hedge approach (for crypto/equity portfolios): Maintain a small (3–5%) allocation to oil futures or energy stocks as a direct hedge against inflation and war risk. Rebalance weekly. Warning: Do not chase at $140 Brent. The likelihood of a 10–15% correction if diplomatic channels unexpectedly reopen (however unlikely) is real. Wait for a pullback toward $115–$120 before establishing new longs. Part Four: Crypto and War – How Should Mainstream Coins Position? The relationship between geopolitical conflict and cryptocurrency is not linear. Unlike oil (which has a clear supply-demand shock model), crypto reacts through three different channels. Channel 1: The inflation hedge narrative Oil at $140 means inflation expectations will reaccelerate. The US Fed is now trapped: raise rates further to fight energy inflation (risking a deep recession), or hold steady (allowing inflation to become entrenched). Bitcoin maximalists argue that this is precisely the environment BTC was built for—a non-sovereign, supply-capped asset. Historical precedent: In March 2022, after Russia invaded Ukraine and oil surged, Bitcoin initially fell 10% (risk-off liquidation), then rallied 25% over the following six weeks as inflation fears dominated. A similar pattern is possible now. Channel 2: Liquidity flight to cash War triggers uncertainty. Uncertainty triggers selling of volatile assets. Crypto remains among the most volatile asset classes. If the conflict escalates into open US–Iran warfare, expect a sharp, sudden 15–25% drawdown across BTC, ETH, and major altcoins within 48 hours as traders flee to the US dollar. This is not a contradiction with Channel 1. It is a sequence: first sell everything that moves (crash), then re-enter assets that benefit from the new regime (recovery). The key question is the speed and depth of the crash. Channel 3: Energy cost of mining Bitcoin’s hashrate is geographically concentrated. A sustained $140+ oil price means electricity costs in many mining regions (especially natural-gas-dependent areas like the Middle East and parts of the US) will spike. Less efficient miners will be forced offline. A post-halving (April 2024) reduction in block rewards already squeezed margins. Now, energy inflation could trigger a mining capitulation event—temporarily slowing network hashrate but historically bullish for price as weaker hands sell coins to cover operating costs. Positioning recommendations for crypto holders: · Bitcoin (BTC): Hold core position (minimum 60% of crypto portfolio). Add on any dip below $55,000 if war fears spike. BTC remains the cleanest institutional gateway for geopolitically driven inflation hedging. · Ethereum (ETH): More sensitive to risk-off sentiment than BTC, but stronger long-term fundamentals. Use a barbell approach: hold ETH for the staking yield, but reduce size relative to BTC during active conflict. · Altcoins: Avoid most mid-caps unless they have explicit energy or commodity exposure (e.g., renewable energy-focused L1s). Meme coins and high-beta DeFi tokens will get crushed first and recover last. · Stablecoins: Hold 15–20% of total portfolio in USDC or DAI on-chain, ready to deploy during the inevitable panic dip. Do not hold Tether (USDT) if regulatory uncertainty around sanctions compliance rises. The crypto-specific wildcard: If the US government expands financial sanctions to include crypto wallets linked to Iranian entities, expect increased pressure on centralized exchanges to freeze addresses. That could temporarily fracture off-ramp liquidity. Non-custodial solutions (Ledger, Trezor, etc.) become essential during this period. Final Outlook: Three Scenarios for the Next 30 Days Scenario 1 (40% probability): Controlled escalation No further attacks inside Iran or on US Gulf assets. Oil holds $110–$130. Crypto recovers within 10 days. Markets learn to live with elevated tension. Action: Maintain hedges, add oil on pullbacks. Scenario 2 (45% probability): Widening conflict A US military asset is struck. Retaliatory strikes inside Iran. Strait of Hormuz threatened. Oil breaks $160. Bitcoin drops 20%, then rallies 35% within 60 days. Action: Raise cash to 25%, buy BTC and oil during panic. Scenario 3 (15% probability): Full regional war Iran closes Hormuz. US and Israel launch sustained strikes. Global recession begins Q3 2026. Oil surges past $200 briefly then collapses as demand destruction hits. Crypto suffers extreme volatility but emerges as one of few transferable assets. Action: Reduce leverage to zero. Hold physical gold, Bitcoin self-custody, and essential commodities. No one knows which path will unfold. But on April 3, 2026, the world changed. The only unforgivable mistake is pretending otherwise. Stay cautious. Stay liquid. And always know your exit before you enter the trade.
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