Top line contracting.
−4.5% YoY versus +1.4% prior. 3y CAGR −6.7%.
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Energy · Market Cap: $609.3B
Fundamentals as of 2026-03-31
All analysis on this page is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Fair values are model-based estimates. Always do your own research.
How does XOM compare?
The Question
Concerns — Exxon Mobil Corporation's 10.0% ROE is below sector median.
Financial story
Concerns — Exxon Mobil Corporation's 10.0% ROE and 0.80 debt-to-equity warrant a closer look at the underlying business.
Bottom line: XOM is flagged as overvalued by the 1 legendary model, but earns a C sector grade (48/100) in Energy. Use the per-tab analysis to form your own view. Drill into the valuation breakdown and sector ranking for the full picture.
Strength. Record 4.59M boe/d of production and low-cost Guyana barrels still profitable below $30 — the engine is running better than ever.
Risk. GAAP EPS fell to $1.00 (from $1.76), net debt jumped to ~$59.6B, and a ~$104+ Brent built on war can revert any quarter.
Exxon Mobil Corporation's fair value depends on which model you trust. See the per-investor fair-value table in the valuation tab.
XOM trades at 24.4x earnings. Sector context and per-investor signals are in the valuation tab.
XOM and CVX differ on P/E, ROE, and revenue growth. See the full XOM vs CVX compare matrix.
Buffett evaluates XOM against his respective frameworks. Per-model fair value and reasoning are in the valuation tab.
XOM's P/E ratio is 24.4x. 5-year P/E history is in the financials tab.
Investor verdicts vary by methodology. Full breakdown by investor and signal is in the valuation tab.
−4.5% YoY versus +1.4% prior. 3y CAGR −6.7%.
−4.5%Net margin 8.9% versus 9.9% prior (−1.0pp). Operating 10.5%.
8.9%P/E 25.3x — 78% above the 5y median of 14.2x. Forward 12.5x hints at EPS expansion next year.
25.3xSee exactly where XOM ranks
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Sign in to see the rankingXOM sits at #29 in Energy with a C grade (48/100).
Energy earnings are a leveraged bet on the crude price, so the macro signal here is the whole thesis. After a war premium pushed WTI and Brent up more than ~45% since the late-February conflict began, crude has retraced toward the mid-$80s — roughly 20% off the 2026 peak — on growing odds of an Iran de-escalation.
The smoking-gun datapoint: a reported 14-point draft agreement would lift oil sanctions and commit Tehran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz within roughly 30 days, with one U.S. official putting the odds of a signed deal around 85%. If that transit chokepoint reopens, the supply-disruption premium embedded in the curve unwinds quickly.
Forward read (1-2 quarters): integrated majors and E&Ps see revenue and free cash flow track lower with realized prices. The earnings sensitivity is direct — a $10 move in the average realized barrel flows almost entirely to pre-tax profit on already-producing volumes, since the cost base is largely fixed. Buyback pace and dividend coverage tighten at the margin if crude settles below the level that underwrote 2026 capital-return plans.
Counter-narrative: the deal is not signed, Tehran has pushed back on terms, and any breakdown re-arms the Hormuz premium overnight. Several analysts still model crude holding near $90-100 until there is genuine clarity, which would keep energy cash flows resilient. This is a probability-weighted setup, not a one-way trade — hence medium confidence.