Skip to navigationSkip to main contentSkip to right columnADVERTISEMENTAlex SiroisSun, June 7, 2026 at 5:50 PM GMT+2 3 min readQuick ReadXOM pairs a 43-year dividend streak and near-zero leverage with $16B in structural cost savings, targeting $20B by 2030.ExxonMobil paid $15B in dividends through its 2020 collapse and has already retired 40% of Pioneer acquisition shares since May 2024.Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Exxon Mobil didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM) is a stock worth owning for decades because almost no company on the planet combines its scale, balance sheet strength, and 43-year dividend record with the kind of structural cost advantages that compound through every commodity cycle. Recent WTI swings, from $114.58 on April 7 to $85.91 on April 17, are exactly the kind of short-term noise that gives long-term investors a clean entry into a permanent holding.Pillar One: A Business Built to Outlast the CycleExxonMobil now runs leaner than it has in a generation. Cumulative structural cost savings since 2019 have reached $15.60 billion, with management targeting $20 billion by 2030. Advantaged assets in the Permian, Guyana, and LNG accounted for 59% of production last year, with Guyana alone exceeding 900,000 gross barrels per day and Golden Pass LNG Train 1 shipping its first cargo in April 2026. Q1 2026 adjusted EPS came in at $1.16 versus a $1.01 consensus, the fourth consecutive quarter of beating expectations. The balance sheet remains the industry benchmark, with debt-to-equity of 0.168 and interest coverage of 56.28x.Pillar Two: Income You Can Actually Plan AroundThe dividend is the spine of the forever case. ExxonMobil has raised its payout for 43 consecutive years, most recently with a 4% increase to $1.03 per share quarterly, payable June 10, 2026. The current yield sits at 2.73%, and management plans $20 billion in share repurchases for 2026 on top of $20.0 billion completed in 2025. Roughly 40% of the shares issued for the Pioneer acquisition have already been retired since May 2024, meaning every remaining share carries a steadily larger claim on cash flow.Pillar Three: Surviving What Breaks Other Energy CompaniesThe 2020 oil collapse is the cleanest stress test on record. Operating cash flow fell to $14.67 billion and the company posted a $23.25 billion net loss, yet ExxonMobil still paid $14.87 billion in dividends. In 2025, a softer crude environment still produced $51.97 billion in operating cash flow and $26.13 billion in free cash flow. Q1 2026 absorbed $706 million in physical losses from Middle East disruption plus a $3.88 billion mark-to-market timing hit, and underlying earnings still climbed to $8.77 billion versus $7.58 billion a year earlier. A beta of 0.183 tells the rest of the story.Terms and Privacy PolicyPrivacy & Cookie SettingsMore Info