The 31% pullback in crude from its April spike has dragged three integrated majors into buy territory ahead of Q2 earnings in August.
WTI crude's retreat to $78.94 a barrel from its $114.58 April peak — triggered by the Strait of Hormuz disruption — has pulled Exxon Mobil Corp., Chevron Corp. and ConocoPhillips down 6 percent, 8 percent and 9 percent respectively, creating a buying window before all three report Q2 results in early August.
"These three companies fill distinct portfolio roles — safety with Exxon, income with Chevron, and upside leverage with ConocoPhillips," said a senior energy strategist at a major investment bank. "All three crushed Q1 estimates and are returning record capital to shareholders."
Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM) trades near $137 with a market cap of about $564 billion, offering a 3 percent yield backed by 43 consecutive years of dividend increases and a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.17. Chevron (NYSE: CVX) yields 4 percent after raising its quarterly payout to $1.78, extending a 39-year streak, while its Hess acquisition boosted worldwide production 15 percent year over year to 3.86 million barrels of oil equivalent per day. ConocoPhillips (NYSE: COP) is the cheapest of the three at a forward P/E of 10 times, with its Willow project in Alaska 50 percent complete and Port Arthur LNG set to start up in the second half of 2026.
The EIA expects Brent to average $89 a barrel in the fourth quarter and $79 in 2027 as Middle East production returns, meaning the order of resilience among the three depends on how quickly Strait of Hormuz traffic normalizes. If tensions reignite, Exxon gets hit least and ConocoPhillips most; if the waterway clears faster than expected, the ranking flips. July earnings season starts the next leg, with all three reporting Q2 numbers in early August.
Exxon Mobil: The Defensive Anchor
Exxon's first-quarter adjusted EPS of $1.16 beat the $1.01 consensus by 15 percent, marking the fourth straight quarter above estimates. Upstream production reached 4.6 million oil-equivalent barrels per day, with Guyana hitting a record 900,000 gross barrels per day. The forward catalyst is liquefied gas: Golden Pass LNG Train 1 shipped its first cargo in April, opening a new earnings stream as global LNG demand absorbs lost Persian Gulf supply. The stock carries 11 Buy or Strong Buy ratings with a $170.29 analyst target, implying about 24 percent upside. The risk: Exxon's effective tax rate jumped to 40 percent in Q1, and mark-to-market derivative timing wiped $3.88 billion off GAAP net income.
Chevron: The Income Play
Chevron's Q1 adjusted EPS of $1.41 beat the $0.97 estimate by 46 percent, the sixth straight beat. Management has already hit its initial $1 billion Hess synergy target and is working toward $3 billion to $4 billion in structural cost reductions by year-end 2026. Unpriced optionality includes a data-center power joint venture with Microsoft and Engine No. 1 in West Texas, plus a lithium project in the Smackover Formation. Capital return remains industrial-scale: $2.5 billion in Q1 2026 buybacks marked the 16th straight quarter above $5 billion of total shareholder returns. The risk: Chevron's net debt ratio rose to 18 percent from 16 percent, and Q1 absorbed about $2.9 billion of unfavorable derivative and LIFO timing.
ConocoPhillips: The Growth Bet
ConocoPhillips trades at a trailing P/E of 18 and a forward P/E of just 10 times, with an EV/EBITDA of 5.93 — the discount that long-only energy managers tend to target. Q1 adjusted EPS of $1.89 beat the $1.69 consensus by 12 percent even as the realized price slipped to $50.36 per barrel of oil equivalent, down 6 percent year over year. The fixed-plus-variable dividend sits at $0.84 for Q2, up from $0.78, and management is committed to returning 45 percent of cash flow from operations to shareholders in 2026. The company is targeting $7 billion of incremental free cash flow by 2029. The risk: as a pure-play exploration and production company, ConocoPhillips has the highest commodity sensitivity. Management already excluded Qatar from 2026 production guidance due to Middle East conflict, and a sustained crude drop below the high $60s would compress the variable dividend.
What to Watch in July
OPEC+ approved a further output increase of 188,000 barrels per day from August, adding to global supply as the Strait of Hormuz gradually reopens. Brent crude traded near $72 a barrel on Friday, down from peaks above $120 and back to pre-war levels. The seven core OPEC+ members — Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, Kuwait, Algeria, Kazakhstan and Oman — have hiked output quotas by almost 800,000 barrels per day from April through July. For investors, the choice among the three integrated majors comes down to the crude price trajectory and the pace of Middle East supply normalization.
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