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Exxon (XOM) delivered $82.31B Q4 revenue and plans a $20B buyback, up 26.52% YTD. Chevron (CVX) saw free cash flow up 35% with a sub-$50 breakeven, up 25.85% YTD. ConocoPhillips (COP) is up 26.01% YTD.
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The three majors restructured their cost bases and set capital plans assuming oil prices well below $116 per barrel, so the price surge creates windfall profits that drop almost entirely to the bottom line.
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Crude oil is sitting at $116 per barrel right now, and for the energy sector, that number carries significant weight. The last time Brent crude touched this level was March 2022, when it hit $117.25 in the wake of the Russia-Ukraine invasion. Before that, you have to go back to 2011 and 2012 to find comparable prices. This is not normal territory.
To understand what $116 oil means for the majors, you need to know where they were just a few months ago. Chevron’s average Brent crude realization in Q4 2025 was $64 per barrel, down from $75 per barrel a year prior. ConocoPhillips averaged $42.46 per BOE in Q4 2025, a 19% decline year-over-year. These companies built their 2026 plans around a much softer price deck. Now the deck has been reshuffled entirely.
ExxonMobil (NYSE:XOM) delivered $82.31 billion in Q4 2025 revenue and record full-year production of 4.7 million barrels of oil equivalent per day, all at prices well below current levels. CEO Darren Woods framed the structural story clearly on the earnings call: “Our transformed company will continue to build on this success in 2026, with higher structural earnings power, stronger mix, lower breakevens, and a portfolio designed to perform across commodity cycles.”
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Chevron (NYSE:CVX) CFO Eimear Bonner put a number on the resilience: “Adjusted free cash flow was up over 35% year over year even with oil prices down nearly 15%.” The company also disclosed that its diversified portfolio carries a dividend and capex breakeven below $50 Brent. At $116, that breakeven is a distant memory.
ConocoPhillips (NYSE:COP) actually missed Q4 estimates, with reported EPS of $1.02 against a $1.09 estimate. But investors looked past the backward-looking miss. The stock has climbed 26.01% year-to-date through March 6, essentially in line with Exxon’s 26.52% YTD gain and Chevron’s 25.85%.
The operational leverage here is real. Exxon guided for $27 to $29 billion in 2026 capex and a $20 billion share repurchase plan built on conservative price assumptions. Chevron’s 2026 free cash flow guidance from its TCO asset alone assumed $6 billion at $70 Brent. Every dollar above that assumption drops almost entirely to the bottom line. COP has committed to returning 45% of cash flow from operations to shareholders, which means higher oil prices would increase the dollar amount of those distributions based on the formula.
