Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM | XOM Price Prediction) and ConocoPhillips (NYSE:COP) both closed the books on Q1 2026 against a chaotic oil market: WTI spiked to $114.58 on April 7 after Middle East supply shocks, then collapsed to $71.87 by late June.
Exxon leaned on its integrated machine to absorb the whiplash. Conoco leaned on discipline, buybacks, and a growing LNG book.
Golden Pass Lifts Exxon. Willow Anchors Conoco.
Exxon beat on EPS at $1.16 versus $1.0074 expected, though headline net income fell to $4.18 billion after a $3.88 billion derivative timing hit and $706 million in Middle East disruption losses. Strip those out and underlying earnings climbed to $8.77 billion.
Guyana hit a record 900,000 gross barrels per day, refining margins printed $16.3 per barrel, and Golden Pass LNG Train 1 shipped its first cargo in April 2026. CEO Darren Woods framed it plainly: “ExxonMobil is a fundamentally stronger company than it was just a few years ago, built to perform through disruption and across market cycles.”
Conoco delivered adjusted EPS of $1.89 versus $1.7052 expected, a cleaner beat driven by cost management. Realized prices slipped to $50.36 per BOE, down 6% year over year, and adjusted earnings fell to $2.32 billion.
Willow in Alaska crossed 50% completion, and Lower 48 crews more than doubled the share of 3-mile-plus laterals versus a year ago. Ryan Lance emphasized the cash-return promise: “reiterating our objective to return 45% of CFO to shareholders this year.”
Integrated Fortress vs. Focused Producer
Exxon runs upstream, refining, chemicals, and specialty products, with emerging bets in hydrogen, lithium, and Proxxima resins. Conoco is a pure E&P plus LNG offtake, sharpened by the Marathon Oil integration and over $1 billion in run-rate synergies.
| Lens | Exxon | Conoco |
| Core Bet | Integrated scale plus LNG and Guyana | Low-cost barrels, Willow, Qatar LNG |
| 2026 Capex | $27B to $29B | $12.0B to $12.5B |
| Buyback Pace | $4.9B in Q1, $20B planned | $1.0B in Q1 |
| Forward P/E | 12 | 10 |
Investors have punished both since the April earnings reports. XOM is down 11.3% from April 1. COP is off 14.92% over the same window, a reminder that pure E&P leverage cuts both ways when crude drops 20%.
The Next Test Is Q2 Realizations
WTI averaging closer to $71.87 heading into July means Q2 realized prices likely slip further. I will be watching whether Exxon’s $15.6 billion in structural cost savings since 2019 continues to widen the underlying earnings gap versus reported.
For Conoco, the swing factor is Qatar. Guidance already excludes Qatar volumes due to the conflict, so any Strait of Hormuz reopening becomes an upside surprise.
Why I Lean Toward Exxon If Oil Stays Choppy
If I had to pick one right now, I would lean toward Exxon. The integrated model, $16.3 per barrel refining margins, and a 43-year dividend growth streak give me something to hold through the noise.
Conoco offers more operating leverage into a crude rebound: 22.1% operating margin, cleaner balance sheet, and the 45% cash-return commitment. Willow and Port Arthur LNG could reprice the story by 2027. If WTI settles above $85 again, I would flip. Until then, Exxon’s diversification looks like the safer path.
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