Bank of America sees Exxon differently than oil market

Exxon Mobil (XOM) stock hasn’t been moving as much, considering the loud warnings from the oil market.

The Guardian reports that Brent crude has been dropping fast as traders price in a reduction in Strait of Hormuz risks, and investors have reason to be cautious. 

Exxon dropped 6.52% over the past week and 10.17% over the past month, trailing the S&P 500’s 1.43% and 1.39% gains, according to Seeking Alpha price-performance data.

However, Bank of America feels the selloff might be missing the bigger story.

In a note shared with me, the traditional energy giant says the stock reflects a weaker oil backdrop than its fundamentals suggest. 

BofA also pointed to Permian execution, Middle East cash-flow recovery, and Exxon’s integrated footprint as reasons the downside may be limited.

Wall Street saw falling crude, but BofA saw a reset opportunity.

The big question is whether Exxon is an oil-price victim or a mispriced energy leader.

Exxon Mobil stock and oil market charts reflect Bank of America’s bullish view on XOM shares after a pullback

Bloomberg

What Bank of America said about Exxon stock

Bank of America analysts led by Jean Ann Salisbury feel that Exxon Mobil’s latest pullback may be pricing in too much oil-market weakness.

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The investor’s expectation was obvious.

If Brent crude falls as Strait of Hormuz fears ease, Exxon stock should struggle with the rest of the energy trade. 

Moreover, we’ve seen the stock reflect some of that pressure, falling over 10% over the past month while crude prices reset lower.

BofA pushed back on that view.

The firm upgraded Exxon to Buy from Neutral and set a $154 price target, arguing the stock already implies long-term Brent crude near $65 a barrel

Moreover, BofA sees limited fundamental downside from current levels, even if oil prices come under pressure.

The bank’s case is that Exxon is not just a straight crude-price bet. 

It pointed to the company’s strong Permian execution, integrated refining and downstream footprint, and exposure to Middle East volumes that could return if post-conflict flows normalize.

BofA also sees Exxon gaining negotiating leverage in Qatar and other Middle East markets as countries look to reopen development.

For perspective, Jean Ann Salisbury of Bank of America Securities is rated a 4-star Wall Street analyst by TipRanks. The platform shows she has a 60% success rate, with 105 of 174 ratings profitable, and an average return of 5.90% per rating. 

Her coverage is heavily skewed toward the oil and energy sector, with active calls on names like ExxonMobil, Chevron, Cheniere Energy, Oneok, and Enterprise Products Partners.

Her record stands out in several key energy names, including an 82% success rate on Enterprise Products, 80% on Cheniere, and 71% on Chevron, with average returns as high as 27.87% on DT Midstream and 23.39% on Targa Resources. 

What Exxon’s oil-market setup means for investors 

Exxon’s setup gives investors a different way to think about the falling oil trade.

For the broader market, lower oil prices usually help bonds, growth stocks, tech, and AI names by easing inflationary pressure and reducing rate-risk fears. 

At the same time, it supports airlines, transport, and retailers by lowering fuel and input costs.

However, for energy investors, the positioning shifts toward integrated giants with balance-sheet strength, Permian growth, and cash-flow recovery. BofA estimates Exxon could add about $3.3 billion in annualized free cash flow at $70 Brent if Middle East volumes return.

Also for perspective, XOM stock trades for around 12-times forward non-GAAP earnings, mostly in line with its 5-year average according to Seeking Alpha.

Things look even more attractive on a sales basis, with the stock trading under 1.5 times sales and 7.8 times cash flows.

It is also an opportune moment to look deeper into the company’s impressive dividend profile.

Exxon’s dividend profile is all about consistency rather than yield

Seeking Alpha reports that the company’s trailing dividend yield is 2.90%, below the energy-sector median of 3.17% and below its own 5-year average of 3.69%. The forward yield is similar at 2.92%, also trailing the sector median of 3.42%

But Exxon stands out on reliability, with 43 consecutive years of dividend growth and 43 years of payments, far above the sector medians of 2 years and 10.7 years, as reported by Seeking Alpha.

For income investors, the appeal is not the highest yield but the durability of the payout.

Wall Street price targets for Exxon Mobil stock

  • Bank of America: $154. BofA upgraded Exxon to Buy, arguing the pullback already prices in a weaker long-term oil market.
  • Mizuho: $175. Mizuho raised its target from $159, though it kept a Neutral rating on XOM.
  • Barclays: $182. Barclays lifted its Exxon target from $163, pointing to a more constructive setup.
  • Bernstein: $182. Bernstein lowered its target from $195 but kept an Outperform rating, still implying upside.
  • RBC Capital: $180. RBC kept a Sector Perform rating, with its target reflecting commodity strength and Exxon’s scale.

Related: Citi revamps oil price target as Hormuz fears ease