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2 No Brainer Energy Dividend Stocks to Buy As Oil Tops $100
ExxonMobil (XOM +0.71%) and Chevron (CVX +0.00%) are two of the largest dividend-paying companies in the energy sector, and both have demonstrated resilience across oil price cycles.
WTI crude has surged from $66.96 on February 27 to effectively $100 a barrel today (currently sitting at $99, and shifting daily). This sharp rally directly benefits both companies’ free cash flow. But the real story is not the oil price. It is that both companies already proved their dividends are safe at much lower prices.
ExxonMobil: 43 years and counting
Exxon’s dividend streak stands at 43 consecutive years of annual increases. The current quarterly payout is $1.03 per share, and the stock yields 2.64% at the current price of $156.
The dividend is well-covered. Full-year 2025 operating cash flow came in at $52 billion against a dividend payout of $17.2 billion – coverage of roughly 3x from operations alone. Even in 2020, when oil collapsed and Exxon posted a net loss of $22 billion, the company maintained its dividend. That is the stress test that matters.
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NYSE: XOM
ExxonMobil
Today’s Change
(0.71%) $1.11
Current Price
$157.23
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$651B
Day’s Range
$154.76 - $157.78
52wk Range
$97.80 - $159.60
Volume
23M
Avg Vol
20M
Gross Margin
21.56%
Dividend Yield
2.59%
Production is the structural catalyst. Exxon hit a record 4.7 million oil-equivalent barrels per day in 2025, the highest in over 40 years, with the Permian Basin alone delivering 1.8 million boed in Q4. The company has also locked in $15.1 billion in cumulative structural cost savings since 2019, targeting $20 billion by 2030. That cost base makes the dividend durable at lower oil prices, not just at current levels.
Exxon’s Q4 2025 EPS of $1.71 beat the $1.66 estimate, and the company repurchased $20 billion in shares in 2025 with another $20 billion planned through 2026.
Chevron: Record production, 39-year streak
Chevron’s dividend yield of 3.6% is higher than ExxonMobil’s 2.6% yield. The quarterly payout rose to $1.78 per share in Q1 2026, extending a streak of 39 consecutive annual increases.
Full-year 2025 free cash flow hit $16.60 billion, a record, while total shareholder returns reached $27.10 billion. Worldwide production grew 12% year-over-year to 3,723 MBOED, also a record.
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NYSE: CVX
Chevron
Today’s Change
(-0.00%) $-0.01
Current Price
$196.81
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$393B
Day’s Range
$195.59 - $197.81
52wk Range
$132.04 - $198.88
Volume
383K
Avg Vol
12M
Gross Margin
14.66%
Dividend Yield
3.51%
Both stocks are up roughly 30% year-to-date. Both companies have maintained dividend growth through multiple oil price downturns, including the 2020 collapse.