Benzinga and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue on some items through the links below.
Exxon Mobil Corp. (NYSE:XOM) is a global energy and chemical company that explores for, produces, and sells crude oil and natural gas.
It is set to report its Q4 2025 earnings on Jan. 30. Wall Street analysts expect the company to post EPS of $1.67, unchanged from the figure in the prior-year period. According to Benzinga Pro, quarterly revenue is expected to reach $80.88 billion, down from $83.43 billion a year earlier.
Don’t Miss:
The company’s stock traded at approximately $81.88 per share 10 years ago. If you had invested $10,000, you could have bought roughly 122 shares. Currently, shares trade at $117.08, meaning your investment’s value could have grown to $14,299 from stock price appreciation alone. However, Exxon Mobil also paid dividends during these 10 years.
Exxon Mobil’s dividend yield is currently 3.52%. Over the last 10 years, it has paid about $37.62 in dividends per share, which means you could have made $4,594 from dividends alone.
Summing up $14,299 and $4,594, we end up with the final value of your investment, which is $18,893. This is how much you could have made if you had invested $10,000 in Exxon Mobil stock 10 years ago. This means a total return of 88.93%. However, this figure is significantly less than the S&P 500 total return for the same period, which was 276.10%.
Trending: Bill Gates Says Climate Change ‘Needs to Be Solved’ — This Award-Winning Building Material Is Tackling It Head-On
Exxon Mobil has a consensus rating of “Overweight” and a price target of $128.59 based on the ratings of 24 analysts. The price target implies nearly 10% potential upside from the current stock price.
The company on Oct. 31 announced its Q3 2025 earnings, posting adjusted EPS of $1.88, beating the consensus estimate of $1.82, while revenues of $85.29 billion came in below the consensus of $87.70 billion, as reported by Benzinga.
“We delivered the highest earnings per share we’ve had compared to other quarters in a similar oil-price environment. In Guyana, we broke records with quarterly production surpassing 700,000 barrels per day, and started up the Yellowtail development four months early and under budget. In the Permian, we also set another production record of nearly 1.7 million oil-equivalent barrels per day, while continuing to expand the use of proprietary technologies like our lightweight proppant that improves well recoveries by up to 20%,” said CEO Darren Woods.












