Exxon Mobil Corp

NYSE: XOM
$118.03
+$0.06 (+0.0%)
Real Time Data Delayed 15 Min.

XOM Articles

GE, Boeing, Goldman Sachs, and Exxon Mobil held the Dow in barely positive territory Tuesday.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and other research calls from Tuesday include Agilent, Apple, Citigroup, Exxon, M&T Bank, Snap, Toyota and Twitter.
These five top dividend-paying companies do at least 50% of their corporate sales overseas. All should continue to fare very well in a weakened dollar environment.
Verizon can't shake its position as the worst-performing DJIA stock of the year to date, and a report that it may be considering a play for Disney did not help its share price last week.
U.S. natural gas stockpiles rose by 72 billion cubic feet last week, a larger-than-expected increase that sent prices down about 1%.
U.S. crude oil and gasoline inventories dropped more than expected last week and pushed crude oil prices up by more than 2% Thursday morning.
One sector that definitely took it on the chin in the first half was energy. These five large cap leaders still make sense with the energy sector badly bruised.
These five all-American companies should have great 4th of July sales and are poised to continue to be solid investments in the second half of 2017.
Seven stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average index have posted share price losses in the first half of 2017. The losses range from about 7% to more than 16%. The Dow itself gained about 8%.
A smaller-than-expected addition to U.S. natural gas stockpiles boosted the commodity's price for August delivery up by about 1%.
The weekly report on U.S. crude oil and refined product inventories was better than expected for producers, lifting prices by around 20 cents a barrel shortly after the report was released.
Now that oil has cooled off and some investors have become concerned that it could challenge $40 per barrel again, it's worth a look to see which of the large oil and gas giants might be the most...
The June 15 short interest data have been compared with the previous figures, and short interest for most of the selected oil stocks increased.
24/7 Wall St. has conducted a review of the top dividends from America’s largest companies. There were 25 such companies paying a yield of 3.5% or more — and some much higher.
U.S. natural gas supplies added 61 billion cubic feet last week, more than analysts had forecast. The weighed on prices, which fell about 2 cents per million BTUs.