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ExxonMobil (XOM) trades at $149.78, up 25.31% YTD; Citigroup raised target from $118 to $150 despite net income falling 14.36% to $28.84B. Chevron (CVX) completed Hess acquisition, Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) partners on supercomputer deployment.
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ExxonMobil and Chevron benefit from crude surge driven by Middle East tensions, with Polymarket pricing 80% odds Iran closes Strait of Hormuz by March 31.
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The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks. Get them here FREE.
Amidst a growing international crisis heavily involving the price of oil, shares of ExxonMobil (NYSE:XOM) are trading at $149.78 as of Wednesday, up 24% year-to-date and 39% over the past year. Retail sentiment on Reddit has shifted from a monthly average score of 37.875 (bearish) to a weekly score of 53.5 (neutral) over the past week, tracking the surge in crude oil prices driven by Middle East tensions. WTI crude has climbed from $60.46 on January 26 to $71.13 as of March 2.
ExxonMobil (XOM) reported a share price of $149.78 with +25.31% YTD growth and a neutral social sentiment score of 53.5 as of March 4, 2026. This sentiment is primarily driven by rising crude oil prices linked to Middle East tensions.
Polymarket traders are pricing an 80% probability of Iran closing the Strait of Hormuz by March 31, with the full-year market at 84% odds through December 2026. Citigroup raised its XOM price target from $118 to $150 on March 2, and the stock now trades above the current analyst consensus target of $144.25.
READ: The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks
The top-driving post this week, “Why are oil prices up but oil stocks down right now?” on r/stocks, has drawn 109 upvotes and 67 comments and reflects growing skepticism that the oil spike translates into durable equity gains.
Why are oil prices up but oil stocks down right now?
by u/[OP] in stocks
“Oil companies hedge their production and lock in prices months in advance, so a sudden spike doesn’t immediately flow through to earnings. The market is pricing in mean reversion before the next quarterly report even drops.” — u/[OP], r/stocks
Earlier in February, “The real bubble is in Big Oil, NOT in Big Tech” on r/stockmarket peaked at 150 upvotes and 69 comments with sentiment scores in the 22-31 range across nine consecutive data points. What retail discussion has missed entirely: ExxonMobil’s AI infrastructure investments, its supercomputer deployment with NVIDIA and Hewlett Packard Enterprise, or its Mobil Lithium initiative targeting EV battery supply chain entry by 2027.