Houston, May 16, 2026, 05:26 CDT
- Exxon wrapped up Friday at $157.92, gaining 3.4% on the session and 5.5% since Monday’s close.
- Oil pushed the move. Brent and U.S. crude each closed up over 3% on Friday, while the wider market wasn’t the driver.
- Next up: crude futures, Strait of Hormuz traffic, Treasury yields, and Exxon’s shareholder meeting on May 27.
Exxon Mobil heads into the weekend trading at $157.92 after shares got a boost Friday from higher crude prices and a Texas jury verdict in the company’s favor in a years-old investor lawsuit. Exxon’s stock price data shows gains every day this week, finishing up 5.5% from Monday’s close.
U.S. cash equities won’t open again until Monday, so timing is at play. The New York Stock Exchange trades from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Eastern on regular days. Traders now have to price Exxon off oil futures, bond moves, and Middle East news until stocks reopen.
Oil took the spotlight Friday. Brent futures finished at $109.26 a barrel and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) wrapped up at $105.42. Both benchmarks are futures, trading oil for delivery at a later date. For the week, Brent climbed 7.84% and WTI jumped 10.48%, according to Reuters, with traders losing confidence in a quick resolution to disruptions at the Strait of Hormuz, the Gulf passage that handles about a fifth of the world’s oil and LNG shipments.
Vandana Hari at Vanda Insights called the market’s attention a “tail risk of renewed military escalation.” Phil Flynn at Price Futures Group said, “margin for error is shrinking rapidly.” That’s exactly what Exxon investors have bet on: rising crude tends to boost upstream profits, even if it hurts other segments and the market overall.
S&P 500 dropped 1.24% and the Nasdaq lost 1.54% Friday, reversing earlier gains. Energy-driven inflation worries pushed Treasury yields up, with the 10-year reaching its highest since May 2025. Mike Sanders, head of fixed income at Madison Investments, said the bond market doesn’t see a “quick resolution” in energy prices. Reuters
Exxon cleared a legal cloud Wednesday. A Texas jury found the company not liable in a case that accused it of defrauding investors on disclosures about Canadian oil sands and Rocky Mountain gas assets. The 2016 suit said Exxon hid losses and put off impairment charges. Jurors threw out those claims, Reuters said.
Peers also gained, so the rally didn’t hinge only on the verdict. Chevron finished Friday at $191.10, ConocoPhillips at $122.41. Both stocks rose as investors shifted into oil producers with more exposure to crude prices.
Exxon posted first-quarter earnings of $4.2 billion, or $1.00 per share, on May 1. Excluding identified items and estimated timing effects, adjusted earnings came in at $8.8 billion. Estimated timing effects are swings on the books that happen when derivatives change value ahead of matching oil or fuel trades. CEO Darren Woods said the quarter showed Exxon is “built to perform through disruption and across market cycles.” Exxon Mobil Corporation
ISS is telling investors to reject Exxon’s push to switch its legal registration from New Jersey to Texas. The proxy adviser said the shift could make it tougher for shareholders to keep directors and officers accountable. Exxon’s annual meeting is set for May 27 at 9:30 a.m. CDT.
Exxon Senior Vice President Neil Chapman is scheduled to speak at the Bernstein Strategic Decisions Conference in New York on May 28. The appearance is expected to bring questions about Guyana, Permian production, shareholder returns, and how long Middle East unrest could keep pressuring trading and refining margins. Exxon said investors will also get a management update soon after.
Prediction market traders aren’t betting on a quick fix for the Hormuz situation. Polymarket traders gave just a 30% chance that Strait of Hormuz traffic returns to normal by the end of June. Over at Kalshi, odds sat at 37% before Aug. 1, 48% before Sept. 1 and 60% before Oct. 1.
Exxon is expected to start the next session steady but volatile if WTI stays around $105. A move toward $160 is possible after the stock hit $158 intraday on Friday. The average analyst target is $166, about 5% higher than Friday’s close, MarketScreener data shows.
But this trade could flip. If there’s news on Hormuz reopening, crude’s risk premium could drop. Higher yields are still weighing on stocks, even if energy holds up better. The bear setup: oil drops, the market sells off inflation trades again, and Exxon pulls back from Friday’s push up toward $153 seen last session.