ExxonMobil Hits All-Time High, Closes in on Half-Trillion-Dollar Market Cap. Has the Stock Market's Leadership Changed?

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ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM) reached an intraday all-time high of $123.75 per share on April 12. The oil major has pulled back a little since then, but Exxon is still up big on the year and has more than doubled over the last three years.

Exxon's market capitalization currently sits at $474 billion as it approaches the feat of becoming the first half-trillion-dollar energy stock. Here's why Exxon is in favor with investors, and why the rally has more room to run.

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An emerging theme

Up over 12% year to date, energy is currently the best-performing sector in the S&P 500. And while you may think that tech stocks and the more growth-oriented parts of the market are the leaders, tech is actually lagging behind energy, communications, industrials, and financials so far this year.

^SPX Chart
^SPX data by YCharts

Given that energy makes up just 4% of the S&P 500, it's difficult for the sector to lead the market on its own. But energy is part of the broader theme that earnings growth is driving the more value-oriented parts of the market.

Resilient to high interest rates

Oil and gas prices fluctuate based on supply and demand. Despite high inflation and rising interest rates over the last few years, demand has been strong, which has made oil a cause of inflation -- not a victim. This characteristic is especially important since the Fed has yet to begin cutting rates, and hot inflation data is leading some economists to expect fewer rate cuts in 2024 than initially projected.

Over the last few years, Exxon has used its outsized gains to pay down debt, which helped reduce its interest expense even as interest rates rose.

XOM Net Total Long Term Debt (Quarterly) Chart
XOM Net Total Long Term Debt (Quarterly) data by YCharts

Exxon has been able to fund its operations, capital expenditures, dividends, and buybacks from the gains of the business, not by taking on debt or depleting the balance sheet of cash. In sum, Exxon has been resilient to higher interest rates because it has been paying down debt and not taking on new debt, and because it doesn't depend on debt to run its business (at least when oil prices are relatively high like they are today).

By comparison, many companies investing heavily in renewable energy aren't profitable right now due to an industry-wide downturn.

The key takeaway here is that an oil and gas company like ExxonMobil is attractive to investors because it is raking in the cash, enjoys impeccable financial health, has a variety of ways it can reward investors, and can do well even if interest rates stay high for longer than expected. By comparison, companies that are taking on debt or have high interest expenses are more vulnerable to interest rate risk.