Exxon (XOM) roars back as one Iran headline reignites oil
For most of last week, oil was sliding down and energy stocks followed in the same direction.
Traders had bet a U.S.-Iran deal would calm the region and reopen shipping lanes, so crude price fell lower for days, and Exxon Mobil (XOM) fell with it, closing red for seven straight sessions.
Then one headline out of Tehran reset the market outlook on June 1.
Oil futures snapped higher, energy names rallied, and Exxon went from a week of losses to one of the day's sharper rebounds.
Why one Iran headline sent Exxon (XOM) stock higher on June 1
Iran's Tasnim news agency reported that Tehran was halting negotiations and the exchange of documents with Washington through mediators, blaming a broken ceasefire and fresh clashes in Lebanon, NBC News reported.
Traders moved fast. West Texas Intermediate futures closed up 5.93% at $92.54 a barrel, while Brent settled 4.24% higher at $97.79 and touched about $98 intraday, CNBC reported.
More Energy Stocks:
- Chevron CEO drops a stark warning on rising oil prices
- Top U.S. bank sends blunt message on the Strait of Hormuz and oil
- Morgan Stanley cuts to the chase on Chevron and oil stocks
Iran also threatened to fully close the Strait of Hormuz, the waterway that carries roughly a fifth of the world's crude.
Exxon had ended Friday at $145.26 after its seventh straight losing session. On June 1 it climbed back toward $150, a gain of about 3% that erased much of the prior week's damage.
What Exxon's business looks like under the oil spike
Exxon enters this stretch from a position of strength.
Energy has been the S&P 500's standout sector in 2026. Exxon shares are up about 24% on the year against roughly 10% for the index, The Motley Fool noted.
However, the picture is not entirely perfect.
Full-year 2025 net income fell about 14%, and the chemicals unit posted a quarterly loss late in the year, according to 24/7 Wall St. on Yahoo Finance.
Where Exxon stands right now
- Record 2025 output near 4.7 million oil-equivalent barrels a day, led by the Permian and Guyana
- Golden Pass LNG began first output in March, adding fresh U.S. export capacity
- A $20 billion buyback and a 43-year run of dividend hikes, with a $1.03 payout due June 10, according to Investing.com
What a higher oil price means for gas prices and other stocks
The effect of the U.S.-Iran story reaches well past Exxon's share price.
When crude climbs, the cost shows up at the pump, on airline tickets, and in anything that moves by truck, ship, or plane. Heating and gas bills can follow, and the squeeze may already be building.
Related: Exxon Mobil earnings carry a hidden risk
According to FXStreet, The International Energy Agency (IEA) expects global oil demand to shrink by 420,000 barrels a day in 2026 as higher prices curb driving and flying.
Exxon's Dan Chapman has warned that physical Brent cargoes could reach $150 to $160 a barrel once inventories hit their floor.
The spike rippled across the market too.
Monday's oil surge pulled cash out of an AI-led stock rally, a reminder that energy strength and the tech trade now pull against each other.
What still has to happen before the Exxon rally holds
It is worth noting that the same force lifting Exxon can reverse it overnight.
Back on April 8, a ceasefire headline knocked oil sharply lower and dragged Exxon and the sector down with it.
Crude even eased off its June 1 highs after President Trump said talks were "continuing, at a rapid pace," according to CNBC.
Wall Street is split on the stock. JPMorgan carries a $170 target, while 24/7 Wall St. models roughly $160.
Bank of America has lifted Exxon toward $151 as it grows more constructive on the majors.
What to watch before considering a position in Exxon
- Whether the Strait of Hormuz reopens, which would unwind the war premium quickly
- Any sign that diplomacy is back on track, since peace headlines have repeatedly sunk oil
- Exxon's downstream and chemicals margins, which still lag the upstream boom
None of this is investment advice.
The cleaner takeaway is that Exxon has become a high-speed gauge of Middle East risk, and that gauge works in both directions.
Related: Exxon CEO delivers message on Strait of Hormuz, oil prices
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This story was originally published June 3, 2026 at 10:33 AM.