Been digging into the energy sector and there's something worth paying attention to with how these companies are positioning their upstream operations.



ExxonMobil's got serious advantages here. They've locked down strong positions in the Permian - that's where the real production action is in the US - plus they've made solid moves in offshore Guyana. What caught my attention is their lightweight proppant tech is actually boosting well recovery by up to 20%. That's not trivial. Both regions have favorable breakeven costs too, which matters a lot when crude prices get sketchy.

Their latest corporate plan is projecting upstream production hitting 5.5 million oil equivalent barrels daily by 2030. And get this - they're saying their best assets (Permian, Guyana, LNG) will drive 65% of those volumes. That's a pretty solid foundation for the next few years.

But XOM isn't the only one with strong upstream assets worth watching. Diamondback Energy has basically bet everything on being a pure Permian play, and they've got enough drilling inventory to keep going for over a decade. ConocoPhillips is also well-positioned with Delaware and Midland basin resources in the Lower 48. Both have solid production outlooks from their upstream operations.

Price-wise, XOM gained 38.3% over the past year versus 29.6% for the broader energy sector. But here's where it gets interesting - the stock trades at a 9.72X EV/EBITDA ratio, which is noticeably above the 5.94X industry average. So you're paying a premium here.

The earnings picture shows some caution though - 2026 estimates have seen downward revisions recently. Currently carries a Zacks Hold rating.

Overall, if you're looking at energy companies with real upstream production potential and favorable asset bases, these names have the resources to weather different market conditions. Worth monitoring how these production projections actually play out.
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