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Received yesterday β€” 13 June 2025

Why ConocoPhillips Stock Just Popped

ConocoPhillips (NYSE: COP) stock is on the rise Friday morning, up 2.5% through 10:55 a.m. ET, on worrisome news from the Middle East.

On Thursday evening, Israeli warplanes struck multiple targets in Iran, resulting in drone strikes from Iran on Israel. Investors are nervous that conflict in the Middle East will threaten the supply of oil from Mideast suppliers, raising oil prices.

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Oil rig at dawn.

Image source: Getty Images.

What this means for oil prices

So far, investors seem to be right about that. According to the latest data from OilPrice.com, WTI crude oil shot up nearly $5 today, the biggest one-day gain since 2022, to $72.70 per barrel. International benchmark Brent Crude is up a similar amount, selling for just under $74 a barrel.

While this might be a blip, it's a big one. And my hunch is it's not a temporary adjustment, as the conflict between Israel and Iran is likely to get worse before it gets better, and could even draw in neighboring countries, affecting oil supplies from the broader region.

Is ConocoPhillips stock a buy?

From an investors' perspective, of course, these kinds of worries do encourage a focus on oil stocks, which may benefit as oil prices rise, and oil profits increase. In the case of Conoco, we're looking at a global giant that earned $9.2 billion in profit last year even before prices began rising, and that trades for only about 12.6 times trailing earnings today

With a 3.3% dividend yield, the stock should perform well so long as Conoco can maintain a 10% or better earnings growth rate. Mideast tensions should help make that more likely, and lift the stock past analyst forecasts for 7% long-term earnings growth.

All things considered, I think Conoco stock looks like a reasonable way to play the situation.

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Received before yesterday

Why ConocoPhillips Stock Zoomed Higher on Thursday

ConocoPhillips (NYSE: COP) stock closed Wednesday in positive territory. On the back of a solid quarterly earnings beat, investors pushed it to a 1.4% gain, good enough to top the 0.6% bump of the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC).

Fundamental gains and a pair of beats

For its first quarter of this year, ConocoPhillips booked just over $17.1 billion in revenue, well up from the nearly $14.5 billion in the same period of 2024. Non-GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles) adjusted net income also headed north, rising to just under $2.7 billion ($2.09 per share) from the year-ago profit of $2.4 billion.

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Oil tanker approaching a sea oil rig.

Image source: Getty Images.

ConocoPhillips said its bottom-line rise was attributable to an increase in volume; however, that was offset to a degree by higher accounting expenses such as depreciation. As has been a theme throughout the oil industry lately, lower prices also had a dampening effect.

Still, it managed to top the average analyst estimates for both adjusted net income and revenue, which were $1.98 per share and $16.5 billion, respectively.

In other developments, ConocoPhillips also declared its upcoming quarterly dividend payment, which matches its two predecessors at $0.78 per share. This will be handed out on June 2 to shareholders of record as of May 19. The dividend yields 3.5%.

It also announced the retirement of CFO Bill Bullock, who will be replaced by current senior vice president of strategy, commercial, sustainability, and technology Andy O'Brien, effective June 1.

Guidance updated

ConocoPhillips also revised several full-year guidance items, notably its estimates for capital expenditures.

The company now believes these will amount to $12.3 billion to $12.6 billion across the year, down from its previous forecast of around $12.9 billion. Adjusted operating costs for the period are now anticipated to reach $10.7 billion to $10.9 billion; previous guidance was $10.9 billion to $11.1 billion.

Oil is a cyclical industry, and we're currently on a downswing, with weakened prices putting the squeeze on profitability. Considering that, ConocoPhillips did fairly well in the quarter, and its latest guidance portends good results in the proximate future.

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Eric Volkman has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Why Frontline Stock Popped, but Exxon and ConocoPhillips Dropped

Uh-oh. OPEC is up to something, and it's probably not good for oil stocks -- or more precisely, not good for all oil stocks.

Over the weekend, the OPEC+ group of oil producing nations, plus a few that aren't officially a part of the cartel, such as Russia, announced plans to "surge" production of oil in June, as CNBC reports.

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Stocks of oil-producing companies including ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM) and ConocoPhillips (NYSE: COP) are reacting poorly to the news, down 2.5% and 3.6%, respectively, as of 10:20 a.m. ET. In contrast, Frontline (NYSE: FRO) stock, which operates tankers that carry oil products from place to place, is doing very well indeed this morning -- up 3.9%.

So what's up with that?

Good news for Frontline is bad news for Exxon and Conoco

When you think about it, the price moves of these three stocks are actually entirely logical. Over the past year, international benchmark Brent crude prices are down a staggering 28%, as are the prices of WTI crude (the U.S. benchmark).

Worries over President Donald Trump's tariff policy, and its effect on global trade and global economic growth, are certainly contributing to the problem; there has been a notable drop-off in oil prices since Inauguration Day back in January, and especially since early April, when the president began announcing his "reciprocal tariffs" initiative. And now, despite oil prices weakening already, OPEC+ is planning to increase production? For the second time in two months? (OPEC already boosted production in May, by the same 441,000 barrels-per-day amount it just announced for June.)

Any first-year economics student can tell you what happens next: When you increase supply (twice!), and demand holds constant, prices fall. What's more, when you increase supply, and demand falls (because, for example, someone's slowing down the global economy by raising tariff barriers to trade), prices fall even more.

That's almost certainly what's going to happen here, and if prices fall, and costs don't fall along with them, this means profits will decline at both ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips.

An oil tanker surging through the sea.

Image source: Getty Images.

And what about Frontline stock?

Conversely, this bad news for Exxon and Conoco is actually good news for Frontline. And why? Because, as that same economics student can tell you, when prices of a good or service fall, the demand for that good or service tends to increase. Basically, oil is going on sale right now, and so the likely result is that people will buy more of it.

Of course, unless those people live in Saudi Arabia, or another OPEC+ country, in order to buy the cheap oil they're going to have to first hire a tanker to ship it from where it's produced to where they live. Because shipping oil from Point A to Point B is Frontline's raison d'etre, this means more business for Frontline, more demand for Frontline's services, and more profit for Frontline stock.

Which oil stock should you buy right now?

Investors are therefore behaving logically today, selling oil producers before their profits sink, but buying oil transport companies like Frontline before their profits boom. Of course, it doesn't hurt that at just 7.7 times trailing earnings, Frontline already looks like a much cheaper stock than Exxon or Conoco. Nor does it hurt that Frontline pays its shareholders a very generous 4.7% dividend yield.

That said, investors who think long-term perhaps shouldn't rule out the idea of buying into Exxon and Conoco stocks on today's sell-off. For one thing, the oil majors are no dividend slouches themselves. Conoco pays a 3.4% dividend yield, and Exxon pays 3.7% -- both very respectable numbers.

Both stocks look reasonably priced, as well, with Conoco costing only 11.7 times trailing profits, and Exxon not that much more expensive at 14.1 times earnings. Plus, don't forget the other rule of economics: Among cyclical stocks like these, cheap prices grow demand, and when demand grows, prices tend to grow as well. Eventually, this situation will right itself, and Exxon and Conoco profits will bounce right back. The best time to buy their stocks is before that happens.

Should you invest $1,000 in Frontline Plc right now?

Before you buy stock in Frontline Plc, consider this:

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Rich Smith has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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