Wednesday, 18 December 2013
Exxon Company Description
Formerly known as Exxon and Mobil as two separate entities, both companies merged into Exxonmobil in 1999 and since have been operating as integrated oil company with upstream and downstream operations. Exxon has market capitalization which is more than the size of Thailand’s economy. Read More: XOM
Monday, 11 November 2013
Exxon Mobil Faces Oil Spill Penalty, But How Much?
The Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration
(PHMSA) found Exxon Mobil Corp. (NYSE:XOM) in probable violation of 9 safety
rules, with a preliminary civil penalty estimate at $2,659,200 in total —
according to the Administration’s “Notice of Probable Violation and Proposed
Compliance Order.” The fine being addressed was made in regards to a rupture of
Exxon’s Pegasus Pipeline near Mayflower, Arkansas.
The accident resulted in the release of “an estimated 5,000
barrels of crude oil in a high consequence area,” based on investigation from
the PHMSA upon completion of inspection the Administration is looking into a
civil suit. Read more
Friday, 8 November 2013
Exxon Mobil Corporation (NYSE:XOM) – Why Haven’t ExxonMobil and Chevron Crashed?
The Dow Jones Industrials’ two energy stocks have done well
even as crude prices plunged below the $100 level. Here’s why ExxonMobil and
Chevron have survived oil’s drop.
Exxon Mobil Corporation (XOM), valued at $403.25B, started
the session at $91.80. Shares have traded today between $91.47 and $92.66 per
share and has traded between $84.70 and $95.49 over the past year. Exxon (XOM)
shares are currently priced at 12.45x this year’s forecasted earnings, which
makes them relatively expensive compared to the industry’s 9.01x earnings
multiple for the same period. And for passive income investors, the company
pays shareholders $2.52 per share annually in dividends, yielding 2.80%.
In a review of the consensus earnings estimate this quarter,
20 sell-side analysts are looking at $1.97 per share, which would be $0.23
worse than the year-ago quarter and a $0.02 sequential increase. Investors
should also note that the full-year EPS estimate of $7.49 is a $0.58 setback
when compared to the previous year’s annual results. The quarterly earnings
estimate is based on a consensus revenue forecast of the current quarter of
$110.79 Billion. If realized, that would be a 3.80% decrease over the year-ago
quarter. Read more
Dow Component Exxon Mobil Corporation (XOM) To Go Ex-dividend Tomorrow
The Dow Jones Industrial Average time, 93.7 million shares of the 30 Dow components have changed hands vs.
an average daily trading volume of 375.7 million. The NYSE advances/declines
ratio sits at 1,758 issues advancing vs. 1,077 declining with 128 unchanged.
EXCLUSIVE OFFER: Jim Cramer's Protégé, Dave Peltier, only
buys Stocks Under $10 that he thinks could potentially double. See what he's
trading today with a 14-day FREE pass.
Thursday, November 7, 2013 is the ex-dividend date for Dow
component Exxon Mobil Corporation (NYSE:XOM). Owners of shares as of market
close today will be eligible for a dividend of 63 cents per share. At a price
of $92.83 as of 10:30 a.m. ET, the dividend yield is 2.7% compared to the
average Dow component yield of 2.6%. Read more.
Thursday, 7 November 2013
Exxon faces $2.7 million fine for Arkansas pipeline spill
Exxon Mobil Pipeline Co (XOM) faces a fine of nearly $2.7
million for a pipeline spill of thousands of barrels of Canadian crude oil in
an Arkansas suburb last spring, the U.S. pipeline safety office said on
Wednesday. The Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA)
found nine probable violations of safety rules in the rupture of the nearly
70-year old Pegasus pipeline that forced residents to evacuate their homes.
The 95,000 barrel-per-day pipeline has been shut since March
29 after spilling about 5,000 barrels in Mayflower, Arkansas. In August, PHMSA
said an original manufacturing defect by a now defunct Youngstown, Ohio steel
pipe company appeared to have led to the accident. On Wednesday, the agency
said Exxon did not adequately account for risks on the pipeline. Read more.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
