Exxon Mobil snapped a record streak of losses as rising oil and natural gas prices bolstered one of the biggest dividends in the S&P 500 Index. Exxon earned 64 cents a share in the first quarter, beating the 61-cent average estimate from analysts in a Bloomberg survey. The oil giant’s exploration and drilling division drove most of the gains but it also received a substantial tailwind from higher chemicals prices that helped offset losses incurred during the deadly February storm in Texas. All the supermajors are making money again after crude’s 30 per cent year-to-date rally to more than $65 a barrel, buoyed by rising energy demand as economies emerge from pandemic lockdowns and Opec holds the line on big supply increases. BP, Royal Dutch Shell and Total all preceded Exxon with bigger-than-expected profits. Chevron matched forecasts but disappointed some investors by holding off on reinstating share buybacks. Exxon’s turnaround from last year’s unprecedented string of losses will help restore investor faith in its ability to cover the S&P’s third-largest dividend, the cornerstone of chief executive Darren Woods’ pitch to Wall Street. Unlike European rivals Shell and BP, Exxon didn’t cut payouts last year, but the decision came at a cost, borrowings increased 40 per cent to about $70 billion. The challenge now is for Exxon to pay back debt while investing in key projects in Guyana and the Permian Basin while meeting increasing shareholder demands for returns. To achieve this, Mr Woods has slashed jobs, delayed some major investments and vowed to reduce capital spending by $10bn a year through the middle of this decade. But that plan, as well as the oil giant’s environmental record, have come under sustained attack from activist investor Engine No. 1, which is seeking four new directors and a strategic overhaul that puts Exxon at the forefront of the energy transition. Engine No. 1 has the support of major California and New York public pension funds. Exxon has urged shareholders to vote against Engine No. 1’s proposals, arguing that the current strategy is beginning to bear fruit. Exxon stock is the top performer among the supermajors this year, providing a total return of 44 per cent, well ahead of second-place Chevron’s 27 per cent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Even so, Exxon has posted a negative total return over five and 10 years, meaning it now ranks outside the top 30 S&P stocks after being number one a decade ago.