Want Super Safe Passive Income? Buy This High-Yield Stock With Over 40 Straight Years of Dividend Raises

Key Points

When investors think of safe stocks to generate dividend income, stable stalwarts like Coca-Cola or Procter & Gamble may come to mind. And while those companies are good options for risk-averse investors , there are arguably even more attractive opportunities outside the consumer staples sector.

ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM) has paid and raised its dividends for 42 consecutive years. According to the company, only 4% of S&P 500 components have streaks at least as long.

Here's why ExxonMobil is a safe, no-brainer dividend stock to buy now.

Want Super Safe Passive Income? Buy This High-Yield Stock With Over 40 Straight Years of Dividend Raises

Delivering on expectations

The integrated energy giant lays out clear medium-term and long-term expectations for investors in its annual corporate plan (usually updated in December). It's a must-read if you're looking to build an investment thesis for ExxonMobil stock. The plan outlines the company's targets for capital spending, earnings, and cash flow projections based on oil and natural gas price ranges, low-carbon investments, emissions reduction plans, cost-saving efforts, and more. This provides a yardstick for investors to measure progress against.

It is management's way of telling investors its intentions and putting the spotlight on what the company can control, rather than what it can't -- market dynamics and fluctuations in oil and natural gas prices. In its latest update, ExxonMobil increased structural cost savings by $7 billion -- bringing total structural cost savings to $18 billion by 2030 (from a 2019 base). These savings were at $11 billion as of Q3 2024. But as of the end of Q1 2025, they were at $12.7 billion -- showing that ExxonMobil is progressing nicely toward its 2030 target.

ExxonMobil also outlined intentions to invest $27 billion to $29 billion in capital expenditures in 2025 and then ramp annual capex to a range of $28 billion to $33 billion in the years from 2026 to 2030 as it pursues long-term opportunities and works to grow its cash flow -- including up to $30 billion in lower-emission investment opportunities.

On its first-quarter earnings call, ExxonMobil reaffirmed its 2025 capex guidance despite lower oil prices. It also outlined plans to reduce its breakeven operating figure to $35 per barrel of Brent crude oil by 2027 and $30 per barrel by 2030. At the time of this writing, Brent prices are around $65 per barrel, which is significantly down from its 52-week peak in the neighborhood of $87 per barrel but up from its 52-week low of around $60 per barrel earlier this month.

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