Late last year, energy was looking like the sector to avoid in 2026. That’s because a global oil glut was sending oil prices lower, and oil stocks with them. In December, there were 1.4 billion barrels of “oil on the water” — i.e., oil being shipped to a port or stored and waiting for a buyer. That was 24% more than the average for December from 2016 to 2024.
As a result, West Texas Intermediate, the type of oil extracted from oilfields in the U.S., was trading in late December at about $57 a barrel, $15 below where it started the year. Brent, the benchmark for oil from Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, was priced at about $60 a barrel, also $15 below where it was at the beginning of 2025.In response to sagging oil prices, investors were dumping energy stocks and looking for 2026 winners elsewhere.
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Well, surprise, surprise. As of the second week of February 2026, the energy sector is leading the pack. And few saw it coming. The State Street Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSEMKT: XLE) is up 23% year to date, beating every other S&P sector and crushing the broad S&P 500, which is up less than 2% year to date.
Several of the U.S. oil majors (the world’s largest and most influential publicly traded oil companies) are soaring. Here are a few of the leaders:
|
Stock |
2026 year-to-date return (as of Feb. 11) |
|---|---|
|
ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM) |
29.3% |
|
Chevron (NYSE: CVX) |
21.9% |
|
ConocoPhillips (NYSE: COP) |
18.8% |
Data source:
What is driving these stocks (and almost all of the other stocks in the S&P 500 energy sector) to outperform the broader market so dramatically? Well, it’s not exactly clear. But there are theories.
One is that aggressive U.S. foreign policy is behind it. Since the U.S. military captured and detained Venezuelan President Nicholas Maduro on Jan. 3, many investors have begun to think that oil majors like Chevron and Exxon will now have access to Venezuela’s oil reserves, which, at 19.4 billion barrels, are considered to be the world’s largest. Indeed, Venezuela sits on a fifth of the world’s proven oil reserves.
The biggest oil companies could be given special access to Venezuelan oilfields by the Trump administration. Just as importantly, both companies have large, complex oil refineries on the U.S. Gulf Coast that can handle the heavy sour blend of oil that Venezuela produces. And Chevron already has operations in Venezuela.


