Reuben Gregg Brewer, The Motley Fool
Sun, Jun 29, 2025, 2:09 PM 5 min read
In This Article:
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The energy sector is highly volatile, a fact that has been on clear display of late.
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Most investors should focus on owning reliable industry giants like dividend stalwart Chevron.
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Conservative high-yield investors should sidestep the volatility with a midstream giant like Enterprise Products Partners.
Oil and natural gas prices can move in unexpected ways and do so in a dramatic and rapid fashion. The geopolitical conflicts playing out today are yet another evidence point that energy investors need to be prepared to deal with often headline-grabbing and perhaps shocking volatility.
If you are looking for a high-yield energy stock today, you'll be better off sticking with a reliable giant like Chevron (NYSE: CVX) or attempting to sidestep energy prices with an investment in a midstream giant like Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE: EPD). Here's what you need to know.
If what you are really looking for is some exposure to oil and natural gas, then Chevron and its roughly 4.7% dividend yield could be for you. A $1,000 investment will net you around six or seven shares today. The big story here, however, is the impressive history of dividend growth, with dividend increases in each of the last 38 years.
Oil and natural gas prices have gone through many dramatic swings over that span, and still, Chevron has remained committed to supporting its dividend. It is built to survive such energy market swings. For starters, its business is diversified across the energy sector and geographically. Having exposure to the upstream (energy production), the midstream (pipelines), and the downstream (chemicals and refining) helps to soften the peaks and valleys since each segment operates a little differently through the energy cycle. Having exposure to various global energy markets on the supply and demand side allows Chevron to focus its investments in the areas with the highest returns.
Then there's the energy giant's balance sheet, which is rock solid. With a debt-to-equity ratio of around 0.2x, it has notably less leverage than most of its closest peers. This gives management the leeway to take on debt during industry weak spots so it can continue to support its business and dividend. When oil prices recover, as they always have historically, Chevron simply reduces its leverage to prepare for the next industry downturn.
Playing it as safe as possible with high-yield Chevron is a good call for dividend investors that want more direct oil exposure.
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