The World Is Paying An Energy Premium. These 3 Dividend S…
By Matt DiLallo – Apr 22, 2026 at 5:15AM EST
Key Points
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Chord Energy has a three-tiered capital return framework that includes paying variable dividends.
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Diamondback Energy aims to return at least 50% of its cash flow to holders through its base dividend, repurchases, and variable dividends.
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EOG Resources returns all its free cash flow to holders through its regular dividend, repurchases, and special dividends.
ing the framework
Chord Energy (CHRD +3.21%) has built a premier position in the oil-rich Williston Basin of North Dakota and Montana. Its large-scale operations in the region enable it to generate lots of cash, even at lower oil prices. Meanwhile, its strong balance sheet enables Chord Energy to return the bulk of its cash flow to holders.
The oil company has a tiered return of capital framework. If its leverage ratio is above 1.0 times, it pays its base dividend ($5.20 per annually) and retains the remaining cash to strengthen its financial profile. Once its leverage ratio dips below 1.0x, Chord returns more than 50% of its adjusted free cash flow to holders via its base dividend and a combination of repurchases and variable dividend payments to reach its targeted payout level. Chord will return more than 75% of its adjusted free cash flow when its leverage ratio is below 0.5x.
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NASDAQ: CHRD
Chord Energy
Today’s Change
(3.21%) $4.08
Current Price
$131.13
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$7.4B
Day’s Range
$126.75 – $131.55
52wk Range
$84.25 – $148.41
Volume
78
Avg Vol
1.1M
Gross Margin
17.52%
Dividend Yield
3.97%
During the fourth quarter, Chord had a 0.6x leverage ratio, enabling it to return 48% of its adjusted free cash flow to investors via its base dividend and repurchases. Given the surge in crude prices, Chord will ly return even more money to investors in the coming quarters, probably through a combination of repurchases and variable dividend payments.
More to allocate according to the framework
Diamondback Energy (FANG +3.46%) has built a leading position in the world-class Permian Basin of Texas and New Mexico. Its low-cost operations generate significant cash. At $50 oil, Diamondback can generate $3.1 billion of free cash flow, and more than double that total at $80 oil.
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NASDAQ: FANG
Diamondback Energy
Today’s Change
(3.46%) $6.35
Current Price
$189.80
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$53B
Day’s Range
$183.09 – $189.98
52wk Range
$127.75 – $204.91
Volume
1.8K
Avg Vol
3.2M
Gross Margin
35.16%
Dividend Yield
2.13%
The oil company has committed to returning at least 50% of its quarterly adjusted free cash flow to holders through a combination of its base dividend, repurchases, and variable dividends. It returned 62% of its free cash flow to investors during the fourth quarter, paying its $300 million base dividend and repurchasing $434 million of its s.
Higher oil prices will enable Diamondback Energy to generate a massive gusher of free cash flow this year. The company will return at least half that money to holders, ly through a higher base dividend, repurchases, and potentially variable dividend payments.
The potential to pay something special
EOG Resources (EOG +2.53%) has a diversified portfolio of low-cost oil and gas resource positions across the U.S. The company can generate a direct after-tax rate of return of more than 100% on new wells drilled at $55 oil. EOG is on track to produce a huge gusher of free cash flow this year, given the surge in crude prices.
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NYSE: EOG
EOG Resources
Today’s Change
(2.53%) $3.27
Current Price
$132.43
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$71B
Day’s Range
$129.20 – $132.91
52wk Range
$101.59 – $151.87
Volume
1.7K
Avg Vol
5.4M
Gross Margin
40.75%
Dividend Yield
3.05%
With one of the best balance sheets in the oil patch, EOG Resources has been returning 100% of its free cash flow to holders. It does that through a growing base dividend, repurchases, and special dividends.
EOG’s current base dividend level is $2.2 billion, less than half the free cash flow it expected to generate this year ($4.5 billion at a low $60 oil price). With crude now much higher, EOG will produce more cash to return to holders. I expect it to return that windfall through a combination of repurchases and special dividend payments.
Oil-fueled dividend payments
Most oil companies pay a fixed quarterly dividend and return any excess cash to holders by repurchasing stock. Chord Energy, Diamondback Energy, and EOG Resources aim even higher, targeting to return a meaningful percentage of their free cash flow to investors, including the potential for additional variable and special dividend payments. As a result, these dividend stocks will ly pass on a portion of the premium they’re currently earning on their oil production to holders in the form of additional dividend payments this year.
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About the Author
Matt DiLallo has been a contributing Motley Fool stock market analyst specializing in covering dividend-paying companies, particularly in the energy and REIT sectors, since 2012. He also covers pre-IPO companies, ETFs, and other investing topics. He holds an MBA from Liberty University.
Stocks Mentioned
Diamondback Energy
NASDAQ: FANG
$189.80
(+3.46%)+$6.35
EOG Resources
NYSE: EOG
$132.43
(+2.53%)+$3.27
Chord Energy
NASDAQ: CHRD
$131.14
(+3.21%)+$4.08
*Average returns of all recommendations since inception. Cost basis and return based on previous market day close.
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