Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Largest US publicly traded water utility; 14 million people served; $4.3B FY2024 revenue; $3.3B/year capex through 2028; lead pipe replacement mandates drive multi-year investment cycle.
American Water Works is the largest publicly traded water and wastewater utility company in the United States, founded in 1886 and headquartered in Camden, New Jersey, trading on NYSE (AWK). The company serves approximately 14 million people across 14 regulated state utility subsidiaries, primarily in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Missouri, Indiana, Illinois, California, and Virginia. For FY2024, American Water generated approximately $4.3 billion in operating revenues under CEO M. Susan Hardwick, who has led the company since 2021 and focused strategy on regulated utility investment—targeting $3.3 billion annually in capital expenditure through 2028—while divesting non-core businesses including the sale of its Military Services Group to AMSAA in 2022 for $810 million.
Spring TX integrated oil and gas (NYSE: XOM) at $33.7B 2024 earnings, $339B revenue; Pioneer $60B acquisition doubles Permian to 1.3M BOE/day, $36B shareholder return, competing with Chevron and Shell.
ExxonMobil Corporation is a Spring, Texas-based integrated oil, gas, and energy company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: XOM) as an S&P 500 Energy component and one of the world's largest publicly traded companies by market capitalization — exploring, producing, refining, and marketing oil, natural gas, and petroleum products while advancing low-carbon technologies through approximately 62,000 employees worldwide. In fiscal year 2024, ExxonMobil reported earnings of $33.7 billion ($7.84 per diluted share), revenue of $339.24 billion, operating cash flow of $55.0 billion, free cash flow of $34.4 billion, and returned $36.0 billion to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases. ExxonMobil completed the landmark acquisition of Pioneer Natural Resources in May 2024 for approximately $60 billion — the largest acquisition in the company's history since the 1998 Exxon-Mobil merger — making ExxonMobil the dominant operator in the Permian Basin (West Texas/New Mexico), the most productive oil basin in the US with the lowest breakeven production costs globally. The Pioneer acquisition added 1.3 million acres in the Midland Basin, doubling ExxonMobil's Permian production capacity to 1.3 million barrels of oil equivalent per day by 2027. CEO Darren Woods has led ExxonMobil since 2017 through the COVID oil price collapse, the industry recovery, and the Pioneer acquisition that repositioned ExxonMobil as the premier Permian Basin operator.
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