Company Insights

MXC customer relationships

MXC customers relationship map

Mexco Energy (MXC): What its customer footprint and MEXC listings tell investors

Mexco Energy is an independent U.S. oil & gas E&P company that monetizes through the sale of produced hydrocarbons — crude oil, natural gas, condensate and NGLs — to third‑party purchasers. Its revenues and operating profit are derived from domestic production and commodity price capture, with receivables described as unsecured and sales sometimes concentrated in large purchasers. For a focused view of counterparty signals and third‑party exposure, this note parses the MXC customer‑relationship signals surfaced from public listing pages and company disclosures. For additional relationship intelligence, visit https://nullexposure.com/.

Why MEXC listings show up in MXC relationship data

MEXC is a cryptocurrency and tokenized assets exchange that hosts trading pages and promotional copy for many ticker-like instruments. The records in our feed are MEXC stock or token pages that reference individual tickers; for MXC this results in a long list of third‑party listings that were observed on MEXC’s site in FY2026. These entries do not by themselves prove commercial procurement or supply agreements between Mexco and those tickers, but they are concrete, timestamped external mentions that investors can follow to understand liquidity channels or secondary market exposure for related tickers. Below I list every relationship item that was returned in the results and note the source for each observation.

All MEXC‑listed relationships observed (FY2026)

  • CDIO — MEXC hosts a trading page that explains how to buy and trade CDIO in three steps; the page was observed on May 2, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for CDIO (2026‑05‑02) — https://www.mexc.co/en-PH/stocks/cdio.
  • SBET — MEXC describes SBETON/USDT pairs as tokenized exposure tied to SharpLink Gaming’s equity, indicating SBET is available through MEXC’s crypto trading rails (March 10, 2026). Source: MEXC article on SharpLink/SBET (2026‑03‑10) — https://www.mexc.com/crypto-pulse/article/what-is-sharplink-gaming-ltd-sbet-crypto-treasury-igaming-tech-explained-77636.
  • EZGO — MEXC provides a step‑by‑step buy/trade page for EZGO, observed May 2, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for EZGO (2026‑05‑02) — https://www.mexc.com/stocks/ezgo.
  • TGL — MEXC runs a trading guide for TGL showing it as tradable on the platform (entries observed May 4, 2026). Source: MEXC stock pages for TGL (2026‑05‑04) — https://www.mexc.com/stocks/tgl.
  • TTWO — MEXC lists TTWO with purchase/trading instructions, observed May 4, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for TTWO (2026‑05‑04) — https://www.mexc.com/stocks/ttwo.
  • WTI — MEXC hosts a WTI trading page, indicating crude‑linked exposure is offered on the platform (May 4, 2026). Source: MEXC stock page for WTI (2026‑05‑04) — https://www.mexc.com/stocks/wti.
  • ALRS — MEXC provides a buy/trade page for ALRS, observed May 2, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for ALRS (2026‑05‑02) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/alrs.
  • CBLL — MEXC lists CBLL with straightforward buy instructions on its platform (May 2, 2026). Source: MEXC stock page for CBLL (2026‑05‑02) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/cbll.
  • CMND — MEXC hosts a CMND page instructing users how to trade the ticker, logged May 2, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for CMND (2026‑05‑02) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/cmnd.
  • FLUX — MEXC provides a trading page for FLUX with stepwise instructions, observed May 2, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for FLUX (2026‑05‑02) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/flux.
  • FTRK — MEXC has a buy/trade guidance page for FTRK on the platform (May 3, 2026). Source: MEXC stock page for FTRK (2026‑05‑03) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/ftrk.
  • GECCO — MEXC lists GECCO with a how‑to‑trade page, observed May 3, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for GECCO (2026‑05‑03) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/gecco.
  • GMM — MEXC provides a trading page for GMM on May 3, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for GMM (2026‑05‑03) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/gmm.
  • JAKK — MEXC hosts a buy/trade page for JAKK, recorded May 3, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for JAKK (2026‑05‑03) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/jakk.
  • LHAI — MEXC provides a stepwise trading guide for LHAI (May 3, 2026). Source: MEXC stock page for LHAI (2026‑05‑03) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/lhai.
  • MFIN — MEXC runs a trading page for MFIN with buy instructions, observed May 3, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for MFIN (2026‑05‑03) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/mfin.
  • NKSH — MEXC lists NKSH with how‑to instructions on its platform (May 3, 2026). Source: MEXC stock page for NKSH (2026‑05‑03) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/nksh.
  • NMFCZ — MEXC hosts a trading page for NMFCZ, observed May 3, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for NMFCZ (2026‑05‑03) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/nmfcz.
  • NMTC — MEXC provides a buy/trade page for NMTC (May 3, 2026). Source: MEXC stock page for NMTC (2026‑05‑03) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/nmtc.
  • OOMA — MEXC lists OOMA with trading instructions on May 3, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for OOMA (2026‑05‑03) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/ooma.
  • QTTB — MEXC hosts a QTTB trading page offering buy guidance (May 3, 2026). Source: MEXC stock page for QTTB (2026‑05‑03) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/qttb.
  • SKE — MEXC provides a trade page for SKE, observed May 3, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for SKE (2026‑05‑03) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/ske.
  • SWKHL — MEXC lists SWKHL with instructions to buy and trade on May 4, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for SWKHL (2026‑05‑04) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/swkhl.
  • SZZLR — MEXC hosts a SZZL/SZZLR trading page with how‑to content (May 4, 2026). Source: MEXC stock page for SZZL (2026‑05‑04) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/szzl.
  • TALK — MEXC provides a stepwise trading guide for TALK (May 4, 2026). Source: MEXC stock page for TALK (2026‑05‑04) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/talk.
  • TAYD — MEXC lists TAYD with buy/trade instructions, observed May 4, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for TAYD (2026‑05‑04) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/tayd.
  • TCPC — MEXC hosts a TCPC trading page with guidance on May 4, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for TCPC (2026‑05‑04) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/tcpc.
  • TELA — MEXC provides a TELA buy/trade page observed May 4, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for TELA (2026‑05‑04) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/tela.
  • UYSC — MEXC includes UYSC with stepwise buy instructions, observed May 4, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for UYSC (2026‑05‑04) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/uysc.
  • WHFCL — MEXC lists WHFCL with trading guidance on May 4, 2026. Source: MEXC stock page for WHFCL (2026‑05‑04) — https://www.mexc.co/stocks/whfcl.

What these relationship listings imply for investors

The MEXC entries collectively are external distribution and liquidity signals rather than direct proof of Mexco customer contracts. For investors and operators, they are useful because:

  • They document where market participants can access tradable exposure tied to many tickers, which is relevant to secondary‑market liquidity and investor base composition.
  • They are time‑stamped public mentions (all from FY2026), so they function as contemporaneous evidence of marketplace availability for those instruments.
  • They do not substitute for Mexco’s own counterparty and revenue disclosures, which remain the primary evidence for operational concentration and credit exposure.

Operational constraints and business model signals

Company disclosures and the relationship feed together reveal several company‑level operating characteristics that investors should weigh:

  • Geography: Mexco operates exclusively in the United States, so commodity, regulatory and infrastructure risk are concentrated in U.S. basins (company filings, FY2026).
  • Contracting posture and role: Mexco is a seller of oil and gas production, selling to various purchasers with receivables reported as unsecured — an operational posture that emphasizes commodity sales and credit risk collection.
  • Concentration and criticality: filings show historical instances where a single purchaser accounted for ≥10% of operating revenues in the years ended March 31, while management also states the loss of any one purchaser would not materially impair sales; these statements together indicate intermittent concentration risk historically, counterbalanced by management’s view of marketability. Treat concentration as a conditional risk: material in specific periods, but not an inherent structural dependency.
  • Relationship maturity and segment: customer interactions are active and tied to core product sales (crude oil and natural gas), not ancillary services, which makes counterparty credit and commodity price the key drivers of revenue volatility.

Takeaways for investment decision‑making

  • Revenue is commodity‑driven and regionally concentrated; investor focus should be on production volumes, realized prices and customer concentration disclosures.
  • Receivables are unsecured and sales have historically concentrated with large purchasers at times, so credit and counterparty monitoring are essential.
  • The MEXC listing signals catalog a broad set of tradable tickers on an external platform and should be treated as liquidity and market‑access intelligence, not direct evidence of Mexco’s customer contracts.

For a deeper look at counterparty and market exposure across listed instruments and trading venues, consult independent relationship mapping at https://nullexposure.com/.

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