Through careful selection of assets and projects, Occidental has become a low-cost leader in the energy sector.
Occidental is working to prolong crude oil’s future marketability by partially remediating its impact on the environment.
One of the market’s most-proven stock pickers is a fan, as well as a major shareholder.
Do you have your eye on oil and natural gas powerhouse Occidental Petroleum (NYSE: OXY) stock? Or, maybe you already own it, and now just want to better understand what makes it tick? Here are the big three narratives shaping this stock's performance.
Occidental Petroleum doesn't report an official "all-in cash cost" as some other names in the energy sector do these days. But it is well established as a low-cost leader in the fossil fuel space, typically able to break even when crude oil prices are less than $60 per barrel. Indeed, for some of its fields, its breakeven point is under $50 per barrel, while nearly half of its wells are capable of breaking even when oil prices are under $40 per barrel.
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This is no mere stroke of luck either. Occidental Petroleum has made a point of acquiring and developing assets in the U.S. Permian Basin -- where it can cost effectively scale up -- while shedding projects that don't align with its core competencies in the shale segment of the oil and natural gas market.
Even if crude prices remain suppressed (as the U.S. Energy Information Administration predicts they will through 2026), this company can still turn a profit.
The company isn't just extracting oil and natural gas from the ground, however. It's working on technologies that suck some of the carbon dioxide generated by the use of fossil fuels out of the air.
It's called direct air capture. While the technology has worked on smaller, more experimental scales, Occidental's facility in Ector County, Texas, will be the biggest of its kind when it becomes operational within the next few weeks. The company says it will remove up to 500,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide from the air per year. This puts Occidental in a leading position within an industry that Precedence Research believes could be worth more than $18 billion by 2034.
More than that, though, if it can be made to work effectively at industrial scale, carbon capture technology will prolong the marketability of crude oil.
Finally, not that you should only own stocks touted by well-known stock pickers, but to the extent it matters, Warren Buffett loves Occidental Petroleum. As he wrote in early 2024, "No one knows what oil prices will do over the next month, year, or decade. But [Occidental CEO] Vicki [Hollub] does know how to separate oil from rock, and that's an uncommon talent." Further elaborating on Occidental, Buffett added, "We particularly like its vast oil and gas holdings in the United States, as well as its leadership in carbon-capture initiatives."
And he's putting his money where his mouth is. Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway owns nearly 265 million shares of Occidental Petroleum worth a total of $11 billion -- about 26.9% of the energy company. That makes it Berkshire's seventh-biggest stock holding.
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James Brumley has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Berkshire Hathaway. The Motley Fool recommends Occidental Petroleum. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.