Occidental Petroleum (OXY) has been a near-term disappointment, but continues to show long-term promise, explains industry-leading oil sector expert Elliott Gue, editor of Energy & Income Advisor.

The stock has underperformed since the company reported disappointing fourth-quarter results and guidance. Although the company’s results and guidance may have disappointed, our longer-term investment thesis remains intact.

Occidental Petroleum’s international and petrochemical assets generate significant free cash flow, while the company boasts an impressive footprint—about 650,000 net acres—throughout the Permian Basin.

Management identified the New Mexico portion of the Delaware Basin as its tier-1 acreage, citing the presence of three to four primary benches and the lack of legacy vertical wells that can complicate operations. The company also continues to run rigs in the Texas portion of the Delaware Basin and the Midland Basin.

The company’s economics in the New Mexico portion of the Delaware Basin should improve from the build-out of the Aventine logistic hubs and the use of in-basin proppant, multilateral pads and water recycling.

Meanwhile, the expansion of its Ingleside export capacity to 750,000 barrels per day will provide Occidental Petroleum with a much-needed demand outlet. All these investments will pay off over the long haul and give Occidental Petroleum a leg up on the competition.


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Occidental Petroleum also has a substantial acreage position in the Permian Basin that hasn’t been evaluated, creating the potential for additional inventory upside as other operators delineate nearby assets. The company sometimes comes under criticism for the patchwork nature of these holdings; we view them as a convenient source of capital or fodder for asset swaps.

The upstream operator has identified more than 3,100 premium drilling locations in the Permian Basin, all of which are expected to break even with oil prices below $50 per barrel. In 2017, the company added 750 sites to this inventory through efficiency gains, appraisal drilling and 17,000 net acres worth of asset trades.

The company has a long runway in the Permian Basin and can support a generous dividend without destroying long-term value through short-sighted development plans.

And with $1.7 billion in cash on its balance sheet, $600 million worth of common shares in Plains GP Holdings LP (PAGP) and plenty of optionality to monetize noncore acreage, Occidental Petroleum also boasts superior financial flexibility.

Occidental’s recent weakness looks like a buying opportunity for investors willing to look beyond the first quarter.

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