OXY stock price wobbles after earnings jump as debt move and dividend hike come into view
20 February 2026
2 mins read

OXY stock price wobbles after earnings jump as debt move and dividend hike come into view

New York, Feb 20, 2026, 09:51 EST — Regular session is underway

  • Occidental slipped at the open, with investors weighing updated guidance and news of another move on the debt front.
  • The bull-bear tug-of-war is once again focused on a slimmed-down 2026 spending plan and fresh balance-sheet maneuvers.
  • Oil hovered close to six-month peaks amid ongoing U.S.-Iran tensions, leaving energy stocks on alert for any headline-driven moves.

Occidental Petroleum dropped 0.3% to $51.39 in early Friday trading in New York. That move comes just a day after a brisk post-earnings rally pushed the oil producer back into focus for traders.

The stakes come down to two things for this stock: crude prices and capital discipline. That’s it. Investors are weighing the new plan, looking for signs it can handle both debt reduction and payouts, even if oil prices soften.

Oil is pulling its weight here. Brent hovered just off six-month highs, last quoted at $71.33 a barrel, and U.S. West Texas Intermediate held at $66.18. Both benchmarks have gained roughly 5.3% this week as U.S.-Iran tensions ratcheted up. UBS oil analyst Giovanni Staunovo noted, “Market players are now awaiting how tension in the Middle East will evolve over the weekend.” Over at Saxo Bank, Ole Hansen summed up the mood: “a wait-and-see day.” (Reuters)

Occidental topped analysts’ forecasts for fourth-quarter earnings, thanks to its midstream segment—pipelines and marketing—which offset weaker realized oil prices of $59.22 per barrel. Adjusted profit landed at 31 cents a share, ahead of the 18-cent consensus. For 2026, the company put capital spending at $5.5 billion to $5.9 billion, projecting production between 1.42 million and 1.48 million barrels of oil equivalent per day. Occidental also reported a $5.8 billion reduction in debt since mid-December, though long-term obligations stood at $20.63 billion at the close of the year, still reflecting the weight of the 2019 Anadarko acquisition and last year’s CrownRock purchase. (Reuters)

Occidental bumped up its quarterly dividend by over 8%, setting it at $0.26 per share. The payout goes to shareholders on record as of March 10, with checks arriving April 15. The company also flagged the Jan. 2 completion of its OxyChem sale as a key reason for a drop in debt. “Our emphasis on operational excellence and cost efficiency drove meaningful production and operating expense outperformance during the fourth quarter,” Chief Executive Vicki Hollub said. (oxy.com)

On Thursday, a new filing revealed Occidental is rolling out cash tender offers totaling as much as $700 million for various outstanding notes and debentures, plus consent solicitations aimed at removing some covenants. The company set an early tender deadline for March 4, while the offers themselves run through March 19. Occidental intends to cover these purchases with available cash, tapping proceeds from the OxyChem sale as well.

Chevron dropped roughly 0.4% and shares of Exxon Mobil slipped about 0.8% early on, so Occidental’s shift looked tied more to its own balance-sheet narrative than any sweeping trend in energy stocks.

Still, there’s a clear risk here. If crude retreats—be it from calmer geopolitics, fresh supply, or a macro shift away from risk—that would challenge the cash-flow logic supporting slower spending and quicker debt paydown. The dividend hike, too, would face tougher scrutiny.

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