Today: 2 March 2026
Occidental Petroleum stock rises as oil jumps; OXY traders eye payrolls and Middle East risk
2 March 2026
1 min read

Occidental Petroleum stock rises as oil jumps; OXY traders eye payrolls and Middle East risk

New York, March 2, 2026, 11:14 a.m. ET — Regular session

  • Occidental Petroleum climbed roughly 2.4% to $54.35, trading close to session highs.
  • Oil jumped—WTI tacked on over 6%, Brent rallied more than 7%.
  • Traders eye headline risk around supply, with attention also shifting to Friday’s U.S. jobs report.

Occidental Petroleum Corp picked up steam Monday, jumping roughly 2.4% to $54.35 in New York after crude prices surged. WTI crude futures gained 6.5%, Brent jumped 7.5%—evidence of just how fast risk can reset the energy complex. U.S. energy names broadly moved higher on the move. Investing.com

The impact stretches past a single name. A jump in crude hits fuel prices and stirs up inflation bets, often shaking risk sentiment more broadly. “The market is taking it relatively well,” said Adam Turnquist, chief technical strategist at LPL Financial. But Ohsung Kwon at Wells Fargo flagged that stocks could take a bigger hit if crude climbs over $100 a barrel. Reuters

Plenty on tap for macro traders this week, including those focused on oil. The U.S. Employment Situation report for February lands Friday, March 6 at 8:30 a.m. ET. Then comes the February CPI, set for Wednesday, March 11 at 8:30 a.m. ET. Both reports carry weight, with any sign of energy-driven inflation likely to jolt rate expectations. Bureau of Labor Statistics

Occidental (OXY) was one of the morning’s hot tickets, jumping $3.79 to $56.87 ahead of the open, according to Nasdaq’s premarket readout. Volume was brisk—roughly 2.3 million shares swapped hands—as energy names surged, even while the broader index futures lagged. Nasdaq

The bid narrowed in the regular session. Oil-sensitive names kept attracting buyers, though desks started to weigh just how long those supply hits could linger—and where the line sits for crude prices before demand starts to crack.

For Occidental, it all comes down to that connection. When crude prices climb, the impact on projected cash flow is immediate—often steering near-term trades, especially on days when there’s little fresh company news to chew on.

Investors piled into major U.S. producers and integrated companies, joining peers heading the same way. Sectors exposed to rising fuel costs—airlines, cruise operators—saw money flow out.

The trade swings in both directions. Should production ramp up again soon or shipping routes remain clear, crude prices may just as swiftly surrender their advances—oil stocks tend to pull back even harder than the underlying commodity in those situations.

Forget earnings—eyes are on fresh headlines about supply, security, and Friday’s U.S. jobs numbers. That mix will tip the scales: either the oil-fueled push keeps lifting OXY, or it flips, dragging risk appetite lower across the board.

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