Houston, April 8, 2026, 06:16 CDT
Occidental Petroleum looked headed for a 7.8% slide in premarket action Wednesday, tracking weaker oil prices after a ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran. Still, Wolfe Research bumped up its price target to $70 and maintained its outperform call on the stock, keeping Occidental on traders’ radar. Reuters
Oxy’s options have tightened in a hurry. Having offloaded OxyChem to Berkshire Hathaway in a $9.7 billion deal and trimmed principal debt down to $15 billion, the company is left with a stripped-down oil-and-gas operation. That’s right as investors start focusing on its next leadership move. SEC
Wolfe’s revised target points to roughly 11.8% upside from Monday, MarketBeat figures show. Still, most analysts aren’t sold. The stock holds a Hold consensus, with the average target standing at $59.52. Exxon and Chevron both traded down premarket, tracking crude’s dip. MarketBeat
Oxy insists its balance sheet is in better shape than the current share price suggests. CEO Vicki Hollub described 2025 as “an exceptional year for Oxy,” crediting “operational excellence and cost efficiency” for the company’s outperformance relative to full-year guidance. On the analyst call, Ken Jackson said Oxy expects another $500 million in savings for 2026. CFO Sunil Mathew projected more than $1.2 billion in improved free cash flow, citing roughly $365 million in interest savings. Oxy
That’s why this isn’t just another management shuffle. Reuters, citing sources on March 26, said Hollub, 66, expects to announce her retirement later this year. Jackson—who moved up to chief operating officer in October and has a reputation for pushing enhanced oil recovery, a method that boosts production from aging fields—is seen as the leading pick to take over. Oxy, for its part, declined to address the speculation. Reuters
If Hollub steps down, she’ll leave a reshaped Occidental—one defined by headline-grabbing and sometimes controversial moves. The $55 billion Anadarko takeover in 2019, which eclipsed Chevron’s offer after a hard-fought bidding war, leaned on $10 billion from Warren Buffett’s Berkshire. Fast forward to this year: Oxy wrapped up the OxyChem sale, also to Berkshire. Hollub has told investors that U.S. operations now drive 83% of output, a sharp climb from just 50% back in 2015. Reuters
The risk here is hard to miss. Should crude prices slide further and the ceasefire stick, shares that have climbed on oil exposure and progress on debt may see that edge fade before Jackson unveils his own capital plans. Matt Britzman, an analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, told Reuters that uninterrupted shipping through Hormuz is “essential” for oil to revert to pre-conflict levels, though Oxy points out that 84% of its resources break even with prices below $50 a barrel. Reuters
Oxy finds itself caught between an upbeat analyst note and choppy trading. The company’s first-quarter numbers land May 5, with a conference call slated for May 6—likely a bigger indicator than any report on whether the debt load, oil narrative, and succession track are still intertwined. Oxy