Today: 13 May 2026
Occidental Petroleum Beats Earnings, but the Debt Story Is What Investors Will Watch
6 May 2026
2 mins read

Occidental Petroleum Beats Earnings, but the Debt Story Is What Investors Will Watch

Houston — May 5, 2026, 17:09 CDT

Occidental Petroleum topped Wall Street’s Q1 profit estimates Tuesday, buoyed by increased domestic output despite swings in oil prices and turbulence in the Middle East hitting other segments. The company reported adjusted earnings of $1.06 a share—well ahead of the 58 cents analysts were looking for, LSEG figures show, according to Reuters.

Occidental is under pressure to show it can maintain cash generation as it chips away at debt and gets ready for a CEO transition. As of May 5, the company had paid back $7.1 billion in principal, lowering total debt to $13.3 billion. The goal: get that figure down to $10 billion.

Occidental posted net income for common stockholders of $3.2 billion, translating to $3.13 per diluted share. Adjusted income from continuing operations, which excludes certain one-off items, came in at $1.1 billion, according to the company.

Output pulled ahead, with total production hitting 1.426 million barrels of oil equivalent per day—known as boed, the industry measure blending oil and gas. That number landed above the upper range of Occidental’s outlook. The company pointed directly to its Permian, Rockies, and Gulf of America businesses as the drivers behind the boost.

Oil and gas pre-tax income jumped to $1.0 billion, up from $700 million in the fourth quarter. Crude prices worldwide averaged $69.91 a barrel, an 18% increase over the previous quarter. On the flip side, domestic gas prices slid 10% to $1.01 per thousand cubic feet, according to the filing.

Chief Executive Vicki Hollub called out “disciplined execution” for the quarter, even with headwinds in the Middle East. She highlighted cost reductions, better efficiency, and more deleveraging—the company’s shorthand for trimming debt.

The headline beat came with a caveat. Revenue landed at $5.11 billion, falling short of the $5.49 billion consensus. According to Reuters, Occidental trimmed its full-year production target, now guiding for 1.41 million to 1.46 million boed, down from the previous 1.42 million to 1.48 million range. Looking to the current quarter, management expects output between 1.39 million and 1.43 million boed.

Lower realizations “were likely a timing issue,” Melius Research analyst James West told Reuters. The snag traces back to derivatives—those financial contracts firms rely on to hedge price volatility—and also to the timing of when sales of physical cargoes hit the books. Reuters

The peer results landed on both sides of the line. Reuters noted that Exxon Mobil and Chevron—both bigger, with far-flung operations—saw first-quarter earnings drop, hit by accounting quirks around derivative timing. Occidental, on the other hand, got a boost from heavier U.S. shale output and managed to beat profit expectations.

Occidental finished Tuesday at $59.34, slipping roughly 1.5% before results dropped. Exxon advanced, and Chevron posted small gains. Post-earnings, Occidental shares ticked up, according to Investing.com.

Just days before the results, Occidental announced Hollub’s plan to step down as president and CEO on June 1, handing the reins to Chief Operating Officer Richard Jackson. Hollub will keep her board seat; Jackson is joining the board too, according to the company.

Now comes a tougher stretch: maintain cash flow, control spending, and still meet debt goals, assuming oil prices don’t settle down. Occidental’s solid quarterly results offer some cushion, though its trimmed production forecast hands investors a new figure to track.

Stock Market Today

  • NetApp (NTAP) Valuation: Undervalued Despite Recent Share Price Gains
    May 13, 2026, 2:35 PM EDT. NetApp's (NTAP) stock has gained 21.2% over the past month and 19.0% over the last year, driven by demand in data storage, cloud infrastructure, and AI. Yet, a Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis by Simply Wall St shows the stock is undervalued by approximately 35%, with an intrinsic value estimated at $179.04 versus the current price near $116. Recent Free Cash Flow projections indicate growth to $2.56 billion by 2035. The 5/6 valuation score signals more insights are needed, highlighting that despite recent gains, NetApp may still present value opportunities for investors focused on cash flow fundamentals.

Latest articles

Palantir Stock Slides as Zelenskiy Meeting Puts War-AI Bet in Focus

Palantir Stock Slides as Zelenskiy Meeting Puts War-AI Bet in Focus

13 May 2026
Palantir shares fell 4.4% to $129.97 Wednesday as CEO Alex Karp met President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Kyiv to discuss expanding AI use in Ukraine’s war effort. Kyiv’s Brave1 Dataroom project, launched with Palantir, is training AI models to intercept Russian drones. Russia fired at least 800 drones at Ukraine on Wednesday, killing six. Palantir’s U.S. government and commercial revenue surged in the first quarter.
Why Grab Holdings Stock Is Back Under Pressure After a Big Q1 Beat

Why Grab Holdings Stock Is Back Under Pressure After a Big Q1 Beat

13 May 2026
Grab shares fell 1.1% to $3.60 in New York after first-quarter revenue beat estimates, rising 24% to $955 million. Profit jumped to $120 million from $10 million a year earlier. Investors weighed strong results against Indonesia’s new 8% ride-hailing commission cap. Grab kept its 2026 revenue and adjusted EBITDA outlook unchanged.
SoFi Bought a Key IPO Access Tool. The Stock Is Still Telling a More Cautious Story

SoFi Bought a Key IPO Access Tool. The Stock Is Still Telling a More Cautious Story

13 May 2026
SoFi acquired PrimaryBid’s technology to expand IPO access for retail investors, confirmed by both companies. SoFi shares fell 2.9% to $15.44 after Truist cut its price target, citing concerns over loan and technology platforms. The acquisition follows a drop in technology-platform accounts and comes as SoFi reported strong first-quarter revenue and member growth. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Popular

Nokia Oyj’s AI Turn Gets a New Boss as Shares Rally Again

Nokia Oyj’s AI Turn Gets a New Boss as Shares Rally Again

13 May 2026
Nokia appointed Siemens executive Emma Falck to lead its Mobile Infrastructure unit starting Sept. 1 and join its group leadership team. Nokia shares rose 5.5% in Helsinki after first-quarter profit jumped 54% and sales to AI and cloud customers increased 49%. The company also launched new agentic AI tools for broadband networks. Falck previously held senior roles at Siemens, BCG, and KONE.
Delta Flight Cancellations Expose Pilot Scheduling Crunch Before Summer Travel Rush
Previous Story

Delta Flight Cancellations Expose Pilot Scheduling Crunch Before Summer Travel Rush

Upstart Stock Tumbles After Earnings: The Profit Miss Investors Couldn’t Ignore
Next Story

Upstart Stock Tumbles After Earnings: The Profit Miss Investors Couldn’t Ignore

Go toTop