Occidental Petroleum Has Achieved 90% of This Crucial Goal. Time to Buy the Oil Stock?

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The oil industry is currently undergoing a massive consolidation wave. Sector leader ExxonMobil kicked things off by acquiring Pioneer Natural Resources in a more than $60 billion deal. Chevron followed it by agreeing to buy Hess for $60 billion. Several other oil companies also struck deals to acquire smaller rivals, including Occidental Petroleum (NYSE: OXY), which bought CrownRock in a $12 billion deal.

One of the critical differences between Occidental’s deal and the acquisitions of its larger peers is that it primarily funded the purchase with debt. The company aimed to quickly repay a big chunk of those borrowings to prevent a repeat of its past mistakes and recently revealed that it achieved 90% of its near-term debt reduction goal. Here’s a look at whether that makes the oil stock a buy.

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Occidental Petroleum initially sealed its deal to buy CrownRock last December. The transaction structure raised some concerns because it intended to finance most of the purchase price with debt. The oil company planned to issue $9.1 billion of new debt and assume CrownRock’s $1.2 billion of existing debt to close the deal, which meant it was funding roughly 85% of the transaction value with debt.

That debt-heavy financing structure was reminiscent of the company’s acquisition of Anadarko Petroleum in 2019, when Occidental agreed to buy its rival for $57 billion. It assumed $15 billion of debt and paid 78% of the equity value in cash. Most of that cash came from new debt (it also issued $10 billion in preferred equity to Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway).

The debt-laden deal nearly doomed Occidental Petroleum after oil prices collapsed the following year, due to the pandemic. The company also faced regulatory issues in selling some assets, adding to the pressure on its balance sheet. In the end, Occidental Petroleum was able to sell enough assets to stay afloat until oil prices rebounded.

Occidental Petroleum set a goal to repay at least $4.5 billion of debt within 12 months of closing the CrownRock deal to avoid repeating its past mistakes. The company planned to achieve that target by using excess free cash flow and the proceeds from asset sales. It set a target of selling $4.5 billion-$6 billion of assets to strengthen its financial foundation.

The company quickly worked on that plan. CEO Vicki Hollub highlighted its progress on the recent third-quarter earnings conference call, stating:

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