Earnings Call Insights: Occidental Petroleum Corporation (OXY) Q4 2025
Management View
- Vicki Hollub, President and CEO, described 2025 as an exceptional year, emphasizing that “the sale of OxyChem made possible by the quality of our portfolio was a deliberate step to strengthen our balance sheet and enable us to deliver greater value from our high-return oil and gas assets.” Hollub noted a new annual production record of 1.4 million barrels of oil equivalent per day, surpassing guidance while spending $300 million less in oil and gas capital than planned and reducing annual operating expenses by $275 million. She highlighted the completion of a 10-year portfolio transformation, stating, “we no longer require transformative acquisitions. Instead, our teams are focused on what they do best, and that is execution, including cost reduction, capital efficiency and well performance.”
- Sunil Mathew, CFO, stated, “In the fourth quarter, we delivered strong operational and financial results. We generated an adjusted profit of $0.31 per diluted share and a reported loss of ($0.07) per diluted share. The difference was largely driven by charges and transaction costs related to the sale of OxyChem.” He highlighted free cash flow generation of approximately $1 billion despite lower realized oil prices and emphasized the successful reduction of principal debt to $15 billion, with a $700 million tender offer announced to further reduce debt to $14.3 billion.
- Richard Jackson, COO, emphasized operational achievements, including record production, a 15% reduction in new well capital costs in U.S. onshore, and ongoing cost efficiency efforts that delivered approximately $2 billion in annual oil and gas cost savings since 2023. He noted that “these efficiencies further enabled us to reduce U.S. onshore capital by $400 million compared to 2025 while still delivering a 1% production growth.”
- Hollub announced that Jordan Tanner will transition to a leadership role in the Gulf of America, with Babatunde Cole appointed as Vice President of Investor Relations.
Outlook
- Hollub outlined 2026 priorities: maintaining production base through safe operations, sustaining and growing dividends (including an 8% increase to the quarterly dividend), and further strengthening the financial position with continued net debt reductions. She said, “We expect capital spending to range from $5.5 billion to $5.9 billion, representing a $550 million reduction from 2025, excluding OxyChem.”
- Mathew projected, “we expect production to average approximately 1.45 million barrels of oil equivalent per day,” and said, “we expect to improve free cash flow by more than $1.2 billion in 2026.”
- The company expects approximately 70% of oil and gas capital to be allocated to U.S. onshore operations, with flexibility to respond to commodity price improvements.
Financial Results
- Occidental generated $4.3 billion in free cash flow before working capital in 2025, even as oil prices declined by around 14% from 2024.
- On a normalized basis and excluding OxyChem, cash flow from operations increased by 27% year-over-year.
- Principal debt reduced to $15 billion, with a tender offer expected to bring this to $14.3 billion.
- The Midstream segment exceeded the midpoint of guidance by more than $500 million in adjusted pretax income for the year; Q4 adjusted pretax income exceeded guidance by $172 million.
- The company achieved its lowest lease operating expense per barrel of oil equivalent since 2021, with Q4 domestic operating expense at $7.77 per BOE.
Q&A
- Arun Jayaram, JPMorgan: Asked about the lower CapEx guide and the drivers of the $800 million reduction. Hollub stated, “our teams came up with these ideas on what we should do and what were the best projects. But as they continue to optimize those projects, it was pretty amazing to see the cost that they were able to cut out, the efficiencies that they were able to find.”
- Jayaram also asked about the Horn Mountain waterflood project and its potential to support a sustaining production profile in the Gulf. Dillon responded, “this waterflood, the King dump flood, the future waterfloods… will move from a 20% to sub-10% decline by 2030 and improving to below 5% in subsequent years.”
- Nitin Kumar, Mizuho: Inquired about the unconventional portion of the sub-$30 per barrel breakeven resource. Hollub explained, “the secondary benches are providing now as much value as the primary benches did… the average resource is about a $38 per barrel breakeven.”
- Kumar followed up on share buybacks. Mathew said, “we would like to first get our principal debt to $10 billion, but we are not setting a time frame to get to this target as we want to have some flexibility.”
- Wei Jiang, Barclays: Explored the sustainability of cost savings into 2027. Mathew noted, “we expect to maintain this momentum into next year. So we could see a modest growth with this year’s capital depending on the efficiency and new well performance.”
- Douglas Leggate, Wolfe Research: Asked about sustaining capital at different oil prices and the outlook for LCV. Mathew outlined how sustaining capital is calculated, “from $5.7 billion, you back out LCV and exploration of $300 million, you’re at $5.4 billion… and going from $5.2 billion to $4.1 billion at $40, that is primarily deflation, around 20% deflation.”
Sentiment Analysis
- Analysts focused on CapEx reductions, cost efficiency sustainability, capital allocation flexibility, and sustaining production levels, with a generally positive but probing tone. Multiple questions centered on structural cost savings and their impact on future years.
- Management maintained a confident tone in prepared remarks, using phrases like “we are perfectly positioned” and “I’m confident that our teams will continue to innovate.” In Q&A, management continued to emphasize operational excellence and cost discipline, reiterating flexibility and the sustainability of improvements.
- Compared to the previous quarter, management’s tone remained confident but placed greater emphasis on cost discipline and flexibility, while analysts maintained a constructive but slightly more detailed and probing approach regarding the durability of efficiencies.
Quarter-over-Quarter Comparison
- Guidance for 2026 capital spending was notably reduced to $5.5 billion–$5.9 billion from the previous “soft guide” range of $6.3 billion–$6.7 billion, reflecting deeper cost efficiencies and project optimization.
- Dividend growth focus strengthened with the announcement of an 8% increase.
- Debt reduction accelerated, with the principal debt moving to $15 billion and a new target of $14.3 billion.
- Analysts in both quarters questioned the sustainability of cost reductions and the impact of capital allocation, but current quarter questions showed greater scrutiny on the structural nature of savings and the long-term outlook for sustaining capital.
- Management confidence increased regarding the resource base and operational agility, highlighting a shift from transformative acquisitions to execution and efficiency as the core strategy.
Risks and Concerns
- Management noted the ongoing industry challenge of reserves replacement and the importance of maintaining a high reserves replacement ratio.
- The outlook for oil prices remains uncertain, with Hollub expressing caution about the sustainability of recent geopolitical price spikes.
- Analysts raised questions about the durability of cost savings, the ability to sustain production growth, and the flexibility of capital allocation in different macro scenarios.
- Mathew acknowledged that no timeframe is set for reaching the $10 billion principal debt target, signaling market-dependent flexibility.
Final Takeaway
Occidental Petroleum delivered a year of record operational and financial performance, marked by substantial cost efficiencies, balance sheet strengthening, and a strategic focus on sustaining and growing shareholder returns. The company’s 2026 plan projects lower capital spending of $5.5 billion to $5.9 billion while targeting average production of 1.45 million BOE per day. Management emphasized continued cost discipline, resilient free cash flow growth, and capital allocation flexibility, positioning Oxy for long-term value creation amid uncertain commodity markets and industry-wide challenges in reserves replacement.