For my 30th Seeking Alpha article, I revisit Occidental Petroleum by taking another look at the company's valuation relative to its reserves:
In
my recent article “Occidental
Petroleum is Surprisingly Expensive Relative to Its Reserves,” I compared the
company’s enterprise value to the value of
its underground oil and natural gas reserves. I then made the same comparison
for several other large oil companies. Even though Occidental Petroleum (OXY) is
much riskier than those companies due to its high debt levels, its enterprise
value to reserve value ratio was not much cheaper.
In calculating Occidental’s enterprise value in that article, I left out Occidental’s roughly 10 billion dollars in preferred stock. Warren Buffett (BRK.A) (BRK.B) bought this stock to help finance Occidental’s August 2019 acquisition of Anadarko Petroleum, and I only noticed my omission while writing my follow-up article “A Valuation of Occidental Petroleum Based On Its Three Sources of Value.”
Fortunately,
including that preferred stock in the calculation doesn’t weaken my original thesis.
It actually makes it stronger. My original thesis was that the company's
enterprise value to reserve value ratio was surprisingly high, and now it's
even higher. This article will look at that revised EV/Reserves ratio and
compare it to the EV/Reserves ratios of some other integrated oil companies,
taking into account the various companies’ share price changes in the past
three weeks. In doing so, we will see how expensive Occidental Petroleum is now
compared to those other companies. (Read More)
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