Occidental Petroleum Corp

NYSE: OXY
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OXY Articles

As Russia and Saudi Arabia ramp up crude production, U.S. shale producers face dangerous days ahead and pressure is building elsewhere as well.
Two oil and gas exploration and production companies have recently slashed their dividends. Are more energy industry firms poised to follow?
Thursday's top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations included Akamai Technologies, Anheuser-Busch InBev, Boeing, BP, Comcast, Duke Energy, Gap, Kinder Morgan, Lyft, Occidental Petroleum, Snap,...
Short interest rose on most oil & gas stocks in the two-week short interest period that ended February 28.
Occidental Petroleum announced Tuesday that it is slashing its dividend by 86% and cutting planned capex spending for this year by $1.7 billion. Will other big oil companies also abandon their high...
24/7 Wall St. has tracked more than 35 analyst downgrades in the oil patch on Monday, after a Saudi-Russia price war on top of the coronavirus outbreak knocking demand for oil.
Oil and gas companies are taking the brunt of investor punishment Monday morning, with some stocks trading down 40% from their Friday closing price.
The stock market has been unforgiving to the oil sector so far in 2020. Many investors are puzzled by the lack of interest and outright disdain that the stock market has for the top energy stocks.
These four top stocks have paid consistent and rising dividends for years, and they are good choices for investors with a higher risk tolerance who are seeking income, especially after their share...
Short interest in oil and gas stocks was mixed in the reporting period that ended February 14. Crude prices did not begin to tumble until a week later, however.
The energy sector dropped more than 4.5% Monday to continue its slide since the beginning of the year.
The impact of the spreading coronavirus has hit the energy sector particularly hard. Here are some of Monday's biggest losers.
Crude oil prices have fallen since the outbreak of coronavirus in China was revealed in early January. Short sellers have been selective with their bets and continue to be so.
Merrill Lynch suggests that investors look at more defensive energy companies, and these five make sense now for long-term growth investors with some risk tolerance.
These four top energy companies pay rich dependable dividends and should continue to battle through the weakness in the sector until we get to the summer driving and travel season.