Got $5,000? Buy and Hold These 3 Value Stocks for Years

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Stock prices are starting to feel a bit frothy. For perspective, the S&P 500 is currently valued at more than 23 times its trailing earnings, and more than 21 times this year's expected profits. That's a steep valuation by nearly any standard. It's especially steep, however, in an environment where interest rates are high. See, higher borrowing costs make growth more expensive to fund, which works against growth companies and their stocks.

What works against growth stocks often works in favor of value stocks though. And there are still plenty of reasonably priced value stocks to consider stepping into. Here's a closer look at three of the best value stocks to buy now and hold for years on end, given that interest rates are apt to remain near their current levels for the indefinite future.

Occidental Petroleum

If you think the world's use of oil is near its end now that consumers have access to environmentally friendlier alternatives, think again. The U.S. Energy Information Agency suggests renewable energy only accounts for about 12% of total domestic power production. The country's single-biggest source of energy remains petroleum, at 36%, while natural gas -- often extracted along with petroleum -- accounts for 32% the United States' energy usage. These numbers are in line with the rest of the world's.

But change is underway. It's just taking shape incredibly slowly at the same time the worldwide need for power continues to swell. Standard & Poor's believes that even as far down the road as 2050 the world's top source of energy will still be oil, with renewables only being a close second. Natural gas will still be a respectable third.

Enter Occidental Petroleum (NYSE: OXY).

While the rest of the energy industry is focused on crude's eventual wind-down, Occidental CEO Vicki Hollub is making a point of establishing new sources now for 2025. That's when -- as she put it when speaking at this year's World Economic Forum -- the "world is going to be short of oil" to a degree that will keep oil prices in the ballpark of $80 to $85 per barrel for a long, long while. The impending acquisition of CrownRock is one such way the company is securing a bigger supply of oil and gas for the future, for instance.

That being said, Occidental isn't blind to the foreseeable future. It's addressing the dirty side of the oil business as well. As an example, it's developing technologies that (literally) suck carbon dioxide out of the air before it can adversely impact the environment. It's even using this captured carbon dioxide as a means of improving the amount of oil a well ultimately produces.