The simple and complicated story behind Buffett's massive oil buy: Morning Brief

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As the old E.F. Hutton commercial said: When Warren Buffett talks, they say people listen.

But when Buffett talked about Occidental Petroleum (OXY) at Berkshire Hathaway's (BRK-A) annual meeting on April 30th, how many really heard what the Oracle of Omaha was saying?

If anyone skipped that part, investors aren't tuning out now, as Berkshire owns nearly 20% of the company.

Buffett’s investment in Occidental Petroleum is both simple and complicated.

Simple: “What [Occidental CEO] Vicki Hollub was saying made nothing but sense,” Buffett told shareholders earlier this year. “And I decided that it was a good place to put Berkshire’s money.”

Elementary, my dear Buffett. Walking his talk, Buffett has been buying Occidental shares seemingly every day.

Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway has purchased shares of Occidental Petroleum at a rapid pace over the last several months. (Source: Markets Insider/SEC Filings)
Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway has purchased shares of Occidental Petroleum at a rapid pace over the last several months. (Source: Markets Insider/SEC Filings)

There’s a more complex tale though, with head-spinning backstory that goes back years for Buffett and decades for Occidental.

Oxy Pete, as the company is known, was founded 102 years ago in California. Smaller than the fully-integrated Seven Sisters — BP, Shell, Chevron, Gulf, Texaco, Exxon, and Mobil — Oxy enjoyed an outsized reputation in large part because of the company’s patriarch, Armand Hammer, company CEO from 1957 until 1990.

Colorful does not begin to describe Hammer.

Friends with myriad global leaders, Hammer was called “Lenin’s chosen capitalist,” due to his deep relationship with Russia. Hammer opened up Libya and locked horns with Qaddafi. He tried to buy Church & Dwight, owner of Arm & Hammer baking soda, because the name of that product was almost eponymous. Hammer was a great collector of art, made illegal campaign contributions to Richard Nixon, and actor, Armie Hammer, is his great-grandson.

Armand Hammer et son jet privé avant son départ du Bourget le 28 mars 1977, France. (Photo by Bertrand LAFORET/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)
Armand Hammer in France circa 1977. (Photo by Bertrand LAFORET/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images) · Bertrand LAFORET via Getty Images

"Occidental made its name in the late 1950s as an international, independent looking for opportunities drilling and producing oil," says University of Iowa professor Tyler Priest. "Hammer was a huge risk taker not only in doing deals with foreign governments, but in mergers and acquisitions."

Oxy today, though, is a far cry from what it was during Hammer's time.

CEO Vicki Hollub is a mineral engineer who worked her way up through the company after coming on board when Oxy bought Cities Service in 1982. Domestic oil and gas production now accounts for 83% of its business and with $29 billion in annual revenue, Oxy is by this count the 43rd largest oil producer in the world and the 11th biggest in the U.S.

Oxy has a significant stake in the Permian basin, in part due to its acquisition of Anadarko in 2019, which is when Buffett entered the picture.

That year, Oxy made a hostile bid for Anadarko, which had already agreed to be bought by Chevron (CVX).