Energy giant Occidental Petroleum (OXY) is acquiring privately-held oil and gas producer CrownRock in a cash-and-stock deal worth $12 billion. The companies expect the deal to close in the first quarter of 2024. Cole Smead, CEO of Smead Capital Management, joins Yahoo Finance to break down the deal, as well as the state of the energy sector and why he believes that "We're probably going to end the 2020's with 10 oil companies in America."
For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.
Video Transcript
[AUDIO LOGO]
DIANE KING HALL: Another deal in the oil and gas space. Occidental Petroleum is buying CrownRock for roughly $12 billion. The deal expected to close in the first quarter of 2024. This comes after several energy consolidations this year, including Exxon buying Pioneer and Chevron acquiring Hess. Our next guest has been calling for just this sort of consolidation in the industry, and he was betting big on Occidental. His firm's largest holding in its portfolio is the petroleum company.
To break down what's going on in the sector, we want to bring in Cole Smead, CEO of Smead Capital Management. Cole, thanks so much for joining us as usual. It wouldn't be merger Monday without a deal to talk about, right? So let's just jump right into this latest. What does this-- there has been, obviously, a lot of consolidation this year, what does this say about the state of the industry now?
COLE SMEAD: Yeah. Thanks for having me. What it says is that there are assets out there that you can buy more attractively than your own company stock. And that's, you know-- use this as a private to public transaction. In effect, these assets are going public into OXY stock at the same time. And we're going to continue to see these arbitrage.
I mean, there's not a ton of deals like this from a private to public, but there's a lot of public to public that has to go on too. We're probably going to end the 2020s with 10 oil companies in America. And so just do the math of where we got to go from point A to point B to get to that. But again, you know, let's say Oxy, most of this deal is going to be done on debt. They're going to borrow that money at say 7% to 8%. Their free cash flow yield on the assets they're buying is higher than that.
So they're just fixing in their costs. They're going to collect the spread in between. Pay off this and the little equity they are floating they'll buy back within one year of free cash. So as shareholders, our hands are applauding and very excited about what Vicki's doing.