Just had a thought about energy stocks that most people seem to be sleeping on right now. Everyone's obsessed with AI, everyone's worried about ESG, but here's the thing — when global disruptions hit and oil prices spike, energy producers become your portfolio's best friend. They're basically a natural hedge against economic chaos.



I've been looking at a couple of solid oil and gas investment plays that even Berkshire Hathaway is betting on, and honestly they make sense if you're thinking medium to long term.

First up is Chevron. This isn't some small player — they're pumping 4 million barrels a day, which is roughly 4% of global production. They just grabbed Hess for access to assets in Guyana, and they're exploring everywhere from Libya to Greece. The company's spending $18-19 billion on capital expenditures through 2026, which tells you they're serious about growth.

Here's what caught my attention: right now Chevron's pulling in $12.5 billion annually in net income. That's down from the $30 billion peak in 2022 when oil was over $100, but think about it — oil's currently sitting around $65. If prices move back up even moderately, their earnings could jump significantly. Plus they're throwing a 3.75% dividend at shareholders. The company's positioned well to reward investors if energy prices normalize.

Then there's Occidental Petroleum. Berkshire owns over 25% of this one, which says something. They're a major natural gas player in the Permian Basin, and here's where it gets interesting — AI data centers are about to explode electricity demand. Natural gas is the fastest path to meeting that demand surge.

Occidental's smaller than Chevron, doing under 1.5 million barrels of oil equivalent daily, and yeah, natural gas prices have been sliding lately which pressures short-term earnings. They're at $2.5 billion in net income over the last year, way below their $10+ billion peak. But think ahead a few years — those data centers are coming, electricity demand will spike, and natural gas prices should follow. This could become a nice portfolio stabilizer.

The reason I'm flagging both of these for oil and gas investment consideration is simple: when commodity cycles turn, energy stocks move differently than the rest of your holdings. Most investors hate them, which sometimes means they're underpriced. Berkshire's conviction in both companies suggests there's real value here if you've got the patience to ride out the cycles.
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