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Warren Buffett Bought 8 Million Shares of This Oil Giant and $100 Oil Proves Him Right
Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB +0.11%) disclosed in a 13F SEC filing that it purchased 8,091,570 shares of Chevron during Q4 2025. With WTI crude now hovering just under $100 a barrel, that bet is looking prescient.
What Berkshire Actually Bought
The Q4 2025 purchase brought Berkshire’s total Chevron (CVX +0.12%) stake to approximately 130 million shares, making CVX 7.24% of Berkshire’s entire equity portfolio and one of its top five holdings. Berkshire also holds a large stake in Occidental Petroleum (OXY +2.02%), and in January 2026, closed its acquisition of OxyChem from Occidental, deepening its energy exposure further.
This is not a passive position. Berkshire has been building energy exposure while trimming elsewhere, including reducing its Apple stake. The CVX addition signals continued conviction, not portfolio drift.
Image source: Getty Images
The Underlying Thesis
A good energy thesis today rests on three pillars: operational scale, shareholder returns, and oil price optionality. Chevron delivered on all three in 2025 despite a difficult pricing environment. The company posted record full-year production of 3,723 MBOE/d, up 12% year-over-year, hit its Permian Basin target of 1 million BOE per day, and generated record full-year operating cash flow of $33.9 billion. It returned $27.1 billion to shareholders and raised its quarterly dividend to $1.78 per share, the 39th consecutive annual raise. All of that happened when Brent averaged just $64 per barrel in Q4.
Now Brent more of less sits at $100. The operational leverage built at $64 oil looks substantially more valuable today. Chevron’s cost reduction program adds to that: $1.5 billion in structural savings achieved in 2025, with a target of $3 to $4 billion by end of 2026.
Expand
NYSE: CVX
Chevron
Today’s Change
(0.12%) $0.24
Current Price
$201.68
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$402B
Day’s Range
$201.21 - $205.06
52wk Range
$132.04 - $205.06
Volume
591K
Avg Vol
12M
Gross Margin
14.66%
Dividend Yield
3.43%
Occidental reinforces the thesis from a different angle. The OxyChem sale to Berkshire closed January 2, 2026, enabling OXY to cut its principal debt by $5.8 billion, bringing it to $15 billion.
How the Position Looks Today
CVX has returned over 26% year-to-date, showing that once again Buffett’s insights before he stepped down as CEO were ahead of the curve. On top of that, the stock still yields 3.6% with a remarkable run of unbroken dividend growth.
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NYSE: OXY
Occidental Petroleum
Today’s Change
(2.02%) $1.21
Current Price
$60.78
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$59B
Day’s Range
$59.67 - $61.36
52wk Range
$34.78 - $61.36
Volume
976K
Avg Vol
14M
Gross Margin
31.94%
Dividend Yield
1.64%
If oil holds near $100, Chevron’s free cash flow generation and dividend coverage metrics only improve materially. If oil retreats, the 39-year dividend track record and $3 to $4 billion cost reduction target have historically supported the stock. And, recall that it performed well with oil in the $60’s already. Whether the Iran conflict goes on longer than expected or not, Chevron has the set up to continue delivering for investors. It’s just a matter of how much.