Cramer Remix: Occidental Petroleum's deal with Buffett is ill-advised
Cramer Remix: Occidental Petroleum's deal with Buffett is ill-advised · CNBC

In This Article:

  • Occidental Petroleum's $10 billion loan from Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway could be an "albatross around the company's neck," CNBC's Jim Cramer says.

  • "Occidental is a major company with a solid balance sheet and the Anadarko deal makes a ton of sense. They could do a normal bond offering and get a much lower rate," the "Mad Money" host says.

  • "If you're a shareholder, you should hate this deal," he says.

CNBC's Jim Cramer on Friday said Occidental Petroleum OXY 's borrowed an "ill-advised" $10 billion from Warren Buffett to further a bidding war with Chevron CVX for Anadarko APC .

To raise enough capital, Occidental now has a loan from Berkshire Hathaway BRK.A with an 8% interest rate, which is worth as much as $20 billion, he said. That could be an "albatross around the company's neck," he added.

"That's staggeringly expensive money," the "Mad Money" host said. "Occidental is a major company with a solid balance sheet and the Anadarko deal makes a ton of sense. They could do a normal bond offering and get a much lower rate."

Buffett, on the other hand, made a good move that has "incredibly favorable terms," Cramer said. The 8% rate is much more than what it would have cost Occidental to get a bank loan, he said.

"If you're a shareholder, you should hate this deal," he said. "Occidental's stock pays a very high dividend that currently yields 5.4%, but that yield looks a lot less attractive when you realize Buffett's getting 8% and he's getting above you in the capital structure. I find it galling."

Occidental CEO Vicki Hollub, however, loves the backing from Buffett, which is why she was willing to pay through the roof, Cramer said. And there was a need for speed to compete with Chevron, which has a larger purse, he continued.

"Think about it like this: if the price of oil does take a header, Occidental will be on the hook for a giant slug of cash. They'll have a much harder time paying that back," Cramer said. "You don't gamble with the fate of your company, yet I think that's actually what Hollub might be doing here."

Cramer compares Occidental's loan to Tesla TSLA 's borrowing strategy here

Cramer's week ahead

The red-hot market will be put to the test when Uber goes public next week, Cramer said.

Investors should be worried about froth — unsustainably high share prices — particularly in the IPO market because there is too much enthusiasm to buy stocks, he said, pointing to Beyond Meat BYND 's second-day rally Friday after rocketing 163% on in its Thursday debut.