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These two energy stocks will benefit from UAE’s decision to leave OPEC

The United Arab Emirates’ impending exit from OPEC and OPEC+ on May 1 marks a seismic shift in the global energy landscape, dismantling a decades-long framework of production quotas that has governed market supply.

As the cartel’s third-largest producer, the UAE’s pivot toward unconstrained output backed by its ambitious target of 5 million barrels per day by 2027 weakens OPEC’s monolithic control over pricing.

While Brent crude remains elevated, hovering around $115 per barrel amidst regional volatility, the long-term outlook favours producers with high spare capacity.

For investors, the UAE’s departure unlocks significant value for its primary Western partners – ExxonMobil and Occidental Petroleum, as Abu Dhabi moves to monetize its vast reserves independently.

ExxonMobil: leveraging strategic synergy and scale

Exxon stock stands as a primary beneficiary given the company’s deep‑seated joint ventures with the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC), and that advantage only grows as the UAE exits OPEC.

The partnership already spans upstream development, carbon‑capture projects, and long‑horizon capacity expansion in Abu Dhabi, giving Exxon privileged access to some of the world’s lowest‑cost, longest‑duration barrels.

A post‑OPEC UAE can now ramp production without quota ceilings, and Exxon is structurally positioned to participate in – and monetize – that incremental output.

Note that XOM’s assets in the UAE and Qatar account for “20%” of its global production capacity currently.

UAE’s exit from OPEC also tightens Exxon’s geopolitical alignment with a producer pursuing sovereign production autonomy, reinforcing long term volume visibility, advantaged breakevens, and a more durable upstream cash engine across cycles.

Note that a healthy 2.66% dividend yield makes XOM stock even more attractive to own in 2026 – at least for income-focused investors.

Occidental Petroleum: high-beta exposure to UAE growth

Occidental stock benefits from the UAE’s exit from OPEC because the move effectively unlocks production growth in the very assets where OXY is already embedded.

The company’s long‑standing presence in the region – from the Al Hosn Gas megaproject to its sizable position in Onshore Block 3 and 2.5 million acres of exploration rights – gives it direct leverage to any UAE decision to raise output once quota constraints disappear.

A sovereign, quota‑free UAE can accelerate gas and liquids development, expand unconventional programs, and push capacity toward its multi‑year targets, and OXY is structurally tied to that upside.

The shift also strengthens OXY’s geopolitical footing: as the UAE pivots toward production autonomy, it increasingly relies on partners with technical depth, carbon‑management expertise, and long‑cycle project execution – all areas where Occidental is differentiated.

That combination translates into higher long‑term volumes, improved capital efficiency, and more durable international cash flow as the UAE reorients its energy policy around national, rather than cartel‑driven, priorities.

Much like XOM, Occidental Petroleum also currently pays a dividend yield of 1.71%.

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