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Canadian Natural Resources Limited
As of May 21, 2026 at 10:37 UTC
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About Canadian Natural Resources Limited
Canadian Natural Resources is the largest producer of oil and the second-largest producer of natural gas in Canada. It is principally involved in extracting heavy oils, natural gas, and bitumen through its drilling and mining operations. Bitumen from mining operations is upgraded into synthetic crude oil. Commodities produced are primarily exported to the US via pipeline. The company also has smaller offshore production operations in the North Sea and Africa.
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Latest News
5 articlesThe article recommends three dividend stocks for May 2026: AbbVie (yielding 3.4% with strong growth despite Humira patent loss), Verizon Communications (yielding 5.9% with growth prospects from Frontier acquisition), and Canadian Natural Resources (yielding 3.8% with 26 consecutive years of dividend increases). All three stocks trade at low valuations and offer stable income with growth potential.
Following Middle East hostilities, a significant oil price divergence has emerged between Western benchmarks and Middle Eastern markets, with Oman crude hitting record $173/barrel. While the U.S. is better insulated due to strong domestic production and strategic reserves, Europe faces severe risks with natural gas storage at five-year lows. The article identifies U.S. energy stocks and gold as primary investment opportunities, with energy producers benefiting from higher oil prices and gold positioned to benefit from fiscal pressures and stagflation risks.
The author discusses his investment in three oil stocks (Chevron, ConocoPhillips, and Canadian Natural Resources) that can benefit from both rising and falling oil prices. Despite recent volatility caused by Iran-U.S. military tensions, he remains confident these companies have low breakeven costs, strong dividend growth histories, and can generate substantial cash flow even at $70/barrel oil prices.
U.S. stock markets declined on March 19, 2026, as Brent crude oil spiked above $119/barrel, intensifying inflation concerns and Middle East conflict fears. Energy stocks gained while tech and industrial sectors weakened. Gold prices fell sharply, dragging down mining stocks. JPMorgan Chase cut its S&P 500 year-end target, warning that elevated oil prices could slow global growth.
Canadian Natural Resources (CNQ) has delivered exceptional dividend growth of 9,300% since 2001, with an average annual increase of 21%. The oil and gas company generates $14.8 billion in operating cash flow, easily covering its $3.6 billion dividend while maintaining profitability even at oil prices above $21 per barrel. Despite potential energy market headwinds, the company's 4.33% dividend yield significantly outpaces the S&P 500 average.