Energy investors spent the spring watching oil prices control stock movements. Now, one energy research team on Wall Street says the real story is happening somewhere else entirely.
Chevron (CVX) has dropped hard from its 2026 high, pulled down by cooling oil prices and a fading war premium.
Even with that, Wolfe Research sees the opposite of weakness. The research team thinks the sell-off opened a rare buying window, and it spelled out why.
Why Wolfe Research sees a buying window in Chevron stock
On July 2, 2026, Wolfe Research analyst Doug Leggate, who has a strong history of covering energy stocks, raised Chevron to Outperform from Peer Perform with a $210 price target, Investing.com reported.
That’s roughly a 27% increase from the stock’s July 1 close of $165.69.
The analyst’s point is simple: swings in oil prices have hidden how strong Chevron’s long-term cash flow really is.
Right now, the market seems to be pricing the stock as if Brent crude will stay under $60 a barrel, far below the roughly $70 Wolfe expects, Seeking Alpha noted.
Leggate called the drop an opportunistic entry point, and RBC Capital reaffirmed its Buy rating the same week.
The oil-price pullback that reset Chevron’s setup
The opening exists because the oil trade unwound fast.
Chevron and ExxonMobil (XOM) were the market’s top energy performers earlier in 2026. Both stocks rode a supply shockwave that drove Brent toward $120 a barrel in April.
Then the pressure lifted. After the U.S. Treasury cleared a 60-day license for Iranian crude, West Texas Intermediate fell to a four-month lownear $69 in late June.
Chevron also slid to roughly 20% below its $214.71 high after the license was cleared.
Nothing structural broke in that drop. The dividend, the balance sheet, and the project pipeline stayed intact even as the war premium drained away.
Guyana and the Hess deal fueling Chevron’s cash engine
The center of Wolfe’s argument is Guyana.
Chevron’s July 2025 acquisition of Hess Corporation (HES) handed it a stake in one of the world’s most productive offshore oil basins. That asset is set to carry more weight.
Related: Chevron CFO reveals why gas prices are stuck
The startup of the Uaru project should push Guyana to a free-cash-flow turning point in the second half of 2026. That’s enough to cover the Hess-related dividends and, in time, become Chevron’s biggest source of free cash flow.
It also offsets a real risk. Chevron’s Tengiz contract in Kazakhstan may expire in 2033. This is a loss Wolfe assumes in its base case, with rising Guyana cash flow acting as the cushion.
