Halliburton Company
HALBusiness Model
ticker: HAL step: 01 generated: 2026-05-13 source: quick-research
Halliburton Company (HAL) — Business Overview
Business Description
Halliburton is one of the world's largest oilfield services companies, providing a comprehensive range of products and services to the upstream oil and gas industry across the full well lifecycle — from exploration and drilling through completion, production, and intervention. The company operates in approximately 70 countries and serves national oil companies (NOCs), international majors, and independent E&P companies. FY2024 revenue was $22.9B. Halliburton has increasingly focused on profitable international growth and margin improvement over volume growth, with a 50%+ FCF return commitment.
Revenue Model
Revenue is from services and technology fees paid by E&P companies on a per-well, per-day, or contract basis. Two primary segments: (1) Completion and Production (C&P) — stimulation (hydraulic fracturing), cementing, production enhancement, wireline, artificial lift; higher-margin, more cyclical with U.S. land activity; (2) Drilling and Evaluation (D&E) — drilling services, formation evaluation, logging, seismic, directional drilling; more international weighted. Services pricing is tied to drilling/completion activity, which correlates with oil/gas prices and E&P capex cycles. International revenue is ~57% of total; North America ~43%.
Products & Services
- Hydraulic Fracturing: World's largest fracking business; key product for U.S. shale completions
- Drilling Services: Drill bits, directional drilling, rotary steerable systems
- Formation Evaluation: Wireline logging, logging-while-drilling (LWD), seismic data interpretation
- Cementing: Wellbore integrity for casing and completion
- Production Enhancement: Artificial lift, chemical treatments, intervention services
- Digital & DecisionIQ Platform: AI-driven workflow automation for well construction and production optimization
- Landmark Software: Subsurface interpretation and reservoir characterization software
Customer Base & Go-to-Market
Serves NOCs (Saudi Aramco, ADNOC, Pemex), international majors (Shell, BP, ExxonMobil, Chevron), and U.S. independents (Devon, Pioneer/ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips). International operations account for ~57% of revenue — driven by Middle East, Latin America, and Southeast Asia NOC capex. North America is more volatile, driven by U.S. land rig counts and shale E&P activity.
Competitive Position
Halliburton is the global #2 oilfield services company by revenue, behind SLB (Schlumberger) and ahead of Baker Hughes. Halliburton is the clear #1 in North American completion services (fracking), with deep customer relationships and integrated service offerings. In international markets, SLB has a structural edge in complex deepwater and digital workflows. Halliburton's focus on "service quality + technology" has enabled a multi-year margin recovery to ~19% EBIT margins.
Key Facts
- Founded: 1919
- Headquarters: Houston, Texas
- Employees: ~55,000
- Exchange: NYSE
- Sector / Industry: Energy / Oilfield Services & Equipment
- Market Cap: ~$25–28B
Financial Snapshot
ticker: HAL step: 04 generated: 2026-05-13 source: quick-research
Halliburton Company (HAL) — Financial Snapshot
Income Statement Summary
| Metric | FY2022 | FY2023 | FY2024 | YoY |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | $20.30B | $23.00B | $22.90B | -0.4% |
| Gross Margin | ~19% | ~21% | ~21% | |
| Operating Margin | ~13% | ~18% | ~17% | |
| Net Income | ~$1.57B | $2.64B | $2.50B | -5.2% |
| EPS (diluted, adj.) | ~$1.92 | ~$3.29 | ~$3.08 | ~-6% |
FY2022 reflects sharp recovery in activity post-COVID; FY2023 peak cycle earnings as rig counts and E&P capex were elevated. FY2024 slight revenue decline reflects North American softness (lower U.S. land rig counts) partially offset by strong international demand. FY2025 revenue: $22.18B (-3.3%) as North America activity further declined.
Cash Flow & Balance Sheet (FY2024)
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Free Cash Flow (FY2024) | >$2.6B |
| Shareholder Returns (FY2024) | >$1.6B (dividends + buybacks) |
| Quarterly Dividend | $0.17/share ($0.68 annualized, ~3% yield) |
| Total Debt | ~$8.5B |
| Shareholder Return Commitment | 50%+ of annual FCF |
Key Ratios (approximate)
- P/E: ~8–9x | EV/EBITDA: ~5–6x | FCF Yield: ~9–10%
- Revenue Growth (FY2024): -0.4% | Operating Margin: ~17%
- International Revenue Mix: ~57% | North America: ~43%
- FCF Conversion: >80% of net income in recent years
Growth Profile
Halliburton is in a mid-cycle oilfield services environment. The 2022-2023 upcycle driven by post-COVID E&P spending recovery has plateaued, with North American activity softening since mid-2023 as U.S. land rig counts fell ~15-20% from peak. International markets remain resilient — NOC spending in the Middle East, Latin America, and Southeast Asia is growing. Halliburton's strategy is to grow international margins toward 20%+ while maintaining North America profitability through efficiency. The DecisionIQ digital platform and software-attached services aim to raise the margin floor through the cycle.
Forward Estimates
- FY2026: North America revenue decline high-single digits; international growth offsets partially
- Operating Margin target: >20% international; maintain North America margins
- FCF: $2.0-2.5B guided for 2026 given softer activity
- Analyst median price target: $35.00 (vs. ~$27-28 current); significant upside implied
- Analyst consensus: 17 Buy, 9 Hold, 1 Sell (of 36 analysts)
Recent Catalysts
ticker: HAL step: 12 generated: 2026-05-13 source: quick-research
Halliburton Company (HAL) — Investment Catalysts & Risks
Bull Case Drivers
International Margin Expansion = Durable High-Margin Growth Driver — Halliburton's international segment has been the key earnings driver through the North America softness cycle. NOC capex in Saudi Arabia (Aramco), UAE (ADNOC), Mexico (Pemex), and Southeast Asia remains elevated as these national producers pursue long-term supply commitments and field development. International EBIT margins have expanded toward 17-19% and management targets 20%+. JPMorgan raised HAL's target to $40 citing international margin confidence; Evercore ISI upgraded to Outperform on the same thesis. International revenues are more stable, contract-based, and less exposed to spot U.S. rig count volatility.
Free Cash Flow Generation + 50% Shareholder Return Commitment — Halliburton generated >$2.6B in FCF in FY2024 and returned >$1.6B to shareholders (50%+ return). Even at a reduced FCF level of $2.0-2.5B in 2026, the company is committed to returning 50%+ to shareholders via buybacks and dividends. At ~8-9x P/E and a FCF yield of ~9-10%, Halliburton is attractively valued relative to its cash generation. The DecisionIQ digital platform and software-attached services aim to raise margin floors through cycles, making FCF more predictable than in prior cycles. Any Venezuela sanctions easing or Iran supply disruptions that tighten global oil markets would accelerate E&P spending and directly boost HAL's activity.
Digital & Technology Services Raise Margin Floors — Halliburton has invested significantly in digital workflows (DecisionIQ AI platform, Landmark subsurface software) that charge customers on a software-as-a-service basis — creating recurring, higher-margin revenue streams less tied to rig count cycles. Customers using integrated digital workflows are stickier (switching costs are high), and the software layer allows Halliburton to command premium pricing on combined digital + services packages. As E&P companies prioritize capital efficiency over activity growth, demand for optimization software grows counter-cyclically to rig counts.
Bear Case Risks
North America Activity Decline — Structural, Not Cyclical — North American revenue is expected to decline high-single digits in 2026 as U.S. land rig counts remain depressed (down 15-20% from 2023 peaks) and E&P companies maintain capital discipline rather than responding to OPEC+ with activity growth. The U.S. fracking market — Halliburton's largest business segment — is oversupplied with service capacity as the major E&P consolidations (ExxonMobil-Pioneer, Chevron-Hess) reduce the number of active drilling programs. North America revenue decline, if sustained, removes Halliburton's historical growth engine and pressure total revenues even if international holds firm.
Oil Price Sensitivity + Oversupply Risk — Halliburton's revenue is a function of E&P capex spending, which is a function of oil and gas prices. OPEC+ oversupply, global inventory builds (49M barrels in Jan 2026), and Iran sanctions relief scenarios could push WTI below $60/bbl — the level at which many E&P companies begin cutting capex. A sustained low-price environment forces Halliburton to lower service prices to retain market share, compressing margins while volumes also decline. Every $10/bbl WTI decline reduces Halliburton's revenue by an estimated $600-800M annually through activity and pricing impacts.
Competitive Pressure from SLB + Technology Commoditization — SLB (Schlumberger) has a structural technology and digital lead over Halliburton in complex international deepwater projects, integrated reservoir modeling, and digital transformation services. As NOCs increase spending on digital oilfield solutions, SLB's early-mover advantage in AI-driven reservoir management could capture a disproportionate share of the margin expansion. Baker Hughes is also investing aggressively in digital and subsea. If the next cycle is technology-differentiated rather than activity-driven, Halliburton's traditional fracking-heavy model may face structural margin compression relative to more technology-forward competitors.
Upcoming Events
- Q2 2026 Earnings (July 2026): International margin trajectory vs. 20% target; North America revenue decline magnitude
- OPEC+ June 2026 Meeting: Production quota decisions directly drive near-term E&P spending and sentiment
- Venezuela/Iran Sanctions Updates: Any geopolitical resolution that opens new markets or tightens global supply is HAL-positive
- U.S. Rig Count Weekly Data (Baker Hughes): Real-time indicator of North America activity trend
Analyst Sentiment
Moderately bullish: 17 Buy, 9 Hold, 1 Sell among 36 analysts; median price target $35.00 (vs. ~$27-28 current, implying ~25-30% upside). Bulls are buying the international margin story and FCF yield; bears flag North America decline and oil price risk. The stock has de-rated from 2023 highs as the North America upcycle has unwound — value is apparent at current multiples if oil stabilizes above $65.
Research Date
Generated: 2026-05-13
Full Research Available
This primer covers steps 1–3 of 21. The full deep dive includes moat analysis, DCF valuation, bull/bear scenarios, management quality, earnings transcript analysis, competitive positioning, returns on capital, institutional/insider activity, and an investment memo.