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If You Invested in Orion Div (OODH)

Energy · Oil & Gas E&P · OTC Link
Looking for the live price? See the OODH quote & overview
$1,000 invested 1 Year Ago
$1,442
+44.2% total 47.5% CAGR
Bought on Jul 8, 2025 at $0.25
$1,000 invested 5 Years Ago
$7,783
+678.3% total 51.4% CAGR
Bought on Jul 7, 2021 at $0.05

What $1,000 or $10,000 in OODH Would Be Worth Today

Real historical value by amount invested and how long ago
If you invested 1 year ago 5 years ago 10 years ago Since Jul 8, 2015
$1,000 $1,442 +44% $7,783 +678% $358,000 +35,700% $358,000 +35,700%
$10,000 $14,418 +44% $77,826 +678% $3,580,000 +35,700% $3,580,000 +35,700%

Based on real historical closing prices through the latest market close. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

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$1,000 Investment Over Time

OODH vs S&P 500

Year-by-Year Returns

OODH annual performance
Year Start Price End Price Annual Return Cumulative
2017 $0.00 $0.00 +0.0% +0.0%
2018 $0.00 $0.00 +50.0% +50.0%
2019 $0.00 $0.00 +0.0% +50.0%
2020 $0.00 $0.01 +133.3% +250.0%
2021 $0.02 $1.20 +7400.0% +59900.0%
2022 $0.03 $0.02 -40.0% +800.0%
2023 $0.02 $0.09 +400.0% +4400.0%
2024 $0.09 $0.32 +250.6% +15675.0%
2025 $0.30 $0.45 +49.2% +22400.0%
2026 $0.31 $0.36 +15.5% +17800.0%

About Orion Div

Energy · OTC Link

Orion Diversified Holding Co Inc. (OTC PINK: OODH) is described in its public communications as a revenue-generating, diversified natural-resource and energy company. The company focuses on acquiring and holding operated majority working interests, non-operated working interests, royalty interests, and mineral interests in producing oil and gas properties, with a core emphasis on premier onshore basins within the United States. In addition, Orion has expanded into precious- and critical-mineral properties through leases and mineral holdings in historic and prospective mining regions.

According to multiple company updates, Orion receives monthly income from mineral and royalty interests spread across tens of thousands of acres in major U.S. oil and gas regions. Its portfolio includes interests in areas such as the Bakken, Permian Basin, Piceance Basin, Arkoma Basin, Eagle Ford, Haynesville Shale, and the SCOOP/STACK plays of Oklahoma, as well as producing properties in states including Oklahoma, Colorado, New Mexico, Texas, Louisiana, Wyoming, North Dakota, Arkansas, Mississippi, and others. The company highlights that these holdings provide diversified exposure to both oil and natural gas production and contribute to recurring revenue.

Orion also reports ownership of a large portfolio of oil and gas royalties across multiple states, including a substantial royalty position in Pecos County, Texas, and additional royalty and working-interest acquisitions in Colorado, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas, and Mississippi. These assets include non-operated working interests in producing wells and override royalty interests across significant acreage positions held by production. The company states that it receives income from a range of operating companies, including major and independent oil and gas producers.

Beyond hydrocarbons, Orion has disclosed a western mineral division that includes mineral leases and properties in regions known for placer gold, precious metals, rare earths, and critical minerals. Examples mentioned in company releases include a 4.25-acre property near Winnemucca in Humboldt County, Nevada, and a two-year lease on the Queen Lilly Placer Claim in a historic gold district in northern California, as well as an additional two-year mineral lease in Nevada in a district with historic placer gold and heavy-mineral concentrations. These mineral interests are positioned as long-term strategic holdings that add exposure to precious and critical minerals while maintaining a primary focus on income-generating oil and gas assets.

In its public statements, Orion emphasizes a disciplined capital structure. The company has stated that it has never issued stock for any asset acquisition and that every mineral and energy interest it owns has been paid for in cash. Management presents this approach as a way to protect the company’s share structure and align management with shareholders over the long term.

Operationally, Orion’s communications describe a mix of operated and non-operated positions. The company references operated majority working interests in certain properties and non-operated working interests and royalties in others, allowing it to participate in production without always serving as the operator. It has reported production and revenue contributions from natural gas wells in South Texas, oil production in the Gulf Coast region, and multiple producing wells and royalty interests across Oklahoma, Colorado, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Wyoming, and other areas.

Orion’s strategy, as described in its news releases, centers on expanding its portfolio across multiple resource sectors while focusing on assets that generate or are expected to generate cash flow. The company notes that it seeks to acquire mineral and royalty interests, as well as working interests, in established producing fields and active drilling areas, including horizontal developments in Oklahoma’s SCOOP and STACK plays and other prolific basins. It also highlights its efforts to maintain a diversified mix of oil, natural gas, and mineral exposure.

In addition to its energy and mineral activities, Orion has disclosed that it is involved in creating construction-related products through Angle Tools Corp., including a patent-pending crescent wrench design intended to work with an electric drill. This product activity is presented alongside the company’s core strategy of investing in oil and gas properties and mineral interests.

Across its communications, Orion characterizes its mission as expanding strategically, operating efficiently, controlling costs, and focusing on long-term shareholder value. The company’s updates frequently reference acquisitions of new royalty and working interests, growth in total mineral acres, and additions to its mineral and royalty portfolio in established and emerging resource regions in the United States.

Business model and revenue focus

Based on its own descriptions, Orion’s business model is centered on acquiring and holding interests in producing or development-stage oil and gas properties and mineral assets. The company highlights several categories of interests: operated majority working interests, non-operated working interests, royalty interests, override royalty interests, and mineral interests. These structures allow Orion to participate in revenues from oil and gas production and, in some cases, from mineral properties, while leveraging operators and partners across different basins.

Orion repeatedly notes that it receives monthly income from its mineral and royalty acres and from non-operated working interests. Its portfolio spans multiple basins and states, and the company has described itself as cash-flow positive on certain acquisitions. By acquiring interests in existing wells, pooled units, and acreage with active or permitted drilling, Orion positions its holdings as sources of recurring income and potential future development.

Geographic and asset diversification

Company communications describe Orion’s assets as spread across major U.S. onshore oil and gas regions. These include the Bakken Shale, the Permian Basin, the Piceance Basin, the Arkoma Basin, the Eagle Ford, the Haynesville Shale, and the SCOOP and STACK plays of Oklahoma. The company also references holdings and acquisitions in states such as Oklahoma, Colorado, Arkansas, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Wyoming, North Dakota, and others. This geographic spread is presented as a way to diversify exposure across multiple basins, operators, and commodity mixes.

On the mineral side, Orion has reported holdings in Nevada and California in areas known historically for placer gold and for rare-earth and critical-mineral potential. These mineral properties are characterized as strategic, long-term positions that complement the company’s oil and gas interests.

Capital discipline and acquisition strategy

In its press releases, Orion emphasizes that it has paid cash for all of its mineral and energy interests and has not issued stock for asset acquisitions. The company presents this as a disciplined approach intended to protect its share structure. Its acquisition strategy, as described, involves targeting producing wells, royalty interests, and mineral acres in established fields and active drilling areas, as well as selective expansion into precious and critical minerals through leases and small mineral properties.

Additional activities

Alongside its resource holdings, Orion has disclosed that it is involved in developing construction tools through Angle Tools Corp., including a patent-pending crescent wrench design intended to work with an electric drill. This activity is mentioned as part of the company’s broader strategy of creating products and investing in energy-related assets.

Frequently asked questions about Orion Diversified Holding Co Inc. (OODH)

Market Cap
$0.0B
Current Price
$0.36
View full OODH overview

Frequently Asked Questions

Orion Div investment returns

How much would $1,000 invested in Orion Div be worth today?

If you invested $1,000 in Orion Div (OODH) 10 years ago on 2016-07-07, your investment would be worth $358,000 today, representing a +35,700.0% total return, growing at a compounded rate of 80.6% per year (CAGR).

Has Orion Div outperformed the S&P 500?

Over the past 10 years, OODH returned +35,700.0% compared to +258.6% for the S&P 500, outperforming the benchmark by 35,441.4 percentage points.

What is Orion Div's average annual return?

The compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of OODH over the past 10 years is 80.6%, growing at a compounded rate each year. Individual years vary significantly — OODH's best recent year was 2021 (+7400.0%) and worst was 2022 (-40.0%).

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