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Oil prices are surging — these eight stocks are still bargains for long-term investors

The combination of underinvestment in new oil wells and rising demand underscores what might be a long period of high prices for energy commodities. Meanwhile, many oil and gas stocks are still trading at low valuations to expected earnings despite a sector-wide rally stretching back to the end of 2020.

Even though the energy sector of the S&P 500 SPX, -1.45% is the only one to rise this year, investors seem still to be at an early stage of a lucrative multi-year cycle.

Simon Wong, an analyst with Gabelli Funds in New York, and Charles Lemonides, chief investment officer at ValueWorks in New York, each named their favorite oil stocks during interviews. Those companies are listed below.

Underinvestment is good for oil industry and investors

Back on March 2, Sam Peters, a portfolio manager at ClearBridge Investments, provided this chart for this article that featured two of his energy stock selections:

On the left, the chart shows that oil industry capital expenditures had increased during previous periods of low supply. But the right side of the chart shows that capital spending fell very low last year as inventories were declining.

Oil producers had already been stung by the price collapse that began in 2014. But the action during early pandemic shutdowns in 2020 briefly took front-month contract prices below zero. Those experiences have caused managers of oil companies to shy away from making typical capital spending commitments at a time of high demand. The focus is still on maximizing cash flow and returning cash to investors through dividends and share buybacks.

In the previous article, Peters recommended two stocks: EQT Corp. EQT, +2.42%, which rose 50% from March 1 (the day before the article with his recommendations was published) through May 10, and Pioneer Natural Resources Co. PXD, -0.01%, which rose 4%. Those price increases exclude dividends — Pioneeer’s dividend yield is 6.96%.

We don’t need $100 oil. If oil stays above $80, these companies can still produce a lot of free cash that they can return to shareholders.

— Simon Wong, energy sector research analyst at Gamco.

Oil prices have been quite volatile of late, with so many different forces in play, including Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which directly disrupted oil markets; China’s aggressive lockdowns of cities to quell new outbreaks of the coronavirus; and the reopening of travel in many markets around the world, including the U.S. These and other factors have helped cause the price of West Texas Intermediate crude oil CL.1, +5.41% to swing as much as 13% from an intraday high ($111.37 a barrel on May 5) to an intraday low ($98.20 on May 11) this month alone.

Wong estimated that as 2022 began, world demand for crude oil ranged from 100 to 101 million barrels a day, while oil was being produced at a rate of about 98.5 barrels a day.

WTI closed at $99.76 on May 10, rising from $75.21 at the end of 2021.

Wong said new oil sources in the U.S. over the past 10 years had been mostly “short-term supply growth” because “you lose 50% to 70% in the first year” of a shale well’s operation.

“The U.S. can bring supply back,” he said. But this hasn’t started yet, because “shareholders want operators to be more disciplined.” Wong also pointed to a difficult political environment for pipeline construction, increasing regulations and difficulty borrowing from banks all increasing the cost of new source development.

Altogether, the oil scene is “bad news for consumers but good news for investors,” Wong said. “We don’t need $100 oil. If oil stays above $80, these companies can still produce a lot of free cash that they can return to shareholders,” he added.

Favored oil stocks

Wong pointed to Canada as a friendlier market for U.S. investors because Canadian wells tend to last 20 to 25 years, by his estimate.

Among Canadian oil producers, Wong likes Suncor Energy Inc. SU, +3.44% SU, +3.65% and Meg Energy Corp. MEG, +0.91% as plays on free cash flow. Based on closing share prices on May 10 and consensus free-cash-flow estimates for the next 12 months among analysts polled by FactSet, Suncor’s estimated free cash flow yield is 18.28%, while the estimate for Meg Energy is 25.68%. Those are very high, compared to consensus estimates of 5.07% for the S&P 50 and 11.15% for the S&P 500 energy sector.

Among U.S. producers he likes are Exxon Mobil Corp. XOM, +2.03% for the long term, in part because of its large investment in offshore development in Guyana, with potential reserve development of 10 billion barrels, by his estimate.

Wong also favors two oilfield-servicing giants: Schlumberger Ltd. SLB, +2.18% and Halliburton Co. HAL, +2.13%.

Lemonides pointed to “a huge opportunity for investors getting in today,” following such a long period during which production investment wasn’t economically feasible. His advice is to look beyond the current “gyrations” in the energy market because “the general direction of economic growth is likely to be strong.”

He listed three oil stocks that he sees as being heavily discounted now — all three emerged from pandemic-driven bankruptcies:

  • Whiting Petroleum Corp. WLL, +1.87% is a shale oil producer that trades for only three times the consensus earnings estimate for the next 12 months among analysts polled by FactSet. When the company filed for bankruptcy in April 2020, it had about $3 billion in debt. The company’s market capitalization is only $2.9 billion now. Even though the forward P/E ratio is so low, Lemonides believes the company will earn more than analysts expect.
  • Valaris Ltd. VAL, +2.48% is an offshore driller that emerged from pandemic-era bankruptcy. Its market capitalization is now $3.9 billion, and Lemonides said that the company’s fleet of drilling ships had been built at a cost of about $20 billion at a time when oil prices ranged between $85 and $100. Now that oil is back in that range, “a significant percentage of the fleet has been put back to work and demand is growing every day,” he said.
  • Tidewater Inc. TDW, +1.69% runs a different type of fleet that moves supplies to and from offshore rigs. The company also services the offshore wind power generation industry. The company’s market cap is $835 million, which is about a third of what it would cost to replace its increasingly busy fleet, according to Lemonides.

Here’s a summary of forward P/E ratios (except for Tidewater, which is expected to post net losses in 2022 and 2023) and opinions of analysts polled by FactSet of the eight stocks discussed by Wong and Lemonides. The table uses Canadian stock tickers for Suncor and Meg Energy; share prices and targets are in local currencies:

Company Ticker Forward P/E Share “buy” ratings Closing price – May 10 Consensus price target Implied 12-month upside potential
Suncor Energy Inc. SU, +3.65% 6.5 62% 44.71 51.89 16%
MEG Energy Corp. MEG, +0.91% 5.3 64% 18.63 24.93 34%
Exxon Mobil Corporation XOM, +2.03% 9.4 45% 85.02 98.46 16%
Schlumberger NV SLB, +2.18% 18.1 88% 37.89 50.03 32%
Halliburton Co. HAL, +2.13% 16.3 79% 34.30 46.07 34%
Whiting Petroleum Corp. WLL, +1.87% 3.2 56% 72.53 100.00 38%
Valaris Ltd. VAL, +2.48% 25.5 100% 52.40 71.71 37%
Tidewater Inc TDW, +1.69% #N/A 50% 20.10 18.50 -8%
Source: FactSet

Click on the tickers for more about each company.

Read Tomi Kilgore’s detailed guide to the wealth of information for free on the MarketWatch quote page.

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