Facing the largest supply shock in history, I find it very peculiar that people are reluctant to allocate to oil and gas companies.
I see a common theme where people see that the price of the stock has gone up and thus the move must already be over, or close to over, or too late.
In prior energy bull markets, the pure play oil and gas stocks had moves of 500-1500% The current move on most stocks is about 100% or less from the recent lows.
At the height of an energy bull market, the FCF ratio on the stocks condenses to around 4-5. While at the beginning it is usually higher 12-15. we are currently seeing the higher ratios.
When looking at the total energy market, the price has gone sideways for almost 20 years. it is just starting to break out of that range.
Last time it broke out of that range, there were structural changes to the oil price, moving the floor much higher.
If this conflict ended today which is unlikely, there will be some interesting shifts in the way the world views energy. Every country will start a SPR, and there will be a built in premium to the price after the strait has proven to be a flashpoint.
If this war were to continue for some time, and the strait remain closed for longer, or more damage to oil and gas infrastructure in the area, then were looking at an even larger energy bull market than the prior one. Meaning stocks like OXY will not simply go up 500-1500% but more likely 1000-3000%
I guess my point is, that regardless of the length of war, almost all of these oil and gas companies are undervalued, especially if located in geopolitically safe regions (USA,CANADA)
when given the choice between an historically expensive stock market, vs a historically cheap energy company… the only real options are going cash or going oil and gas.
thanks. bye.
Investors are surprisingly reluctant to allocate oil/gas
byu/MeasurementSecure566 instocks
Posted by MeasurementSecure566
5 Comments
If the war ends soon, what’s the point?
And also shipping, transport sector – many hidden gems!
But can be volatile when caught at the wrong cycle
>largest supply shock in history
lol. Lmao, even.
High confidence the oil esp US domestic refinery company will benefit. Went through with this at least 2 times. Congress questioned CEO of these companies before on price gauging. Northern CA resident here I started seen $7 at some stations this week.
I only added a refinery etf fund not adding because it is going sideways right now. If it has a slight dip I will add.
Has anybody started to think that this could be the start of a true golden age of renewable energy?
It seems pretty certain that oil and gas consumption is going to take a long-term hit from this, and renewables benefit from that. Problem is very few investors know how to take advantage of that.