Is OPEC For Real This Time?

By Kris Rosemann On September 28, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) reached an agreement to cut crude oil production levels for the first time since 2008. The cartel reportedly agreed to limit production of member nations to a range of 32.5-33 million barrels per day (bpd) while leaders met at the International Energy Forum in Algiers, Algeria. As would be expected following such news, the price of crude oil has bounced, bringing market sentiment surrounding energy-related stocks higher along with it. The proposed production could be a reduction of up to 750,000 bpd from OPEC production levels in the month of August, but how the group of nations will reach such a production cut has yet to … Read more

The Quiet Analyst Speaks

Image Description and Source: Mailslot for Cantor Fitzgerald, on the top floors of the WTC. The mailslot was located in a post office near the WTC site. The mailslots are with the Smithsonian Institution. Travis Wise. It’s 9pm Sunday, September 11, 2016. The day is a somber one. The 15th year passing of the tragic events of 9/11 were on everyone’s minds, and I can’t help but think specifically of Cantor Fitzgerald. The financial services company’s headquarters were on the 101st-105th floors of One World Trade Center, just a few floors above the impact zone of one of the hijacked airplanes. The firm lost 658 employees, over two thirds of its workforce, more than “any of the other World Trade … Read more

Distributing Truth on MLPs

By Kris Rosemann The recent merger break-up fiasco at Energy Transfer Equity (ETE) and Williams Companies (WMB) has put the master limited partnership (MLP) conversation back into the spotlight, after the two entities were unable to finalize a merger that had been announced in fall 2015 and would have created the largest pipeline company in the US. The deal between Energy Transfer Equity and Williams was officially terminated by Energy Transfer Equity June 29 after a court ruled that the firm was legally able to walk away from the agreement when it was unable to deliver an opinion on the tax treatment of the transaction that was required by June 28. Williams has since stated that it will seek monetary … Read more

Crude Oil Prices Now Near $40 Per Barrel

Image: Top holdings of the Energy Select Sector SPDR; source: State Street. Call it luck. Call it good timing. Call it what you will, but we’re calling it tactical prudence within a portfolio management context. The newsletter portfolios have been on the “long side” of energy equities now for the better part of the past few months, after having negligible exposure to the energy-sector bust for most of the past few years. We continue to target achieving the goals of the newsletter portfolios, and we think tactical exposure makes sense at this time. West Texas Intermediate crude oil prices (USO) have now advanced to ~$40 per barrel from the depths of the mid-$20s just a few months ago, and while … Read more

Avoid Dividend Double Whammies By Using the Dividend Cushion!

By Brian Nelson, CFA I think a lot of investors sell themselves short. Of course you want a strong and growing dividend, but analysis shouldn’t stop there. One of the most important things you could ever do is evaluate just how strong that dividend truly is via the Dividend Cushion ratio, a metric that measures a company’s dividend coverage via future free cash flow generation with consideration of its balance sheet health. For example, how valuable would it have been to know that Kinder Morgan (KMI), ConocoPhillips (COP), and BHP Billiton (BHP) were going to cut their dividends…in advance of them doing so? Our membership knew these cuts were probable long before anyone else because they paid attention to each … Read more

Market’s Swooning: Bye Bye Energy MLPs, Part II

Things were ugly again during the trading session February 8, but you were expecting the weakness. There’s nothing surprising, and we continue to wait to scoop up undervalued gems once the tide of this market turns. Topping the news today was the abrupt replacement of the CFO of Energy Transfer Equity (ETE)/Energy Transfer Partners (ETP) coupled with the sell-off in Chesapeake Energy (CHK) on news of a probable bankruptcy, which set the tone among midstream MLPs (AMLP), the index diving aggressively. Followers of Valuentum were far ahead of these developments, “Focus on ETE, Not ETP, Strive for Balance and Stick to the SEC Filings,””Alert: Energy Transfer Equity Is More than 7x Leveraged!,” “Energy MLPs Continue Swoon,” and our body of … Read more

The Dividend Cushion, ConocoPhillips Cuts!

By Brian Nelson, CFA I believe one of the strongest areas at Valuentum is our quantitative work, not only with respect to enterprise free cash flow valuation, but also with respect to assessing dividend health. For those that have not had a chance to evaluate the efficacy of the Dividend Cushion ratio, “,” it is well worth a quick read. For example, if you are a financial advisor or individual investor and you were holding ConocoPhillips (COP) for income purposes, then you are not taking advantage of the depth of our forward-looking quantitative research. Today, February 4, ConocoPhillips cut its dividend payout ~66%, to $0.25 on a quarterly basis, now implying a forward yield of ~2.5%. ConocoPhillips registered a -1 … Read more

The Bounce in Energy and Potash’s “Surprising” Dividend Cut

Nothing like Valuentum’s optimistic article last week, January 21, in Barron’s to get the energy markets popping, “Is Kinder Morgan on Road to Recovery,” would you say? Of course, we say that in jest. The equity markets January 28 were defined by optimism that two of the globe’s major energy resource producers, the cartel OPEC and Russia (RSX), would finally come together to alleviate the pain that has been exerted on the price of the black liquid the past 12-24 months with a “meeting.” What we found to be peculiar, however, is that instead of OPEC letting what turned into a “rumor” run, helping to further drive crude oil prices higher, OPEC delegates quickly denied the talk of a potential … Read more

Moody’s Puts Oil & Gas and Mining Sectors on Review

By Kris Rosemann On January 22, Moody’s placed 120 oil and gas companies (XLE) from across the globe on review for a credit rating downgrade. The list ranges from massive global producers such as Royal Dutch Shell (RDS.A, RDS.B) and Total (TOT) to nearly 70 US exploration and production and services (“E&P”) companies. It also includes 55 mining companies (XLB) that have been punished by the recent rout in commodity prices. Alcoa (AA), Rio Tinto (RIO) and Vale (VALE) are a few notables that made the list for a potential downgrade. The news is not completely unexpected, however, and may likely be a response to several executive teams pointing to legacy (outdated) counterparty/customer ratings as reasons to not be concerned … Read more

Bye Bye Energy MLPs

West Texas crude oil prices (USO) just broke through $32 per barrel to the downside for the first time since 2003. Share prices of those in the energy complex (XLE) continue to reel, and we maintain our view that the tremendous fallout in energy master limited partnerships (AMLP, AMZ) may not be over. From our perspective, the MLP business model may not survive in its present state, as equity markets continue to “wise up” to the artificial equity pricing paradigm that has centered on the group’s financially-engineered payouts. Without an artificial pricing paradigm to “prop up” their equity prices, for example, the incentive to perpetuate such a business model is substantially reduced. Distribution cuts would then inevitably ensue as a … Read more