Oil & Gas: Free Cash Flow Negative and Net Debt Heavy
Two characteristics define the independent oil and gas space: negative free cash flow and net cash deficits on the books. Read more >>
Exclusive Analysis for the Discerning Investor
Two characteristics define the independent oil and gas space: negative free cash flow and net cash deficits on the books. Read more >>
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
A version of this article appeared on our website March 31, 2015. <Our best ideas at any time are included in the Best Ideas Newsletter portfolio and Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio.> The “20 Something’s Stock Portfolio” is the first in a series of articles where we get to the core of what many brand new investors want to do when they are first introduced to the stock market: find exciting companies that they are familiar with that will help compound their wealth over time. Other portfolios that we will share in this series include “The Ultra High Income Portfolio,” “The Economic Castle Portfolio,” “The Dividend Cushion Portfolio,” and “The Intelligent ETF Investor’s Portfolio,” among others. The series of portfolios will … Read more
We like to publish excellent questions and the answers to them at times for the benefit of all members. Let’s start with the answer first. A: This is a great question because it hits at the heart of our process. We not only look at the intrinsic valuation of equities, but we also evaluate the market’s conviction in the company’s undervaluation via pricing information, more commonly applied via technical and momentum work. So, in short, we like stocks that have both good value and good momentum indicators, hence our name Valuentum, and we’d only view the top tier of our ranking system 8-10 as ideas for consideration (generally), but only after the ones in the newsletter portfolios (the Best Ideas Newsletter … Read more
We’ve been cautious on the oil and gas markets (XLE, AMLP) for some time, and that includes our October move closer to market neutral on the sector, but we’re still underweight the group. We’ve been saying that crude oil prices are more likely to hit the $20 per barrel level than move significantly higher, and we maintain our view that they may never again return to the $100 per barrel, a level many have grown accustomed to. After all, why should they? Unfortunately, the fallout continues to punish traditional “buy and hold” investors who have been trained to ignore most “news” and may still be holding on the belief of the fallacy of mean reversion, something that we believe cannot … Read more
The Best Ideas Newsletter portfolio has generated significant outperformance in part from avoiding many of the landmines across the energy sector during the past many months. We’ve done equally well in our calls in the Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio, and we’re very proud of raising the issue of the importance of looking at non-GAAP free cash flow across pipeline entities. We believe that such a measure is the best one to assess the timing of free cash flows as they are generated, an important consideration for investors of all types, and not properly addressed in measures of distributable cash flow or a company’s dividend or distribution. Why are we now inching ever so slightly back into energy? 1. The market … Read more
The bottom continues to fall out of crude oil prices. The price of West Texas crude oil hit six-year lows during the trading session Monday dipping just below $43 per barrel. The world is drowning in a crude oil, and OPEC continues to produce to drive marginal US operators to the brink. The dollar is strengthening, which is exacerbating the decline in the price of this dollar-denominated commodity. The news is not “new.” We’ve been commenting on the fall of crude oil for months, and the lack of energy positions in the newsletter portfolios coupled with the bearish calls on the offshore drillers speak to how far ahead of the market we positioned readers. Remember Seadrill (SDRL)? It’s trading at … Read more
Q: Are the oil and gas markets doomed? Valuentum’s Brian Nelson: In short, no. For one, if we thought the oil and gas space (XLE) were doomed, we would not be holding onto Chevron (CVX), Kinder Morgan (KMI), and Energy Transfer Partners (ETP) in the Dividend Growth portfolio. Instead, I think what we are witnessing in the oil and gas market is a flight to quality and balance-sheet strength. Our outlook for oil and gas equities has not changed before or after the recent fall in energy prices. Valuentum’s thesis accepts the fact that crude oil (USO) and natural gas prices will be extremely volatile, and that’s why we’ve gravitated toward firms such as Chevron, which has the strongest balance … Read more
Image Source: Macrotrends The bull market in energy (XLE) has lasted for the better part of a decade. Ever since the turn of the new century, energy perma-bulls have made the case that “black gold” (USO) should continue its ever-upward price advance thanks to ongoing demand from emerging and developing economies coupled with reduced inventories and areas of supply. We’re seeing this thesis challenged right at this moment. In deciding not to cut crude oil output in the face of oversupply and falling prices, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), for the lack of a better phrase, is now essentially engaged in a price war with producers in the US that are using breakthrough technology to produce oil … Read more
West Texas Intermediate crude oil (Dec’14) fell under $75 per barrel today, now almost $30 lower than its 52-week high, reaching the lowest level since September 2010. Brent crude also fell to a four-year low. We view the move in crude as a net-negative for the economy and S&P 500 earnings, even though many from transportation to retail will benefit from lower energy costs. The energy sector accounts for roughly 10% of the S&P 500 (SPY), and ExxonMobil (XOM) and Chevron (CVX) top the index’s top 10 holdings. We think falling crude oil prices are more a reflection of expectations for declining global economic activity, which in itself, signals that trouble is on the horizon. North American shale production continues … Read more