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Investment Opportunities

Why Oil and Gas May Be a Bargain for Today’s Investors

Why Oil and Gas May Be a Bargain for Today’s Investors
  • PublishedNovember 10, 2020

Often, the greatest stock market wins come from bold contrarian calls…

And one of my favorite professional investors – Murray Stahl of Horizon Kinetics Asset Management – just made a really big contrarian call.

Stahl is pounding the table on the oil and gas sector.

He just called it “one of the few ‘once-in-a-lifetime’ investment opportunities that one can be fortunate enough to actually come across in a lifetime.”

Being bullish on oil and gas is not a mainstream view

Far from it. Investors have been dumping shares of oil and gas companies for years.

Since the price of oil last peaked in June 2014, the S&P 500 has risen almost 75%.

The energy sector, meanwhile, has declined by almost as much. It’s down 70% over that same time period.

Energy Trails the Broader S&P 500

An investor who put $10,000 into an S&P 500 index fund on June 30, 2014, would have $17,500 today.

A similar investment in the Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSE: XLE) would have declined to just $2,900.

The energy sector has been nothing short of a disaster in recent years…

The consensus view is that prospects aren’t getting better for oil and gas companies going forward. Instead, investors expect the future for these companies to only get worse.

The 800-pound gorilla that has everyone scared to own oil and gas companies is the global plan (especially in the U.S. under a Biden presidency) to get off fossil fuels and adopt green energy initiatives.

Multiple sources suggest that fossil fuel use will be almost nonexistent by 2035.

If that happens, oil and gas companies will be worthless – so investors today aren’t willing to touch them with a 10-foot pole.

Murray Stahl believes this view is wrong…

A Collapse or a Shock?

Murray Stahl sees a looming oil supply shortage causing an oil price shock.

If he’s right, the opportunity is massive. These companies are trading at throwaway valuations.

Today, the energy sector represents just 2% of the weight of the S&P 500. That is just a tiny fraction of the 25% weighting that energy stocks had in the index in 1980.

While Big Tech companies today are priced for perfection in the stock market, the oil and gas sector is priced for failure.

But if optimism returns, there is a ton of upside in these stocks.

So what does Stahl see that others don’t?

A lot – and he lays it out in his 37-page quarterly letter to his investors…

  1. Oil and gas companies across the globe have slashed investments in new wells at an incredible rate. Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM) and Chevron (NYSE: CVX), for example, will spend 70% less drilling wells in 2020 than they did in 2014.

    That reduced spending will take a toll on future production very soon.

  2. Investors underestimate the amount of money required to build out the required renewable energy infrastructure across the globe.

    Stahl is convinced the transition will be much harder than almost everyone thinks.

  3. Even in the most bullish cases for renewable energy growth, we still need a huge amount of oil and gas to help meet the world’s growing need for energy.

With merger and acquisition activity heating up in the sector, it seems that oil company executives see a lot of value. Oil and gas aren’t dead, but the stocks in the sector are priced as though they are.

Stay tuned. I’m going to take a deeper dive on this sector and report back on any clear bargains I find.

Good investing,

Jody

Written By
Jody Chudley

2 Comments

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  • […] is the second largest coal company in the U.S. Oil and gas are also products it offers. And they work all over the U.S. to get these. The company owns rights […]

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