Saturday, January 24, 2009

Looking Up for Energy and Resource Stocks

Swiss investor, Marc Faber, still hates America, but he has a good track record for market prediction. So, I paid attention when I read this in Barrons today, in the Investor Roundtable Part 3:

Faber: When volatility diminishes (in the next few months), you want to be in cyclical industries. Among the most cyclical stocks are resource producers. They were driven up by incremental demand from China, and then collapsed. In the next six months they could have significant upside. I like Rio Tinto, BHP Billiton and CVRD [Companhia Vale do Rio Doce].

The financial crisis and collapse in commodities will keep supplies out of the market. Nobody is exploring now. There is no money, and projects are being postponed. Whenever the recovery comes, in five or 10 years, resources stocks will go ballistic from today's low levels. If you're optimistic about the next six months, too, when the news may be slightly better than today, you should own them. Freeport McMoRan Copper & Gold fell from 127 to 15 and is now 26. Xstrata, in Switzerland, is another one. A lot of these stocks are more attractive than gold, because gold is at a 20-year high relative to industrial commodities.

Scott Black: Rio Tinto's balance sheet isn't in good shape. They have a refinancing issue.

Faber: Worst-case, the Chinese government could buy them out. China has taken a big stake in the company. Meryl recommended Kaiser Aluminum [KALU] earlier today. I would add Alcoa.

Felix Zulauf: You're not saying this is the beginning of a big bull market, but of a base-building process from low levels.

Faber: Correct, but when stocks decline by the magnitude seen in resources shares, or the Nasdaq after 2000, a base-building period follows that can extend for several years. When you print money, you can get an artificial bull market (in cyclical and resource stocks) that exceeds everyone's expectations.


And this is a quote from Scott Black, another on the Barrons Roundtable of great investors (and a disciple of Benjamin Graham and value investing). He makes the case for XTO. But the arguments and metrics can be applied just as well to the Canroys (though it appears XTO did a much better job of hedging than PWE or PGH):


BLACK : My next pick is an old favorite, XTO Energy, in Fort Worth. The stock is 37.58, there are 577 million fully diluted shares, and the market cap is $21.6 billion. The company did a smart thing by hedging approximately 77% of its natural-gas production in 2009. They have locked in 1.6 Bcf [billion cubic feet] of gas at $8.94 per Mcf [thousand cubic feet], and 62,500 barrels a day at $118.85 per barrel. Production has been growing dramatically, and should average about 2.67 Bcf per day in 2009, up 18% year over year. About half the increase is from drill-bit growth, the rest from acquisitions. XTO bought Hunt Petroleum last year for $4.2 billion, figuring it could triple reserves, which are now 80% gas, 20% oil. It has 12 Tcfe [trillion cubic feet-equivalent] of gas and 500 million barrels of oil.

BARRONS: What are you pricing reserves at?

Black: I value the gas reserves at $3 per Mcf and the oil at $8 per barrel. Breakup value is about $44 a share, so the stock is selling at 85% of breakup value. My 2009 revenue estimate is $9.86 billion -- slightly higher than the Street's -- which converts to $4.50 a share in earnings. Return on equity is 15.5%, return on total capital 10.3%. Free cash flow is $2.28 billion. XTO has cut its capital-spending budget this year, to $3.8 billion from more than $5.3 billion. They are wed to the notion of knocking $1 billion to $2 billion of debt off the balance sheet.

Their finding and development costs were $1.45 to $1.50 per Mcfe in 2007, and $1.65 in 2008. This year they could fall to $1.50. XTO is one of the few energy companies with rising earnings, because of hedging. They will earn about $3.75 to $3.80 a share for 2008, and $4.50 for '09. The stock sells for 8.3 times earnings and 3.6 times discretionary cash flow. It is extremely cheap. You've got asset and earnings protection. And they are in every major field in the U.S. -- the Barnett Shale, Fayetteville and so forth. Energy is a controversial investment today, but XTO is the cream of the crop.

Schafer: If they hedged this year, does that mean next year's earnings will be down?

Black: No, because they hedged 2010, too.

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