DEVON ENERGY CORP. $54.13 (New York symbol DVN; TSINetwork Rating: Speculative) (405-235- 3611; www.dvn.com; Shares outstanding: 406.0 million; Market cap: $22.5 billion; Dividend yield: 1.6%) is one of the largest U.S.-based oil and natural gas explorers and producers. Its production mix is 59% gas and 41% oil.
In 2011, Devon sold all of its international and Gulf of Mexico properties, which it saw as risky and expensive to develop. The company is now focused on its North American projects, which include conventional production, shale oil in Texas and oil sands in Alberta.
Devon has formed joint ventures to cut the risk of its big development projects. Last year, it sold a onethird stake in five shale oil and gas fields to giant Chinese state-owned petroleum and chemical company Sinopec for $2.2 billion. As well, Japan’s Sumitomo Corp. bought 30% of the Cline and Wolfcamp shales in Texas for $1.4 billion.
Meanwhile, the company’s daily production averaged 686,900 barrels of oil equivalent in the three months ended March 31, 2013. That’s down slightly from 693,600 barrels a year earlier. Cash flow per share declined 14.7%, to $2.85 from $3.34, on lower oil prices.
Devon will spend as much as $7.0 billion to explore and develop its properties this year. The company can easily afford this expense: its $12.2 billion of debt is a manageable 54.2% of its market cap, and it holds cash of $6.5 billion, or $16.01 a share.
The stock trades at 4.7 times Devon’s forecast 2013 cash flow of $11.40 a share, based on the latest quarter. The shares yield 1.6%.
Devon Energy is a buy.