imperial oil
Toronto symbol IMO, is Canada’s largest integrated oil company. It also operates over 1,900 retail gas stations under the “Esso” banner. ExxonMobil owns 69.6% of Imperial’s stock.
Imperial Oil is one of Canada’s largest and oldest energy companies, operating across the full oil and gas value chain—from exploring and producing crude oil and natural gas to refining fuels and marketing products under well-known brands like Esso and Mobil. Headquartered in Calgary, the company plays a major role in Canada’s energy sector, including significant involvement in oil sands development, petrochemicals, and transportation fuels, and it is majority-owned by ExxonMobil.
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The past year’s plunge in oil prices has forced all three of these producers to slash their costs and delay new projects. Like Imperial Oil (see page 81), Suncor and Cenovus have refineries that help offset oil’s drop. Encana doesn’t have refineries, but it has narrowed its operations to four main projects that give it a better balance between oil and natural gas. We see all three firms as buys for patient investors. SUNCOR ENERGY INC. $37 (Toronto symbol SU; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Resources sector; Shares outstanding: 1.4 billion; Market cap: $51.8 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 1.6; Dividend yield: 3.1%; TSINetwork Rating: Average; www.suncor.com) gets 80% of its crude production from its huge Alberta oil sands projects. The remaining 20% comes from traditional oil and gas wells....
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CRESCENT POINT ENERGY CORP. $28.03 (Toronto symbol CPG; Shares outstanding: 449.5 million; Market cap: $12.9 billion; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk; Dividend yield: 9.9%; www.crescentpointenergy.com) produces oil and natural gas in Western Canada, with a focus on its Bakken light oil development in southeastern Saskatchewan.
The company is now buying heavily indebted Legacy Oil + Gas (Toronto symbol LEG) for $563 million plus the assumption of $967 million in debt. Activist investors put a lot of pressure on Legacy to complete a deal.
The move will add about 22,000 barrels of oil a day to Crescent Point’s current output of 150,000 barrels. About 15,000 barrels of Legacy’s output is in Crescent Point’s core Bakken area.
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The company is now buying heavily indebted Legacy Oil + Gas (Toronto symbol LEG) for $563 million plus the assumption of $967 million in debt. Activist investors put a lot of pressure on Legacy to complete a deal.
The move will add about 22,000 barrels of oil a day to Crescent Point’s current output of 150,000 barrels. About 15,000 barrels of Legacy’s output is in Crescent Point’s core Bakken area.
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IMPERIAL OIL $49.32 (Toronto symbol IMO; Shares outstanding: 847.6 million; Market cap: $41.9 billion; TSINetwork Rating: Average; Dividend yield: 1.1%; www.imperialoil.ca) is a major integrated oil company with oil sands projects in Alberta and conventional oil and gas operations across Western Canada. It also operates three refineries and 1,700 Esso gas stations.
Oil prices hit a high of $147 U.S. a barrel in July 2008, but then plummeted to a low of $32 in December 2008 as the recession took hold. Prices climbed back to over $100 in 2010, and remained near there until mid-2014 when oil plunged from $110 to less than half that price by the end of the year. Oil is now at $60 a barrel.
Strong oil prices for most of 2014 let Imperial report cash flow of $5.3 billion, or $6.26 a share. This year, low oil prices will likely push cash flow down by more than half, to $2.6 billion, or $3.02 a share.
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Oil prices hit a high of $147 U.S. a barrel in July 2008, but then plummeted to a low of $32 in December 2008 as the recession took hold. Prices climbed back to over $100 in 2010, and remained near there until mid-2014 when oil plunged from $110 to less than half that price by the end of the year. Oil is now at $60 a barrel.
Strong oil prices for most of 2014 let Imperial report cash flow of $5.3 billion, or $6.26 a share. This year, low oil prices will likely push cash flow down by more than half, to $2.6 billion, or $3.02 a share.
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IMPERIAL OIL LTD., $46.95, Toronto symbol IMO, has started up the second phase of its Kearl oil sands project in northern Alberta. The company owns 71% of Kearl; ExxonMobil (New York symbol XOM) holds the remaining 29%. Exxon also owns 69.9% of Imperial. Kearl’s first phase began operating in April 2013 and produced an average of 95,000 barrels a day (67,000 to Imperial) in the three months ended March 31, 2015. Imperial’s share of Kearl’s output represented 20% of the company’s overall production of 333,000 barrels. This new phase will ultimately double Kearl’s capacity to 220,000 barrels a day (156,200 to Imperial). The company spent $9 billion on the expansion, which is equal to 23% of its $39.8-billion market cap (or the value of all of its outstanding shares). However, Kearl’s reserves should last 40 years....
Imperial Oil continues to face low oil prices, and Alberta’s new NDP government could increase royalties or impose new environmental regulations. However, Imperial plans to keep expanding Kearl and Cold Lake, its two main oil sands properties in Alberta. These projects will prosper when oil prices recover, and they should last for decades. IMPERIAL OIL $49.32 (Toronto symbol IMO; Shares outstanding: 847.6 million; Market cap: $41.9 billion; TSINetwork Rating: Average; Dividend yield: 1.1%; www.imperialoil.ca) is a major integrated oil company with oil sands projects in Alberta and conventional oil and gas operations across Western Canada. It also operates three refineries and 1,700 Esso gas stations. Oil prices hit a high of $147 U.S. a barrel in July 2008, but then plummeted to a low of $32 in December 2008 as the recession took hold. Prices climbed back to over $100 in 2010, and remained near there until mid-2014 when oil plunged from $110 to less than half that price by the end of the year. Oil is now at $60 a barrel....
CRESCENT POINT ENERGY CORP. $28.03 (Toronto symbol CPG; Shares outstanding: 449.5 million; Market cap: $12.9 billion; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk; Dividend yield: 9.9%; www.crescentpointenergy.com) produces oil and natural gas in Western Canada, with a focus on its Bakken light oil development in southeastern Saskatchewan. The company is now buying heavily indebted Legacy Oil + Gas (Toronto symbol LEG) for $563 million plus the assumption of $967 million in debt. Activist investors put a lot of pressure on Legacy to complete a deal. The move will add about 22,000 barrels of oil a day to Crescent Point’s current output of 150,000 barrels. About 15,000 barrels of Legacy’s output is in Crescent Point’s core Bakken area....
One of our top blue chip stocks has the reserves, refineries and oil sand projects to meet the challenge of low oil prices and an NDP win.