oil and gas
CHESAPEAKE ENERGY $7.34 (New York symbol CHK; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk) (405-848-8000; www.chk.com; Shares outstanding: 665.1 million; Market cap: $5.2 billion; No dividends paid) has eliminated its dividend to conserve cash in the face of low oil and gas prices. The company had been paying a quarterly dividend of $0.0875 a share. The cut will save it $240 million a year.
As well, Chesapeake will spend $3.5 billion to $4.0 billion on exploration and development in 2015, down from its earlier estimate of $4.0 billion to $5.0 billion. It spent $5.8 billion in 2014.
The stock now trades at just 1.3 times the company’s annual cash flow of $5.52 a share, based on the latest quarter.
...
As well, Chesapeake will spend $3.5 billion to $4.0 billion on exploration and development in 2015, down from its earlier estimate of $4.0 billion to $5.0 billion. It spent $5.8 billion in 2014.
The stock now trades at just 1.3 times the company’s annual cash flow of $5.52 a share, based on the latest quarter.
...
STANTEC INC. $31.87 (Toronto symbol STN; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk) (780-917-7288; www.stantec.com; Shares outstanding: 94.0 million; Market cap: $3.1 billion; Dividend yield: 1.3%) sells a range of consulting, project-delivery, design and technology services. Its clients operate in a variety of industries, including oil and gas, transportation and construction.
In the three months ended June 30, 2015, Stantec’s acquisitions and the stronger U.S. dollar boosted its revenue by 12.0%, to $593.9 million from $530.3 million a year ago. However, earnings fell 2.6%, to $43.2 million, or $0.46 a share, from $44.3 million, or $0.47. The decline came from fewer oil and gas projects and the cost of integrating recently purchased firms.
Meantime, Stantec continues to grow through acquisitions. One of its latest is VI Engineering, a 30- person electrical-engineering firm based in Houston. VI’s clients include MidAmerican Energy, Statoil, Public Service Electric and Gas, Valero Refining, Bayer and Enterprise Products Partners.
...
In the three months ended June 30, 2015, Stantec’s acquisitions and the stronger U.S. dollar boosted its revenue by 12.0%, to $593.9 million from $530.3 million a year ago. However, earnings fell 2.6%, to $43.2 million, or $0.46 a share, from $44.3 million, or $0.47. The decline came from fewer oil and gas projects and the cost of integrating recently purchased firms.
Meantime, Stantec continues to grow through acquisitions. One of its latest is VI Engineering, a 30- person electrical-engineering firm based in Houston. VI’s clients include MidAmerican Energy, Statoil, Public Service Electric and Gas, Valero Refining, Bayer and Enterprise Products Partners.
...
In a tough environment, our advice on resource service firms Wajax and McCoy: both are high-yielding value stocks with better days ahead.
NEW GOLD INC., $2.85, symbol NGD on Toronto, recently started building a mine at its 100%-owned Rainy River project in Ontario. It aims to start production in mid-2017 at an average of 325,000 ounces of gold annually over nine years (along with silver as a by-product). The company has now entered into a $175-million streaming agreement with Royal Gold (Nasdaq symbol RGLD) to help fund Rainy River (all figures except share price in U.S. dollars). Royal will pay $100 million at the start of the deal and the remaining $75 million when the mine is 60% complete (projected at mid-2016)....
SHERRITT INTERNATIONAL $1.62 (Toronto symbol S; TSINetwork Rating: Speculative) (1-800-704- 6698; www.sherritt.com; Shares outstanding: 293.6 million; Market cap: $472.6 million; Dividend yield: 2.5%) sold all of its coal interests for $793 million in cash in April 2014. The company is now focused on nickel production, with operations in Cuba and Canada. As well, it has a 40% interest in the Ambatovy nickel mine on the island nation of Madagascar, off Africa’s east coast. Sherritt also produces oil and gas in Cuba, Spain and Pakistan and manages 506 megawatts of power generation capacity in Cuba. In the three months ended March 31, 2015, the company’s revenue fell 31.4%, to $82.9 million from $120.9 million a year earlier, mostly due to lower oil and gas prices. Cash flow per share declined 32.0%, to $0.17 from $0.25....
RUSSEL METALS $21.58 (Toronto symbol RUS; TSINetwork Rating: Speculative) (905-819-7777; www.russelmetals.com; Shares outstanding: 61.7 million; Market cap: $1.3 billion; Dividend yield: 7.0%) is one of North America’s largest metal distributors, serving 39,000 clients at 53 locations in Canada and 12 in the U.S. In the three months ended March 31, 2015, Russel’s revenue fell 2.2%, to $903.9 million from $924.0 million a year earlier. The company’s metal-services business saw its sales rise slightly, but the energyproducts division, which supplies pipes for oil and gas drillers, reported a 14% sales decline. Earnings fell 36.2%, to $18.5 million, or $0.30 a share, from $29.0 million, or $0.47. Russel’s earnings fell faster than revenue because steel prices declined in the latest quarter. That cuts the company’s profit margins and causes it to suffer losses on its inventory....
WAJAX CORP. $20.60 (Toronto symbol WJX; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk) (905-212-3300; www.wajax.ca; Shares outstanding:20.0 million; Market cap: $414.1 million; Dividend yield: 4.9%) sells and services cranes, forklifts and other heavy equipment. It also provides related parts (such as bearings, motors, hoses and fittings) and power systems (including diesel engines and transmissions). The company’s customers are in the natural resource, construction, manufacturing and transportation industries. In the three months ended March 31, 2015, Wajax’s revenue fell 4.3%, to $317.2 million from $331.4 million a year earlier, as mining, oil and gas and oil sands firms made fewer purchases....
ENERPLUS CORP. $10.14 (Toronto symbol ERF; Shares outstanding: 206.2 million; Market cap: $2.2 billion; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk; Dividend yield: 5.9%) produces an average of 100,855 barrels of oil equivalent a day (57% gas and 43% oil). Its properties are mainly in Alberta, Saskatchewan, B.C., North Dakota and Montana, as well as in the Marcellus shale, which passes through Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio and West Virginia.
Enerplus’s production rose 2.1% in the quarter ended March 31, 2015, but that wasn’t enough to offset sharply lower oil and gas prices; cash flow per share fell 51.4%, to $0.53 from $1.09.
Like ARC, Enerplus will cut spending this year. Its outlays will now total $480 million, down 40.8% from $811.0 million in 2014.
...
Enerplus’s production rose 2.1% in the quarter ended March 31, 2015, but that wasn’t enough to offset sharply lower oil and gas prices; cash flow per share fell 51.4%, to $0.53 from $1.09.
Like ARC, Enerplus will cut spending this year. Its outlays will now total $480 million, down 40.8% from $811.0 million in 2014.
...
ARC RESOURCES $21.14 (Toronto symbol ARX; Shares outstanding: 340.0 million; Market cap: $7.4 billion; TSINetwork Rating: Speculative; Dividend yield: 5.7%; www.arcresources.com) produces oil and natural gas in Western Canada. Its average daily output of 120,354 barrels of oil equivalent is 64% gas and 36% oil. In the quarter ended March 31, 2015, ARC’s cash flow per share fell 38.7%, to $0.57 from $0.93 a year earlier. Production gained 13.9%, but its realized oil price fell 49.0% and its gas price declined 45.5%. Like many oil and gas producers, ARC is cutting back on exploration and development spending. This year, it will devote $550.0 million to this purpose, down sharply from $945.5 million in 2014....
CENOVUS ENERGY $18.66 (Toronto symbol CVE; Shares outstanding: 828.5 million; Market cap: $15.9 billion; TSINetwork Rating: Average; Dividend yield: 5.7%; www.cenovus.com) gets 35% of its revenue from its oil sands projects and conventional oil and gas wells in Western Canada.
Refining supplies the remaining 65% of Cenovus’s revenue. The company ships oil to its 50%-owned refineries in Illinois and Texas. Phillips 66 (New York symbol PSX) owns the other 50% of these operations.
Cenovus has now agreed to sell its royalty lands to the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan for $3.3 billion. The company collects royalties from firms that drill for oil and gas on these properties, which total 4.8 million acres in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba.
...
Refining supplies the remaining 65% of Cenovus’s revenue. The company ships oil to its 50%-owned refineries in Illinois and Texas. Phillips 66 (New York symbol PSX) owns the other 50% of these operations.
Cenovus has now agreed to sell its royalty lands to the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan for $3.3 billion. The company collects royalties from firms that drill for oil and gas on these properties, which total 4.8 million acres in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba.
...