Imperial takes the long view

Article Excerpt

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…