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Cardinal Energy LtdCJ.TOWATCHOct 01, 2025Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 15, 2026. Market Open.
CJ had a good 2025, and is now of course not as cheap as before. Consenus calls for growth only in the 5% range or so this year. Debt at $215M is much higher than last year, but is only 1X cash flow so not really a leverage problem. The payout ratio is high, at 88% for the nine months to Sept. 30. But it is likely sustaintable near that level. We would not expect a dividend increase, however (last increase was Nov. 2022). It did beat most estimates in the Q3, but missed on gas production estimates. We would consider it 'ok'. We would prefer a lower dividend and more growth.
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Yield is ~7.8%; previously relied on balance sheet to pay that, but now capex is over so this is sustainable from low-mid $50s. Screens expensively, partly due to one of the biggest oil tycoons in Calgary being a major shareholder. Significant leverage to rising oil price, and he's bullish on oil.
To hold this one, you'd need to be a strong oil bull to see significant upside in next 2-3 years.
Sentiment remains challenged in the space (a common theme today), even though the Energy Index is up about 20% YTD. People are hiding in large caps, with few funds coming to small- or mid-caps. Hard to see it outperforming. Yield is 10.7%, pretty hard to replace. Not a name for new money.
Look at his Top Picks today, and then decide if you want to let this go for tax-loss selling.
Outspending free cashflow, using debt to finance dividend, not his preference. Gets concerning if oil price drops. Not sustainable for the next year and a half. In 2026, the cadence of capex reduces and the dividend becomes sustainable. Yield is 10.1%.
Look elsewhere. You may sacrifice 2% on the dividend, but you're getting one that's much more sustainable.
For the mid-cap Canadian companies in the space with higher yields, be very careful. If you're looking for dividend sustainability, we've gone through a couple of cycles in the last decade -- dividends have been both increased and reduced. Yield is 11%.
In the space, he prefers FRU.
He never buys a company on the expectation that it will be bought out. Good exposure to medium-heavy oil. Very manageable debt levels. Older, higher-cost assets, so it needs a higher than average oil price. If you don't care about capital appreciation and just want the juicy dividend, it's not the worst name.
Very high dividend yield, just under 9%. Gamechanger will be the development of the SAGD program, which will add to its existing base and probably more than double FCF. Cash can be used to de-lever and build the next project. SAGD is modular, so they can add more once first one is successful. Highly leveraged to oil prices, a higher-cost producer.
Likes the scalability. Probably late 2026 for all pieces to come together.