High Arctic Energy Services IncHWO.TOCOMMENTOct 26, 2016Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of May 29, 2026. Market Open.
Splitting the company into two to separate the PNG business makes sense to us. The return of capital could be as much as 76c per share. This all sounds attractive...BUT....it is already a very small company. With less capital, and a split, shareholders will be left with two tiny market cap companies, and it is very possible that they will struggle to get investor attention. Valuations are cheap, but owning two sub ~$30M market cap companies may prove to be very frustrating, unless small caps stage a big rally. Adding in cyclical risks, and we think the 36% YTD gain already reflects some of the possible potential. Thus, we are less enthusiastic at this time on this split.
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The key question is if the energy market turns around. If it did, this would be on the top of his list for stocks to own. They are in great shape on the balance sheet. It scores in the top 1% of valuation. This company will be a survivor. The problem is, he wants a stock that isn’t continually going lower every day.
They have Papua New Guinea operations and Canadian operations. All through the energy downturn, this company kept a clean balance sheet, and most years they had an excess cash position. Last year, they took advantage of it and bought 68 new rigs in Canada. Now the cycle starts to turn. Trading at 8X earnings. Dividend yield of 3.65%. (Analysts’ price target is $6.29.)
Probably a little too early to get excited about the drilling services sector. You need to see better sustained oil prices before a company starts spending more money. This company kept its balance sheet clean right through the cycle. They pay a nice dividend. They are survivors, and are using their strong balance sheet to pick away at acquisitions. They are getting iron at very, very discounted prices. Adding rigs very, very cheaply.
This has been on his radar screen. It is involved in the service side of things in Papua New Guinea. The 2 rigs they have are on longer-term contracts. The growth will be if they get into other businesses. There are lots of rumours floating around that they are looking to make acquisitions in Canada. That is where the opportunities lie. The stock is thinly and can be pushed around with institutional orders.