Stock price when the opinion was issued
Good business. Alberta oil sands are low cost, long life, low decline. Refineries. Integrated, with benefit being that it takes the raw edge off commodity price sensitivity. Owns this indirectly through the back door, with an investment in XOM (major shareholder of IMO).
Modestly bullish on oil. Not his first choice, but no quarrels with it either.
(Note the short timeframe.) This is a swing trade. Looking at the chart, you can see how the stock likes to go down to $90-ish, and then go up to $100-ish. That's 10% that you can trade and trade. He always buys on the bounce.
He feels that all oil will break out eventually. He's hoping to get $100 on this, though it's pulled back a bit. If it gets there, he'll probably sell and then get back in if it returns to the bottom. If it doesn't, his buy price was close to the bottom so he isn't losing anything.
Basic premise is that Canadian oil companies have unbelievable assets. Well north of 20% dividend growth. Great cashflow and shareholder returns. Oil's just broken a triple top on a point-and-figure chart, and these companies look as though they're about to reaccelerate.
He'd buy this one, and he'd buy CNQ.
A large amount of US exports are products. The refiners have crack spreads that are currently very favorable, which is why you’re seeing merger mania. Imperial Oil, Husky and others in this space are talking about significant profit growth in their Refining and Marketing business. Their net income this quarter was $516 million up from $333 the year before. If you look at the long-term chart, this stock hasn’t made money for investors. The dividend yield is not great. Compare it to Suncor. This hasn’t been an exciting place to be.