
TSE:MEG
This summary was created by AI, based on 11 opinions in the last 12 months.
MEG Energy Corp has been a focus of attention due to its recent acquisition by Cenovus Energy, which has garnered mixed feelings among analysts. While there is a sense of disappointment regarding the loss of MEG as a standalone entity, many experts recognize the strategic fit that MEG assets provide for CVE. Sentiment in the oil sector remains subdued, with concerns over valuations and a competitive landscape that may lead to further consolidation. Analysts suggest holding onto shares for now as they await further clarity on the transaction and its implications on future oil prices, especially in response to geopolitical factors. Overall, MEG has been praised for its strong fundamentals and disciplined approach to capital management, but the merger raises questions about growth and market positioning in a challenging environment.
Thinks it can work at $70 oil. Generates 10% FCF yield at $70 oil. Reached final debt targets, so all free cashflow should return to shareholders mostly in form of buybacks. Over the next 5 years, compounding effect should expand FCF yield from 10% to 20%. If oil goes to $80, you go from 14% FCF to 55%. Inventory depth would allow them to achieve this. Yield is 1.5%.
Update next week should allow for short covering or for $$ to come back into the name. Trades at material discount to peers.
Looks good. He got a weekly buy on this 2 weeks ago, and a monthly buy would be more substantial (the more you go out, the better it is.) Short term, hitting resistance. Once it gets through $28.40, it will probably play out with what he sees in the longer-term charts, which look quite good.
Believes company is reaching final debt target in ~October 2024. Will pivot to 100% return of capital. Trading at 11% free cash flow yield at $70. Expecting a $40 share price at $80 oil. Large amount of reserves that will allow company to continue excellent capital allocation strategy. Continued share buybacks are very good for investors. Market currently ignoring hidden value in company.
His thesis is 35 years minimum of stay-flat inventory, 14-16% free cashflow yield for 2025-26, soon to pay down as much debt as it needs to. Inflecting imminently to 100% return of capital. If you're bullish on oil, sit on it and collect the modest dividend. Two years out, sees $45 target at $80 oil.
Has taken profits, because the CEO changed (whom he's met), but really it was due to valuation, which has risen with the share price. He sees less, but still decent upside in this. Likes their long-dates reserves, good free cash flow yield and benefits from the WCS differential. Foreign investors will return to Canadian energy stocks when they realize that shale producers have inventory challenges (weak quality and quantity). He targets $42-43. They will be debt free in Q2, he expects.
His biggest holding though has reduced it. Trades at 13% free cash flow yield, so as shares have risen, that yield has declined. The new CEO looks capable and he remains bullish MEG. He expects a change in Ottawa next year which will be reduce political risk. Meg should hit its debt target in Q3 which could trigger share buybacks. He targets $42 or 31% upside.
Pure play on heavy oil. Long-life, low-decline, very scalable assets. Production easily doubled due to size of resource. Highly leveraged to any upside in oil. Sightline to greater ROC of 50-75% via share buybacks. High quality. M&A candidate for Suncor. No dividend.
(Analysts’ price target is $30.92)
Are buying back lots of shares. Option premiums are decent. Likes it.