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TSE:SGY
This summary was created by AI, based on 5 opinions in the last 12 months.
Surge Energy Inc (SGY-T) is considered a small-cap oil producer that has demonstrated consistent performance, yielding attractive dividends ranging from 5.1% to over 7%. Experts note its low decline rates and a substantial drilling inventory of approximately 12 years, making it an appealing option for income-focused investors. However, its small market capitalization raises concerns about institutional interest, which may limit its growth potential. While the balance sheet is described as strong, analysts suggest that there are other stocks with better growth prospects and inventory available. In summary, Surge is seen as a well-managed company but potentially underperforming due to its size and lack of institutional attraction.
One of the few energy names that is cheap relative to its 5 year average. Trading at 6.2X EV discounted adjusted cash flow on a 2015 level versus 10.5X its five-year average. That is kind of impressive. Their balance sheet is good for 2015. It does start to get a little bit more impaired in 2016 at 2.7X, which is still good relative to the group. If you are constructive on $48 oil going forward, then this is a name that you can buy, but you have to be constructive on oil.
Along with many companies, they cut their dividends. Not a business model he is personally comfortable in. Finds valuation very stretched. In his math, it would be trading 8.8-8.9 times next year’s cash flow and that is using $55 oil. In next year’s analysis he is trying to be conservative with oil rallying to $60, but with an average of around $55. On that basis it is trading at a 2 point multiple premium to other names where he feels the business model is slightly better. Potentially at risk of another dividend cut if oil doesn’t rally to $55 next year. Dividend yield of 9.8%.
10.8% dividend. They are talking about buying back shares. It is cheap. You actually CAN own this one in the energy space. He is not buying yet because the numbers could deteriorate. It is certainly one of the good names at these levels. He got out of every oil company last fall. He would buy it if he thought oil prices were starting to firm.
Any time you see double-digit yield, you have to be concerned that the market is indicating things. At today’s strip price, nobody is safe. This company made the dividend cut and felt it was right sized for at least the next couple of quarters to see where prices go. They probably have to look at their dividend again in mid-2016 if we are still sub-$50 oil.
She owns it and likes it. They have done some things that have helped them prepare for this environment. They sold some assets to Torc Energy(which she owns and likes). This helped their balance sheet. They have cut costs. Their pay out ratio looks good right now even though their yield is high. It is one that has a safe dividend.
He got concerned about their dividend and about their debt, so he took it out of his portfolio, and then the next day they made a big asset sale to reduce their debt by $400 million. The debt situation cleared up dramatically. $40 oil would be tough for everyone, including this one, because they are not debt free. He still likes the company. Still high risk, but thinks they will survive.
This was an old favourite of his. He is thinking about buying this, but it may be a little early given oil prices. A very solid company with great assets, but not sure if it can sustain its dividend through another 6 months of low oil prices. If you have the patience for a 3 year commitment to a small-cap energy stock, this and Kelt Exploration (KEL-T) would be at the top of his list. Between now and the end of 3 years, you might face a dividend cut and a lower stock price.
A quality name, but really depends on your time horizon. He is painting a more bearish picture for energy prices over the next 6 months. Thinks this is going to be under pressure for some time. He would suggest looking for something in another sub sector of the market rather than energy or materials.
A good company. Got into some trouble with the balance sheet because of some acquisitions. She likes the efforts they have gone through to rectify that problem. This has a pretty good payout ratio right now, so she thinks the dividend is safe. A good place to stay and wait for this environment to turn itself around. 8% dividend.
This should make it through the energy situation, but they have some debt on the balance sheet and they are a small company, relatively levered. Sit back, wait and watch for 6 months, before jumping in.