Source: Ron Struthers (10/20/22)
More and more North American natural gas will end up as LNG to Europe in the coming years. Soon we will compete on price. Expert Ron Struthers believes Royal Dutch Shell Plc. offers a compelling valuation compared to its peers and will benefit from this market transition.
Do as I do, not what I say! We had a prime example of this on Wednesday from President Biden, as he told oil and gas companies that they should not buy back shares or pay dividends but instead spend the money on exploration.
But what did he do?
U.S. Oil and Gas
He canceled the Keystone XL Pipeline on his first day of office, and then he halted all leasing and permits for oil and gas exploration on federal lands. In May of this year, he canceled three offshore oil and gas leases, and as of now, they have not leased one acre of land to drill.
J.t this past July, Biden proposed a policy to end all tax incentives to oil and gas companies. Would you think this gives no confidence for oil and gas companies to explore?
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Of course, they have curtailed exploration, and most are focused on shareholder returns, and oil and gas production has declined, and all the inventories of oil, gas, gasoline, diesel and heating fuel, etc., are at multi-year lows.
Electricity prices along the Atlantic coast of the United States are set to increase 50-60% year-on-year as gas supplies become squeezed to meet winter heating and generation needs. New England on-peak power prices have averaged slightly below US$80/MWh in September, forward electricity prices for December 2022 have been trending well above US$200/MWh recently.
The operator of New England’s power grid has already warned of potential blackouts in the winter in case of a severe cold spell. Before Biden took office, the U.S. was producing more oil than it was using and more than the Russians or the Middle East. oil and gas companies are the favorite whipping boys of politicians anytime prices rise.
Meanwhile, today we hear the Biden administration is granting US$2.8 billion to companies to expand electric-vehicle battery production. This will do nothing to ease the current energy crisis.
Gas Shortage
Last week we saw the first decent increase in gas storage that lifted the level off the bottom of the five-year average.
This will not help curtail high prices this winter, as the next two charts show rising demand.
You can see from these charts that gas for electrical production is above the five-year average, and exports of LNG are at record levels, taking advantage of the higher European prices.
More and more gas will be diverted to higher prices leading to higher prices and possible shortages in North America. Getting data in Canada is very hard, and what is there is out of date. Ontario provides quarterly reports, but these have not even published the Q4 2021 report yet.
The U.S. has now become the largest exporter of LNG and is now importing about 15% of gas production as LNG, mostly to Europe. What is important is that approved LNG projects will ramp this up to over 50% of U.S. production.
I do know Ontario is scrambling for more natural gas for electrical generation.
Alberta recently had pipeline problems that should have increased storage. The only decent report is from Stats Canada, but they are months behind.
They have just reported July storage numbers, and it is not looking good — well below 2020 and 2021 levels.
• July 2022 15,840,398 cubic meters (15,840,398cm)
• July 2021 18,610,093cm
• July 2020 21,075,478cm
• July 2019 17,514,295cm
We have the most incompetent leadership in Canada, the U.S., and Europe like never before. Turfing the PMs in the UK is becoming a habit, as Truss resigned today. You can count on governments to make this energy crisis far worse.
You often see in the news about Canada’s potential or capacity to export LNG. This is just nonsense or fake news; Canada has zero export capacity for LNG.
The first to come on line will be TC Energy Corp.’s (TRP:NYSE) pipeline, as shown in my report on them, and that will not be until 2025.
Royal Dutch Shell Plc. (SHEL:NYSE) leads a consortium actually building the LNG plant processing TC Energy gas.
Statista has provided some excellent graphics that will help you understand the dire straits that Europe is in this winter.
Almost all these countries are dependent on fossil fuels.
The Nord Stream
The Nord Stream 2 was completed since this 2021 graphic but does not matter anyway, as it was blown up along with Nord Stream 1. What is coming from Ukraine is questionable, as the Russian invasion has started to target energy infrastructure.
I expect this is part of a plan before a Russian offensive this winter. There is no solution for this winter; Europe won’t have enough energy. Germany will probably have to shut down industry and plunge into a deep recession and deep freeze, along with some other European countries.
The U.S. has now become the largest exporter of LNG and is now importing about 15% of gas production as LNG, mostly to Europe. What is important is that approved LNG projects will ramp this up to over 50% of U.S. production.
The gas will go to the highest bidder, so as time passes, the U.S. and Canada will compete with Europe for natural gas. Nobody knows how long this war will last and what damage to energy infrastructure will result.
Remember that most troops killed in war are either transporting energy or guarding it. This war will be no different other than there being a lot more gas and nuclear energy facilities compared to past wars.
And most likely, politicians will screw things up with their plans for the transition to green energy. In another desperate move ahead of the U.S. mid-term elections, Biden is releasing another 15 million barrels from the SPR.
This will be the last because, after the mid-term elections, there will be a gridlocked government. The Republicans will win the House and maybe the Senate too, but even if they win both, Biden can veto any legislation, and it goes back to the House and Senate but must get a 2/3 majority vote.
That will not happen. However, markets love a government that can do nothing, and this may be a reason that extends this bear rally if and when one starts.
I believe it is a perfect time with the politically driven correction in oil and gas and the producers to buy one of the blue-chip integrated oil companies that will benefit from tighter energy markets and more LNG exports. Royal Dutch Shell Plc. (SHEL:NYSE) has been in my Millennium Index before.
We sold it in 2014 for an 81% profit plus dividends because I believed oil was heading down significantly, and indeed it dropped from the $100 area to $50 and lower.
Now is a good time to add Shell to the Millennium Index.
Shell Plc.
Royal Dutch Shell Plc. (SHEL:NYSE) is probably the best-known brand in the world, serving 32 million customers per day and 84 million loyal members. They have about 46,000 locations (more than Mcdonald’s) in 80 markets.
Their goal by 2025 is to have 40 million customers and 55,000 locations. They currently have over 105,000 EV charge points and plan to grow this to over 500,000 in 2025. I expect the Shell brand will remain at the top for a long time.
Shell pays dividends in U.S. dollars, and the last quarterly dividend was US$0.25 per share, and since each ADR represents two ordinary shares, the quarterly dividend on the ADR was US$0.50. Based on a US$2.00 dividend per year and the current ADR share price, that is a yield of 3.8%.
I like Shell at this time because of its superior and well-known brand, and at current prices, the stock is valued better than its peers like Exxon, Chevron, and BP, for example.
Before Covid-19 hit, they were paying a US$0.47 dividend, and it dropped to the US$0.17 level in 2020 and early 2021.
I expect Shell will get back to the US$0.47 level in the next couple of years. Shell has a growing portfolio in LNG as well as renewable projects coming on stream from now to 2024.
Production in the North Sea
They are bringing their Jackdaw Field into production in the North Sea, which can produce more than 6% of the UK’s gas production in the coming years. Shell is also going ahead with the Crux Field in Australia, which will provide gas for their floating LNG facility.
Pursuing LNG Canada, Shell has a 40% leading interest in building out the facility in Kitimat, B.C. Kitimat was chosen as the ideal location for the facility due to the easy access to abundant, low-cost natural gas from Alberta/British Columbia’s vast resources.
The location also benefits from a relatively short shipping distance to north Asia, one of the fastest-growing gas markets in the world. The shipping route is approximately 50% shorter than from the US Gulf of Mexico and avoids the Panama Canal. =
The project has strong support from the local community, including indigenous First Nations, as well as from the local government. TC Energy will supply the gas.
Recent performance has been strong, as shown below, and Shell is delivering stronger cash flow from operations than its peers. Shell should have a higher valuation, not a lower one.
A large part of Shell’s LNG is a traded portfolio using other’s assets. Their renewable segment is doing well, with the input cost to electrical price spread quite large at this time. This looks to continue for some time, and we will probably see the spread widen with even higher electricity prices.
Shell’s chemical division is significant, contributing almost 20% of the earnings in Q2. Chemicals are cyclical. and their division has seen a weaker performance. Shell says now at a bottom of the cycle based on the chemicals they are in.
More important is that their Pennsylvania plant starts production of polyethylene this year, which is currently a high-margin plastic product, so this will greatly improve their Chemical Division.
Shell’s oil and gas production has declined some in the last several years, but the quality of their portfolio of assets has improved considerably, and they are now a lot more profitable on a little less production.
Comparing Q2 2022 to Q2 2013 in it’s presentation, when oil prices were about the same, Shell produced +65% adjusted earnings in Q2 2022 compared to Q2 2013 and three times the cash flow and doubled shareholder distributions.
Recent performance has been strong, as shown below, and Shell is delivering stronger cash flow from operations than its peers. Shell should have a higher valuation, not a lower one.
Shell has a US$6 billion share buyback underway in Q3, something similar will continue in Q4.
Basically, Shell looks at the share valuation to determine the mix of dividends and stock buyback. The US$7.2 billion payout in Q2 to investors was a record. The dividend is very stable, and buybacks will help increase the dividend.
Conclusion
I like Shell at this time because of its superior and well-known brand, and at current prices, the stock is valued better than its peers like Exxon, Chevron, and BP, for example.
Marketwatch reports its PE ratio without extraordinary items at 8.6, and the stock is trading right around book value. They have a US$6 billion share buyback and are on a path of increasing cash flow and dividends.
P/E w/o extraordinary Book Value
Exxon 11.35 1.54
BP 12.1 1.16
Chevron 14.42 1.63
Shell 8.6 0.98
Shell is well positioned for a growing LNG market, and it is continuing to high-grade its portfolio by divesting in lower margin assets. While most of the major integrated oil and gas companies are trading at highs on the chart, you can buy Shell at a good price after a bit of a correction.
It looks like the stock could break to the upside out of wedge pattern. There is resistance between US$54 and US$56, so we need a clear break above US$56 to confirm a new bullish move.
Support is between US$48 and US$50.
We can buy the stock now and get almost a 4% and growing dividend while we wait for capital appreciation.
Speculators could try the Call Options. I like the January 2023 $45 Call for around US$8.30.
It is US$7 in the money, so the premium is only US$1.30. A US$10 move in the stock would give you more than a double, but you won’t get the dividends with the options.
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