Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

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Energy Sector Energy Sector Analysis Analysis Brian R. Boulter Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Fisher College of Business Business 2/13/07 2/13/07
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Transcript of Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Page 1: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Energy Sector AnalysisEnergy Sector Analysis

Brian R. BoulterBrian R. Boulter

Fisher College of BusinessFisher College of Business

2/13/072/13/07

Page 2: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

S&P 500 Sector AllocationS&P 500 Sector Allocation

10.76%

9.29%

9.69%

22.18%

12.21%

10.82%

15.07%

3.05%

3.57%

3.35%

7.82%

6.69%

7.73%

20.71%

17.53%

11.34%

16.38%

1.53%

7.44%

1.21%

0.00% 5.00% 10.00% 15.00% 20.00% 25.00%

Consumer Discretionary

Consumer Staples

Energy

Financials

Health Care

Industrials

Information Technology

Materials

Telecommunication Services

UtilitiesSIM Weight

S&P 500 Weight

Page 3: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

SIM Relative to S&P 500SIM Relative to S&P 500

-2.93%

-2.60%

-1.96%

-1.47%

5.32%

0.52%

1.31%

-1.52%

3.87%

-2.15%

-4.00% -3.00% -2.00% -1.00% 0.00% 1.00% 2.00% 3.00% 4.00% 5.00% 6.00%

Consumer Discretionary

Consumer Staples

Energy

Financials

Health Care

Industrials

Information Technology

Materials

Telecommunication Services

Utilities

% Overweight / (Underweight)

Page 4: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Energy Sector CompositionEnergy Sector Composition

• Coal & Consumable Fuels - 1.38%• Peabody Energy, Consol Energy Inc.

• Integrated Oil & Gas - 63.76%• Exxon Mobile, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, Marathon Oil, etc.

• Oil & Gas Drilling – 4.21%• Transocean Inc., Noble Corp., ENSCO Int’l, etc.

• Oil & Gas Equipment & Services – 13.39%• Baker Hughes, Schlumberger Ltd., Halliburton, Smith Int’l, etc.

• Oil & Gas Exploration & Production – 9.61%• Anadarko Petroleum, Apache Corp., Devon Energy Corp., etc.

• Oil & Gas Refining & Marketing – 3.30%• Sonoco Inc., Valero Energy

• Oil & Gas Storage & Transportation – 4.34%• Kinder Morgan, El Paso Corp., Spectra Energy Corp., etc.

Page 5: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Recent PerformanceRecent Performance

# of Companies MTD QTD YTD

Materials 29  0.63% 5.13% 5.13%Utilities 32  3.78% 3.39% 3.39%Health Care 56  -0.23% 2.77% 2.77%Consumer Discretionary 89  -0.02% 2.74% 2.74%Telecommunications Services

9  -1.43% 1.62% 1.62%

Industrials 52  0.11% 1.42% 1.42%Consumer Staples 38  -0.65% 1.18% 1.18%Financials 87  0.11% 0.81% 0.81%Information Technology 75  -0.84% 0.71% 0.71%

Energy33  0.78% -1.09% -1.09%

S&P 500 500  -0.01% 1.39% 1.39% Total Return 0.07% 1.58% 1.58% Net Total Return 0.05% 1.53% 1.53%

Page 6: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Oil & The Energy SectorOil & The Energy Sector

• Energy Sector revenues are driven by global oil prices– Impact current and future levels of

exploration, drilling and refining expenditures

• S&P 500 sector index is heavily weighted with Integrated Oil & Gas companies– Earnings almost perfectly correlated with

crude oil spot prices

Page 7: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Oil & The Energy SectorOil & The Energy Sector

Page 8: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

*R^2 = 0.93

**93% of the change in the Energy Sector’s quarterly earnings is explained by the corresponding increase/decrease in the spot price for crude oil

***Based on 10-Q’s and average quarterly spot prices 1993-2007

Representative Energy Sector Quarterly Earnings Regressed against WTI Crude Oil Spot Prices

(14 Years)

0

50,000,000

100,000,000

150,000,000

200,000,000

250,000,000

- 10.00 20.00 30.00 40.00 50.00 60.00 70.00 80.00

Crude Oil Spot Prices

$ Millions

Y

Predicted Y

Page 9: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

World Oil Market OverviewWorld Oil Market Overview

• Long-Term oil prices are relatively stable– Driven by global supply and demand

• Abundance of proven oil reserves makes extraction cheaper and prices lower

• Short-Term prices are more volatile– Impacted by political, economic and environmental

shifts• War, recession, weather, etc.

• The long cycle of the petroleum industry has been a recurrent pattern for more than 140 years

Page 10: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Commodity Cycles Are Long-Commodity Cycles Are Long-Term Business CyclesTerm Business Cycles

Source: Hess Energy Trading Company, LLC

(Soft Landing)

Page 11: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Energy Cycles 1876-2005Energy Cycles 1876-2005

Source: Hess Energy Trading Company, LLC

Historically, energy cycles last +/- 20-30 years from peak to peak.

Last peak was reached in 1981… 2006 marks 25 years exactly!

Page 12: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Global Oil ConsumptionGlobal Oil Consumption

Page 13: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.
Page 14: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Global Oil SupplyGlobal Oil Supply

Page 15: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Middle Eastern Oil SupplyMiddle Eastern Oil Supply

Page 16: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Global Oil ReservesGlobal Oil Reserves

Among the top 20 oil reserve holders, 8 are OPEC member countries that together account for 65 percent of the worlds total reserves.

Page 17: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

What’s Happening to Oil?What’s Happening to Oil?

• Natural petroleum resources are not projected to be a key constraint on world demand through 2030

• Forecasted oil price paths reflect alternate assessments of oil-rich countries’ willingness to expand production capacity as much as previously indicated– Also reflects expected costs of extraction

Page 18: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

$34

$57

$96

Page 19: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

The High’s and Low’sThe High’s and Low’s

• The high price case assumes that the worldwide crude oil resource is 15 percent smaller and is more costly to produce than assumed in the reference case.

• The low price case assumes that the worldwide resource is 15 percent more plentiful and is cheaper to produce than assumed in the reference case.

Page 20: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

The Bottom LineThe Bottom Line• Long-term supply vs. demand will be most heavily

impacted by the politically and economically motivated production decisions of oil-rich countries– OPEC Nations, Middle-East, etc.

• OPEC has declared that current oil prices are acceptable at $50-$60– No significant production cuts are scheduled in the short-

run

• Global reserves have increased significantly since 2002– May be used strategically to mitigate severe

supply/demand imbalances and stabilize prices

Page 21: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Absolute ValuationsAbsolute Valuations

Page 22: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Relative ValuationsRelative Valuations

Page 23: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Energy Sector ValuationEnergy Sector Valuation

• Absolute Sector Valuation– Trading below 10 year average: Cheap

• Relative Sector Valuation– Selling at a discount to the market

• Some measures indicate that energy is cheap• Overall: in-line historically relative to the market

• Sector earnings/stock prices driven by oil:– Oil likely to hover between $45 & $60 per barrel in the

short-term– Energy stocks Likely to decline further for 6-8 months

and begin to trade sideways once oil prices level off

Page 24: Energy Sector Analysis Brian R. Boulter Fisher College of Business 2/13/07.

Sector RecommendationSector Recommendation

• Energy sector stock prices are still adjusting to reflect the recent decline in future forecasts for oil prices– 5-6 month delay

• Recommend to decrease current SIM portfolio weighting to 7.00%– Sell 73 basis points to reach 269 basis points below

S&P 500 weighting

• Look to move towards equal weighting after 12-14 months