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Started By
Message
I am looking for energy stocks to buy for the long term. Any suggestions?
Posted on 12/18/15 at 9:16 am
Posted on 12/18/15 at 9:16 am
I am looking for companies with strong financials that can make it through the hard times that are upon us. Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
Posted on 12/18/15 at 9:41 am to WGB2004
XOM
BP
PSX
COP
CVX
And if you want a spec, CPE
BP
PSX
COP
CVX
And if you want a spec, CPE
This post was edited on 12/18/15 at 9:42 am
Posted on 12/18/15 at 9:42 am to WGB2004
I still like SDRL. They have the newest fleet of drill ships in the GOM and I read an article not long ago that said they have enough cash to "float" for 2 years. The stock has gotten absolutely hammered the past year or so, but at $3.75, I think it's a long term value.
Posted on 12/18/15 at 9:42 am to LSUTigersVCURams
One of those is not like the other.
Posted on 12/18/15 at 9:45 am to raw dog
you mean PSX as a pure play refiner?
Posted on 12/18/15 at 9:46 am to WGB2004
XOM and RDS-B are my two favorite right now
Posted on 12/18/15 at 10:45 am to WGB2004
quote:
XOM and RDS-B
I hold these.
Posted on 12/18/15 at 11:25 am to Grits N Shrimp
Don't buy pgn
ask me how I know 


Posted on 12/18/15 at 3:40 pm to jeepfreak
I might wait until this merger deal with DD either happens or gets shut down by the feds before I bought any DOW.
Posted on 12/19/15 at 9:24 am to LSUTigersVCURams
Its not purely an energy company, but Check out BHP. Super undervalued right now.
Posted on 12/19/15 at 3:59 pm to WGB2004
Right now, xom...everyone else has serious issues.
Posted on 12/19/15 at 6:01 pm to jeepfreak
Why SDRL? Debt is going to weigh heavily on them in 16
Posted on 12/19/15 at 6:23 pm to cwill
Assuming you like Exxon because they have so much cash. What serious issue would you think Shell has?
Posted on 12/20/15 at 5:28 pm to notiger1997
They're a mess domestically, they lost the Arctic program and they just swallowed $60B of gas production.
Posted on 12/21/15 at 2:45 pm to Grits N Shrimp
quote:
Why SDRL? Debt is going to weigh heavily on them in 16
Anyone with thoughts on this, I'd love to hear. The market seems to think they aren't going to survive this.
I read an article in Barron's that was very skeptical about offshore drilling's future. I read a COP vice president saying they got out of that business because it takes about $75 a barrel to earn a profit, once you count in permitting and failed wells.
Genuinely curious of what others think on this.
Posted on 12/21/15 at 3:31 pm to WGB2004
EOG is starting to look good to me again. The stock is just over $70 right now, and my limit order would trigger at $69. Earlier this year I rode it up from 69.82 to 86.95 before selling.
On a relative basis among the shale players, EOG has good acreage, balance sheet, and corporate culture (efficient and engaged). I don't know what their stock price will be in 6 months, but I expect them to survive the downturn and have a much higher stock price when oil prices turn around. I'm planning to buy and hold unless the stock price shoot up oddly again.
On a relative basis among the shale players, EOG has good acreage, balance sheet, and corporate culture (efficient and engaged). I don't know what their stock price will be in 6 months, but I expect them to survive the downturn and have a much higher stock price when oil prices turn around. I'm planning to buy and hold unless the stock price shoot up oddly again.
Posted on 12/21/15 at 6:16 pm to WGB2004
If you can wait a few months, a lot of reserves are going to disappear off of the balance sheets of oil companies in the US since they can't be profitably produced. At that point, you'll know which ones have good real book value. Plus, you can compare the new stated reserves and compare them to the reserves stated a year ago. That information will be very valuable for a number of reasons.
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