You are receiving this email because you signed up to receive our free e-letters, or you purchased a product or service from its publisher, Eagle Financial Publications. Six Dividend-paying Energy Investments to Buy After Price Drop 10/06/2023 [[Have You Seen This $11 Trillion 'Tech Strip?']( While many folks today are wondering what to do with their money⦠a revolutionary âsheetâ of new technology has quietly sparked an $11 trillion tech revolution. Investors who get in FIRST have a rare chance to position themselves in front of a tsunami of profits. [Click here to see how anyone can profit fast.]( [Click Here...]( Six dividend-paying [energy investments]( to buy after a price drop during the last week have faced selling pressure since reports that the U.S. âcrude tanksâ incurred shrinking supplies at a major U.S. storage site. The six dividend-paying [energy investments]( to buy can be scooped up at reduced prices after their shares pulled back amid profit taking and reports of slipping demand after crude prices surged to $90-95, marking their highest level since August 2022. Oil supplies at a key storage hub in Cushing, Oklahoma, fell to their lowest level since July 2022, with U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures rising to $95.03 per barrel on Sept. 28, pulling back to $88.82 on Monday evening, Oct. 2, rising to $89.41 on Tuesday evening, Oct. 3, but finishing at $82.79 on Oct. 6. The shrinking surplus at Cushing-based crude tanks, Americaâs largest U.S. storage hub, sent oil prices for near-term supplies surging. Stockpiles slumped below 22 million barrels recently to the lowest mark since July 2022, according to U.S. government data. The crunch even caused American crude to become pricey for Asian refiners. Contrary to the usual negative relationship between the U.S. dollar and crude oil prices, the current oil supply shock has been "more bullish than bearish" for the American greenback in the post-pandemic environment, according to BofA Global Research. The U.S. dollar appears to be "broadly supported" until the end year's end amid persistently tight oil supply, the investment firm wrote in a research note. Political polls indicate most Americans agree there is an âinvasionâ at the southern U.S. border, a failed energy policy, a mismanaged foreign policy, an irresponsible fiscal policy and an erupting crime problem in many major cities forcing out long-time residents, seasoned Wall Street trader Bryan Perry wrote to his [Cash Machine]( subscribers. Fortunately, the [Cash Machine]( model portfolio has a large weighting of high-yield assets that are bullishly sensitive to rising interest rates, he added. Paul Dykewicz interviews [Cash Machine]( chief Bryan Perry at a MoneyShow. Six Dividend-paying Energy Investments to Buy and Why The six [dividend-paying energy investments]( to buy offer both income and a chance for capital appreciation. Perry, who currently averages a dividend yield of 10.8% with [Cash Machine]( 29 recommendations, closely follows and recommends oil and other energy equities. His favorite oil stock, recommended on November 29, 2022, has soared 48.26% in slightly more than 10 months. Unemployment data released on Oct. 6 revealed non-farm payrolls for September jumped by 336,000 versus consensus estimates of 160,000. Hourly wages increased at the lowest level in a year. Even though the economy is adding jobs, wage inflation is easing. After the markets opened sharply lower in the morning of Oct. 6, the indexes later rose. Investors also can take solace from the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index data released by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis on Sept. 29 showing inflation dipping below 4% on an annual basis. When excluding volatile food and energy prices, the latest rise in the key inflation gauge of the Federal Reserve was just 0.1%, a 3.9% gain from the same period last year. The data show that consumer prices rose less than expected during August. Growth stocks traded up after the release of the inflation news, with bond prices positive and yields dipping, Perry opined. The result is that the âtrading landscapeâ improved a bit, he added. Six Dividend-paying Energy Investments to Buy: Stocks and Funds Another avid oil industry observer is Bob Carlson, a pension fund chairman who also leads the [Retirement Watch]( investment newsletter that features several portfolios. As a risk-averse pension fund leader, Carlson often prefers funds to individual stocks to gain diversification and to reduce risk. âFor oil stocks, especially dividend-paying oil stocks, I recommend the ETF Energy Select SPDR (XLE),â Carlson advised me. The fund owns 23 stocks and its 10 largest positions account for 74% of its holdings. Those holdings don't change much, since XLE has a turnover ratio of only 9%, Carlson continued. The fund's top positions recently consisted of Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XON), Chevron (NYSE: CVX), EOG Resources, Inc. (NYSE: EOG) Schlumberger NV (NYSE: SLB) and ConocoPhillips (NYSE: COP). XLEâs dividend yield currently is at 3.36%, while its share price is down 5.89% in the last four weeks, but up 6.10% in the past three months, 0.04% for the year to date and 9.14% in the last 12 months. The fund has 99% of its portfolio in U.S. energy companies. Bob Carlson, leader of [Retirement Watch]( gives an interview to Paul Dykewicz. [[The most important online financial education event of 2023](]( You are personally invited to join DayTradeSPY for the most important online financial education event of the fall. Of course, itâs the Wealth365 Summit, which begins October 9th, runs through October 14th. Youâll hear from over 60 world-class traders and investors, including us! Weâll share ideas, insights, tools, and technology that aim to be up-to-date and instantly actionable for protecting your retirement and building your wealth, regardless of overall market conditions. [Click Here Now To Reserve Your Complimentary Seat.]( [Click Here...]( Six Dividend-paying Energy Investments to Buy: IXC Investors who want global exposure to energy stocks should consider purchasing shares in iShares Global Energy (IXC), Carlson continued. Roughly 61% of the fund is in U.S. energy companies and 39% is outside the United States. IXC owns about 52 stocks and has 60% of the fund in the 10 largest positions. The fundâs turnover ratio is 10%. Top holdings of IXC recently were Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Shell (NYSE: SHEL), Total Energies (NYSE: TTE) and ConocoPhilips. The dividend yield was 4.39%. As far as performance, IXC is pulled back 4.49% in the last four weeks, but rose 8.59% in the past three months, 2.78 so far this year and 10.53% for past 12 months. Six Dividend-paying Energy Investments to Buy: Occidental Petroleum A dividend-paying energy stock to buy is Houston's Occidental Petroleum (NYSE: OXY), an international energy company with assets mainly in the United States, the Middle East and North Africa. As one of the largest U.S.-based oil and gas producers, it has operations in the Permian and DJ basins, and offshore in the Gulf of Mexico. Occidental Petroleum's midstream and marketing segment provides flow assurance and maximizes the value of its oil and gas. The company's chemical subsidiary OxyChem manufactures the building blocks for life-enhancing products, while its Oxy Low Carbon Ventures subsidiary is advancing technologies and business solutions to economically grow its business while reducing emissions. As part of its green energy outreach, Occidental Petroleum seeks to advance a reduced-carbon world. BofAâs price objective of $82 per share for OXY assumes $80 Brent and $75 WTI long-term crude prices, which are below current levels. BofA also is assuming long-term Henry Hub natural gas of $4.25. Risks to reaching that price objective are any reduced oil and gas prices and margins, significant delays to the new upstream projects critical to OXYâs production targets and any cost pressures from operating expenses, capital expenditures and taxation, BofA wrote. Chart Courtesy of [www.stockcharts.com]( Six Dividend-paying Energy Investments to Buy: APA APA Corporation (NASDAQ: APA), a Houston-based holding company for Apache Corporation, an American-based hydrocarbon exploration business, received a $57 price objective from BofA. The valuation assumes a discounted cash flow value based on $80 Brent and $75 West Texas Intermediate (WTI) long term prices. BofA also assumes long-term Henry Hub natural gas prices at $4.25. The investment firm further used a long-term, post-tax weighted average cost of capital (WACC) of 9.7%, based on the BofA strategy teamâs assumed risk premium and a five-year monthly beta. Potential outperformance of that estimate could come from higher-than-expected commodity prices, as well as exploration success in Suriname and Egypt, BofA opined. Increased drilling activity in the latter land also could help. Risks to achieving BofAâs price objective are reduced commodity prices,  Egyptian political risk and exploration risk in Suriname, the investment firm added. Chart Courtesy of [www.stockcharts.com]( Six Dividend-paying Energy Investments to Buy: OVV Denver-based Ovintiv Inc. (NYSE: OVV) (TSX: OVV), a North American energy producer focused on developing its multi-basin portfolio of oil, natural gas liquids and natural gas producing plays, received US$66 and CN$89 price objectives from BofA. The price target assumes $80 Brent and $75 WTI long-term, BofA wrote in a recent research note. The estimate is based on a long-term Henry Hub natural gas price of $4.25. The valuation applied a long-term, post-tax WACC of 9.7%, based on the BofA strategy team's assumed risk premium and a five-year monthly beta. In addition, Ovintiv [announced]( on Sept. 26 that it received regulatory approvals for the renewal of its share buy-back program. This action is consistent with the company's capital allocation framework, which returns at least 50% of post-base dividend Non-GAAP Free Cash Flow to shareholders. Risks that could cause the price target to be missed include the oil and gas prices and margin environment, significant delays to the new upstream projects critical to Ovintivâs production goals, an inability to capture the price environment due to cost pressures from operating expenses, capital expenditures and taxation. Other risks encompass potential currency exchange challenges and whether the purchase of certain Midland Basin assets closes by mid-2023. Possible outperformance could stem from improved cost of capital as Ovintiv deleverages its balance sheet or from increased oil and gas prices. The Toronto Stock Exchange accepted Ovintivâs notice of its intention to renew normal course issuer bid (NCIB) to purchase up to 26,734,819 common shares during the 12-month period starting October 3, 2023, and ending October 2, 2024. The number of shares authorized for purchase equals 10% of Ovintiv's public float as of September 21, 2023, pursuant to TSX rules. The purchases will be made on the open market through facilities of the TSX, New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and/or alternative trading systems at the market price at the time of acquisition, the company reported. Ovintiv reported on Sept. 11 that it priced an underwritten public offering of 15,000,000 shares of its common stock by NMB Stock Trust, a Delaware statutory trust, for gross proceeds of about US$684.8 million. Plus, Ovintiv will not sell any shares of its common stock in the offering and will not receive any proceeds from the sale. The offering closed on September 13, 2023, with J.P. Morgan serving as underwriter. Chart Courtesy of [www.stockcharts.com]( [[What To Do With Your Trades Now](]( Would you rather read the news, or get a jump start on the markets by predicting trends up to 72 hours ahead with up to 87.4% proven accuracy? The future is here, and it wants a piece. [Join the Training on A.I. 101 Live Session for Free.]( [Click Here...]( Six Dividend-paying Energy Investments to Buy: ExxonMobil ExxonMobilâs âproduct solutionsâ business recently provided a progress report halfway through its eight-year strategy for its combined downstream and chemicals businesses. BofA Global Researchâs latest research note on the stock showed the oil giant is ahead of its management's current plan of forecasting almost triple earnings from 2019 through 2027. âWhile this seems to be a haircut by the market on imprecise visibility, management has provided a new level of transparency that suggests it is about 60% of the way there, with an incremental mid-cycle product solutions contribution to FCF [free cash flow] that we believe could be 25% of total company value,â wrote Doug Leggate, a BofA oil industry research analyst. Under mid-cycle conditions, ExxonMobilâs management provided guidance that the company would earn $4 billion more than the run rate achieved in the first half of 2023 and $10 billion above 2019 under mid-cycle conditions for refining and chemicals, Leggate continued. Six Dividend-paying Energy Investments to Buy: Transparency Breeds Confidence âWe took two key messages away from the presentations and 'in-person' discussion with management,â Leggate wrote. âFirst, is management's confidence in delivery of these projects and the way it defines its contribution to earnings and cash flow. Our second takeaway is what is clearly a growth trajectory for chemicals & downstream that goes beyond 2027, with a similar level of spending that has funded its current project queue. What is not clear is whether the market has recognized the incremental value as sustainable given a start up that has coincided with the strong rebound in refining margins, blurring the contribution from new projects and efficiencies delivered so far. In our view, risks to current estimates look skewed higher.â Incremental value of $10 billion is reasonably about $120 billion or almost a quarter of XOM's market capitalization when fully onstream, Leggate wrote. No other major oil stock has that level of growth, he added. âWith an outlook that doubles cash flow through 2027 from 2019, we see little new that would materially change XOM's trajectory defined by growth and rate of change in free cash flow that we believe can support relative outperformance vs. peers," Legatte concluded. âWe maintain our Buy rating and $145 PO (price objective).â Chart Courtesy of [www.stockcharts.com]( Six Dividend-paying Energy Investments to Buy: Offer Alternative Energy ExxonMobilâs management recoignizes the need to include alternative energy in its product offerings, said Michelle Connell, head of Dallas-based [Portia Capital Management](. The oil behemoth recently announced the acquisition of Denbury, a $4.9 billion Dallas company that focuses on carbon capture and oil recovery, she added. This acquisition will help smooth out the seasonality of XOM's cash flow/revenue, Connell continued. Exxon Mobil will benefit from large tax incentives by participating in this green energy segment. In the last few years, ExxonMobil has focused on lowering the costs of its headquarters and personnel, Connell commented. The cost-cutting also included the trimming or paying down the company's debt that is expected to continue for the next several years. Another plus is that ExxonMobil has a âstrongâ annual free cash flow of $5 billion, she added. Michelle Connell leads Dallas-based [Portia Capital Management](. ExxonMobil currently has a dividend yield of 3.14% that is expected to increase to 4% during the next 3-4 years, Connell told me. Even though the stock has gained 13.63% in the past year, 1.29% so far this year, 2.80% in the last three months and dipped 4.00% in the past month, Connell estimated XOM could climb at least 10-15% in the next 12 months. The companyâs price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is 8.57%, well below its average P/E of 17. Plus, ExxonMobilâs gross margins are now 28%, compared to 2020 when gross margins were just 4%. ExxonMobil also is stepping up production at its low-cost facilities, such as the ones in Guyana and the Permian basin, while reducing output at its high-cost production plants, Connell counseled. Managementâs goal is to triple ExxonMobil's profits by fiscal year 2027, she added. Six Dividend-paying Energy Investments to Buy: Rising Political Risk Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine remains a key factor in keeping oil prices high. To help fund its continuing invasion of Ukraine, Russia has limited production to keep prices up. OPEC leader Saudi Arabia also has curtailed production to draw down global inventories. Political risk could climb further in the months and year ahead after the Russian Defense Ministry released documents recently indicting its military spending could rise by more than 68% in 2024 to reach $111.15 billion. That amounts to about 6% of Russia's gross domestic product (GDP), more than the countryâs spending on social programs, according to [Moscow Times](. Russiaâs military spending is set to total about three times more than education, environmental protection and health care spending combined. The six dividend-paying energy stocks to to buy could appeal to investors seeking both income and capital appreciation, as well as a way to profit from rising political risk. That is especially true with Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine triggering a fierce counteroffensive. Ukraine lately has launched strikes against positions in the Crimea region that that Russia has held since its previous land-seizing invasion in 2014. However, Russia is using minefields, networks of trenches and formidable tank barriers to thwart the advances of Ukrainian soldiers and inflict casualties aimed at weakening the resistance. Russia also fired a missile at a village near Karkiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 5 that killed [52 civilians]( at a funeral ceremony that marked one of the [deadliest attacks]( of [the war]( in months. Sincerely, Paul Dykewicz, Editor
[DividendInvestor.com]( About Paul Dykewicz: Paul Dykewicz is an accomplished, award-winning journalist who has written for Dow Jones, the Wall Street Journal, Investor’s Business Daily, USA Today, Seeking Alpha, GuruFocus and other publications and websites. Paul is the editor of [StockInvestor.com]( and [DividendInvestor.com]( a writer for both websites and a columnist. He further is the editorial director of Eagle Financial Publications in Washington, D.C., where he edits monthly investment newsletters, time-sensitive trading alerts, free e-letters and other investment reports. Paul also is the author of an inspirational book, "[Holy Smokes! Golden Guidance from Notre Dame's Championship Chaplain](", with a foreword by former national championship-winning football coach Lou Holtz. Follow Paul on Twitter [@PaulDykewicz](. mailto:CustomerService@EagleFinancialPublications.com About Us:
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