National Post (National Edition)

With OPEC deal, energy stocks shine

Oil and gas firms get price target boosts

- JESSE SNYDER

CALGARY • With energy stocks surging following the announceme­nt of an OPEC production cut on Wednesday, investors are once again asking whether it’s time to buy.

Following the broadbased deal in Vienna to cut as much as 1.8 million barrels per day between OPEC and non-OPEC members, benchmark crude prices surged nearly 10 per cent Wednesday. They continued to climb Thursday, with West Texas Intermedia­te surpassing the US$51 threshold.

“Once the OPEC came through, it was more material and more positive than we would have expected on every front,” CIBC analyst Jon Morrison said.

The question for investors — who are still hesitant following two years of volatility and steep collapses in oil prices — is whether markets have fully recovered from their previous lows. Some analysts have warned that oil markets have been overhyped in recent days, and that prices will slump if OPEC members fail to follow through with their production targets.

But most agree that on a fundamenta­l level markets are already more or less in balance, which should provide space for growth in coming years.

“I still think it’s a good time to step into the space,” Morrison said.

“Even though we think there’s going to be a temporary flattening over the next little while, we don’t see the market structure going down.”

The OPEC deal itself was larger than most analysts expected, and could potentiall­y place a floor beneath oil prices in the near term.

“The main thing about this deal is there’s a lot less risk that oil prices go back to $40, or below that,” Desjardins senior economist Mathieu D’Anjou said.

Justin Bouchard, also an analyst at Desjardins, released a research note Thursday that delved into the free cash flow and free cash flow yield in five of the largest Canadian oilsands producers, including

The report made Husky its top pick, and moved the company’s target price from $21 to $23. At WTI prices of US$60 per barrel, the analysts estimated the company’s stock could offer investors nine-per-cent cash flow plus growth yield.

“Husky’s stock price, at least on a relative basis, is very compelling when you compare it to the other four companies,” Bouchard said.

Suncor was moved from a buy to a hold, while its target price was moved from $41 to $48. Suncor and CNRL had the next highest estimated cash-flow yields after Husky, at eight per cent. The lowest was Cenovus, at six per cent.

He said companies that were most directly impacted by oil prices, including

and saw some of the biggest gains in recent days. MEG is was up 13 per cent since Wednesday.

CIBC’s Morrison, like others, says the fundamenta­ls of the market are most likely to push oil prices gradually upward in 2017. CIBC estimates oil will reach between US$55 and US$60 by the end of the year.

“And with that is going to come a reinvestme­nt back into the North American energy sector that we haven’t seen for the past two years,” he said.

Morrison’s top picks for oilfield services companies include Secondary picks and include and who CIBC recently listed as outperform. In a morning research note, CIBC increased its target price for from $40 to $45.

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