CBC Edition

Investors return to oil and gas sector after long period of industry 'doldrums'

- Paula Duhatschek

Some investors who'd pulled out of the oil and gas sector in recent years have started to return.

Among them is Calgarybas­ed wealth portfolio man‐ ager Martin Pelletier, who said his firm exited the oil and gas sector "in a material way" in 2015 before returning about a year and a half ago.

"I was on the sidelines for a good part of the last … four or five years, I guess," said Pelletier, with the wealth management firm Wellington­Altus Private Counsel, a divi‐ sion of Wellington-Altus, which manages more than $20 billion in assets.

Pelletier said he was drawn back in part by rebounding oil prices and what he described as a "precarious" supply situa‐ tion.

"[That] made it a lot more of an attractive investment environmen­t," he said.

These days, hefty profits and a renewed interest in en‐ ergy security prompted by the war in Ukraine are the two biggest reasons for the re‐ newed interest by investors, after several years of lacklus‐ ter financial returns and growing concerns about cli‐ mate change.

"Any investor who hasn't participat­ed in the run here in oil and gas … there's a bit of a fear of missing out," said Jere‐ my McCrea, managing direc‐ tor of energy research with Raymond James.

Year-to-date, Cenovus shares are up about 50 per cent, Canadian Natural Re‐ sources shares are up 37 per cent and Suncor shares are up about 34 per cent.

In comparison, the S&P/TSX Composite Index is down roughly 12 per cent.

Michael Tims, vice-chair‐ man of Matco Investment­s Ltd., said this year has marked a change from a lengthy period of "doldrums" following the 2014 oil crash, punctuated by a steep decline in prices during the peak of the pandemic in 2020.

"By June of 2022, we hadn't got quite back to the 2014 peaks, but we'd certainly sur‐ passed the levels of all the years from 2015 through to the present," he said.

Since June, Tims noted en‐ ergy stocks have taken a bit of a dip. The difference, he said, is that for a long time, the sector was out of step with the rest of the market.

"Now we're seeing every‐ thing kind of pulling back con‐ currently [amid] worries about recession," he said.

What to do with the re‐ newed investment?

Part of what makes the current moment different from previous boom times is that, while companies are en‐ joying their stock prices, they aren't generally pouring much money into capital expansion.

Instead, Tims said many exploratio­n and production companies are projected to pull in about three-and-a-half times as much cash as what they plan to spend on capital.

"That's a big sea change for the Canadian oil and gas industry," said Tims.

Wisened by previous boom-bust cycles, McCrea be‐ lieves companies are trying to be more prudent this time around.

"It's that, 'Just don't don't blow it,' kind of thing here," he said.

The current regulatory en‐ vironment also plays a role, he said. McCrea said oilsands producers might be reluctant to spend years developing a new project when, for exam‐ ple, the federal government wants all cars sold by 2035 to be zero-emission.

"There's a lot of regulatory headwinds that is just keep‐ ing pretty much every pro‐ ducer not willing to expand their spending programs to bring on more production," said McCrea, who said they're instead maintainin­g produc‐ tion with existing facilities.

"As a result your profits ac‐ tually then increase quite a bit, which then can be turned back into dividends and buy‐ backs and quite frankly that's a bit of what a lot of these in‐ vestors are looking for here."

The Internatio­nal Energy Agency said last year that no new oil and gas fields, or coal mines, are possible if the world is to reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

For many years, investors around the world have been warned to pay attention to climate risks because of the potential for stranded assets and the impact on global warming. That's part of the reason dozens of banks, pen‐ sion funds and other financial institutio­ns have decided to divest from the fossil fuel in‐ dustry.

For his part, Tims hopes the industry should use this moment to make a big push toward hitting its environ‐ mental, social and gover‐ nance (ESG) targets.

"I think it's a window of opportunit­y," said Tims, to re‐ duce methane emissions,

clean up orphaned wells and dedicate resources to carbon capture and storage.

He believes this will also lead to better returns in the long-term, as investors differ‐ entiate between companies that are following the "right path" and those that are re‐ sisting.

"The right focus isn't to be anti-woke," he said. "The right focus is to do the best the in‐ dustry can do on all those

subjects."

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