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A Double Bargain in the Energy Market
by Matt Badiali
March 8, 2006

When you’re after great values in oil and natural gas stocks, you occasionally run into a problem…

How do you compare the value of a company whose resources are mostly natural gas with one whose resources are mostly oil?

Analysts do it all the time. They have a simple ratio to help them.

That ratio states: 6,000 cubic feet of gas is equal to 1 barrel of oil.

So… if your favorite oil company lists their reserves as 60,000,000 cubic feet of natural gas, you can calculate that volume in barrels of oil by dividing it by 6000. Therefore, you’d know that this company’s reserves were equivalent to 10,000 barrels of oil.

Now, we can use this ratio to compare different companies and hunt for cheap resources. We can also use this ratio to compare the actual price of oil to natural gas. We’ll adjust the 6,000 number to 6 to account for the way each is priced in the market.

Here’s how our ratio works with today’s prices:

A barrel of crude oil is trading for around $61. Its “equivalent” in natural gas is trading for around $6.65. Now let’s run the numbers:

$61 oil divided by $6.65 natural gas = 9.2

At a ratio of 6, analysts consider natural gas and oil to be roughly of equal value. When the ratio is above 6, natural gas is cheap compared to oil. When the ratio is below 6, natural gas is expensive compared to oil.

The chart below shows how natural gas was expensive through most of the fall when compared to oil. In December, natural gas was very expensive. At the peak, it sold at a 54% premium to oil, the equivalent of $92 per barrel!

“Expensive” natural gas didn’t last long… we’re reaching the end of the warmest winter in a century. Since such a large amount of natural gas is used to heat homes and factories, warm temperatures mean less gas demand. Prices have crashed. Now, at a ratio around 9, you can see that oil holds the premium over gas.

Said another way, natural gas is CHEAP in relation to oil right now, selling at a 37% discount.

When natural gas is above 6 on this scale, its utility is very high. That means if your electrical generation plant can run off oil or natural gas, you choose the cheapest source of fuel. Right now, you would choose natural gas. I’d even favor natural gas over crude when the ratio is at 6, as natural gas is a cleaner source of energy.

Right now, natural gas is selling at an equivalent of $39 per barrel while oil is up around $60. That’s really cheap natural gas.

Don’t think that things will remain this way. Fundamentals will reassert themselves sooner or later and the ratio will return to a more normal level.

In the meantime, investors can take advantage of depressed natural gas prices and buy stock in an energy producer with a lot of exposure to gas. In my newsletter, S&A Oil Report, I’ve recommended Anadarko Petroleum (APC) as just such an opportunity.

Not only is Anadarko set to benefit from rising natural gas prices, it’s also an attractive takeover bargain for an energy supermajor looking to pay up and replace reserves.

Dirt-cheap natural gas and a possible buyout? I call that a double bargain.

Best Regards,

Matt Badiali

Editor's note: Matt Badiali is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Matt Badiali.

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A BREAKOUT IN LONG-TERM INTEREST RATES

Rising to their highest level since June 2004, interest rates on 10-year U.S. Treasury bonds made a significant breakout this week.

An investor in the bellwether bond of the United States can now earn roughly 4.75% on his money. Will that number continue to rise, and continue to make it more expensive to borrow money? That’s anyone’s guess.

We’ll simply point out if interest rates do continue to rise, more pressure will be placed on speculative assets financed with loads of debt. We’re talking to you, real estate.

The breakout in long-term interest rates (one-year chart):

-Brian Hunt


“The current-account surpluses of oil exporters last year exceeded the surplus built up by the thrifty, export powerhouses of Asia including Japan. In 2005, Asia's surplus increased $42 billion, to about $391 billion, according to International Monetary Fund data.

But oil exporters increased their surplus by $200 billion to $424 billion.

Much of that cash gets recycled through the global financial system, instead of back into oil-producing economies. For instance, a substantial portion of these petrodollars do a round trip into U.S. dollar assets like bonds and real estate.”

“Even as Hillary Clinton was working to try and stop this Dubai port deal, her husband, Bill Clinton, was advising Dubai on how to get the deal through. ...Forget women, now he's cheating on her with other countries.”

-Jay Leno

“The stock market is the nearest thing we have to a financial ‘crystal ball,’ and that said, I continue to wonder what it is that is bothering Mr. Wall Street. The most obvious answer is rising interest rates.

Rising rates puts pressure on the carry trade, and it puts pressure on the badly-financed layer of the real estate game.”

-Richard Russell,
Dow Theory Letters

BEAZER GIVES UP THE GHOST

While many publicly traded homebuilding stocks plummeted during the last few months of 2005, Georgia-based builder Beazer Homes (BZH) continued to run higher.

Now, it seems the string of interest rate hikes has finally caught up with the housing boom and BZH.

The stock is down 18% in 2006, plunging on large trading volume.

The Safest Ways Into China For Americans
March 7, 2006

The Easiest Money in Finance
March 6, 2006

Maximum Pessimism Here In New Zealand
March 3, 2006

A Government Encouraged Addiction
March 2, 2006

The Courage To Get Rich
March 1, 2006

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