Wednesday’s shock decline in weekly EIA crude inventory data
turbocharged oil’s already strong recent move, with WTI crude quoted at
$61.25. This energy group has had a decent run, but today’s performance has
been mixed, not the bullish bonanza I would have expected even on a day
when all other market sectors were trading lower.
I believe a
presentation at Monday’s Ira Sohn Conference by Greenlight Capital’s David Einhorn
soured sentiment somewhat on a group that should otherwise be rocketing
upward along with the price of oil. An opposite performance compared to
the group’s implosion when oil prices swooned from November-January.
Mr. Einhorn attacked fracking (sic) companies for destroying capital
and producing substandard returns. First of all, fracing is spelled
without a “k,” but, semantics aside, Mr Einhorn’s message was clear:
The best way to play rising oil prices is by owning oil. That is emphatically, unequivocally untrue. As with any
commodity–gold is another great example–the best way to play a commodity
price recovery is to buy shares of the producers. It’s not easy to find a perfect comparison to past cycles since the
combination of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing wasn’t
widely adopted until the end of the last decade.
There was a commodity boom in 2003-2008 that was unprecedented in
recent history, so we can look at that. The best benchmark for the price
of oil itself is the USO oil ETF, which debuted in may 2006. To
represent the oil sector, which was widely beloved by fund managers in
the middle of the last decade, I chose Chesapeake Energy. no company and manger were as beloved by the Street in the mid-aughts as Chesapeake and its former CEO Aubrey McClendon. From May 2006 to the peak of the last commodity boom in July 2008
Chesapeake shares rose 111.79% and the USO ETF rose 67.49%. So you
should have owned the producer not the commodity then, and I believe
that is the case in May 2015, as well.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/greatspeculations/2015/05/07/riding-oils-rebound-with-pure-play-permians/?ss=energy
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