Shell (SHEL)
Headquartered in London, Shell is a multinational energy giant with operations in more than 70 countries. It produces around 3.2 barrels of oil equivalent per day, has an interest in 10 refineries, and sold 64.2 million tons of liquefied natural gas last year.
It’s a staple for global investors, too. Shell is listed on the London Stock Exchange, Euronext Amsterdam, and the New York Stock Exchange.
The company’s NYSE-listed shares are up 26% year to date.
Piper Sandler analyst Ryan Todd sees an opportunity in the oil and gas supermajor. Last week, the analyst reiterated an ‘overweight’ rating on Shell while raising his price target from $65 to $71.
Considering that Shell trades at around $56 per share today, Todd’s new price target implies a potential upside of 27%.
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Learn MoreChevron (CVX)
Chevron is another oil and gas supermajor that’s benefiting from the commodity boom.
For Q3, the company reported earnings of $11.2 billion, which represented an 84% increase from the same period last year. Sales and other operating revenues totaled $64 billion for the quarter, up 49% year over year.
In January, Chevron’s board approved a 6% increase to the quarterly dividend rate to $1.42 per share. That gives the company an annual dividend yield of 3.0%.
The stock has enjoyed a nice rally too, climbing 57% in 2022.
Morgan Stanley analyst Devin McDermott has an ‘equal weight’ rating on Chevron (not the most bullish rating) but raised the price target from $193 to $196 last month. That implies a potential upside of 4% from the current levels.
Exxon Mobil (XOM)
Commanding a market cap of over $460 billion, Exxon Mobil is bigger than Shell and Chevron.
The company also boasts the strongest stock price performance among the three in 2022 — Exxon shares are up 79% year to date.
It’s not hard to see why investors like the stock: the oil-producing giant gushes profits and cash flow in this commodity price environment. In the first nine months of 2022, Exxon earned $43.0 billion in profits, a huge increase from the $14.2 billion in the year-ago period. Free cash flow totaled $49.8 billion for the first nine months, compared to $22.9 billion in the same period last year.
Solid financials allow the company to return cash to investors. Exxon pays quarterly dividends of 91 cents per share, translating to an annual yield of 3.2%.
Jefferies analyst Lloyd Byrne has a ‘buy’ rating on Exxon and a price target of $133 — around 17% above where the stock sits today.
More: Why Warren Buffett keeps betting big on oil
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