Important information

Please read this page before proceeding, as it explains certain restrictions imposed by law on the distribution of this information and the countries in which our funds are authorised for sale. It is your responsibility to be aware of and to observe all applicable laws and regulations of any relevant jurisdiction.

By confirming that you have read this important information and the terms and conditions, you also confirm that you agree that such terms and conditions will apply to any subsequent access to the Individual Investors section of this website by you, and that all such subsequent access will be subject to the disclaimers, risk warnings and other information set out herein.

i) you understand this website uses cookies to ensure that we give you the best browsing experience on our website. If you continue browsing, we consider that you accept the use of these cookies. To manage your cookies you can also use our automated/online tool which is available by clicking   located at the bottom right hand side of your screen. View the cookies policy of this website

Legal and Regulatory Information

Accuracy of information; changes

Whilst considerable care has been taken to ensure the information contained within this website is accurate and up-to-date, no warranty, guarantee or representation is given as to the accuracy, reliability or completeness of any information and no liability is accepted for any errors or omissions in such information. The information included on this site has been produced by Capital International Management Company Sàrl (“CIMC”), which is regulated by the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier (“CSSF” – Financial Regulator of Luxembourg) and its affiliates, as appropriate (“Capital Group”). Any reproduction, disclosure or dissemination of these materials by you is prohibited.

Some of the information on this website may contain projections or other forward looking statements regarding future events or future financial performance of countries, markets or companies. These statements are only predictions, opinions or estimates made on a general basis and actual events or results may differ materially. No information on this site constitutes investment, tax, legal or any other advice.

All investment strategies, products and services referred to on this website are subject to change without notice. Capital Group may amend the website (including this Legal Information section) and our investment strategies, products and services at any time with or without notice to the user. Capital Group is under no obligation to update the website or to correct inaccuracies which may become apparent. Capital Group shall have no liability for any direct, indirect, consequential or special losses or damages of any kind whatsoever arising from or in connection with any use of the website or its contents.

No information, whether oral or written, obtained by you through or from this site or from any conversation with Capital Group staff or a professional consultant will have the effect of varying this Legal Information.

Not an offer

This website (and the information contained therein) is provided for information purposes only, and does not constitute either an offer, invitation, inducement or a solicitation to buy or sell any securities or investment product nor is it a recommendation for any security or investment product. The information contained on this website is not directed at or intended for distribution to, or use by, any person in any jurisdiction or country where such use or distribution would be contrary to any applicable local law or regulation or would subject Capital Group to any registration or licensing requirement in such jurisdiction. It is your responsibility to inform yourself of any applicable legal and regulatory restrictions and to ensure that your access and use of this information does not contravene any such restrictions and to observe all applicable laws and regulations of any relevant jurisdiction. Professional advice should be sought in cases of doubt, as any failure to do so may constitute a breach of the securities laws in any such jurisdiction.

.Potential investors should read the terms and conditions in the relevant offering materials carefully before any investment is made. Investors should be aware that this website may not provide all the information which is necessary or desirable to make such a decision and should undertake their own due diligence.

The funds referred to herein are offered, as part of a formal process, by their current prospectuses only. The prospectuses and key investor information documents contain more complete information about these funds and should be read carefully in conjunction with the latest annual and semi-annual reports before investing. Depending on the countries where the funds are offered, the prospectuses are supplemented by an addendum containing supplementary information required by the regulations of such jurisdictions. However, prospectuses and other information relating to these funds will not be distributed to persons in any country where such distribution would be contrary to local law or regulation. Capital Group will not at any time be arranging on behalf of the individual investor.
The contents of this website have been approved by Capital International Management Company Sàrl and is only to be accessed and viewed by (and the investment opportunities described in it are only available to) limited categories of persons in the UK and in other jurisdictions.

The funds referred to on the website are Luxembourg-registered UCITS, which are registered in each of the relevant jurisdictions under the applicable local laws and regulations. Investors should be aware that protections provided by relevant local laws and regulations may not apply to investment in the funds. It is your responsibility to be aware of the applicable laws and regulations of your country of residence. In particular, UK investors should note that holdings or investments in the funds will not be covered under UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme. Investors will have no right of cancellation under FCA’s Cancellation and Withdrawal rules.

The funds referred to herein are not registered under the United States Investment Company Act of 1940 and securities issued by the funds are not registered under the United States Securities Act of 1933. This is not an offer to sell, nor a solicitation of an offer to buy, the securities of any fund in the United States, its territories, possessions or protectorates under its jurisdiction nor to nationals, citizens or residents in any one of those areas.

Capital Group will not regard any person who accesses this website as its client in relation to any of the investment products or services detailed in the website, unless expressly agreed. Capital Group will not be responsible to any individual for providing them the same protections as are offered to its clients. Capital Group shall not be undertaking arranging activities at any time on the behalf of individuals electing to access the website.

No investment advice

The website is provided for information purposes only. Nothing on this website will constitute legal, tax or investment advice or recommendations. The products described may not be available to, or suitable for, all investors. In addition, current levels, bases and reliefs from tax depend on individual circumstances, which may also change in the future. Investors should not invest in the funds unless they understand its nature and the extent of their exposure to risk. Independent professional advice from a suitable authorised person, including tax advice, should be sought before making an investment decision.

Investment risk

The value of any investment made in the funds or otherwise and the income from such can go down as well as up, and the investor may not get back the full amount invested. Past performance is not a guarantee of future returns. Changes in the rate of exchange may also cause the value of overseas investments to go up or down. Funds that invest in asset classes carrying greater risk, such as emerging markets, high yield securities and securities of small capitalisation companies may have a higher risk of loss of capital.

Third party websites

Capital Group accepts no responsibility for any information contained in any website accessed via a hyperlink from this website. No other person/company may link their website into Capital Group's website without the express written permission of Capital Group. The content, accuracy and opinions expressed in such websites are not checked, analysed, monitored or endorsed by us. Access to any third party website is at the user’s own risk.

Third party content

Materials and information distributed by Capital Group, whether in hard copy, website or electronic format, include general news and information, commentary, interactive tools, quotes, research reports and data concerning the financial markets, securities and other subjects. Some of this content is supplied by third parties ("Third Party Content") that are not affiliated with Capital Group (each a "Third Party Content Provider"). Third Party Content is being provided for non-commercial purposes only and may not be copied, used or distributed without the permission of the relevant Third Party Content Provider. Third Party Content may be protected by United States or international copyrights. Third Party Content may not be copied, used or distributed without the permission of the relevant Third Party Content Provider. All trademarks and service marks appearing on this site are the exclusive property of their respective owners. These provisions are not intended to, and will not, transfer or grant any rights in or to the Third Party Content, and the relevant Third Party Content Provider reserves all such rights. Capital Group's use of any Third Party Content is not intended to imply that any Third Party Content Provider sponsors, endorses, sells or promotes any Capital Group investment strategies, products or services. Third Party Content is provided on an "AS IS" basis and Third Party Content Providers shall have no liability for monetary damages on account of the Third Party Content provided herein.

Enforcement of terms and conditions

These terms and conditions are governed and interpreted pursuant to the laws of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. If any part of these terms and conditions is deemed to be unlawful, void or unenforceable, that part will be deemed severable and will not affect the validity and enforceability of the remaining provisions. None of these terms and conditions are enforceable under the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 by a person who is not a party to its terms.

Switzerland Only 

Capital International Sàrl is responsible for the content of this website in Switzerland.
The Funds listed on this website are authorized by the Swiss Financial Market Authority (FINMA) for distribution in or from Switzerland. Capital International Sàrl, 3 Place des Bergues, 1201 Geneva, is the Funds’ Representative in Switzerland and JPMorgan (Suisse) SA, 8 rue de la Confédération, 1204 Geneva, acts as their Swiss Paying Agent. The prospectus, the key investor information documents, the articles of incorporation, the latest annual and semi-annual reports of the Fund can be obtained through this website and upon request free of charge from the Swiss Representative.

Cookies

This site uses cookies. The cookies we use are to help make the website more user-friendly. You are not required to accept cookies, and you may delete and block cookies from this site. To find out more about cookies on this website and how to delete cookies, see our cookie policy.

I have read and accept the terms and conditions of this site.

Capital IdeasTM

Investment insights from Capital Group

Categories
Energy
5 trends driving energy markets in 2023
Craig Beacock
Equity Investment Analyst
Darren Peers
Equity Investment Analyst
KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • China’s reopening and lifting of COVID-19 restrictions is likely to push oil demand to new highs.
  • Higher quality oil reserves have been used up, and further exploration is getting more expensive and requires greater expertise as drilling goes further afield.
  • Oil and gas companies are seeking new ways to reduce emissions in their operations. European oil and gas companies are seeking replacements for their fossil fuel businesses, while US companies are primarily focused on how to remove carbon from their existing businesses.

Is there more fuel in the tank for energy stocks?


That’s the question on many investors’ minds as the energy sector solidly outpaced all others over the past two years. Historically, the trajectory of oil prices has been a good gauge of prospects for the sector, as the price directly impacts many companies’ bottom lines. But thus far in 2023, there appear to be some deviations from this tried-and-true correlation. In fact, oil prices took a tumultuous ride last year, recently returning to near where they started in 2022. In contrast, energy stocks continue to mostly hold onto their gains.


1.  Will the bull run for oil equities continue?


We believe we’re in the early stages of a multi-year bull run for oil stocks. That does not mean the energy sector — led by oil stocks — will move in a straight line. Amid long uptrends, there are also mini-cycles, some lasting months to a year or more, in which short-term factors outweigh longer term supply-demand trends. Nevertheless, we see investment opportunities over the next three to five years.


China’s reopening and lifting of COVID-19 restrictions is likely to push oil demand to new highs, with the International Energy Agency (IEA) forecasting an increase of nearly 2 million barrels per day. Meanwhile, there is a structural supply shortage due to many years of underinvestment in new capacity by oil companies, production cuts from the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC+) with output undershooting supply targets, and declining US shale inventories. It will take a number of years before we see supply catch up with demand. Together these factors should be supportive of oil prices above US$70 per barrel.


Analysis of prior energy equity bull markets (we show Canada, as an example, in the chart below) suggests we may still be in the early innings of a positive rerating for the sector. Supported by higher energy prices, companies in the sector generated a record-breaking estimated US$1.4 trillion of free cash flow (FCF) in 2022. Valuations remain attractive across a number of metrics including price-to-earnings and price-to-book ratios. And the resilience of oil stocks in the face of falling oil prices over the last three months suggests investors are looking past any near-term weakness in the underlying commodity price.


Energy equity bull markets have often shown staying power

Bull Markets

Data as at 25 January 2023. Sources: Bloomberg, Peters & Co. Limited, S&P/TSX (Canada) Composite Index performance

2.  What are top spending priorities for oil companies?


The industry business model has largely pivoted from a focus on high growth and reinvestment in production to a focus on higher dividend payouts and more capital discipline. This has been one of the most pronounced changes we’ve seen in our lifetime. And this trend looks set to continue. Record-breaking cash flow over the last 12 months has left oil producers with some of the strongest balance sheets in history. Nearly 40% of executives from the top 100 oil and gas companies in the US indicated debt reduction and shareholder returns as their top capital allocation priorities, according to a 2022 study by Deloitte.


The shortening and steepening of the cost curve benefitting oil producers 

Cost curve

Data as at April 2022. The cost curve indicates how much oil would be produced for a given price — a function of determining profitability for producers above the breakeven cost of drilling a new oil well. Short and steep cost curves generally enable producers to generate higher profits. Kboe/d = thousand barrels of oil equivalent per day Sources: Capital Group, Bloomberg, Goldman Sachs

This renewed focus on shareholder returns has emerged because investors are demanding capital discipline. Investors who are willing to engage now are pressing for dividends and share buybacks rather than reinvestment at higher prices. It is likely going to be another 12 to 18 months before we see producers start to reinvest in their businesses while still maintaining a sharp focus on capital discipline and return on investment.


Supply-demand dynamics also support a higher oil price. It will take years for supply to catch up with demand as illustrated by widening OPEC+ production deficits and forecasted dwindling global spare capacity. Of the major oil-producing countries, Saudi Arabia could increase capacity by a million barrels per day and the United Arab Emirates by another million. But it would take years to build out that capacity, and US production is slowing quite quickly. Taken together, there’s just not enough oil to bolster global supply.


Moreover, exploration costs are going up. Higher quality oil reserves have been used up, and further exploration is getting more expensive and requires greater expertise as drilling goes further afield. US exploration and production companies lack the expertise for advanced exploration and will likely have to acquire companies that know how to tap into these oil fields to bring new supply to market. Additionally, oil services costs have risen with inflation. The higher cost structure is impacting the entire industry but will most acutely affect smaller companies with fewer resourcing options.


Taking demand and supply dynamics into consideration, in our view, US$70 per barrel of oil is a floor that should hold under most scenarios, and our analysis shows this would allow the major oil companies to maintain profitability, even when factoring in inflation and higher costs of production.


3.  What is the impact of the Inflation Reduction Act on energy companies?


The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 is a landmark piece of legislation. The bill directs US$369 billion in federal funding to clean energy tax incentives, loans, and consumer and commercial subsidies that have the potential to make the return profile more compelling for investments in areas such as carbon sequestration and the build-out of clean hydrogen infrastructure.


Over the next decade, the legislation could help to unleash a wave of capital expenditure. Oil and gas companies alongside chemicals and auto manufacturers are just a few potential beneficiaries. Only a handful of the US supermajors have scalable low-carbon projects underway, but the subsidies in the Inflation Reduction Act are likely to move others off the sidelines.


Amid the optimism, it’s fair to say that some firms are proceeding cautiously, mindful that policy priorities could adjust with changes in the balance of political power. The Biden administration is supportive of investment in renewables; however, if there is a change in administration in the next election or if energy prices become too high, priorities could easily shift back in favour of fossil fuels to help lower costs.


4.  How do European and US companies differ in their approaches to decarbonisation?


Oil and gas companies, regardless of region, are seeking new ways to reduce emissions in their operations. One of the key drivers of this change in behaviour has been the proliferation of net-zero targets, where the amount of human-produced greenhouse gas emissions is balanced by an equal reduction.


European oil and gas companies are proactively seeking replacements for their fossil fuel businesses, while US companies are primarily focused on how to remove carbon from their existing businesses. They are leveraging tactics such as carbon sequestration — in which carbon dioxide is removed from the atmosphere and held in solid or liquid form — rather than looking to diversify their energy mix.


European supermajors are investing more capital into low-carbon investments

Energy low carbon chart

Data as at September 2022. Capital expenditure figures are taken from information disclosed directly by the company. It is noted that investments dedicated to transitioning away from fossil fuels are likely lower, as several companies include fossil gas-related activities in their “low-carbon” capex. Source: InfluenceMap

Like their US counterparts, European firms are incentivised by new legislation. The REPowerEU plan, adopted by the European Commission in March 2022, directs nearly €210 billion in new investments toward clean energy in the European Union. The bill finances new energy partnerships with renewable and low-carbon gas suppliers, as well as clean hydrogen projects and solar and wind build-outs.


Failure to invest now in renewable infrastructure results in the risk of companies being disrupted later on. And it’s not just a matter of environmental, social and governance concerns. There’s a risk of market share loss as overall demand for renewables increases.


5.  Where do you see areas of relative value?


There’s a fairly widespread view that production costs in the Canadian oil sands, located in the Alberta region, are high. But the facts on the ground are changing. The cost of oil production there has declined over the last two decades. The long-life, low-decline nature of these assets means the capital intensity required to maintain operations is comparatively low versus US peers, and it enables high free cash flow generation, which is cash flow in excess of the company’s operating and capital expenses. In addition, the Canadian oil sands stocks often trade at valuation discounts to the US exploration and production peer group, and that is due in part to environmental concerns and the high carbon intensity of production per barrel.


Lower capital intensity for the Canadian oil sands supports high free cash flow conversion

article energy

Free cash flow conversion is a ratio that indicates how much cash is available to a company after covering its operating and capital expenses, an indication of its capital intensity. Defined here as free cash flow divided by cash flow from operations. Sources: Company filings and Capital Group analysis

Companies highlighted: Canadian oils sands (IMO = Imperial Oil; CNQ = Canadian Natural Resources Limited; CVE = Cenovus Energy; SU = Suncor Energy). S&P 500 exploration and production (OXY = Occidental Petroleum Corporation; COP = ConocoPhillips; DVN = Devon Energy Corporation; CTRA = Coterra Energy; MRO = Marathon Oil Corporation; APA = APA Corporation; FANG = Diamondback Energy; PXD = Pioneer Natural Resources Company; EOG = EOG Resources; EQT = EQT Corporation; HES = Hess Corporation).

The management teams of select US and European oil giants are operating with the strongest capital discipline seen in decades, and dividends offer some cushion for investors even if oil prices soften from here. The supermajors may benefit from higher-for-longer oil and gas prices supporting upstream exploration and production companies — in addition to record high downstream refining margins that purely upstream companies do not have exposure to. On a valuation basis, the European supermajors trade at a wider-than-usual discount versus their US peers on price-to-earnings multiples, despite very similar business characteristics.


European supermajors trade at a significant discount to their American rivals

article currency

Data as at 25 January 2023. Source: Bloomberg

 



Craig Beacock is an equity investment analyst at Capital Group with research responsibility for energy and as a small- and mid-cap generalist in Canada, as well as US and Europe integrated oil, midstream and oil refiners. He holds a bachelor’s degree in business administration from the University of Southern California. He also holds the Chartered Financial Analyst® designation. Craig is based in San Francisco.

Darren Peers is an equity investment analyst at Capital Group with research responsibility for integrated oil & gas in the US and Europe, oil & gas exploration and production in the US and Canada and oil & gas refining and marketing, as well as large-cap machinery companies in the US He holds an MBA from the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College and a bachelor’s degree in economics from Dartmouth College. Darren is based in Los Angeles.


Past results are not predictive of results in future periods. It is not possible to invest directly in an index, which is unmanaged. The value of investments and income from them can go down as well as up and you may lose some or all of your initial investment. This information is not intended to provide investment, tax or other advice, or to be a solicitation to buy or sell any securities.

Statements attributed to an individual represent the opinions of that individual as of the date published and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Capital Group or its affiliates. All information is as at the date indicated unless otherwise stated. Some information may have been obtained from third parties, and as such the reliability of that information is not guaranteed.

Capital Group manages equity assets through three investment groups. These groups make investment and proxy voting decisions independently. Fixed income investment professionals provide fixed income research and investment management across the Capital organization; however, for securities with equity characteristics, they act solely on behalf of one of the three equity investment groups.