Does the Latest Natural Gas Price Spike Make it Time to Buy ARC Resources Ltd. (TSX:ARX)?

ARC Resources Ltd. (TSX:ARX) is poised to soar higher because of firmer natural gas.

| More on:
Burning gas and electric cooker rings

Image source: Getty Images

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s premium investing services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn moresdf

Unseasonably cold weather has caused natural gas prices to spike once again. Energy companies that are focused on producing the fossil fuel have attracted considerable interest. One Canadian oil and gas producer garnering significant attention is ARC Resources (TSX:ARX).

Successfully growing production and reserves

ARC embarked on a difficult transformation, which has seen it become a leading Canadian natural gas producer and report some solid 2018 results. Key to that performance was an impressive reserve-replacement ratio of 245%. During the year, ARC added 118 million barrels of oil equivalent to its reserves to finish 2018 with proven and probable reserves of 879 million barrels, which was 5% higher than a year earlier. Those reserves are 77% weighted to natural gas with the remainder made up of oil, condensate, and natural gas liquids.

ARC’s reserves were independently assessed to have an after-tax value $14 per share, which is over 30% higher than the driller’s current market price, highlighting the considerable potential upside available to investors.

The company has proven that it can grow production at a steady clip, comfortably meeting its 2018 guidance. For 2018, ARC’s total oil equivalent output grew by 8% year over year to 132,724 barrels daily with a significant lift in the volume of condensate and natural gas liquids driving that increase. It also reported an impressive operating netback, which, at $17.12 per barrel of oil equivalent produced before commodity hedges, was a healthy 9% greater than 2017.

Despite those solid operational results, ARC’s net income declined by 45% year over year to $214 million primarily because of higher exploration, evaluation, depreciation, and amortization expenses as well as a $64 million foreign exchange loss.

Improved outlook

The recent spike in natural gas as well as oil prices coupled with ARC’s upbeat 2019 guidance bodes well for the company’s performance. Total forecast production of 135,000-142,000 barrels of oil equivalent daily is between 2% and 7% greater than ARC’s reported 2018 production, while operating expenses are expected to fall by up to 11%. Those projections combined with analysts predicting firmer oil and natural gas prices bodes well for ARC’s financial performance and should see cash flow as well as earnings grow.

While weaker Canadian natural gas prices remain a risk, with the wide differential between AECO pricing and the Henry Hub benchmark weighing on domestic producers, ARC has mitigated that through a range of strategies. Key is a focus on establishing commodity price hedges combined with selling the oil and gas produced across multiple price hubs. This means ARC anticipates that less than 10% of its 2019 sales revenue generated by natural gas will be exposed to AECO pricing.

Is it time to buy ARC?

The wide differential between Canadian AECO gas prices and the North American Henry Hub benchmark has been weighing on domestic producers for some time, making them unappealing investments. Higher natural gas and a narrower price differential has reduced some of that impact. When that is considered along with ARC’s marketing strategy aimed at minimizing its exposure to AECO pricing, its growing reserves, higher forecast production, and solid netbacks, the company shapes up as an interesting contrarian play on natural gas.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Matt Smith has no position in any of the stocks mentioned.

More on Energy Stocks

Group of industrial workers in a refinery - oil processing equipment and machinery
Energy Stocks

Up by 25%: Is Cenovus Stock a Good Buy in February 2023?

After a powerful bullish run, the energy sector in Canada has finally stabilized, and it might be ripe for a…

Read more »

A worker overlooks an oil refinery plant.
Energy Stocks

Cenovus Stock: Here’s What’s Coming Next

Cenovus stock has rallied strong along with commodity prices. Expect more as the company continues to digest its Husky acquisition.

Read more »

A stock price graph showing growth over time
Energy Stocks

What Share Buybacks Mean for Energy Investors in 2023 and 1 TSX Stock That Could Outperform

Will TSX energy stocks continue to delight investors in 2023?

Read more »

Arrowings ascending on a chalkboard
Energy Stocks

2 Top TSX Energy Stocks That Could Beat Vermilion Energy

TSX energy stocks will likely outperform in 2023. But not all are equally well placed.

Read more »

Gas pipelines
Energy Stocks

Suncor Stock: How High Could it Go in 2023?

Suncor stock is starting off 2023 as an undervalued underdog, but after a record year, the company is standing strong…

Read more »

oil and natural gas
Energy Stocks

Should You Buy Emera Stock in February 2023?

Emera stock has returned 9% compounded annually in the last 10 years, including dividends.

Read more »

grow money, wealth build
Energy Stocks

TFSA: Investing $8,000 in Enbridge Stock Today Could Bring $500 in Tax-Free Dividends

TSX dividend stocks such as Enbridge can be held in a TFSA to allow shareholders generate tax-free dividend income each…

Read more »

oil and natural gas
Energy Stocks

3 TSX Energy Stocks to Buy if the Slump Continues

Three energy stocks trading at depressed prices due to the oil slump are buying opportunities before demand returns.

Read more »