Energy - Europe - America - Equinor ASA NYSE: $EQNR
P/E Ratio 7.8x - Price/Sales (TTM) 0.6 - Price/Cash Flow (TTM) 3.6x
Operating Margin 28.4% - Dividend 8.4% - Nuff Said!!!
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Yield/Payout: 3.3–3.7%, Payout ~43–46%
Valuation: P/E ~13.9×; P/B ~2.0×
ROE: Industry standard ~12–14%
Sharpe: ~1.1 (5‑yr)
Pros: Big‑5 stability, dividend safety, modest valuation, strong risk-adjusted returns
Cons: Growth tied to domestic economy; interest sensitivity
Yield/Payout: 4.33–4.4%, Payout ~43% Valuation: P/E ~12.7×
ROE: ~7.7% TTM (banks average higher) Sharpe: ~1.0
Pros: High yield with strong dividend growth (12‑year streak), buyback-friendly
Cons: Slightly lower ROE than closest peers
Yield/Payout: ~0.9%, payout ~20–30%
Valuation: P/E ~18–20× (rail sector)
ROE: ~20%+
Sharpe: ~1.0
Pros: High efficiency, strong earnings growth, low leverage vs equity
Cons: Minimal income component, exposure to cyclical trade volumes
Yield/Payout: ~3.8%, ~50–60% payout
Valuation: P/E ~10–12× typical for insurers
ROE: Strong fiscal health (leverage ~23.9%)
Sharpe: Very low risk-adjusted returns
Pros: A-rated balance sheet, 11-year dividend hikes, Asian growth engine
Cons: Underwhelming stock performance, sensitivity to credit/claims cycles
Yield/Payout: ~3.66–3.7%, payout ~73%
Valuation: P/E ~19.6×, P/B ~1.2× typical for utilities
ROE: 7.4%
Sharpe: ~0.55–0.66
Pros: 51-year dividend increase streak, low volatility, inflation hedge
Cons: Slow growth, regulated earnings
Yield/Payout: ~5.3–5.5%, payout ~90%
Valuation: P/E ~16.8×
ROE: ~11.6%
Sharpe: ~0.35 (5‑yr), ~0.98 (1‑yr)
Pros: Monthly cash flow, pipeline stability, covered dividends
Cons: Commodity-linked cash flow; high payout
Yield/Payout: ~5.7%, payout ~140–142% IFF earnings
Valuation: P/E ~23.6×, ROE ~9.4%
Sharpe: ~0.8
Pros: 30-year dividend growth streak, fee-based contracts, secured backlog
Cons: High accounting payout; exposure to regulatory, tariff risk
Yield/Payout: ~4.9–5.1%, payout ~88–97%
Valuation: P/E ~16×
ROE: ~13% (midstream avg)
Sharpe: Moderate risk-adjusted; 1-yr ~1.5, 5-yr ~0.36
Pros: Asset expansion in Mexico, utilities diversification
Cons: Capital intensity; marginal earnings coverage
Yield/Payout: ~5.6–5.9%, payout ~89%
Valuation: P/E ~15.5×
ROE: ~7.9%
Sharpe: ~0.5
Pros: Best yield among Big‑5, international footprint
Cons: High payout; lower profitability
Yield/Payout: ~11–12%, payout astronomical (~600–900%+)
Valuation: P/E ~71× trailing, forward ~10×
ROE: ~15.5%
Sharpe: Low due to financial leverage
Pros: Highest yield, low beta (~0.6)
Cons: Unsustainable high payout; reliance on debt, free cash flow issues
RY, TD (15% each): Diversified bank income & safety
FTS (10%): Low-growth anchor
CP (10%): Blue-chip growth with little volatility
MFC (5%): Insurance diversification and balance sheet strength
PPL (10%) & TRP (10%): Monthly/quarterly cash flow with pipeline leverage
ENB (10%): Stable, price-consensus income with growth potential
BNS (7.5%): Extra yield balancing banks
BCE (7.5%): Ultra high yield play—only in small position, tightly monitored
Hold as cash or government bonds to hedge volatility or deploy opportunistically
Yield ~4–5%: Blended yield provides solid income with reliable coverage
Diversification: Banks, insurers, utilities, pipelines, rail and telecom reduce correlation risk
Valuation discipline: P/E focused on value vs growth; banks/utilities at ~12–20×, pipelines mid-teens
Balanced volatility: Core holdings have Sharpe ~1; income enhancers moderate risk, tactical reserve cushions shocks
Production Facilities and Resources
Oil Sands Operations: Cenovus operates several oil sands projects in Alberta, utilizing steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) technology. Key projects include Foster Creek, Christina Lake, and Sunrise. In May 2017, Cenovus acquired full ownership of the Foster Creek and Christina Lake projects. In June 2022, the company assumed full ownership of the Sunrise oil sands asset by acquiring the remaining 50% interest from BP Canada.
Conventional Oil and Gas: Cenovus's conventional assets are primarily located in Western Canada, including the Deep Basin—a liquids-rich natural gas region spanning northwestern Alberta and northeastern British Columbia. In November 2020, Cenovus sold its Marten Hills assets to Headwater Exploration Inc.
Refining and Upgrading: Following the acquisition of Husky Energy in January 2021, Cenovus became one of Canada's largest refiners. The company owns refineries in Lima, Ohio; Superior, Wisconsin; and Lloydminster, Alberta. Additionally, Cenovus holds a 50% ownership in refineries located in Wood River, Illinois, and Borger, Texas, through a joint venture with Phillips 66. In August 2022, Cenovus agreed to acquire BP's 50% interest in the BP-Husky Toledo Refinery in Ohio, assuming full ownership.
Partners and Customers
Cenovus collaborates with various partners across its operations. The company has a joint venture with Phillips 66 for the Wood River and Borger refineries. Additionally, Cenovus supplies products to a diverse customer base, including wholesale and retail fuel markets, as well as petrochemical industries.
Financial Performance
In 2024, Cenovus reported cash from operating activities of $9.2 billion, an increase from $7.4 billion in 2023. Adjusted funds flow for 2024 was $8.2 billion, with free funds flow of $3.1 billion. Total capital investment for the year amounted to $5.0 billion, primarily directed towards sustaining production and advancing growth projects.
In the fourth quarter of 2024, the company generated over $2.0 billion in cash from operating activities, $1.6 billion in adjusted funds flow, and $123 million in free funds flow. Net earnings for the quarter were $146 million. Total upstream production averaged 816,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (BOE/d), with oil sands production reaching a record 628,500 BOE/d. Downstream operations reported a crude throughput of 666,700 barrels per day, representing a utilization rate of 93%.
Cash Reserves and Capital Allocation
As of December 31, 2024, Cenovus maintained a strong financial position, enabling continued investment in sustaining and growth capital. The company's 2025 capital budget is set between $4.6 billion and $5.0 billion, with approximately $3.2 billion allocated for sustaining capital and up to $1.8 billion for growth projects. This disciplined capital plan supports shareholder returns and maintains net debt near $4.0 billion.
Market Performance
As of February 28, 2025, Cenovus Energy Inc. (NYSE: CVE) shares are trading at $13.715 USD, reflecting the company's stable market presence.
Recent Developments
In the fourth quarter of 2024, Cenovus experienced a decline in net income to C$146 million from C$743 million in the same period the previous year. This decrease was attributed to lower commodity prices and weaker refining margins, despite an increase in production. Total upstream production rose slightly to 816,000 BOE/d, and refining throughput increased to 666,700 barrels per day.
Overall, Cenovus Energy Inc. continues to demonstrate resilience through its integrated operations, strategic investments, and commitment to financial discipline, positioning itself for sustained growth in the evolving energy sector.
Cenovus Energy (CVE) benefits from the currency exchange dynamics between the Canadian dollar (CAD) and U.S. dollar (USD). Since extraction and operational costs are primarily incurred in CAD, while revenues from oil and gas sales are largely earned in USD, a weaker CAD relative to USD enhances Cenovus's profitability in several ways:
The current CAD-to-USD exchange rate environment is a positive factor for Cenovus. As long as oil and gas prices remain stable or increase, Cenovus should see continued financial strength, stronger free cash flow, and potentially better stock performance compared to companies operating in markets where both costs and revenues are USD-based.
Which is situated in both Texas and Arkansas.
We are long SLI and also long EQNR and here's why...