• Subscribe
  • Log In
  • Home
  • Daily Diary
  • Asset Class
    • U.S. Equity
    • Fixed Income
    • Global Equity
    • Commodities
    • Currencies
  • Sector
    • Basic Materials
    • Consumer Discretionary
    • Consumer Staples
    • Energy
    • Financial Services
    • Healthcare
    • Industrials
    • Real Estate
    • Technology
    • Telecom Services
    • Transportation
    • Utilities
  • Latest
    • Articles
    • Video
    • Columnist Conversations
    • Best Ideas
    • Stock of the Day
  • Street Notes
  • Authors
    • Bruce Kamich
    • Doug Kass
    • Jim "Rev Shark" DePorre
    • Helene Meisler
    • Jonathan Heller
    • - See All -
  • Options
  • RMPIA
  • Switch Product
    • Action Alerts PLUS
    • Quant Ratings
    • Real Money
    • Real Money Pro
    • Retirement
    • Stocks Under $10
    • TheStreet
    • Top Stocks
    • TheStreet Smarts
  1. Home
  2. / Investing
  3. / Energy

The Coming Energy Boom

Here are three names poised to profit from the expanding US energy infrastructure build out.
By BRET JENSEN
Apr 26, 2012 | 09:30 AM EDT
Stocks quotes in this article: CBI, TKR, FRD

Natural gas and oil production have started to change the domestic energy landscape over the past half a decade. One out of every five jobs since the end of the recession has come from the energy sector, the U.S. has become a net gasoline exporter for the first time in a generation, and North Dakota now produces more oil than OPEC member Ecuador does.

I believe we are in the early innings of an energy renaissance in North America. One area of particular interest is the expansion of the natural gas infrastructure as it takes more market share from coal and as massive new projects get under way to build the facilities needed to export natural gas. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's decision to approve Cheniere Energy's (LNG) proposal to build the nation's largest natural-gas export terminal in Louisiana should kick off an avalanche of similar projects.

The companies that supply the pipes, steel, know-how and other materials and products should benefit greatly over the next decade as the U.S. capitalizes on its huge bounty of new energy sources. Here are three companies I believe will benefit and should be considered as investments to take advantage of this long-term trend.

Chicago Bridge & Iron Co. (CBI) provides conceptual design, engineering and construction services to energy and natural resource industries worldwide.

Four reasons CBI is a long-term bargain at $44 a share:

  • CBI will be one of the primary firms employed to build these huge LNG facilities.
  • Analysts expect very solid growth from the company over the next two years. Projections call for 15% to 20% revenue growth for both FY2012 and FY2013, respectively.
  • The stock is undervalued with a five-year projected Price/Earnings/Growth ratio of 0.88 and a forward Price-to-Earnings ratio just below 13. It also has a solid balance sheet with more than $600 million in net cash (approximately 15% of its market capitalization).
  • The median price target on CBI is a little north of $54 a share. Credit Suisse has an Outperform rating and a $58 price target on the company.

Timken Co. (TKR) develops and manufactures anti-friction bearings and assemblies, alloy steels and mechanical power transmission systems. Although it's not a pure play on the energy infrastructure ramp-up, it does get 36% of revenue from custom steel products required for drill pipes and other tubular steel needs. It is building a huge new facility in Ohio to take advantage of the expanding drilling activity in the Utica Shale, which is just beginning to take off. Its industrial and mobile divisions should also benefit from increased demand from the energy sector as well.

Four reasons Timken is undervalued at just under $55 a share:

  • It has a low five-year projected PEG of 0.88 and a forward PE of just over 9, significantly under its five-year average of 18.2.
  • It has easily beaten earnings estimates three of the last four quarters, and consensus estimates for FY2012 and FY2013 have steadily increased over the past three months.
  • It has a solid balance sheet, yields 1.8% and sells for around 1x annual revenues.
  • The median price target is $64.50. Stifel Nicolaus just initiated the stock as a Buy earlier in the month. Given the company again beat estimates easily on the top and the bottom line earlier in the week, I would look for price targets to be raised over the coming few weeks.

Friedman Industries (FRD) engages in steel processing, pipe manufacturing and processing, and steel and pipe distribution activities in the U.S.

Four reasons Friedman is a good pick for value and dividend investors at $11 a share:

  • The Texas-based company is ideally situated (both geographically and materially) to serve the expanding energy infrastructure demand through its Texas Tubular division.
  • It is cheap at just 7.5x forward earnings and has more than 25% of its $77 million market capitalization in net cash.
  • In addition to a cheap valuation, Friedman provides a 4.6% dividend yield.
  • Given its small-market capitalization, niche product lines and the age of its management team, the company would be an ideal bolt-on acquisition for a larger player.

Editor's Links

More on Energy:

  • An Oil Play to Watch
  • The Uneven Playing Field
  • What to Do With Liquid Natural Gas
Get an email alert each time I write an article for Real Money. Click the "+Follow" next to my byline to this article.

At the time of publication, Jensen was long FRD.

TAGS: Investing | U.S. Equity | Energy

More from Energy

Peabody Is Glowing Hot

Mark Sebastian
Aug 17, 2022 3:19 PM EDT

Here's how to play Peabody Energy as it looks like it could fire up over $25.

The Pendulum Swings Back, but Don't Look for Things to Stabilize

Peter Tchir
Aug 15, 2022 11:00 AM EDT

It could swing past the point where things look normal or OK to a point where things look bad again.

Where Are Crude Prices Heading, and Could They Clog Up a Recovery?

Bruce Kamich
Aug 12, 2022 11:00 AM EDT

Let's check the charts to see where we can expect oil prices to flow.

PPI Cools, Home Prices Don't, Fed in the Dark, Technical Battle Lines, Chevron

Stephen Guilfoyle
Aug 12, 2022 7:29 AM EDT

Just when is the Federal Reserve going to reduce the cash slosh, anyway?

This New Energy Fund Sounds Dirty, But Could Help Investors Clean Up

Mark Abssy
Aug 11, 2022 1:33 PM EDT

The Strive U.S. Energy exchange-traded fund is billed as an anti-ESG ETF. Let's see how it stacks up against the similar Energy Select SPDR Fund.

Real Money's message boards are strictly for the open exchange of investment ideas among registered users. Any discussions or subjects off that topic or that do not promote this goal will be removed at the discretion of the site's moderators. Abusive, insensitive or threatening comments will not be tolerated and will be deleted. Thank you for your cooperation. If you have questions, please contact us here.

Email

CANCEL
SUBMIT

Email sent

Thank you, your email to has been sent successfully.

DONE

Oops!

We're sorry. There was a problem trying to send your email to .
Please contact customer support to let us know.

DONE

Please Join or Log In to Email Our Authors.

Email Real Money's Wall Street Pros for further analysis and insight

Already a Subscriber? Login

Columnist Conversation

  • 02:23 PM EDT STEPHEN GUILFOYLE

    We're Cleaning Out This Retailer From the Bullpen

    Check out the latest moves in TheStreet's Stocks U...
  • 10:24 AM EDT JAMES "REV SHARK" DEPORRE

    This Weekend on Real Money

    To Improve Your Trading and Investing, Spend More ...
  • 08:44 AM EDT PETER TCHIR

    CPI Beats Expectations, But Maybe Not the 'Whisper'?

    Slightly better-than-expected inflation across the...
  • See More

COLUMNIST TWEETS

  • A Twitter List by realmoney
About Privacy Terms of Use

© 1996-2022 TheStreet, Inc., 225 Liberty Street, 27th Floor, New York, NY 10281

Need Help? Contact Customer Service

Except as otherwise indicated, quotes are delayed. Quotes delayed at least 20 minutes for all exchanges. Market Data & Company fundamental data provided by FactSet. Earnings and ratings provided by Zacks. Mutual fund data provided by Valueline. ETF data provided by Lipper. Powered and implemented by FactSet Digital Solutions Group.

TheStreet Ratings updates stock ratings daily. However, if no rating change occurs, the data on this page does not update. The data does update after 90 days if no rating change occurs within that time period.

FactSet calculates the Market Cap for the basic symbol to include common shares only. Year-to-date mutual fund returns are calculated on a monthly basis by Value Line and posted mid-month.

Compare Brokers

Please Join or Log In to manage and receive alerts.

Follow Real Money's Wall Street Pros to receive real-time investing alerts

Already a Subscriber? Login