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						U.S. energy shareholders seek to leave behind a lost 
						decade
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		 [December 28, 2019]  By 
		Lewis Krauskopf and Jessica Resnick-Ault 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - The 2010s was a lost 
		decade for shares of U.S. energy companies overall. Volatile commodity 
		prices amid growing supply, poor financial performance and disfavor from 
		some investor groups all contributed to the energy sector's 
		transformation from investor darling to investor outcast.
 
 U.S. crude prices <CLc1> fell more than 20% during the 2010s, while the 
		rise of alternative energy also brought pressure, with some stock buyers 
		shunning fossil fuel investments as socially irresponsible.
 
 But with the dawn of a new decade, some investors say the sun is also 
		rising on energy shares.
 
 The energy sector's swoon defied a boom in U.S. domestic oil production, 
		sparked by the advent of hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking." Ten years 
		ago, the United States was a net importer of about 10 million barrels 
		per day of oil and fuels. It ends the decade poised to become a net 
		exporter of oil and fuel products.
 
 
		
		 
		"It really is a great irony that at a time when the United States became 
		the world’s biggest producer and has become a great exporter, that 
		investors have become skeptical and have adopted a position of ‘show me 
		the money,’” said Daniel Yergin, vice chairman of IHS Markit.
 
 “Industry is having to demonstrate that it can deliver those returns 
		over several quarters, not just one quarter, so they’re going through a 
		real testing period right now," Yergin said.
 
 The S&P 500 energy sector <.SPNY> registered a meager 6% gain this 
		decade, compared with a more than 180% rise for the benchmark S&P 500 
		stock index, according to Refinitiv data.
 
 Including dividends, the energy sector's total return rises to roughly 
		39%. But that pales in comparison to the S&P 500's over 250% total 
		return and is only slightly above the roughly 37% return of the ICE BofA 
		Merrill Lynch Treasury index <.MERG0Q0>, a barometer of U.S. Treasury 
		bond performance.
 
 Over the past decade, including estimates for 2019, the energy sector’s 
		total earnings have declined 14.8%, while all other major sectors have 
		seen growth of at least 28%, according to Refinitiv data.
 
 The energy sector's poor performance means its importance to the stock 
		market has withered away.
 
 Energy represents less than 5% of the weight of the overall S&P 500, 
		down from over 15% in mid 2008, when U.S. crude prices topped $140 a 
		barrel, according to Refinitiv data.
 
		
		 
		
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			Pump jacks operate at sunset in Midland, Texas, U.S., February 11, 
			2019. Picture taken February 11, 2019. REUTERS/Nick Oxford 
            
			 
As a result, investors seeking overall stock market exposure require a smaller 
allocation of energy shares, another pressure point for the group.
 Even so, the decade was transformational for the oil-and-gas industry, which 
flocked to booming fields in west Texas and North Dakota.
 
 U.S. crude oil production, which was just over 5 million barrels per day (bpd) 
at the decade's outset, surged to a record 13 million bpd by the decade's end, 
leading to an abundance of supply that has pressured prices, while natural gas 
output also is setting records.
 
 "The price of energy has been lower than it would have been had none of this 
occurred," said Pearce Hammond, managing director at Simmons Energy in Houston.
 
 "It never benefited the energy companies," he added. "Why? Because they outspent 
cash flow and they didn’t deliver any kind of real returns. They were just huge 
sinks of capital."
 
 But as 2020 arrives, some investors believe the energy sector will leave its 
struggles behind.
 
 “We have seen crude go to $60 and yet the energy stocks trade as if oil is at 
$40,” said Gary Bradshaw, portfolio manager of Hodges Capital Management in 
Dallas.
 
 Investment advisory firm Alan B. Lancz & Associates is among those betting on 
energy shares. It is overweight the energy sector after buying shares of 
companies that include Exxon Mobil Corp <XOM.N>, Chevron Corp <CVX.N> and 
Marathon Petroleum Corp <MPC.N>, the firm's president, Alan Lancz, said.
 
 A "perfect storm" of macroeconomic factors pressured commodity prices - 
including the strong U.S. dollar and slowing economies in emerging markets - as 
well as more recently a fear of eventual increased U.S. regulations that has 
sparked more drilling, Lancz said. But he thinks both macro and political 
factors are poised to ease over the next year.
 
 
 
“We see over a two-, three-year period a gradual recovery in this whole sector 
that has been unduly depressed,” Lancz said.
 
 (Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf and Jessica Resnick-Ault in New York; additional 
reporting by David Gaffen in New York; editing by Alden Bentley and Leslie 
Adler)
 
				 
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