Current market conditions can make it hard for even the most patient, disciplined bargain hunter to find useful investing opportunities. The trick is being able to identify pockets of the economy where current conditions create opportunity or where companies may have been able to buck broader industry and market trends to create their own success.
This year, one of the areas of the economy that has continued to offer useful value-driven investing opportunities is the Energy sector. Surging energy prices can be a bit of a double-edged sword; energy producers are able to charge more for their goods and services, but in the same breadth those price increases have a downstream, ripple effect that often extends throughout the market, regardless of sector or industry type. The price of crude oil – the primary price driver for all energy-related commodities – peaked to start this summer, with both Western and Middle East crude topping at around $125 per barrel. Since then, prices have moderated, but still remain well above pre-2022 levels.
For companies that operate in the refining space, rising crude prices are an input cost that blunts some of their ability to deliver refined, finished petroleum products. That also means that a moderation of prices usually has a way or working in their favor. HF Sinclair Corp (DINO) is an interesting case study. Formerly recognized as HollyFrontier Corp, this is an independent refiner, with refineries located from the Midwest to the Pacific Northwest of the United States and extending into Canada. DINO markets their finished goods in those areas along with the Southwest. This is a company that, in part, finds opportunities to manage its refining costs by navigating the differences in commodity prices between regions. For example, the company is a major buyer of West Canadian Select (WCS) crude, which traditionally is priced at a discount to West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude. When the gap between these two distinct crude deliveries narrows, costs increase for DINO, while a healthy, normal or widening gap improves their profitability prospects.
Coming into 2022, some of the larger political and economic challenges associated with crude production in North American forced the gap I just mentioned to narrow, putting quite a bit of pressure on DINO’s bottom line. More recent reports seem to indicate that those fortunes have reversed, with the company showing significant improvements in Free Cash Flow, Cash, and operating margins. While the broad market’s volatility has kept a lot of stocks at relatively depressed prices, DINO is just a few dollars away from its 52-week high, standing as an exception to the rule in a market landscape that has most of the stocks you and I look at plumbing historical lows right now. Despite the price increase for the year, DINO’s strengths also appear to translate to a value proposition that remains very attractive and makes this a stock that a smart bargain hunter should seriously think about putting on a watchlist. Let’s run the numbers.
Fundamental and Value Profile
HF Sinclair Corporation (HF Sinclair) is an independent petroleum refiner. HF Sinclair produces and markets high value light products such as gasoline, diesel fuel, jet fuel, renewable diesel, and other specialty products. HF Sinclair owns and operates refineries located in Kansas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Wyoming, Washington and Utah and markets its refined products principally in the Southwest United States, the Rocky Mountains extending into the Pacific Northwest and in other neighboring Plains states. HF Sinclair produces and markets base oils and other specialized lubricants in the United States, Canada and the Netherlands, and export products to more than 80 countries. The Company, through its subsidiary, HollyFrontier Corporation produces renewable diesel at two of its facilities in Wyoming. The Company supplies fuels to more than 1,300 Sinclair branded stations and licenses the use of the Sinclair brand at more than 300 additional locations throughout the country. DINO’s market cap is around $11 billion.
Earnings and Sales Growth: Over the last twelve months, earnings increased by more than 542.5%, while revenues grew almost 144% (not a typo). In the last quarter, earnings increased by about 465% while sales improved by almost 50% (again, these are not typos). DINO’s operating profile is showing signs of increasing strength; over the last twelve months, Net Income was 5.61% of Revenues and grew to 10.94% in the last quarter.
Free Cash Flow: DINO’s free cash flow is healthy, at $1.2 billion over the last twelve months. That marks an increase from $248.8 million a year ago, and from $592.3 million in the last quarter. The current number translates to a Free Cash Flow Yield of 10.41%.
Debt to Equity: DINO’s debt/equity ratio 0.34. This is a low number that speaks to management’s conservative approach to leverage. As of the last quarter, the company reported about $1.7 billion in cash and liquid assets against about $3.3 billion in long-term debt. The company’s operating profile indicates that debt service isn’t a concern, with improving flexibility on all fronts.
Dividend: DINO’s annual divided is $1.60 per share, which translates to a yield of 3.07% at the stock’s current price. Management suspended its dividend in 2020, owing partly to pandemic-related pressures but also to provide financial capacity to pursue a couple of major refinery acquisitions in 2021 in the Pacific Northwest and Rocky Mountain areas of the U.S. Management reinstated its dividend in May of this year, which a strong sign of management’s confidence in their long-term road ahead.
Price/Book Ratio: there are a lot of ways to measure how much a stock should be worth; but I like to worth with a combination of Price/Book and Price/Cash Flow analysis. Together, these measurements provide a long-term target at about $69 per share. That suggests that the stock is nicely undervalued, with about 34% upside from its current price.
Technical Profile
Here’s a look at the stock’s latest technical chart.
Current Price Action/Trends and Pivots: The yellow diagonal line traces the stock’s upward trend from a low at around $29 in March to its high in June at around $58. It also provides the baseline for the Fibonacci retracement lines shown on the chart. The stock’s last pivot high in late August was around $55 to mark immediate resistance, with the stock dropping back to start this week at current support around $48, roughly inline with the 38.2% retracement line. A drop below $48 should find next support at around $44 based on pivot activity seen in June and July as well as the 50% retracement line, while a push above $55 will find next resistance at the stock’s 52-week high at around $58; however if buying activity remains high at this level, the stock could push to about $61 per share in the near term.
Near-term Keys: I think DINO’s fundamental profile offers an interesting value proposition at its current price, along with an impressive set of fundamentals that are increasing in strength at a time when a lot of other companies throughout the market are seeing drawdowns and cost challenges to limit profitability. If you prefer to focus on short-term trading strategies, a drop below $48 could be a signal to consider shorting the stock or buying put options, with $44 offering a nice bearish profit target. The stock’s latest bounce off of support has the stock rallying, with about $4 of upside to immediate resistance, which could be a nice signal to think about buying the stock or working with call options, using $55 as a nice, quick bullish profit target, and $58 to $61 possible if buying activity increases.