ZIM Integrated Shipping Services Ltd
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Industrials : Marine Transportation | Mid Cap Value
Based in Israel
Company profile

Zim Integrated Shipping Services Ltd is an Israel-based company. It operates as fleet and a network of shipping lines offering cargo transportation services on all major global trade routes, it also offers multi-modal, cargo handling, tariff management, schedule information, and other related services supported by the company's local offices and representatives around the world.

Closing Price
$23.16
Day's Change
-1.22 (-5.00%)
Bid
--
Ask
--
B/A Size
--
Day's High
24.20
Day's Low
22.96
Volume
(Light)
Volume:
3,795,717

10-day average volume:
6,814,559
3,795,717

MarketWatch's 2022 stock of the year: Warren Buffett, oil and a 120% return

9:49 am ET December 24, 2022 (MarketWatch)
Print

By Philip van Doorn

An industry sea change and a tremendous investment by Berkshire Hathaway helped fuel shares of Occidental Petroleum

It has been a brutal bear-market year for stocks in 2022. Stocks have plunged by nearly 19%, as measured by the S&P 500, and many once-highflying tech stocks have fallen even more.

Which makes MarketWatch's stock of the year even more notable. Amid the stock-market carnage, one big company stock has outperformed the others. What has made the stock even more remarkable is that not so long ago, it was trading as if the company were headed for bankruptcy.

Occidental Petroleum (OXY) is MarketWatch's 2022 stock of the year. Occidental is the best-performing stock in the S&P 500 this year and by some measures the stock is still cheaply priced, despite Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett's vote of confidence and the strength of the energy sector.

Shares of Occidental Petroleum have risen 120% during a year in which the energy sector has been the only one in the benchmark index to show a gain, as you can see below.

Russia's invasion of Ukraine served as a catalyst for oil and natural gas producers as the world energy supply was disrupted.

Then during the first quarter, Berkshire Hathaway (BRKA) began buying Occidental's stock, after Buffett complimented Occidental CEO Vicki Hollub's plans to pay down the oil producer's debt and repurchase shares.

By the end of the third quarter, Berkshire's stake in Occidental Petroleum's common shares had increased to 21.38%, according to FactSet.

Incidentally, Berkshire's stock has risen 3% this year.

Getting back to Occidental, the company's revenue for the first three quarters of 2022 increased 57% to $28.42 billion, while its earnings per share shot up to $10.64 from 19 cents a year earlier.

Thinking longer-term for oil

Now, for some broader context, take a look at how prices of West Texas Intermediate crude oil have moved over the past 10 years:

Oil prices have given up most of their gains from early in 2022, falling from a momentary peak for WTI at $130.50 on March 7 to $79.71 on Dec. 22. But prices are still relatively high for the period following the broad decline that began during the summer of 2014. At that time, the stage was set for a tumble because U.S. shale oil producers had changed the world market through a long period of heavy capital investment and increasing supply. Saudi Arabia further increased oil production and the resulting price crash sent many U.S. players into bankruptcy and forced industry consolidation, including Occidental's acquisition of Anadarko in 2019.

Then the temporary elimination of demand during the early stages of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020 sent oil to incredibly low prices. For a while, Occidental's Anadarko deal looked like a disaster that could sink the entire company. But with rising oil prices and prudent financial management, Hollub has turned things around and resisted calls from the White House to push for more production.

What lies ahead? Take a look at this chart showing how oil-industry investment was declining as demand was increasing through 2021:

The chart was provided by Sam Peters, a portfolio manager at ClearBridge Investments. It shows an energy industry that has learned its lesson. If supply expands too rapidly, the eventual drop in prices will hurt the bottom line.

We are now in a long period during which management teams at major oil producers are more focused on prudent spending to maintain supply, rather than expand it, as they deploy excess cash through buybacks and dividends.

In an interview with Matt Peterson as part of the MarketWatch 50 series, Hollub explained that with a $40 break-even point for production, "there's no pressure to increase production right now, when we have these other two ways that we can increase shareholder value."

An inexpensive stock and sector

Here's how the 11 sectors of the S&P 500 have performed this year, and how their forward price-to-earnings ratios have changed:

Index                   2022 price change  Forward P/E  Forward P/E -- Dec. 31, 2021 
Energy                              56.9%          9.4                         11.1 
Utilities                           -1.2%         18.5                         20.4 
Consumer staples                    -2.6%         20.9                         21.8 
Health Care                         -3.3%         17.4                         17.2 
Industrials                         -6.3%         18.1                         20.8 
Financials                         -12.6%         11.6                         14.6 
Materials                          -12.8%         16.0                         17.0 
Information technology             -27.0%         20.2                         28.1 
Real Estate                        -28.3%         16.2                         24.2 
Consumer discretionary             -36.2%         21.4                         33.2 
Communication services             -40.3%         14.2                         20.8 
S&P 500                            -18.6%         16.7                         21.5 
                                                                    Source: FactSet 

P/E ratios have declined for the index and all but one of its sectors, but this is especially notable for the energy sector when it has risen 54%.

Occidental Petroleum trades for 8.3 times the consensus earnings-per-share estimate for the next 12 months among analysts polled by FactSet. That's down from 9.9 at the end of 2021.

The energy sector has, by far, the lowest P/E of any S&P 500 sector. On this basis, it is trading for only 56% of the S&P 500's value. If we look back five years (averaging monthly prices to limit the effect of very short spikes or declines), energy on average has traded at 57% of the S&P 500's forward P/E. But if we look back at 10-year, 15-year and 20-year averages, those numbers rise to 104%, 99% and 94%, respectively.

Energy stocks remain relatively inexpensive based on long-term averages and the supply and demand setup still looks good for investors who can remain committed.

This year's top 10 stocks in the S&P 500

Here are this year's 10 best performers in the benchmark index:

Company                     Ticker  Sector                  Industry                 2022 price change 
Occidental Petroleum Corp.   OXY    Energy                  Oil & Gas Production                  120% 
Hess Corp.                   HES    Energy                  Oil & Gas Production                   90% 
First Solar Inc.             FSLR   Information Technology  Semiconductors                         86% 
Marathon Petroleum Corp.     MPC    Energy                  Oil Refining/ Marketing                79% 
Schlumberger Ltd.            SLB    Energy                  Contract Drilling                      78% 
Exxon Mobil Corp.            XOM    Energy                  Integrated Oil                         77% 
APA Corp.                    APA    Energy                  Integrated Oil                         74% 
Enphase Energy Inc.          ENPH   Information Technology  Semiconductors                         73% 
Marathon Oil Corp.           MRO    Energy                  Oil & Gas Production                   69% 
Halliburton Co.              HAL    Energy                  Oil & Gas Production                   69% 
                                                                                       Source: FactSet 

Click the ticker symbols for more about each company.

Click here for a detailed guide to the wealth of information available for free on the MarketWatch quote page.

All but two of these companies are in the energy sector, and the other two, First Solar Inc. (FSLR) and Enphase Energy Inc. (ENPH), make solar power equipment.

Don't miss: Tesla's stock drop has been bad. But this company has wiped out more investor wealth in 2022

-Philip van Doorn

	

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

December 24, 2022 09:49 ET (14:49 GMT)

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