Those watching the oil space know that prices for the fuel have been volatile since they soared past $140 per barrel in 2008. Prices have plunged since then, but in 2016 sentiment in the sector was boosted when OPEC and 11 other producers made a deal to cut oil output.
In early 2018, a production shortfall in Venezuela and US sanctions against Iranian exports increased fears of a global oil shortage. The reduction in supply prompted Russia and Saudi Arabia to ramp up production to ensure a shortage did not materialize.
Analysts believe demand for oil will not slow any time soon, but remain cautious. In fact, accounting and consultancy firm Deloitte points out that while demand remains steady the role some countries play in the oil and gas sector is changing.
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“Indeed, across oil, natural gas, and chemicals, increasing US exports are helping to bolster activity, with all showing continued growth in shipping to international markets. The United States has been a major producer, but now it is consolidating its position as a leading exporter of crude oil, refined products,and natural gas, thereby becoming a big influence in global market trends,” the firm states.
There’s no question that those circumstances have left many market participants cutting bullish bets on oil. However, some still believe now may be the perfect time to get involved in the oil market. With that in mind, the Investing News Network has put together a brief how to guide for investing in oil.
Investing in oil: Futures and ETFs
Those interested in investing in oil have various options, from direct methods like purchasing oil futures, which are high risk and highly volatile, to purchasing lower-risk energy sector exchange-traded funds (ETFs). Those include the iShares Global Energy Sector ETF (BMV:IXC), or mutual funds like the T. Rowe Price New Era Fund (MUTF:PRNEX).
Futures trading requires due diligence, and can be difficult for the average investor to understand. But for those in the know, here are some futures contracts offered on the NYMEX: Light Sweet Crude Oil, Brent Crude, E-mini Crude Oil, the Crude Oil Volatility Index (INDEXCBOE:OVX) and RBOB Gasoline.
As mentioned, ETFs are a great way to invest in the sector at a lower risk. That’s largely because they allow investors to gain exposure to a diversified portfolio while only having to track a single stock.
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Besides the iShares Global Energy Sector ETF, other oil ETFs include: the United States Oil Fund (ARCA:USO), the United States Brent Oil Fund (ARCA:BNO), the Energy Select Sector SPDR (ARCA:XLE), the United States 12 Month Oil Fund (ARCA:USL), the PowerShares DB Oil Fund (ARCA:DBO), the United States Gasoline Fund (ARCA:UGA) and the SPDR S&P Oil & Gas Explore & Product (ARCA:XOP).
Investing in oil: Stocks
Of course, there’s also the option of investing in oil exploration, development and production companies. Some of the oil company stocks recommended by CommodityHQ offer strong dividend options and have high liquidity, such as ExxonMobil (NYSE:XOM), BP (NYSE:BP,LSE:BP), ConocoPhillips (NYSE:COP), Transocean (NYSE:RIG) and Anadarko Petroleum (NYSE:APC).
Similarly, Keith Schaefer, editor and publisher of the Oil and Gas Investments Bulletin, has highlighted some smaller oil companies that he believes investors should keep an eye on. Those energy stocks are: Cardinal Energy (TSX:CJ) and Select Sands (TSXV:SNS).
Darrell Bishop, head of energy research of Haywood Securities, has also discussed his favorite energy stock picks. Bishop, who is positive about Canada’s potential, suggested investors watch out for Blackbird Energy, which merged with Pipestone Energy (TSXV:PIPE) in early 2019, and Parex Resources (TSX:PXT).
Whether you choose publicly traded oil company stocks, investing in oil futures or long-term investments, the energy sector offers plenty of ways to invest in the industry.
This is an updated version of an article originally published by the Investing News Network in 2015.
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Securities Disclosure: I, Georgia Williams, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.
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