Let's talk Valero - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
Search Top Stocks:

Let's talk Valero

Posted Nov 21 2007, 06:33 PM by Matt Koppenheffer
Rating:
Filed under: , ,

With Valero up almost 26% over the past 12 months versus the paltry sub-3% return of the S&P 500, it seems as good a time as any to question whether the stock can continue to deliver market-beating returns.

Though refiners like Valero don't directly profit from higher oil prices, rising prices do tend to boost the crack spread that refiners do profit from. And though oil fell back from the highs that it touched earlier in the day, it is still breathing down the neck of $100 per barrel.

On The Motley Fool's CAPS service, Valero has managed to score a perfect five-star rating from an aggregate 2,740 investor ratings (2,640 bulls versus just 100 bears). Though other refiners such as Delek and Alon share similarly high ratings, Valero blows both out of the water in terms of the total number of players bullish on the stock. [readmore]

Hukphinn, one of CAPS top rated players, has been bullish on Valero for over a year now and gave this pitch in support of the stock:

[Valero] is the largest independent U.S. refiner of oil, and it has a unique capacity to process sour crude, which represents a great proportion of the new supply of oil (e.g., from Saudi Arabia and, to a much lesser but increasing extent, the Canadian oil sands). Since new refineries are not coming online anytime soon, and other refiners don't have, and are not likely to develop in the short to medium-term, the capacity to process sour crude effectively, Valero enjoys a competitive advantage that will likely benefit its shareholders for some time to come.


There are still a lot of unknowns out there when it comes to the magnitude and duration of the housing debacle and how much exposure our financial institutions have to instruments barely worth the paper they were printed on. In an uncertain environment, the large and growing need for energy seems to be a pretty safe bet. Unless new refineries start springing from the earth, or it turns out Valero has been sitting on a bunch of subprime CDOs, I think CAPS players have highlighted a winner.

(Full disclosure: I do not have a financial position in any of the companies mentioned.)

To read more of the Top Stocks blog, click here.

Comments

 

the only thing i can tell you is that the president and his big bosses friends going out with a big bang before next year.

to the winner go the spoils was always there but now fore the sake of some smart operators so fill in the spaces

I've read the article entitled "Why $4-a-gallon gas is a bargain", and have to say that this is a very shallow view. If people around the world are paying even more than $4/gallon, they are being taken advantage of even worse than we are. People cite OPEC, Saudi Arabia, etc... because they are valid examples of corruption and greed. The oil companies are recording record profits while the average consumer is forced to make hard choices regarding the essentials of life. The steady increase of oil prices is causing equally steady increases in the cost of goods, which the consumer has to absorb. Unfortunately, the average working wage in this country has not increased to match the increased cost of goods, which again, is a direct result of the skyrocketing cost of oil. This is directly causing our nation to slide into a recession. Why are we not utilizing alternative fuel sources to ease the financial burden being placed on the backs of the populace? Why don't we freeze prices like we have in other industries that were out of control? Are we buying Saudi oil to protect Israel the way we buy Egyptian cotton (instead, we subsidize farmers to not grow cotton), for example? The article demonstrates either ignorance or a desire to mislead people on the part of the author. How about publishing an article that shows factual information on how high cost of oil actually affects the consumer?

Does any body know, what are some good hybrid vehicle and green energy stocks.?.? Who'll make the money when those are increasing? Parts makers overseas? Car Companies with a concern for the environment - that are overseas (Honda, Toyota?) Dealerships?? I try to buy American but if the next big thing is made mostly by overseas companies then what??

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):