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Is Hyperdynamics a Stock for the Long Term?

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Being able to retire rich, or at least comfortable, is the goal of almost any investor. However, it's much easier said than done. In a recent Wells Fargo survey, respondents between the ages of 50 and 59 said that they had, on average, about $29,000 saved up. With pensions all but gone, and Social Security targeted for cuts in the future, it's hard to count on anyone but yourself. But $29,000 isn't going to cut it for most people, so you've got to get involved in the stock market in order to grow that nest egg. Getting in the game is the easy part; choosing the right stocks is the hard part.

Making prudent decisions
Generally speaking, I look for four traits in a retirement stock:

  1. Valuation: Investors of all ages want to make sure they're not overpaying for a stock, but this matters even more in retirement. Retirees don't have the long time horizon that younger investors have, so it's essential to make sure you don't overpay in the short term.
  2. Dividends: Most retirees need a combination of both growth and income, as they'll be depending more and more on their portfolio to help with everyday expenses. Companies that pay dividends not only offer immediate income, but they've also proven to outperform non-paying dividend companies over long periods of time.
  3. Growth: Investors love dividends, but everyone wants to see their stocks rise over time. Growth can be as big a part of your portfolio as a steady dividend. It's important to note that you don't need a high-flying stock that's going to shoot to the moon; a company that can grow and outperform the market is hard enough to find, so steady growth is highly covetable.
  4. Low volatility: Retirees want to invest in great growth stocks just as much as anyone else, but they also want to be able to rest well knowing that their portfolio won't be taking them on a roller-coaster ride. At the end of the day, most retirees would rather own a sturdy company that lets them sleep at night than a company that whips up and down with the gyrations of the market.

Although some companies are definitely more geared toward retirees, which companies you choose to invest in will be dictated largely by what you already have in your portfolio. Small, mid, and large caps can all play a role in your investing strategy, so I chose to evaluate all varieties of stocks in this regular series.

So how does Hyperdynamics stack up?
In order to check out the valuation of Hyperdynamics (NYSE: HDY  ) , we don't want to look at only its P/E ratio, which isn't meaningful. That may seem unhelpful because it's hard to draw context for a company with no current P/E. However, if a company doesn't have a P/E, it's usually because it had negative earnings that year, which in itself tells us that something hasn't quite been right. Normally we'd look at the historical five-year average P/E and compare it to the current one, but since we don't have one, that action is rather fruitless.

Hyperdynamics' dividend is 0%. Although we'd love to see all companies pay a dividend, sometimes it just doesn't make strategic sense -- and of course companies can still pursue share buybacks in order to provide shareholder value.

Next, we want to ensure that Hyperdynamics' stock has the ability to rise over the next five, 10, or 20 years. A company that's growing its net income has the best possible chance to see its share price rise over time. Of course, we can't predict the future, but we can look back to get an idea of how the company has performed in the past in order to try to ensure future earnings growth. Over the past five years, Hyperdynamics has grown its net income by 7.15%. Fortunately, Hyperdynamics has been able to grow its earnings over the past five years, and that's pretty significant considering all of the market turmoil in the last few years. Of course, this doesn't mean that growth will continue, but it's a great sign that the company can prosper in the face of difficulty.

One of the best measures of volatility is called beta. Beta measures the impact that the movement of the stock market will have on a particular stock. For instance, a beta of 1.0 signifies that Hyperdynamics will move in tandem with the market; a beta of 2.0 means that the stock will move up twice as much as the general market, and vice versa. In this particular case, Hyperdynamics has a beta of 2.03, which is pretty high. Generally speaking I like to see a beta below 1.2 for retirees.

Let's look at the competition
We've taken a look at Hyperdynamics, and maybe you think it's passed all the tests, or maybe you just don't feel comfortable with the results. Either way, it's beneficial to see how a company stacks up in its industry, because it's just as important to understand a company's competitors as it is to understand that particular company. Here are Hyperdynamics' stats when compared to three of its closest competitors:

Company

Current P/E

Dividend Yield

5-Year Net Income CAGR

1-Year Beta

Hyperdynamics NM 0% 7.2% 2.0
Noble Energy (NYSE: NBL  ) 22.6 0.8% 2.3% 1.0
Zion Oil & Gas (Nasdaq: ZN  ) NM 0% 80.6% 0.5
Vaalco Energy (NYSE: EGY  ) 14.8 0% 1.3% 1.2

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's. NM = not meaningful.

Each company has traits to like and traits left to be desired. Either way, it's beneficial to look at the industry picture and not just Hyperdynamics in isolation.

Of course, I can't decide for you whether or not this is the best stock for retirement, but it has passed one of the four tests, which shows that this stock has some promise, although there could be some better deals out there for your retirement buck. Depending on which traits are most important for you, you'd be wise to look further into this stock for your portfolio.

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Jordan DiPietro owns no shares in the companies mentioned above. The Fool owns shares of Wells Fargo. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.


Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On May 18, 2011, at 1:44 PM, thirdcoast wrote:

    Noble- 10.25B market cap

    HDY- 0.5M market cap

    Close competitors?

    Once again your analysis is hilarious!

    Nice headline lol...It should say:

    "Dont click the PR below that mentions HDY's signed rig contract"

    At least you focus on retirees this time...the senile are the only ones still around that might buy into the fools pathetic newsletter spam on HDY.

  • Report this Comment On May 18, 2011, at 1:46 PM, foolsdiligence wrote:

    In the past quarter, institutional investment in HDY increased substantially. Who's the fool? These guys?

    BLACKROCK GROUP LTD

    STATE STREET CORP

    SUSQUEHANNA

    DISCOVERY CAPITAL

    KLEINHEINZ CAPITAL

    ROXBURY CAPITAL

    HODGES CAPITAL

    CITADEL ADVISORS LLC

    REVELATION CAPITAL

    VANGUARD GROUP INC

    DLS CAPITAL

    WEINTRAUB CAPITAL MA

    CAISSE DE DEPOT

    AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL

    CHARTER OAK PARTNERS

    FIRST NEW YORK SECUR.

    PINE RIVER CAPITAL

    ESSEX INVESTMENT MAN.

    SCHWAB CHARLES INVEST.

    CALIFORNIA PUBLIC EMP

    CREDIT SUISSE AG/

    DEUTSCHE BANK AG

    BLACKROCK FUND ADVIS.

    LMR MASTER FUND LTD

    MARSHALL WACE NORTH

    MORGAN STANLEY

    DYNAMIS ADVISORS

    COMMERZBANK AKTIENGE

    MADISON STREET PARTN.

    RUSSELL FRANK CO

    IFC HOLDINGS INC

    BLUEFOOT PARTNERS

    DRIEHAUS CAPITAL MAN

    INVESCO LTD

    FIRST DALLAS SECURIT.

    HELIOS ADVISORS LLC

    GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP

    ING GROEP NV

    CITIGROUP INC

    KNIGHT CAPITAL GROUP

    SPOT TRADING L.L.C

    J P MORGAN CHASE & C

    FIC CAPITAL INC

    ARROW INVESTMENT ADV

    and more . . . .

    INSTITUTIONAL Holdings Summary

    Total Number of Holders 84

    % of Shares Outstanding 28.84%

    Total Shares Held 44,861,707

    An increase of 25M+ shares . . . and climbing rapidly

    http://www.nasdaq.com/asp/holdings.asp?symbol=HDY&select...

  • Report this Comment On May 18, 2011, at 2:39 PM, xlordluckx wrote:

    Another poorly written article that borders on negligently misleading.

    Your argument falls apart the moment you don't compare similar companies, which unfortunately was at the very beginning. Hence the entire article is worse than useless, as it actually masks the potential of HDY.

    You do your readers and your reputation (assuming you have one) a grave disservice by such poor analysis.

    The other posters have pointed out just who is jumping on board HDY. There's some pretty reputable companies in that list...but Jordan DiPietro says it's a bad buy.

    Foolish Readers, I think that's all you need to know.

  • Report this Comment On May 18, 2011, at 2:44 PM, HDYFAN wrote:

    MF misses the point entirely. HDY is completely about the probably billions of barrels of oil/natural gas equivalent in it's 77% of the Guinea offshore concession.

    HDY can go up 10 times in value, and then double or triple from there...on proven reserves alone. Drilling begins later this year on the highly prospective concession/oil province.

    All the best from Beavercreek OH

    GL

  • Report this Comment On May 18, 2011, at 3:57 PM, Symplicity wrote:

    lol

    I got a good laugh out of this.

  • Report this Comment On May 18, 2011, at 4:08 PM, ArniePalmer wrote:

    Why are you boys at the Fool so concerned about a small Houston company with no revenues? And why all the negative press? Me thinks youre trying to pull the wool over some peoples eyes. Trying to protect your short position boys? ahhahahahhh... we will have your shirts come 4th qtr... perhaps sooner!

  • Report this Comment On May 18, 2011, at 6:13 PM, royaliowa wrote:

    Yes one has to wonder WHY? You goofballs have made a CAREER of trying to bring down HDY for some reason, I am suspect of your reason for article after article trying to convince people to not buy this stock.

    Do you really think everyone who is a fool reader hasn't already gotten your drift, you want HDY to drop.

    really piss poor reporting and very bias, but WHY

  • Report this Comment On May 18, 2011, at 6:20 PM, OrgonGuy wrote:

    This article is so far off base as to be beyond laughable. HDY has no Price/Earnings ratio be cause it has no earnings. Unless HDY makes a diversification trade for already producing oil properties (a distinct possibility) it will not have any earnings for at least 3 years! A dividend with no earnings would be suicide. HDY stock is all about growth (10 times or more is easily possible) and nothing else for years to come. According to the author's solid (though conservative) criteria for a retirement investment, HDY should not ever be considered as it fails on all but one point.

    These comparisons to dissimilar companies make no sense. This article (like most written about HDY from the "Fool") is a total waste of bandwidth.

    I encourage you to do your own Due Diligence on HDY. You will be amazed at the potential, but you will not find safety and stability.

  • Report this Comment On May 19, 2011, at 3:31 PM, kkkkkhai wrote:

    maybe i'm being a jerk, but wouldn't a more prudent columnist be ready to defend himself against this type of abasement? DId you use some type of auto-fill program to write your articles? I've been trading for a whole 4 mths and I definitely could have spit out an article in less than 30 mins that could blow yours out of the water, kind sir.

    go do some more homework,

    newbie

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