No one is a font of all knowledge on the sometimes skittish and always challenging securities markets. That's true of well-known energy seer T. Boone Pickens, who not so many years ago was urging us to believe that wind power was simply waiting for widespread acceptance before blowing all our problems away.
That contention now seems to be largely a thing of the past, and Boone has moved to a more sensible stance that the nation should boost its use of natural gas as a transportation fuel. He continues to believe in the desirability of a movement toward increased use of the cleaner-burning hydrocarbon -- as do I -- despite the U.S. Senate's less than impressive defeat of the so-called NAT GAS Act in mid-March. I'm always eager to tap Boone's -- I can call him that; I've met him -- notions about compelling energy names. I received a new dose of thoughts when he appeared on CNBC Tuesday.
Simply divine
From a big-picture perspective, Pickens is obviously ebullient about our nation's energy opportunities. "To have these resources show up in America at this time is divine intervention," he said. And as if crediting a higher authority weren't enough, he went on to add that, "we (in the U.S.) have the cheapest energy in the world."
I concur on both counts. And while I have my own thoughts about which energy stocks are especially attractive -- EOG Resources
Biggest in the Bakken
The first-mentioned of Pickens' preferences was Continental Resources
In the most recent quarter, Continental was able to increase its barrels of oil equivalent production by 14% sequentially. On a year-over-year basis, its production jumped by a whopping 66%. As CEO Harold Hamm said as the results were released, "Along with good well performance, the two factors driving our results are faster drilling cycle times and our increased working interest ownership in Bakken wells."
Talking sense in the Senate
Coincidentally, at about the same time that Pickens was appearing before a national television audience, Hamm was testifying before the Senate Finance Committee, defending the continuance of the deductibility of "intangible drilling costs" by oil and gas producers. Under long-standing tax law the companies can deduct labor and other expenses incurred in the drilling process. "We could stop this energy renaissance. We certainly do not want to do that," Hamm told the lawmakers regarding the possibility of revoking the deductions.
On the other side was Dale Jorgenson, a Harvard economist who called a potential tax reform an opportunity to fashion a new tax on fossil fuel use that would create, "a truly level playing field ... [needed] to recognize the environmental hidden costs associated with the combustion of fossil fuels." There was no indication whether such a leveling would include loan guarantees for nascent fossil fuel companies like those that have been awarded to the likes of Solyndra.
Pickens' other recommendation was Pioneer Natural Resources
Changes at Chesapeake
When asked whether his energy funds having exited troubled Chesapeake Energy
For now, however, while crude prices have slid during the course of this year, they remain comparatively higher than natural gas levies. On that basis, and because their management teams clearly recognize that they're guiding public companies -- unlike the crew at Chesapeake -- I urge you at the very least to add Continental Resources and Pioneer Natural Resources to your Motley Watchlists.