Buffett, Jones and Hamm: An Oil Wisdom Trifecta

Printable Version

Dear fellow investors, 

Someone once said, “Better than being smart is knowing who is!” Over the last few weeks, three of the richest and most successful businessmen in the U.S. have let us know what they think about being in the oil and gas business. Warren Buffett, Jerry Jones and Harold Hamm are instructing us in a special way and we at Smead Capital Management are happy to be instructed. It is a trifecta that any good handicapper couldn’t pass up.

Warren Buffett bought over nine million shares of Occidental Petroleum (OXY) for around $56 per share between June 17th and June 22nd. Counting his warrants and shares purchased earlier this year, he controls 25% of the company. His prior purchases were also in the $50-58 per share range. Additionally, Buffett has invested heavily ($20 billion) in Chevron (CVX). For a guy who was gun shy in the aftermath of the COVID-19 outbreak, this aggressive deployment of cash spells long-term bullishness to us.

Jerry Jones was featured in a story by The Wall Street Journal about his $1.1 billion investment in Comstock Resources, a major natural gas producer. After an extensive rundown on how his investment had grown to $2.7 billion, Jones is quoted as saying about energy prices, “We’re still in the first quarter!” Jones believes we are in the early stages of a favorable long-term bull market for energy.

Harold Hamm is the showstopper in this triumvirate. Hamm explained that since the stock market isn’t properly valuing his and other oil and gas producers, he was going to put us minority shareholders out of our misery. He is offering $70 per share and the offer is being turned over to his independent board members to see if that is a fair price.

Our argument on that subject is very simple. Below is the stock chart of Continental Resources (CLR) with the price of oil over the last five years. Continental traded at $70 per share when oil was much lower than the $100 per barrel current prices. In effect, he is using Wall Street’s mispricing to steal the shares from the investors who invested the last two years when they had no fans.

As you can see, CLR used to track very closely with the price of crude, peaking at $71.79 with crude oil at $79.76. Today, the spread between crude and the share price of CLR has massively widened at a time when investors would normally be falling all over each other to buy these stocks. Hence, Hamm’s willingness to borrow against the copious free cash flow of CLR to buy out minority shareholders for what historically looks like a song.

Let’s put this in a real-world setting. Hypothetically, we will assume that Jerry Jones, Warren Buffett and Harold Hamm are at the Dallas Cowboys game as Jerry Jones’s guest in the owner’s suite. You are also a guest and hear them talking about what each other is doing in the oil patch. What would you do the following Monday after hearing this chitchat as a guest in that owner’s suite? What are investors doing the week after? They are selling oil stocks down to the lowest prices in weeks.

We are bullish on oil and gas and own CLR, OXY, COP and CVX in our U.S. portfolio. We know that investors are worried about what a recession would do to gasoline consumption. However, a number of recessions happened in the 1970s and those economic slowdowns didn’t stop oil and gas stocks from being the best performing stocks of that decade. Fear stock market failure.

Warm regards,

william smead.

William Smead

The information contained in this missive represents Smead Capital Management’s opinions, and should not be construed as personalized or individualized investment advice and are subject to change. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Bill Smead, CIO, wrote this article. It should not be assumed that investing in any securities mentioned above will or will not be profitable. Portfolio composition is subject to change at any time and references to specific securities, industries and sectors in this letter are not recommendations to purchase or sell any particular security. Current and future portfolio holdings are subject to risk. In preparing this document, SCM has relied upon and assumed, without independent verification, the accuracy and completeness of all information available from public sources. A list of all recommendations made by Smead Capital Management within the past twelve-month period is available upon request.

©2022 Smead Capital Management, Inc. All rights reserved.

This Missive and others are available at www.smeadcap.com.4.9

We Advise Investors

Sign up to get our advice sent straight to your inbox.

Recent Missives

DXYZ: An Old Form of Ignorance

April 23, 2024

Many investors are bullish, or not fearful, of the future of stock returns. At Smead Capital Management, we continue to explain to our investors how poor the outcomes will be. Some ask when...

⟶ Keep Reading

1Q24 U.S. Value Strategy Newsletter: Common Stock Psychology Matters

April 15, 2024

There are four main educational disciplines that are important to us in the investment process. We believe investors need to understand economics, the history of the stock market, the mathematics of investing and...

⟶ Keep Reading

1Q24 International Value Strategy Newsletter: Higher Natural Rates

April 15, 2024

As we finish the first quarter of 2024 and look ahead, global stock investors are looking for lower short-term rates from central banks. The question remains whether they will get them. Looking back...

⟶ Keep Reading

Bloomberg Markets: Bill Smead on Bank Stocks and Inflation

April 13, 2024

Bloomberg Markets 4/12/2024 For more information go to www.bloomberg.com. The information contained in this article represents SCM’s opinions, and should not be construed as personalized or individualized investment advice. Past […]

⟶ Keep Reading

Hit Them Where They Ain’t

April 2, 2024

[...] As value investors, we go into companies that are out of favor but have characteristics that could lead us to multi-year winners. Our best stocks were found in the holes in the...

⟶ Keep Reading

Saved by Zero

March 19, 2024

[...] The U.S. Federal Government has set a net zero carbon goal by 2050. Tremendous resources have been applied with borrowed money to fund these goals and subsidize money-losing green investments. After pouring...

⟶ Keep Reading

We Advise Investors

Sign up to get our advice sent straight to your inbox.

US INVESTORS

Individual Investors

OR

Financial Advisors, Family Offices,
and Institutional Investors

OR

NON-US INVESTORS

Individual Investors

OR

Financial Advisors, Family Offices,
and Institutional Investors

OR

Scroll to Top