How far will crude fall this time? And, can a fundamentally sound company have its shareholders rewarded with tempered downside and explosive upside? Below is a look at what might be in store for Halliburton investors.
What The Bulls See
- A healthy annual dividend rate of 1.6 percent
- Attractive valuation metrics:
- An enterprise value of $42.80 billion versus a market capitalization of $36.69 billion
- A price-to-sales ratio of 1.14
- A price-to-book ratio of 2.37
- A P/E ratio of 23 versus expected EPS growth of 32.4 percent for the next year
- 6.86 percent net profit margins that spin off $1.49 billion in positive levered free cash flow annually
- Strong management effectiveness metrics:
- A return-on-assets of 9.59 percent
- A return-on-equity of 14.86 percent
- Some good balance sheet metrics:
- 50.19 percent debt-to-equity ratio
- A current ratio of 2.76
What The Bears See
- Cash of $2.36 billion versus total debt of $7.84 billion
- A P/E ratio of around 23 that seems expensive versus expected revenue growth of only 4.6 percent
The Technical Take
Technicians note that Halliburton shares may be in a short-term "abc" downside correction with a target of around $40.75. If that support holds up, a move up to the mid-$50s could occur. That's the most bullish scenario.
The more bearish scenario would have the stock in the early stages of a larger "ABC" downside correction, with the nearest support not coming in until $37.30–$38.70. Either way, there appears to be some short-term downside action ahead for the shares.
Overall
Halliburton shares will certainly be a screaming "buy" at some point – likely when the weight of lower crude prices is less of a problem for the sector. The technical crowd would tell even the staunchest bulls to be patient before pulling the trigger on new long positions.
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