The majority of stock market participants focus on short-term news and events. That can easily be proven by looking at the 52-week high and low stock prices of any company with a stable business. Most of the time you can see large differences in the two numbers, even when not much has changed in that short amount of time. These swings create great opportunities for the savvy investor to take advantage of deeply discounted prices because the market's short-term mistake.
This is such a case. With the leading ETF of this sector down 30% since its peak, brave and savvy investors can step in and scoop of quality stocks at rock-bottom prices and profit from the eventual recovery. I see many reasons why this sector will recover in the long-term and am taking advantage of these solid entry points. I believe that this current bear market will be seen in the future as a great buying opportunity missed by many. Don't let yourself fall into that category.
The energy stocks sector is in a full-fledged bear market. The Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSE:XLE), which tracks the energy sector of the S&P 500, is down over 30% since it peaked in June 2014. With the current drop in the price of crude oil back into the mid-$40's, energy stock prices are falling well below the levels they reached early in 2015, the last time crude dropped below $50. The complete sector sell-off provides brave and savvy investors the opportunity to pick up quality energy stocks at bear market prices and profit from the eventual recovery.
Global crude demand is about 90 million barrels per day, with that number growing by one to two million each year. The cause of the current drop in crude is a global production excess of 1.5 to 2.5 million barrels per day. Crude oil production naturally declines by 5% to 8% per year. It takes very little production spending slow down to flip excess production to a shortage.
I think this one quote from the Wall Street Journal drives home the point: “Oil companies need to replace between 5% and 8% of crude output each year just to offset shrinking production from old wells, analysts estimate. But only six major oil projects worldwide received a go-ahead last year, compared with an average of more than 20 a year from 2002 to 2013, according to Deutsche Bank.”