After a brutal start to the year, Devon Energy (NYSE:DVN) has finally bounced following solid earnings. The domestic energy company has become a cash flow machine returning lots of capital to shareholders, making the stock appealing to buy on weakness considering the volatile energy sector. My investment thesis is ultra Bullish on the energy company at this valuation.
Improved Efficiency
While Devon Energy grew oil volumes 8% in 2023 to 317 m/bod, the company actually cut capital spending plans for 2024 by 10%. The goal is to keep oil volumes at 315 m/bod with capital spending dipping to $3.45 billion.
The company isn’t chasing the market with aggressive spending in order to capture more market share even with OPEC+ maintaining production cuts of 2 m/bod. Devon Energy will allow production volumes to possibly even dip in 2024 to only 650,000 m/boed compared to the 662,000 m/boed produced last year.
Devon Energy suggests breakeven funding at ~$40 per barrel of oil at WTI prices. Due to this low breakeven level, the company is able to generate substantial free cash flow, offering a nearly 10% yield at the current market cap with WTI prices around $80/bbl.
Due to the consistent cash flows from the higher capital efficiency from focusing on the Delaware Basin while generating better results in the Williston Basin and Eagle Ford, the company just hiked the fixed dividend by 10% to $0.22. The total Q1’24 dividend payout will be $0.44 for an annual payout of $1.76. Devon Energy only guarantees the fixed dividend with a yield of 1.9%, but investors are virtually guaranteed higher payouts on current oil prices along with stock buybacks.
The hiked fixed dividend only amounts to ~$600 million in annual payouts. Devon Energy produced $2.7 billion in free cash flow in 2023 and lower capital spending should boost cash flows in 2024 while the company forecast returning 70% of capital to shareholders.
The stock could definitely fall back to the lows at $40, but Devon produced strong results back in Q4’23 when oil prices were lower. The energy company had realized oil prices of nearly $77/bbl in Q4, while the company survived only $72/bbl back in Q2’23 when natural gas prices were $1.66/mcf.
Devon was still able to generated $1.4 billion in operating cash flows back in the June quarter. The company could still absorb far lower energy prices, though natural gas prices couldn’t sustain lower prices and WTI isn’t likely to stay below $70/bbl for long with OPEC+ cuts.
The stock only has a market cap of $29 billion for a company with $6+ billion in operating cash flows and a $5+ EPS. By every metric, Devon Energy is cheap and energy prices are closer to the lows than a premium level where risks to the downside are excessive.
An investor can build a solid position at the current cheap levels and get a dividend normally running at double the current fixed rate. Back after the weaker Q2 results due to lower oil prices, Devon Energy actually paid a variable dividend of $0.29 on top of the fixed rate of $0.20.
The combined $0.49 quarterly dividend would equate to a 4.2% dividend yield. Recently, management has proclaimed a desire to prioritize the share buybacks program at the current stock valuation.
Devon Energy bought 5.2 million shares for $234 million during the December quarter. The company has reduced the diluted share count from 677 million at the end of Q3’21 to only 636 million at the end of 2023. Devon has reduced the share count by 6% during a period where the company was more focused on dividend payouts, offering insight to the potential for a larger reduction in the outstanding share count.
Yielding The Most
Over the last few years, Devon Energy has consistently offered shareholders one of the best net payout yields. The current yield is nearly 10% while Occidental Petroleum (OXY), Pioneer Natural Resources (PXD) and Hess Corp. (HES) all became acquisition targets with lower yields of the combined net buyback yield and the dividend yield.
The market is clearly missing the opportunity to own a premier energy company on the cheap. While oil could definitely trade lower, the odds are that natural gas rallies eventually and oil is likely split on whether the next move is higher or lower.
Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B) continues loading up on Occidental, though Devon Energy offers the better net payout yield and the cheaper stock.
Takeaway
The key investor takeaway is that investors should continue loading up on Devon Energy, trading near multi-year lows while offering investors strong capital returns from positive cash flows via disciplined capital investments. At these prices, the stock offers some protection from lower oil prices, though the upside potential occurs with a rally in both oil or natural gas prices.