Why You Should Buy Imperial Oil

The executive team at Imperial Oil may be the best in the oil patch. One chart shows why.

| More on:
The Motley Fool

“The metric that the press usually focuses on is growth in revenues and profits. It’s the increase in a company’s per share value, not growth in sales or earnings or employees, that offers the ultimate barometer of a CEO’s greatness.”

The Outsiders: Eight Unconventional CEOs and Their Radically Rational Blueprint for Success

When we invest in a company, we are entrusting our capital to management. It’s logical to assume our return on investment will only be as good as the people running it. As evidenced by the single graphic below, it’s clear that the executive team at Imperial Oil (TSX: IMO) is the best in the Alberta oil patch.

Why should I buy this stock?

At first glance, there’s no compelling reason you should.

According to the company’s own guidance, production is expected to grow 10% annually through 2020. But the company’s oil sand rivals such as Canadian Natural Resources and Suncor are growing output even faster.

How about dividends? Once again Imperial disappoints. At 1.01% the stock has the lowest yield amongst its peers. Income hungry investors can easily triple their income stream in names like Cenovus or Husky Energy.

This might be acceptable if Imperial was “cheap.” But on most conventional valuation metrics — such as EV/EBITDAX, price to earnings, or price to book — the stock actually looks a little expensive.

The case to buy Imperial Oil in a single chart

Of course, basing any investment decision on a single statistic would be foolhardy. However, the case to buy Imperial Oil could probably be summed up by this graphic.

What does the chart show? Imperial Oil is (by a mile) the best capital allocator in the Alberta oil patch.

In the energy industry, we have a useful metric to determine how well a management is allocating our money: return on capital employed, or ROCE. This metric is important in capital intensive industries such as airlines or semiconductors.

What Imperial has that its competitors lack is discipline. The company only allocates capital to its highest returning ventures. If management cannot find enough new projects that meet a high return threshold, they will return excess capital to shareholders through dividends and buybacks. Over the past 20 years, the company has repurchased over half of its outstanding shares. That means shareholders have been able to double their stake in a wonderful business tax-free.

Screenshot 2014-03-16 at 11.45.18 AM.png

Source: Imperial Oil Investor Presentation

Imperial’s rivals, as apparent by the chart above, are a little too eager to deploy that capital into low quality projects. Managing over a larger corporate empire may stoke some management egos, but happy executives never put money in my pocket. Sure, Imperial could have grown faster as its competitors did. But that would require expensive investments and shareholders may be able to find better returns elsewhere.

Foolish bottom line

Great executives focus on generating returns for shareholders and not growing the size of the business. Sometimes those are synonymous. Sometimes they’re not. Imperial’s management team understands this better than anybody, and that’s why the stock deserves a long-term place in your portfolio.

Fool contributor Robert Baillieul has no positions in any of the companies mentioned in this article.

More on Investing

man in bowtie poses with abacus
Dividend Stocks

How Much Canadians Typically Have in a TFSA by Age 55

The average 55-to-59-year-old's TFSA balance is a useful benchmark, but Loblaw shows how investing well can still move the needle.

Read more »

stocks climbing green bull market
Dividend Stocks

The Canadian Dividend Stock I’d Trust When Markets Get Choppy

Intact Financial (TSX:IFC) stock is the TSX dividend fortress that just keeps delivering

Read more »

dividends can compound over time
Dividend Stocks

3 Ultra-High-Yield Dividend Stocks I’m Still Buying

These three ultra-high yields look tempting, but each one pays you in a very different (and with a very different…

Read more »

Aerial view of a wind farm
Dividend Stocks

Maximum TFSA Impact: 2 TSX Stocks to Help Multiply Your Wealth

Want to get more out of your TFSA? These two TSX stocks could help you grow wealth steadily over time.

Read more »

panning for gold uncovers nuggets and flakes
Metals and Mining Stocks

Invest $5,000 in This Dividend Stock for $145.75 in Passive Income

See how Lundin Gold's dividends can transform your investment strategy with substantial returns during gold rallies.

Read more »

Child measures his height on wall. He is growing taller.
Energy Stocks

A Canadian Energy Stock Poised for Big Growth in 2026

Tourmaline looks set up for 2026 because it’s growing production while staying disciplined on spending.

Read more »

Canada day banner background design of flag
Dividend Stocks

The Very Best Canadian Stocks to Hold Forever in a TFSA

The best Canadian stocks to hold forever in a TFSA, and why CNR, BCE, and GRT.UN offer long‑term stability, income,…

Read more »

House models and one with REIT real estate investment trust.
Dividend Stocks

It’s Time to Buy: 1 Oversold TSX Stock Poised for a Comeback

Here's why this oversold TSX stock, offering a dividend yield above 4%, might just be the best long-term investment you…

Read more »