Oil Volatility Is Back: 3 Canadian Stocks to Buy Now

Energy volatility is back, but these three TSX gas stocks offer scale, upside torque, and even a takeover catalyst.

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Key Points
  • Tourmaline is the blue-chip pick with record production, stronger free cash flow outlook, and a sustainable base dividend.
  • Birchcliff is the higher-risk, higher-upside option, since its cash flow can surge if gas prices rebound.
  • ARC is now a deal-driven story after Shell’s planned acquisition, with key risks around closing and regulatory timing.

Oil prices can turn fast, but so can opportunity. Energy investors have had plenty to watch lately. Crude prices remain jumpy, natural gas demand keeps building, and global buyers still want reliable supply from stable countries. That puts Canada back in focus. The trick, as always, is avoiding companies that only look good when commodity prices run hot. Investors need producers with strong assets, disciplined spending, and enough financial strength to handle the next price swing.

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Source: Getty Images

TOU

Tourmaline Oil (TSX:TOU) fits that brief better than almost anyone on the TSX. The company is Canada’s largest natural gas producer, with operations across the Alberta Deep Basin, northeast British Columbia, and the Montney. That scale gives it a real edge when markets get choppy. It can spread costs, control infrastructure, and move gas to better-priced markets.

Tourmaline stock looks relevant now as natural gas could regain attention as power demand rises and liquefied natural gas exports ramp up. In its latest first-quarter results, Tourmaline stock reported record production and pointed to higher free cash flow expectations for 2026 and 2027. That gives investors a useful mix of growth potential, income, and a balance sheet that doesn’t need heroic commodity prices to work. It also gives investors one of the cleaner ways to ride Canadian gas without reaching too far down the risk ladder.

The dividend adds another draw. Tourmaline stock planned a $0.50 quarterly base dividend for late June, and it has used special dividends before when cash flow allows. At writing, its yield now sits near 3.1%. The risk comes from gas prices. If North American prices weaken again, the stock could wobble. Still, for investors who want a blue-chip energy name with gas leverage, Tourmaline stock deserves a close look.

BIR

Birchcliff Energy (TSX:BIR) offers a smaller, more leveraged way to play the same theme. It focuses on the Montney in Alberta, producing natural gas, light oil, condensate, and other liquids. That makes it more sensitive to commodity prices than Tourmaline stock, but also gives it more torque if gas prices improve.

Birchcliff stands out now because it rebuilt momentum after a tougher stretch for gas producers. In May, the company reported strong first-quarter 2026 results and declared a $0.03 quarterly dividend. That payout won’t make income investors rich overnight, but it shows management still wants to return cash while funding growth.

The appeal here comes from operating leverage. If gas prices improve, Birchcliff could see cash flow move higher quickly. Its Montney position also gives it long-term relevance as LNG Canada and broader gas demand reshape the market. The risk is that smaller energy producers can take harder hits when prices fall. Therefore, Birchcliff suits investors who can handle volatility and want more upside than a steadier giant might offer.

ARX

ARC Resources (TSX:ARX) brings a different twist. It already ranks among Canada’s strongest Montney producers, with a mix of natural gas and liquids that supports steady cash flow. Its first-quarter 2026 numbers showed why the market likes it. ARC reported net income of $584 million, or $1.03 per share, up sharply from last year.

The bigger catalyst, though, is Shell‘s planned acquisition of ARC. Shell agreed to buy the company in a deal worth about $16.4 billion, including assumed debt. That gives ARC shareholders exposure to a major global energy company, while also showing how valuable Canadian Montney assets have become.

For investors, ARC now looks less like a pure standalone stock and more like a deal-driven opportunity. The upside depends on the transaction closing and the value of Shell shares. The risk comes from deal timing, regulatory issues, or changes in energy sentiment. Still, Shell’s interest sends a strong message: high-quality Canadian gas assets matter.

Bottom line

Oil volatility can scare investors away, but it can also spotlight the stronger names. Tourmaline stock offers scale, Birchcliff offers torque, and ARC offers a takeover-backed vote of confidence. For long-term investors who can stomach commodity swings, these three TSX energy stocks look well-positioned for the next big chapter.

Fool contributor Amy Legate-Wolfe has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Tourmaline Oil. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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