The Shell share price dips! Is this offer too good to turn down?

The Shell (LSE:SHEL) share price has fallen around 6% from its peak earlier in the autumn. It’s not a huge fall, or even a correction, but it could offer keen investors an opportunity to buy at a lower entry point. 

Valuations

Shell is a vertically integrated oil company and it’s useful, for investment purposes, to compare the Anglo-Dutch company against its peers. So, when I look at the ‘Big Six’ a couple of trends emerge. Firstly, the American companies trade at a premium although they tend to have stronger net income margins. Meanwhile, the European companies trade at lower multiples relative to their earnings.

Eni often appears cheap on a price-to-sales basis. However, its profits margins tend to be lower. It’s an international oil company (IOC) but it’s partially owned by the Italian government, and this means it can occasionally appear more like a national oil company — it has objectives that aren’t purely profit-related (e.g., employment and security of supply). As such, Eni is only non-top-rated oil company for profitability. Eni has a much lower net income per employee — as does Total. Shell is something of a middling performer when compared to the rest of the Big Six. The below chart highlights Shell’s discount versus its American peers, and premium to the European companies. It’s also apparent that this premium to BP may reflect its better debt position.

Growth

Growth is an important consideration when making an investment. We don’t want to buy companies that are going backwards. The below chart shows the projected earnings for the next three years and the resultant forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios. Shell has a PEG ratio — an earnings formula that takes into account growth — of 1.49 based on forward projection for the next five years. This isn’t an overly attractive ratio as one tends to suggest fair value.Shell has a PEG ratio — an earnings formula that takes into account growth — of 1.49 based on forward projection for the next five years. This isn’t an overly attractive ratio as one tends to suggest fair value.Shell has a PEG ratio — an earnings formula that takes into account growth — of 1.49 based on forward projection for the next five years. This isn’t an overly attractive ratio as one tends to suggest fair value.

Shell has a PEG ratio — an earnings formula that takes into account growth — of 1.49 based on forward projection for the next five years. This isn’t an overly attractive ratio as one tends to suggest fair value.

Source: c/news