There are various ways to invest in rising oil prices, you can buy stocks in companies who do the exploring and the drilling for the oil. You can buy companies that sell the equipment or you can buy companies that do the research to find the oil. And you can invest in the actual oil itself.
Oil prices are dependent on the economy, supply and demand
and the state of affairs in the Middle East. Right now,
there is a great deal of turmoil in Iraq
that has oil prices rising again. You have to pay more to heat your house and
to drive, you might as well also profit from the rising oil and gas prices.
Investing in Rising Oil and Gas Prices
There are various ways to invest in rising oil prices. You
can buy stocks in companies who do the exploring and the drilling for the oil.
You can buy companies that sell the equipment to these companies to drill for
oil, or you can buy companies that do the research to find places for the
various oil companies to drill. And you can invest in the actual commodity oil
itself.
These are the sectors in the oil industry that you need to
look at, some web sites list companies under slightly different sectors
phrases.
- Oil & gas drilling and exploration
- Oil & gas equipment and services
- Oil & gas pipelines
- Oil & gas refining and marketing
Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs)
You can buy an ETF (Exchange traded fund) that holds
different oil companies in their portfolio, that way you can cover many
different companies in the oil industry at the same time. By looking at the
holdings of an ETF, you can then see exactly what they own in the oil industry.
For example, DIG is the heavily traded oil ETF that seeks 200% of the Dow Jones
US Oil and Gas Index holds companies like Exxon, Chevron, ConocoPhillips and
Schlumberger.
When you think oil prices are going to rise, you could buy
the ETF with the symbol of DIG
and by doing that, you would own a piece of the above mentioned oil companies
all at once.
You have to remember though, that this fund does not trade
the price of oil or necessarily follow the price of oil, this fund trades the
oil companies in their fund.
Other oil and gas ETFs you can invest in for rising oil
prices would be:
- IYE – iShares Dow Jones US Energy is a broad based oil and gas industry ETF with large oil and gas companies like Chevron, Exxon, Schlumberger and ConocoPhillips comprising 48% of the fund.
- XLE – SPDR Energy Select Sector ETF also has large oil and gas companies.
- XOP – SPDR S&P Oil and Gas Exploration and Production ETF tracks the total return performance of the S&P Oil and Gas Exploration and Production Index. This ETF is not as top heavy in the large companies as the above ETFs, holding smaller companies like Frontier Oil, Sandridge Energy, Gulfport Energy and GeoResources Inc.
Oil Services Sector
One area of the oil industry is called the oil services
sector, these are companies that provide oil drilling and production services,
oil field equipment, support services and geophysical/reservoir services. The Philadelphia
oil service sector index is the benchmark index to watch for these companies
and this sector. The symbol is OSX, there is a total of 15 companies in this
index. The list of companies in this index is at the end of the article,
Deep water and offshore drillers
There are the deep-water drillers as well, offshore
platforms and the companies that look for the oil offshore. There is limited
competition here and last summer there was a backlog of contracts. This group
could be interesting to watch once the new congress and administration are in
office since they recently voted to repeal the offshore drilling ban.
Some of the more notable companies in this sector are,
- Transoceanic (RIG)
- Noble Corp (NE)
- Diamond Offshore (DO)
- Atwood Oceanics (ATW)
- Bristow Group (BRS)
- Ensco International (ESV)
Buy Oil
Not literally, but you can invest in oil through a couple of
ETFs with the symbols of OIL and USO. These
ETFs track the price of crude oil. With these ETFs, you’re not investing in
companies but the movement of the oil price itself.
Another ETF with a symbol of DXO is the crude oil
double long, this is an ETF that if the price of oil moves up, this ETF moves
up twice as much. It is more risky to the downside as well, meaning you can
lose twice as much.
When you look for ETFs to buy in the oil industry, many
places will have them listed under Natural Resources or Specialty Natural
Resources.
Falling Oil Prices
Now that you feel oil prices have gone far enough and are
about to drop, you can also make money with falling oil prices by reading How to Profit from Falling Oil and Gas Prices with ETFs.
Copyright © 2009-2014 Sam Montana
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