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JPMorgan Likes Energy Stocks and Wonders Why Others Don’t

JPMorgan Likes Energy Stocks and Is Perplexed That Others Don’t

(Bloomberg) -- Can it finally be energy stocks’ time to shine? JPMorgan Chase & Co. thinks so.

The U.S. energy industry features the second-worst performing group of stocks in the S&P 500 this year, up 5.3% compared with an advance of 19% for the broader gauge. That’s despite love from Wall Street analysts, attention from some Asian investors, and votes of confidence from the likes of Morgan Stanley Wealth Management.

JPMorgan’s Dubvrako Lakos-Bujas, who wrote the note on Sept. 26, renewed an April call to buy shares of energy explorers and producers.

“Investor complacency toward energy is perplexing,” Lakos-Bujas said. “The market should assign a structural premium to the equity-oil complex with the Middle East currently a geopolitical tinderbox.”

JPMorgan Likes Energy Stocks and Wonders Why Others Don’t

Positioning, sentiment and valuations are at bearish extremes for the sector right now, JPMorgan said. Systematic funds are underweight oil and institutional investors “have abandoned” it, the report said. That’s despite the fact that insider purchases are at cycle highs, buyback announcements have been strong and dividends remain high.

“Favorable technicals, improving fundamentals with stabilizing business cycle, and ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East could help redirect flows into this universally hated and cheap sector,” Lakos-Bujas said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Joanna Ossinger in Singapore at jossinger@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Christopher Anstey at canstey@bloomberg.net, Cecile Gutscher, Sid Verma

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