Is Edenville Energy Plc (AIM:EDL) An Energy Industry Laggard Or Leader?

Edenville Energy Plc (AIM:EDL), a GBP£8.02M small-cap, operates in the oil and gas industry which has endured an extended oil price slump since mid-2014. However, energy-sector analysts are forecasting for the entire industry, negative growth in the upcoming year , and a massive growth of 41.87% over the next couple of years. This rate is larger than the growth rate of the UK stock market as a whole. An interesting question to explore is whether we can we benefit from entering into the oil and gas sector right now. Below, I will examine the sector growth prospects, as well as evaluate whether EDL is lagging or leading its competitors in the industry. Check out our latest analysis for Edenville Energy

What’s the catalyst for EDL’s sector growth?

AIM:EDL Past Future Earnings Nov 14th 17
AIM:EDL Past Future Earnings Nov 14th 17

The oil and gas sector has been negative 40% in the past five years, due to the oil price crash. Large energy businesses have slashed their growth expenditures by over 40% since the collapse, and reduced headcount by nearly half a million workers. However, recently the sector saw a reversal in the downturn, and in the previous year, the industry saw growth of over 50%, beating the UK market growth of 11.30%. EDL lags the pack with its sustained negative earnings over the past couple of years. The company’s outlook seems uncertain, with a lack of analyst coverage, which doesn’t boost our confidence in the stock. This lack of growth and transparency means EDL may be trading cheaper than its peers.

Is EDL and the sector relatively cheap?

AIM:EDL PE PEG Gauge Nov 14th 17
AIM:EDL PE PEG Gauge Nov 14th 17

The energy sector’s PE is currently hovering around 14x, relatively similar to the rest of the UK stock market PE of 19x. This illustrates a fairly valued sector relative to the rest of the market, indicating low mispricing opportunities. However, the industry returned a lower 5.74% compared to the market’s 12.78%, illustrative of the recent sector upheaval. Since EDL’s earnings doesn’t seem to reflect its true value, its PE ratio isn’t very useful. A loose alternative to gauge EDL’s value is to assume the stock should be relatively in-line with its industry.

What this means for you:

Are you a shareholder? EDL has been an oil and gas industry laggard in the past year. If your initial investment thesis is around the growth prospects of EDL, there are other oil and gas companies that have delivered higher growth, and perhaps trading at a discount to the industry average. Consider how EDL fits into your wider portfolio and the opportunity cost of holding onto the stock.

Are you a potential investor? If EDL has been on your watchlist for a while, now may be a good time to dig deeper into the stock. Although its growth has delivered lower growth relative to its oil and gas peers in the near term, the market may be pessimistic on the stock, leading to a potential undervaluation. Before you make a decision on the stock, I suggest you look at EDL’s future cash flows in order to assess whether the stock is trading at a reasonable price.

For a deeper dive into Edenville Energy’s stock, take a look at the company’s latest free analysis report to find out more on its financial health and other fundamentals. Interested in other energy stocks instead? Use our free playform to see my list of over 300 other oil and gas companies trading on the market.


To help readers see pass the short term volatility of the financial market, we aim to bring you a long-term focused research analysis purely driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis does not factor in the latest price sensitive company announcements.

The author is an independent contributor and at the time of publication had no position in the stocks mentioned.

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