Bright future for these oil-sands producers

Article Excerpt

Canada’s oil sands still face strong opposition from environmentalists. However, new technology has sharply lowered the oil sands’ greenhouse-gas emissions. As well, turmoil in Egypt and other Middle Eastern countries highlights the oil sands’ strategic importance to the U.S. and Canada. These factors make it less likely that Ottawa will introduce regulations that would slow oil-sands development. These three oil-sands producers have all moved up lately, but they still have plenty of room to grow. SUNCOR ENERGY INC. $40 (Toronto symbol SU; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Resources sector; Shares outstanding: 1.6 billion; Market cap: $64.0 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 1.7; Dividend yield: 1.0%; TSINetwork Rating: Average; www.suncor.com) became Canada’s largest oil company when it merged with Petro-Canada in August 2009. About 50% of Suncor’s production is conventional oil and natural gas. The remaining 50% comes from oil sands, including the company’s 12% stake in the massive Syncrude development. Suncor aims to expand its oil-sands operations until they account for about 70% of its…