Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. US coal company stocks may receive a lift in coming weeks if deteriorating relations between Russia and the West push Vladimir Putin to shut off Europe’s natural gas supply.

 

Reuters/New York

 

 

Beaten-down US coal company stocks may receive a lift in coming weeks if deteriorating relations between Russia and the West push President Vladimir Putin to shut off Europe’s natural gas supply.

The crisis in eastern Ukraine has emboldened Europe and the US to impose broad sanctions on Russia. But Europe finds itself in a precarious position, with almost a third of the natural gas the continent consumed in 2013 flowing from Russia, according to the US Energy Information Administration.

Europe’s heightened concerns about energy security could provide an opportunity for US coal companies, which have been hurt by declining domestic consumption, to step in and fill the gap as winter approaches. More than half of US coal exports already reach Europe.

“Export demand will certainly increase, with the situation in Russia and Ukraine having a big impact on Europe with respect to natural gas,” said Ernie Cecilia, chief investment officer at Bryn Mawr Trust in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.

“In the short term, there’s no question that a rise in export demand will be helpful to coal stocks.”

Yet significant headwinds at home would likely make any comeback in coal companies’ stocks short-lived and hard-fought.

Even as the broader stock market has rebounded from the lows seen during the financial crisis, coal stocks have languished.

Shares of Peabody Energy Corp, the biggest US producer of coal, have declined more than 27% since March 9, 2009, when the S&P 500 hit its financial crisis nadir, closing at 676.53 points.

While the S&P has nearly tripled from that day, the Dow Jones US Coal Index has lost 7.7% in that time. The last three-plus years have been particularly bad for the coal index, which has lost nearly three-quarters of its value since April 2011.

The index includes just three stocks - Peabody, CONSOL Energy and Alpha Natural Resources. CONSOL, which is more diversified and derives around a third of its revenue from natural gas, is the only one up on the year so far. It has gained 5.3%, but still lags the wider S&P 500, which is up more than 8%.

Peabody is down around 20% this year, and Alpha Natural has swooned 45%.

CONSOL is the only one of the three expected to show a profit in the next two years, according to Thomson Reuters StarMine, which tracks corporate profit estimates.

Competition with natural gas, the emergence of renewable energy technologies and new environmental regulations contributed to a fall in US coal production in 2013 to the lowest levels since 1993, according to the Energy Information Administration.

Domestic coal consumption is slated to decline by 2.7% in 2015, as federal standards requiring power plants to reduce air pollution expedites a shuttering of coal power plants. US coal consumption peaked in 2007 and has declined nearly 37% since then, EIA data shows.

That may temper any gains in coal stocks, both in scale and duration.

“I just don’t know if any of this - the situation in Russia and Ukraine – would be sufficient enough to overcome significant pressure in the domestic market,” Cecilia said.

Energy stocks have overall remained favourable for investors, but not necessarily those with money in coal. The S&P 500 energy sector is outperforming the wider index with a 9.3% gain so far in 2014.

“We look at the domestic energy landscape, and the abundant supply of natural gas has impacted coal dramatically,” said Timothy Rooney, vice president of product management and research for Nationwide Funds.

“Generally, energy in the US is a good long term investment, but that’s really being driven by oil and natural gas.”

 

 

 

 

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