3 Top Oil Stocks to Buy Now

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Oil is up! No, it's down! A reversal is just around the corner! No, it's months or years away! There's a boom looming...or is it a crash? Buy! Sell! Hold!

Paying too much attention to the ups and downs of the oil market can drive you crazy. The plain fact is, nobody knows what oil prices are going to do next week, much less years from now. The best strategy for oil investors is to look for quality oil and gas companies that are poised to outperform their industry peers regardless of what happens to oil and gas prices in the short term.

Three such companies that look like good buys right now are Royal Dutch Shell (NYSE: RDS-A)(NYSE: RDS-B), Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE: EPD), and Apache Corporation (NYSE: APA). Here's why they may be good picks for your portfolio:

Oil pours from a golden oil barrel.
Oil pours from a golden oil barrel.

The stock market hasn't been kind to the oil industry lately. But it's still worth a look for investors. Image source: Getty Images.

Large and in charge

There's no question that oil major Royal Dutch Shell was outperforming when oil prices were high. In its Q3 2018 earnings report -- covering the quarter that ended right before oil prices dropped in October -- the company announced it had churned out $14.7 billion in cash flow, of which just $2.6 billion was eaten up as working capital, for a final operating cash flow of $12.1 billion.

That was more cash than the company had churned out in a decade. Even more astonishing, during the last quarter in which it beat this record -- Q2 2008 -- oil prices were averaging more than $100 a barrel.

But in Q4, oil prices began to slide, ending the quarter more than 40% lower. But you'd never know that from Shell's earnings. It actually posted higher operating cash flow -- $22.0 billion -- than it did in Q3. Even after adjusting for changes in working capital, operating cash flow was $12.9 billion. On a trailing twelve-month basis, that's the highest it's been since at least 2006. Revenue and net incomes also increased both sequentially and year over year.

This shows how the breadth of Shell's operations pay off for its investors. Earnings in its upstream (oil exploration and production) segment were down both sequentially and year over year, thanks to those lower oil prices. But Shell was more than able to make up for it with massive gains in its integrated gas and oil products segments. Even better, oil prices rose again in January, with Brent crude now trading at about $60.

At a current P/E of just 11.3, and with a best-in-class dividend yield of 6%, Shell is a solid pick among oil companies.