The Best Mining and Energy Stock Bargains on the Market

There's an old saying on Wall Street that investors should look to the income statement for upside and the balance sheet for downside protection. But for mining and energy stocks, this axiom has been spun on its head. Income-statement metrics are forcing many of these stocks down, but their balance sheets point to the way to vigorous upside (while that downside protection also remains in place).

You can find no greater example of this than copper and gold miner Freeport McMoran (NYSE: FCX). Copper prices have fallen from around $4.50 a pound in early 2011 to a recent $3.60, dampening the company's profit prospects. Adding insult, the company is temporarily seeing reduced output at a key Indonesian mine on the heels of work stoppages. Lastly, concerns continue to fester that China's insatiable appetite for copper is set to slow down. Add it up, and you have a pretty dismal stock chart...



To be sure, this stock may look attractive at less than eight times trailing profits and less than four times trailing EBITDA, but Freeport McMoran's earnings per share (EPS) is expected to slump about 15% this year to about $4.15 a share. And investors simply shun stocks that are posting falling profits.

But such an environment is precisely where you find value. Freeport McMoran is becoming a deep-value stock if you measure the company's stock against the unlocked value in its various copper and gold mines. Let me explain...

As mining engineers will tell you, it's highly unlikely that we'll soon hear about a brand new mining opportunity anywhere in the world. Any region that contains vast stores of copper, gold or other minerals has already been identified and exploited. So Freeport should benefit in the years to come from finite industry supply and stable to rising demand. Simply based on current dynamics, Goldman Sachs says Freeport McMoran's mines are worth $50 a share. That's more than 25% above current levels.

Values across the board
You can apply this same logic to many other mining firms. Take gold-mining stocks as an example. They've been steadily falling in value, even as the value of gold has remained fairly steady. As I noted in this article, a number of gold-mining stocks now trade well below analysts' price targets. These stocks actually trade above net asset value (NAV), but that's only because the calculation involves historical purchase prices of mines and not the value of untapped gold that is waiting to be harvested. On that basis, analysts see solid potential upside for this beaten-down group.

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