Halliburton stock (NYSE: HAL), an energy company organized into the exploration, development, and production of oil and natural gas, is scheduled to report its fiscal first-quarter results on Tauesday, April 25. We expect HAL’s stock to trade higher due to revenues and earnings beating expectations marginally in its first quarter. Halliburton
HAL
We believe the macro backdrop that underpins a strong multiyear upcycle for energy remains very compelling in both oil and gas and in low-carbon energy resources. The growing tight supplies due to geopolitical uncertainty and the soaring demand from the reopening of China’s economy will likely bode well for energy prices in 2023. Multiple tailwinds remain in place for 2023, and the activity outlook abroad remains robust, especially in the Middle East, offshore, and North American markets.
Our forecast indicates that HAL’s valuation is $41 per share, which is about 22% higher than the current market price. Look at our interactive dashboard analysis on HAL Earnings Preview: What To Expect in Fiscal Q1? for more details.
(1) Revenues expected to be slightly ahead of consensus estimates
Trefis estimates HAL’s Q1 2023 revenues to be around $5.6 billion, marginally above the consensus estimate. Halliburton saw its revenues jump 30% year-over-year (y-o-y) to $5.58 billion in Q4 2022. HAL’s Q4 revenues in the completion and production segment jumped 35% y-o-y to $3.2 billion, while the drilling and evaluation segment gained 25% to $2.4 billion. By geographic region, North American revenue surged 46% y-o-y to $2.6 billion, Latin America revenues grew 41% y-o-y to $945 million, and Middle East/Asia revenues increased 25% to $1.4 billion. Europe/Africa/CIS region saw a 10% decline in revenues due to the company’s exit from Russia. For 2023, we forecast HAL’s Revenues to be $23.8 billion, up 17% y-o-y.
According to the International Energy Agency, even with the prospect of a recession in some markets, demand is expected to grow by 2 million barrels per day this year to a record 101.9 million barrels per day. Because these market dynamics will spur new drilling activity, HAL should likely be able to flex its pricing power as both land drilling and offshore activity increase.
(2) EPS is also likely to marginally beat consensus estimates
HAL’s Q1 2023 earnings per share is expected to come in at 70 cents per Trefis analysis, 3 cents above the consensus estimate. In Q4, HAL’s net income fell to $656 million, or $0.72 per share from $824 million, or $0.92 per share, in the year-earlier period. The company utilized $409 million in tax benefits during the comparative period which explains the bottom line coming in higher in Q4 2021. It should be noted that the operating margins expanded significantly from 12.9% in Q4 2021 to 17.5% in Q4 2022.
(3) Stock price estimate higher than the current market price
Going by our HAL’s Valuation, with an EPS estimate of around $3.07 and a P/E multiple of 13.3x in fiscal 2023, this translates into a price of $41, which is almost 22% higher than the current market price.
It is helpful to see how its peers stack up. HAL Peers shows how Halliburton’s stock compares against peers on metrics that matter. You will find other useful comparisons for companies across industries at Peer Comparisons.
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