With Oil Shares Like BP Cheap, Is A Contrarian Bet A Good Move In October?

 | Sep 30, 2020 02:48

The year 2020 has not been kind to the oil industry. Brent crude, the international benchmark, started the year around $60. By late April, it was below $20. When various lockdowns eased in early summer, oil prices gained pace and reached a six-month high. A run-up toward the $50 level looked likely.

Yet, September has brought back question marks about the industry's future for the rest of the year as well as price weakness. Although Brent is still over $40, many analysts concur that a decline toward $35 cannot be ruled out.

According to the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), in September:

"The global economic growth forecast is revised down to -4.1% for 2020 from -4.0% in the previous month, amid a further slowing momentum in especially emerging and developing economies... In 2020, the global oil demand contraction is revised down further by 0.4 (million barrels per day)."

Earlier, we have looked at how investors could use exchange-traded funds (ETFs) to participate in moves in oil prices. Today, we extend the discussion to UK-based oil major BP (LON:BP), (NYSE:BP).

At the start of the year, both BP and Royal Dutch Shell (LON:RDSa), (NYSE:RDSa) had the largest market capitalization on the FTSE 100, the UK's leading stock index. But their fall from grace has been fast and furious. Shares of each company now trade at less than half their former market caps. On Sept. 29, BP stock closed at 229.30p ($17.67 for U.S.-based shares).