As the price of oil trades around $70 a barrel, how much do you really know about investing in the oil business?
The following are key insights from TheStreet.com. As a starting point, here are the oil industry's ten biggest earners (based on net income for the second quarter of 2008): 1. Exxon Mobil (XOM): $11.68 Billion2. Royal Dutch Shell (RDS-A, RDS-B): $11.56 Billion
3. BP (BP): $9.47 Billion
4. Total (TOT): $7.46 Billion
5. Chevron (CVX): $5.98 Billion
6. Petrobras (PBR): $5.52 Billion
7. ConocoPhillips (COP): $5.44 Billion
8. Eni (E): $5.41 Billion
9. PetroChina (PTR): $4.12 Billion
10. StatoilHydro (STO): $3.68 Billion (These companies will soon announce their third quarter earnings.) From The No. 1 Oil Stock to Own (Video, Oct. 17) Research Director Stephanie Link weighs in on the oil debate. Which is more important for investors: a stock's yield or the price of oil? Link: "We think yield is very important... If you look at the last correction [in the price of oil]... the [oil] stocks that did not have a yield really got hit much harder than those that did have a yield... We actually started to building a position in Chevron (CVX Quote)... it's about a 4% yield, about $4 billion in cash and it's trading at the cheapest level on a normalized earnings basis than it has in quite some time." To watch the video, click the player below:
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