One stock that has been delivering on this measure is CSE Global, which installs IT, communications and other electronic systems on rigs. The company has been steadily winning contracts and its year-to-date order wins of $163 million are now 30% of CIMB-GK’s $550 million target for the year. The stock is currently trading at nine times CIMB-GK’s estimate of its FY2011 earnings, which Tng says is relatively undemanding, given its three-year compounded annual growth rate of 16% in its earnings. He also likes that the company has been steadily diversifying out of the O&G sector and into the healthcare industry.
Rotary Engineering is another company that has been winning new contracts recently. It provides various engineering, procurement and construction services to the O&G as well as petrochemical industries. A key catalyst in the near future could be the US$10 billion ($13.7 billion) refinery project in Saudi Arabia that Rotary is bidding to be part of. If Rotary secures this project, its earnings per share could rise 28% in FY2012. Even without the win, however, the stock is backed by net cash per share of 22 cents, versus its current share price of $1.15.
Another O&G play that Tng likes is Swiber Holdings, which provides a wide range of services to the offshore industry, including transporting and installing subsea pipelines and chartering out offshore support vessels. He says Swiber is a laggard among most of its offshore and marine peers, with a price-to-earnings ratio (PER) of eight times CIMB-GK’s FY2011 estimate, a 38% discount to the sector’s rolling forward mean PER of 13 times.