Energy Stocks Have Soared This Year, but, These 3 Still Look Like Great Buys

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The stock market has been roaring this year. Most sectors have rallied, including energy. The average energy stock in the S&P 500 is up more than 10% this year.

Despite that rally, several energy stocks still look like compelling buys. Chevron (NYSE: CVX), MPLX (NYSE: MPLX), and Occidental Petroleum (NYSE: OXY) stand out to a few Fool.com contributors as great buys right now. Here's why they think these energy stocks could supply investors with high-octane total returns from here.

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Chevron comes with baggage

Reuben Gregg Brewer (Chevron): When it comes to integrated energy majors, Chevron is easily one of the elite group leading the pack. It is large, with a market cap of $275 billion. It is diversified across the upstream (production), midstream (pipelines), and downstream (chemicals and refining). It is financially strong, with a debt-to-equity ratio of only around 0.17 times (one of the lowest of its closest peer group). And it has an over three-decade history of annual dividend increases.

XLE Chart
XLE data by YCharts.

And yet, it has lagged behind the energy rally over the past year and is well behind ExxonMobil, its closest U.S. comparison point. The problem is a bit unique since Chevron is in the middle of trying to buy Hess, and Exxon appears to be standing in the way. Exxon's partnership with Hess in a major oil project is what's holding things up and could even scuttle the deal. Investors are likely treading carefully with Chevron right now, worried that the deal falling through would result in slower growth for Chevron. That's not unrealistic.

But Chevron isn't a stock you look at for the short term but one you buy for the long term. Even if Exxon throws a wrench in the Hess deal, Chevron can simply shift gears and find another acquisition target. Maybe that takes a little time, but losing Hess won't derail Chevron; it will just slow it down temporarily. Thus, the laggard stock performance today could end up being a buying opportunity. And you'll get an attractive 4.2% dividend yield while you wait for all this to get sorted out.

The complete package

Matt DiLallo (MPLX): Units of MPLX have gained about 25% so far this year. Even with that surge, the master limited partnership (MLP) still looks like an attractive investment.

Despite the MLP's roaring rally this year, it still offers a high yield of more than 8%. That's due to a combination of valuation (which is still relatively low at about 10 times earnings) and continued distribution growth. MPLX recently increased its distribution by another 12.5%, marking its third straight year of double-digit distribution increases.