Energy Materials model basket

Upstream E&P Producers

Ten North American and international producers underwriting the post-2020 shale model of shareholder returns.

What is the thesis for Upstream E&P Producers?

A ten-name book of upstream exploration and production operators that have internalized capital discipline as a business model rather than a cycle posture. The thesis is that the market still prices these companies against the pre-2020 reinvest-at-any-price memory, while the cohort is actually returning 75% or more of free cash flow to shareholders and holding production roughly flat.

This is a curated QuantLink model basket. It is not a filed portfolio, not a fund, and not investment advice.

Published Apr 14, 2026. Updated Apr 14, 2026. Source: QuantLink curated model basket and FastAPI ideas endpoint.

Holdings
10
Benchmark
SPY
Status
New
1Y model return
+47.0%

Performance as of Jul 17, 2026.

Thesis narrative

The question

Are North American upstream producers priced for a repeat of the 2014-2019 reinvest-at-any-price cycle, or for the post-2020 model in which the cohort returns the majority of free cash flow to shareholders and holds production roughly flat? Those two priors imply different multiples, different terminal values, and different holding periods, and the market has not fully committed to the second one.

Base rates

The reference class is publicly listed commodity producers that transitioned from growth-first to payout-first capital allocation. Two clean analogues: North American gold miners after the 2013 writedown cycle, and global tobacco manufacturers after the 1998 settlement. In both cases, the cohort spent roughly three to five years being priced as if the old model still governed, even as payout ratios rose past 60% of free cash flow and reinvestment ratios dropped below 40%. The equity base rate for holding the cohort through the re-rating was roughly the 60th to 70th percentile of broad-market sleeves over a five-year horizon, with the caveat that the commodity itself did not need to rally for the re-rating to occur.

For upstream oil and gas specifically, the pre-2020 reinvestment ratio across the public North American independents averaged roughly 130% of operating cash flow. The same cohort has operated at roughly 45-55% reinvestment ratios since 2022, with the residual 75%+ of free cash flow distributed through variable dividends, base dividends, and buybacks. Breakeven oil prices on maintenance capex have fallen from the mid-60s to the low-40s per barrel for the Permian pure-plays.

The imputed probability embedded in current forward multiples is that the cohort reverts to roughly 80-90% reinvestment within three years. Management compensation structures and board composition across the cohort make that outcome materially less likely than the market implies.

Base rates (continued)

The second base rate worth naming: international producers listed on North American exchanges have historically traded at a 20-30% discount to domestic pure-plays on equivalent reserve life and operating margin. The gap has compressed twice in the last two decades -- 2005-2008 and 2021-2022 -- both times when capital discipline became a credible cohort-wide property rather than a company-specific one. We are in a third such window.

Why consensus is wrong

The sell-side treats variable dividends as a signal of unstable cash-return policy rather than a signal of contractual discipline. The framework is backwards. A variable dividend tied to a formula -- 50% of free cash flow after the base, for example -- is more credible than a fixed payout that management can defend through a downturn, because the variable payout removes management's discretion to retain cash for low-return drilling when prices are strong. The names in this book with formalized variable payout structures are the highest-conviction positions, not the lowest.

The second piece the consensus misses is inventory depth and location. The headline concern is that Permian Tier 1 inventory is being exhausted. The reality at the operator level is more differentiated: the names with deep sub-$50 breakeven locations across multiple benches in the Delaware and Midland basins have five-to-seven years of Tier 1 runway at current activity. The cohort's aggregate inventory picture is mediocre; the inventory picture at the names we own is materially better than that.

Third, the market treats Canadian and international exposure as a quality discount rather than a diversification premium. Oil sands operators with multi-decade reserve lives and fixed royalty structures have cash-flow durability that no unconventional basin can match.

Position construction

The book has two 20% anchors and three clusters.

Anchors. CVE at 20% is the oil-sands integrated anchor -- multi-decade reserve life, refining integration on the downstream, and a payout framework that has held through two cycles. DVN at 20% is the US domestic anchor -- Delaware-weighted inventory, variable dividend by formula, and the cleanest read on the post-2020 model in the Lower 48.

Permian pure-plays (~28%). PR (~11.8%), OVV (~12.7%), MTDR (~7.3%), and MGY (~5.8%) concentrate exposure to the Delaware and Midland basins. OVV is the geographic hedge with Anadarko and Montney assets alongside the Permian core. MGY is the capital-light operator with the most conservative reinvestment ratio in the cohort.

Bakken and Anadarko (~7%). CHRD (~7%) is the Williston pure-play with the highest free-cash-flow yield in the book at current strip. The position is sized for the single-basin concentration risk.

International and diversified (~16%). APA (~11%) combines Permian operations with Egyptian and North Sea exposure at a multiple that still embeds sovereign discount. CRGY (~2.9%) is the Eagle Ford and Uinta operator with the most idiosyncratic payout structure. VET (~1.5%) is the European gas and Canadian light-oil operator -- the smallest position and the purest imputed-expectations gap in the book.

Asymmetric payoff

If the cohort sustains 75%+ payout ratios for three more years and the multiple converges toward tobacco-analogue levels, the book returns roughly 15-22% annualized. If oil averages below $55 for two consecutive years and management teams break discipline, the book returns roughly -10 to -18%. If a reserve-replacement scare or a policy-driven supply response tightens the market, the right tail is 28-40% with dividend yield compounding.

At a 55% base, 25% bear, and 20% bull weighting, expected value is roughly +12 to +18% annualized against an SPY base rate near +8%. The asymmetry comes from the payout yield itself -- roughly 8-12% cash-on-cash at current prices -- which compresses the downside regardless of multiple path.

Three things that would change our mind

  1. Two or more cohort members abandoning formal variable-dividend frameworks in favor of growth-oriented capex budgets, signalling the discipline regime is breaking.
  2. Permian Tier 1 depletion metrics accelerating at the operator level -- specifically, reported well productivity per lateral foot declining by more than 10% year-over-year across three or more holdings.
  3. A legislated windfall tax on upstream cash returns in the US or Canada that would compromise the payout model at the distribution step rather than the extraction step.

What we're explicitly NOT betting on

We are not betting on a higher oil price. The thesis works at a $65-75 strip because the payout yield and multiple re-rating do the work. We are not betting on the international supermajors, which are in a separate idea with a different thesis. We are not holding a pure-play unconventional gas producer, because the gas cohort has a different capital structure and a different end-market narrative. And we are not sizing for a sharp commodity rally -- the book is deliberately weighted toward the names with the most formalized payout frameworks rather than the highest oil-price beta, because the re-rating thesis does not require price cooperation.

Model basket holdings

Model basket: curated equal or target weighting, not a filed portfolio. Weights are the target basket weights returned by the live ideas endpoint.

NameSymbolModel weight
Cenovus Energy Inc.CVE20.01%
APA CorporationAPA11.02%
Devon Energy CorporationDVN20.00%
Permian Resources CorporationPR11.78%
Ovintiv Inc.OVV12.65%
Matador Resources CompanyMTDR7.33%
Chord Energy CorporationCHRD7.03%
Magnolia Oil & Gas CorporationMGY5.78%
Crescent Energy CompanyCRGY2.87%
Vermilion Energy Inc.VET1.53%

Backtested performance vs SPY

Performance is backtested from the returned tearsheet series. It reflects the model basket methodology and benchmark series, not live fund returns or a filed portfolio track record. Performance as of Jul 17, 2026.

Total Return

+47.0%

SPY +19.5%

Ann. Return

+47.7%

SPY +19.8%

Ann. Vol

33.3%

SPY 12.6%

Sharpe

1.43

SPY 1.57

Max Drawdown

-21.1%

SPY -9.1%

Alpha vs SPY

+48.8%

hit rate 51.4%

Performance as of Jul 17, 2026.

Rolling Performance vs Benchmark

Portfolio Holdings

Holding
Weight
Country
Exchange
Sector
Industry
Mkt Cap
Price
1Y
1Y Trend
CVE
CVECenovus Energy Inc.
20.0%
DVN
DVNDevon Energy Corporation
20.0%
OVV
OVVOvintiv Inc.
12.7%
PR
PRPermian Resources Corporation
11.8%
APA
APAAPA Corporation
11.0%
MTDR
MTDRMatador Resources Company
7.3%
CHRD
CHRDChord Energy Corporation
7.0%
MGY
MGYMagnolia Oil & Gas Corporation
5.8%
CRGY
CRGYCrescent Energy Company
2.9%
VET
VETVermilion Energy Inc.
1.5%

SSR performance series fallback

The table below is the server-rendered reference series behind the interactive chart. Values show the wealth index level from a 1.00 starting value, not a second 1Y return figure. Series as of Jul 17, 2026.

DateModel basket wealth indexSPY
Jul 18, 20251.0000x1.0000x
Jul 21, 20250.9847x1.0019x
Jul 22, 20251.0013x1.0020x
Jul 23, 20251.0140x1.0106x
Jul 24, 20251.0175x1.0109x
Jul 25, 20251.0198x1.0152x
Jul 28, 20251.0558x1.0149x
Jul 29, 20251.0613x1.0122x
Jul 30, 20251.0479x1.0110x
Jul 31, 20251.0358x1.0072x
Aug 1, 20251.0003x0.9907x
Aug 4, 20250.9991x1.0057x
Aug 5, 20251.0121x1.0006x
Aug 6, 20250.9988x1.0083x
Aug 7, 20250.9947x1.0074x
Aug 8, 20251.0104x1.0153x
Aug 11, 20250.9931x1.0133x
Aug 12, 20251.0138x1.0241x
Aug 13, 20251.0227x1.0276x
Aug 14, 20251.0276x1.0277x
Aug 15, 20251.0194x1.0253x
Aug 18, 20251.0133x1.0250x
Aug 19, 20251.0051x1.0195x
Aug 20, 20251.0135x1.0168x
Aug 21, 20251.0190x1.0127x
Aug 22, 20251.0699x1.0283x
Aug 25, 20251.0877x1.0237x
Aug 26, 20251.0755x1.0280x
Aug 27, 20251.0935x1.0304x
Aug 28, 20251.1050x1.0340x
Aug 29, 20251.1022x1.0278x
Sep 2, 20251.1214x1.0202x
Sep 3, 20251.0778x1.0257x
Sep 4, 20251.0964x1.0343x
Sep 5, 20251.0614x1.0313x
Sep 8, 20251.0537x1.0339x
Sep 9, 20251.0529x1.0363x
Sep 10, 20251.0989x1.0392x
Sep 11, 20251.0867x1.0479x
Sep 12, 20251.0750x1.0475x
Sep 15, 20251.0606x1.0531x
Sep 16, 20251.0980x1.0517x
Sep 17, 20251.0964x1.0504x
Sep 18, 20251.0922x1.0553x
Sep 19, 20251.0624x1.0576x
Sep 22, 20251.0652x1.0626x
Sep 23, 20251.0863x1.0568x
Sep 24, 20251.1083x1.0534x
Sep 25, 20251.1100x1.0486x
Sep 26, 20251.1269x1.0546x
Sep 29, 20251.0808x1.0575x
Sep 30, 20251.0667x1.0615x
Oct 1, 20251.0718x1.0651x
Oct 2, 20251.0442x1.0664x
Oct 3, 20251.0630x1.0663x
Oct 6, 20251.0756x1.0702x
Oct 7, 20251.0721x1.0662x
Oct 8, 20251.0811x1.0725x
Oct 9, 20251.0662x1.0694x
Oct 10, 20251.0080x1.0405x
Oct 13, 20251.0338x1.0565x
Oct 14, 20251.0181x1.0552x
Oct 15, 20251.0212x1.0599x
Oct 16, 20251.0021x1.0527x
Oct 17, 20250.9992x1.0587x
Oct 20, 20251.0042x1.0697x
Oct 21, 20251.0005x1.0696x
Oct 22, 20251.0028x1.0641x
Oct 23, 20251.0409x1.0704x
Oct 24, 20251.0229x1.0791x
Oct 27, 20251.0211x1.0919x
Oct 28, 20250.9989x1.0948x
Oct 29, 20251.0063x1.0953x
Oct 30, 20250.9977x1.0833x
Oct 31, 20251.0093x1.0868x
Nov 3, 20251.0131x1.0888x
Nov 4, 20250.9961x1.0759x
Nov 5, 20250.9794x1.0797x
Nov 6, 20251.0066x1.0681x
Nov 7, 20251.0395x1.0691x
Nov 10, 20251.0502x1.0858x
Nov 11, 20251.0786x1.0883x
Nov 12, 20251.0625x1.0889x
Nov 13, 20251.0668x1.0708x
Nov 14, 20251.0846x1.0707x
Nov 17, 20251.0644x1.0607x
Nov 18, 20251.0887x1.0518x
Nov 19, 20251.0789x1.0558x
Nov 20, 20251.0652x1.0398x
Nov 21, 20251.0745x1.0501x
Nov 24, 20251.0846x1.0656x
Nov 25, 20251.0744x1.0756x
Nov 26, 20251.0908x1.0830x
Nov 28, 20251.1079x1.0889x
Dec 1, 20251.1207x1.0840x
Dec 2, 20251.1038x1.0860x
Dec 3, 20251.1394x1.0897x
Dec 4, 20251.1421x1.0905x
Dec 5, 20251.1459x1.0926x
Dec 8, 20251.1316x1.0893x
Dec 9, 20251.1279x1.0884x
Dec 10, 20251.1423x1.0956x
Dec 11, 20251.1212x1.0981x
Dec 12, 20251.1208x1.0863x
Dec 15, 20251.0922x1.0847x
Dec 16, 20251.0476x1.0817x
Dec 17, 20251.0797x1.0698x
Dec 18, 20251.0403x1.0779x
Dec 19, 20251.0472x1.0845x
Dec 22, 20251.0602x1.0912x
Dec 23, 20251.0606x1.0962x
Dec 24, 20251.0577x1.1001x
Dec 26, 20251.0503x1.1000x
Dec 29, 20251.0642x1.0960x
Dec 30, 20251.0803x1.0947x
Dec 31, 20251.0719x1.0866x
Jan 2, 20261.1049x1.0886x
Jan 5, 20261.0600x1.0958x
Jan 6, 20261.0397x1.1023x
Jan 7, 20261.0149x1.0988x
Jan 8, 20261.0665x1.0987x
Jan 9, 20261.0613x1.1059x
Jan 12, 20261.0620x1.1077x
Jan 13, 20261.0939x1.1055x
Jan 14, 20261.1267x1.1000x
Jan 15, 20261.0999x1.1030x
Jan 16, 20261.0983x1.1021x
Jan 20, 20261.0905x1.0797x
Jan 21, 20261.1323x1.0921x
Jan 22, 20261.1255x1.0978x
Jan 23, 20261.1396x1.0982x
Jan 26, 20261.1415x1.1038x
Jan 27, 20261.1712x1.1082x
Jan 28, 20261.1833x1.1081x
Jan 30, 20261.2012x1.1026x
Feb 2, 20261.1783x1.1081x
Feb 3, 20261.2090x1.0987x
Feb 4, 20261.2540x1.0934x
Feb 5, 20261.2275x1.0797x
Feb 6, 20261.2688x1.1004x
Feb 9, 20261.2780x1.1058x
Feb 10, 20261.2710x1.1028x
Feb 11, 20261.3093x1.1026x
Feb 12, 20261.2655x1.0856x
Feb 13, 20261.2974x1.0863x
Feb 17, 20261.2743x1.0881x
Feb 18, 20261.3173x1.0935x
Feb 19, 20261.3498x1.0907x
Feb 20, 20261.3433x1.0986x
Feb 23, 20261.3331x1.0873x
Feb 24, 20261.3237x1.0952x
Feb 25, 20261.3033x1.1045x
Feb 26, 20261.3206x1.0983x
Feb 27, 20261.3512x1.0931x
Mar 2, 20261.3970x1.0937x
Mar 3, 20261.3760x1.0841x
Mar 4, 20261.3788x1.0917x
Mar 5, 20261.4126x1.0856x
Mar 6, 20261.4101x1.0714x
Mar 9, 20261.4223x1.0808x
Mar 10, 20261.3954x1.0790x
Mar 11, 20261.4465x1.0777x
Mar 12, 20261.4485x1.0613x
Mar 13, 20261.4565x1.0553x
Mar 16, 20261.4589x1.0660x
Mar 17, 20261.4832x1.0689x
Mar 18, 20261.5041x1.0539x
Mar 19, 20261.5359x1.0513x
Mar 20, 20261.5479x1.0334x
Mar 23, 20261.5398x1.0443x
Mar 24, 20261.5935x1.0408x
Mar 25, 20261.6119x1.0466x
Mar 26, 20261.6461x1.0279x
Mar 27, 20261.6791x1.0104x
Mar 30, 20261.6611x1.0070x
Mar 31, 20261.6336x1.0363x
Apr 1, 20261.5783x1.0441x
Apr 2, 20261.6218x1.0450x
Apr 6, 20261.6338x1.0500x
Apr 7, 20261.6543x1.0504x
Apr 8, 20261.5596x1.0772x
Apr 9, 20261.5478x1.0834x
Apr 10, 20261.5529x1.0827x
Apr 13, 20261.5604x1.0932x
Apr 14, 20261.5027x1.1066x
Apr 15, 20261.4975x1.1153x
Apr 16, 20261.5278x1.1180x
Apr 17, 20261.4499x1.1316x
Apr 20, 20261.4707x1.1293x
Apr 21, 20261.5103x1.1219x
Apr 22, 20261.5422x1.1333x
Apr 23, 20261.5702x1.1289x
Apr 24, 20261.5527x1.1376x
Apr 27, 20261.5730x1.1396x
Apr 28, 20261.6015x1.1340x
Apr 29, 20261.6645x1.1338x
Apr 30, 20261.6754x1.1451x
May 1, 20261.6662x1.1483x
May 4, 20261.7095x1.1441x
May 5, 20261.7085x1.1533x
May 6, 20261.5966x1.1693x
May 7, 20261.5459x1.1657x
May 8, 20261.5362x1.1753x
May 11, 20261.5728x1.1780x
May 12, 20261.5861x1.1762x
May 13, 20261.5833x1.1828x
May 14, 20261.5953x1.1922x
May 15, 20261.6521x1.1778x
May 18, 20261.6726x1.1770x
May 19, 20261.6886x1.1691x
May 20, 20261.6409x1.1811x
May 21, 20261.6053x1.1835x
May 22, 20261.6076x1.1881x
May 26, 20261.5422x1.1960x
May 27, 20261.5078x1.1958x
May 28, 20261.5089x1.2024x
May 29, 20261.5011x1.2054x
Jun 1, 20261.5520x1.2087x
Jun 2, 20261.5646x1.2103x
Jun 3, 20261.5807x1.2018x
Jun 4, 20261.5810x1.2064x
Jun 5, 20261.5125x1.1752x
Jun 8, 20261.5457x1.1779x
Jun 9, 20261.5032x1.1744x
Jun 10, 20261.5530x1.1559x
Jun 11, 20261.5170x1.1756x
Jun 12, 20261.5297x1.1819x
Jun 15, 20261.4619x1.2028x
Jun 16, 20261.4390x1.1956x
Jun 17, 20261.4248x1.1807x
Jun 18, 20261.3993x1.1899x
Jun 22, 20261.4351x1.1861x
Jun 23, 20261.4391x1.1689x
Jun 24, 20261.4013x1.1684x
Jun 25, 20261.4051x1.1701x
Jun 26, 20261.3954x1.1616x
Jun 29, 20261.3889x1.1807x
Jun 30, 20261.3761x1.1899x
Jul 1, 20261.3482x1.1883x
Jul 2, 20261.3628x1.1867x
Jul 6, 20261.3563x1.1971x
Jul 7, 20261.4133x1.1914x
Jul 8, 20261.4563x1.1877x
Jul 9, 20261.4177x1.1978x
Jul 10, 20261.4251x1.2030x
Jul 13, 20261.4752x1.1937x
Jul 14, 20261.4689x1.1980x
Jul 15, 20261.4644x1.2027x
Jul 16, 20261.4687x1.1962x

Themes and category

Energy MaterialsEnergy & MaterialsQuality

Methodology and caveats

QuantLink fetches this idea from the live FastAPI ideas endpoints and renders the returned title, thesis, holdings, themes, benchmark, and tearsheet fields directly. Missing fields are left unavailable rather than fabricated.

Holdings are a curated model basket. They are not 13F filings, not insider filings, not adviser holdings, and not a claim that any person or fund owns the basket.

Backtested performance depends on the returned basket weights, benchmark, rebalancing assumptions, available price history, and calculation choices in the tearsheet endpoint. Backtests can differ materially from live results and do not include every cost, tax, capacity, liquidity, or execution constraint an investor may face.

Equal-weight and target-weight baskets can drift between rebalance points. Rebalancing can increase turnover, and concentrated thematic baskets can have higher drawdowns than a broad market benchmark.

Frequently asked questions

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