

The ASX energy shares available to Aussie investors are dominated by two major players: Woodside Energy Group Ltd (ASX: WDS) and Santos Ltd (ASX: STO).
Both of them are heavily exposed to energy prices, so whatever happens, they will largely affect both of them in similar ways, in my opinion.
Letâs compare them to two of the easiest metrics first.
ASX energy shares’ valuation
There are a number of metrics to measure different businesses. Profit can be impacted by different accounting policies, but itâs the bottom line for a company and also dictates how much of a profit reserve there is to pay dividends.
We can look at the price/earnings (P/E) ratio which shows what multiple of earnings the business is trading at. It provides an easy way to compare businesses in simple terms, particularly if theyâre in the same industry.
Commsec numbers say that Woodside could generate earnings per share (EPS) of $3.19 in FY23. That would put the Woodside share price at 11 times FY23âs estimated earnings. It could then generate $2.84 of EPS in FY24, putting the Woodside share price at 12 times FY24âs estimated earnings.
Commsec numbers also suggest that Santos could make an EPS of 38.4 cents in FY23 and 84.6 cents in FY24. This would put the business at 8 times FY23âs estimated earnings and 8.5 times FY24âs estimated earnings.
On valuation terms alone, Santos is a bit cheaper, but they are both trading on a low valuation.
Dividend projections
The dividend could be one of the biggest influencers on which ASX energy share generates the strongest total shareholder returns.
For Woodside, the business is committed to paying a good dividend to investors each year.
In FY23, the current projections suggest that Woodside may pay an annual dividend per share of $2.34, which would equate to a grossed-up dividend yield of 9.75%. Though, in FY24, the grossed-up dividend yield may reduce to 9.5%, though this is still very high.
With Santos, the ASX energy share is predicted to pay an annual dividend per share of 38 cents, which would be a grossed-up dividend yield of 7.6%. In FY24, it could then pay an annual dividend per share of 29.2 cents, putting the dividend yield at 5.8%.
Woodside is the clear winner here.
What about projects?
Both of the businesses are working on projects to grow profit further. Woodside said that with its Sangomar field development phase 1 offshore Senegal, it expects to complete subsea installation and relocate the floating production storage and offloading facility from Singapore, ahead of targeted first oil late in the year.
In Western Australia, the Scarborough and Pluto train 2 projects are now 25% complete and they âremain on track for targeted first LNG production in 2026.â
Santos is working on a number of carbon capture storage projects, which can help it produce âabated gas and LNGâ.
The business points out that Asia Pacific LNG demand is expected to almost double by 2040, according to Wood Mackenzie forecasts.
However, the Australian Financial Review recently reported that Santosâ $5.8 billion Barossa gas project in the Timor Sea has emerged as the âbiggest targetâ of the escalated restrictions on gas projects, with the governmentâs newly-agreed restrictions on gas projects.
The AFR reported that the CO2 content of Barossa is around 18%, while Woodsideâs Scarborough project is a âlow-CO2 fieldâ.
Foolish takeaway
I think Woodsideâs higher dividend yield and investments in renewable energy and hydrogen could make it a better long-term pick, even if itâs a bit more expensive.
However, if everything goes well for Santos with its projects then it could still perform well.
The post Best ASX energy share to buy now: Woodside vs. Santos appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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More reading
- Banking and energy: The ASX 200 dividend shares to buy now according to analysts
- Invested $12,000 in Woodside shares in 2018? Hereâs how much dividend income youâve earned
- Why did the Woodside share price drop 7% in March?
- Here’s Citi’s forecast for the Woodside share price
- 5 things to watch on the ASX 200 on Thursday
Motley Fool contributor Tristan Harrison has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.
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