Comparing Summit Midstream (NYSE:SMC) and TC Energy (NYSE:TRP)

TC Energy (NYSE:TRPGet Free Report) and Summit Midstream (NYSE:SMCGet Free Report) are both oils/energy companies, but which is the superior investment? We will contrast the two businesses based on the strength of their analyst recommendations, valuation, institutional ownership, dividends, profitability, earnings and risk.

Analyst Ratings

This is a breakdown of current recommendations and price targets for TC Energy and Summit Midstream, as provided by MarketBeat.

Sell Ratings Hold Ratings Buy Ratings Strong Buy Ratings Rating Score
TC Energy 2 2 5 0 2.33
Summit Midstream 0 0 0 0 0.00

TC Energy currently has a consensus target price of $55.67, indicating a potential upside of 17.46%. Given TC Energy’s stronger consensus rating and higher possible upside, equities analysts plainly believe TC Energy is more favorable than Summit Midstream.

Risk & Volatility

TC Energy has a beta of 0.82, suggesting that its share price is 18% less volatile than the S&P 500. Comparatively, Summit Midstream has a beta of 2.37, suggesting that its share price is 137% more volatile than the S&P 500.

Earnings & Valuation

This table compares TC Energy and Summit Midstream”s revenue, earnings per share and valuation.

Gross Revenue Price/Sales Ratio Net Income Earnings Per Share Price/Earnings Ratio
TC Energy $11.80 billion 4.17 $2.16 billion $3.61 13.13
Summit Midstream $458.90 million 0.96 -$38.95 million ($12.81) -3.24

TC Energy has higher revenue and earnings than Summit Midstream. Summit Midstream is trading at a lower price-to-earnings ratio than TC Energy, indicating that it is currently the more affordable of the two stocks.

Insider & Institutional Ownership

83.1% of TC Energy shares are owned by institutional investors. Comparatively, 43.0% of Summit Midstream shares are owned by institutional investors. 5.3% of Summit Midstream shares are owned by insiders. Strong institutional ownership is an indication that hedge funds, endowments and large money managers believe a company will outperform the market over the long term.

Profitability

This table compares TC Energy and Summit Midstream’s net margins, return on equity and return on assets.

Net Margins Return on Equity Return on Assets
TC Energy 31.15% 12.92% 3.74%
Summit Midstream -23.01% 0.71% 0.22%

Summary

TC Energy beats Summit Midstream on 11 of the 13 factors compared between the two stocks.

About TC Energy

(Get Free Report)

TC Energy Corporation operates as an energy infrastructure company in North America. It operates through five segments: Canadian Natural Gas Pipelines; U.S. Natural Gas Pipelines; Mexico Natural Gas Pipelines; Liquids Pipelines; and Power and Energy Solutions. The company builds and operates a network of 93,600 kilometers of natural gas pipelines, which transports natural gas from supply basins to local distribution companies, power generation plants, industrial facilities, interconnecting pipelines, LNG export terminals, and other businesses. It also has regulated natural gas storage facilities with a total working gas capacity of 532 billion cubic feet. In addition, it has approximately 4,900 kilometers of liquids pipeline system that connects Alberta crude oil pipeline to refining markets in Illinois, Oklahoma, Texas, and the United States Gulf Coast. Further, the company owns or has interests in power generation facilities with approximately 4,600 megawatts; and owns and operates approximately 118 billion cubic feet of non-regulated natural gas storage facilities in in Alberta, Ontario, Québec, and New Brunswick. The company was formerly known as TransCanada Corporation and changed its name to TC Energy Corporation in May 2019. TC Energy Corporation was founded in 1951 and is headquartered in Calgary, Canada.

About Summit Midstream

(Get Free Report)

Summit Midstream Corporation focuses on owning, developing, and operating midstream energy infrastructure assets primarily shale formations in the continental United States. It operates natural gas, crude oil, and produced water gathering systems in four unconventional resource basins, including the Williston Basin in North Dakota, which includes the Bakken and Three Forks shale formations; the Denver-Julesburg Basin that consists of the Niobrara and Codell shale formations in Colorado and Wyoming; the Fort Worth Basin in Texas, which comprises the Barnett Shale formation; and the Piceance Basin in Colorado, which includes the Mesaverde formation, as well as the emerging Mancos and Niobrara Shale formations. It serves natural gas and crude oil producers. Summit Midstream Corporation was founded in 2012 and is based in Houston, Texas.

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