CNQ
$48.98
Canadian Natural Resources Limited engages in the acquisition, exploration, development, production, marketing, and sale of crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas liquids (NGLs) in Western Canada, the United Kingdom sector of the North Sea, and Offshore Africa.
Recent News
Goldman Sachs Updates Canadian Natural (CNQ) View as Oil Price Forecasts Rise
Canadian Natural Resources Limited (NYSE:CNQ) is included among the 15 Best Safe Dividend Stocks for 2026. On March 12, Goldman Sachs raised its price recommendation on Canadian Natural Resources Limited (NYSE:CNQ) to $49 from $37. The firm reiterated a Buy rating on the shares. In a research note, the analyst said estimates across U.S. Majors […]
Canadian Natural Resources Links Record Output To Bigger Cash Returns
Canadian Natural Resources (TSX:CNQ) reported record Q4 production, marking a new output milestone for the company. The company completed an acquisition that it describes as important for its long term production profile. Management raised production guidance for FY2026, updating CNQ's medium term operating outlook. CNQ introduced a new capital return framework, including an additional NCIB share buyback and a plan to move toward returning 100% of free cash flow once net debt goals are...
Is It Too Late To Consider Canadian Natural Resources (TSX:CNQ) After Strong Recent Share Gains?
For investors wondering whether Canadian Natural Resources at about $66.51 is still offering value or if most of the opportunity is already priced in, this article walks you through what the numbers are saying about the stock today. The share price is $66.51, with returns of 6.0% over 7 days, 20.1% over 30 days, 41.2% year to date, 64.6% over 1 year and 115.9% over 3 years. These figures naturally raise questions about growth potential and changing risk perceptions. Recent coverage has...
Canadian Natural Resources Faces Rising Risks: Hold or Sell the Stock?
CNQ faces risks from volatile oil and gas prices, steep international production declines, rising debt costs, regulatory uncertainty, project execution challenges and falling earnings estimates.
These Energy Stocks Benefit Most From the Iran Crisis
The urge to buy energy stocks is a natural reaction to a supply shock, but which ones? The companies with the lowest-cost output are currently on the wrong side of the Strait of Hormuz and owned by their governments anyway. The suppliers of the rest of the world’s oil, natural gas, fertilizers and petrochemicals are mostly publicly listed, higher-cost producers.