LNG Cheniere Energy, Inc. Loading... : Bullish and Bearish Analyst Opinions
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17:28
May 31
May 31
Buy Cheniere Energy as a directly named infrastructure play; the speaker explicitly cites LNG terminals as an ignored physical constraint, and the SPR depletion thesis amplifies the asymmetric repricing case for LNG export infrastructure.
MED
12:06
May 26
May 26
Cheniere’s Q1 2026 earnings miss was purely a non-cash mark-to-market paper loss; physical delivery will replace that with realized EBITDA as gas input costs drop. The 20% global LNG supply gap from Qatar’s damaged facility (3-5 year recovery) combined with Cheniere’s fixed-price export contracts and 10-15% spot sales at massive spreads (US $2.88 vs Europe $14.50, Asia $18.81) ensures super-normal margins. The market is ignoring structural supply constraints and accounting noise, creating a compelling long opportunity as the paper loss rolls off and cash flows materialize. Oil price volatility spilling into gas markets, new LNG export capacity from competitors, geopolitical resolution in Qatar, or a sudden drop in European/Asian demand.
HIGH
05:29
May 19
May 19
LNG prices to stay elevated
The Iran war has disrupted 80 million tons of LNG supply, and even if the Strait of Hormuz reopens, it will take 3-6 months to normalize flows and 3-5 years to repair permanent damage. Oversupply that was expected in 2026-2027 is now pushed to 2028-2029, and pent-up demand may mean no oversupply at all. LNG prices have remained high since 2022 and will stay at levels that were previously considered high as the new normal.
MED
13:00
May 01
May 01
Commodity dependent, avoid.
Cheniere Energy's margins depend on natural gas prices, giving management little control over profitability. Commodity-driven businesses screen out as low quality because they lack pricing power and enduring competitive advantage. Therefore, avoid.
MED
08:19
Apr 23
Apr 23
LNG supply disruption significant to monitor.
The Strait of Hormuz closure has halted all LNG tanker traffic since late February, cutting off 20% of global LNG supply. The supply loss is massive and traders should monitor for potential price impacts if the disruption continues.
MED
20:25
Apr 22
Apr 22
Cheniere Energy is a good long-term energy investment.
He likes Cheniere Energy (LNG) as a long-term investment in the energy sector. It is a pipeline/infrastructure company that will benefit from the long-term advantage of U.S. natural gas sourcing and is trading at reasonable multiples. It will benefit from the end of the war and long-term demand, despite potential short-term declines when the Strait of Hormuz reopens.
MED
08:35
Apr 22
Apr 22
Escalation could push oil past $120.
The ongoing closure of the Strait of Hormuz and the risk of renewed US attacks on Iran or strikes on Saudi and Qatari energy infrastructure create a setup where oil prices could surge past $120 a barrel.
MED
21:21
Apr 17
Apr 17
Cheniere benefits from global gas dynamics.
Cheniere is liked given its exposure to global gas dynamics and the expectation that global gas prices will stay elevated.
HIGH
06:27
Apr 16
Apr 16
Energy prices to remain high due to supply disruptions.
Supply disruptions from the Strait of Hormuz closure are causing destruction in the supply of oil, jet fuel, LNG, and fertilizer, which will keep pressure on energy markets and derivatives, keeping prices elevated.
MED
20:11
Apr 15
Apr 15
Author holds $300 Jun and $370 Sep call options on LNG (Cheniere Energy). The broader bearish thesis implies rising energy costs (beneficial for energy exporters) despite consumer weakness. LNG, as a major LNG exporter, could benefit from sustained or increased global energy demand. A direct bullish bet on the LNG stock price increasing by mid-2026, contradicting the author's general economic pessimism. A severe economic downturn reduces global energy demand. The market may have already priced in energy trends. The author's macro view proves correct and triggers a broad market sell-off that drags down all equities.
HIGH
14:15
Apr 02
Apr 02
The speaker lists LNG as one of several commodities facing a global shortage alongside oil, NGLs, and fertilizers, causing petrochemical plant closures and power shortages worldwide. The closure of the Hormuz Strait disrupts global LNG flows. The crisis is described as crushing industries on every level, with the impact on LNG and natural gas following the same trajectory as oil. The same supply constraints and geopolitical pressures driving oil prices higher will also drive LNG prices higher, contributing to a broad-based global energy crisis. A rapid resolution to the conflict or a deeper-than-expected global recession that crushes industrial and power demand for gas.
19:14
Apr 01
Apr 01
Matt Smith highlighted that LNG flows from Qatar to Asia have stopped, with the last shipments arriving and no cargoes behind, directly impacting countries like South Korea, Thailand, and Taiwan. The cessation of LNG shipments reduces supply in Asian markets, leading to inventory drawdowns, potential shortages, and likely price increases for natural gas in the region. WATCH because this supply crunch is immediate and data-driven, with significant implications for LNG pricing and energy security in Asia, warranting close attention. Resumption of Qatari exports or a surge in LNG supply from other producers (e.g., the U.S. or Australia) could quickly alleviate the tightness.
01:30
Apr 01
Apr 01
The tweet outlines various sectors and assets positioned to perform well during economic downturns, geopolitical conflicts, and energy transitions.
HIGH
14:45
Mar 31
Mar 31
Qatar declared force majeure on LNG contracts after an attack on its facility, with the CEO stating it could mean a 17% loss of Qatari LNG export capacity for up to five years. The attack was part of the regional conflict. Damage to major liquefaction infrastructure is not quickly repairable, removing a significant chunk of global LNG supply for an extended period. This represents a structural, long-duration supply shock to the global LNG market, warranting close monitoring for sustained price impacts and supply chain dislocations. Faster-than-expected repair of the damaged facilities or a rapid de-escalation of the conflict preventing further attacks.
17:44
Mar 24
Mar 24
Sullivan highlights an underreported crisis: the last LNG cargoes are arriving in Taiwan, Japan, and South Korea. Asia's spot LNG price has spiked from ~$11 to $18-20 per unit, and it's unclear if they can get enough fuel at any price. These regions are heavily dependent on LNG imports for power generation. A physical shortage, not just high cost, could force power rationing in major economies. This is a critical, high-impact supply shock in development that the market may be under-pricing. It warrants close monitoring for direct impacts on utilities, LNG shippers, and broader Asian economic activity. A rapid de-escalation in the Strait of Hormuz or a swift diplomatic resolution could ease transport fears and alleviate shortage pressures.
17:21
Mar 24
Mar 24
Patrick Pouyanné stated that LNG prices are currently around $20 per million BTU, and if the conflict continues with Qatar supply offline (20% of world market), prices could rise to $30-$40, similar to 2022. Supply disruption during peak demand seasons—summer for Asian cooling and European storage refill—creates a tight market, driving significant price appreciation. WATCH because the thesis is highly dependent on geopolitical events, but the potential for a sharp price increase makes it a critical developing setup for energy markets. Resolution of the conflict or rapid deployment of alternative LNG supply (e.g., from new US capacity) could alleviate price pressures.
15:53
Mar 24
Mar 24
Agen stated that LNG production is ramping up very fast, with exports to Europe and Asia increasing, and Alaska LNG can reach Asia in 8 days. Policy actions under President Trump, such as permitting streamlining and investment, are accelerating LNG export capabilities and reducing timelines. Direction LONG because increased LNG production and exports signal growth and rising demand in the LNG market, supported by government initiatives. Geopolitical tensions, regulatory hurdles, or slower-than-expected ramp-up could hinder growth and export targets.
04:08
Mar 24
Mar 24
The speaker highlights that the Ras Laffan LNG facility in Qatar (20% of global supply) was damaged, with 17% of its trains significantly damaged, taking 20% of capacity offline. He agrees with the IEA that the crisis is "profoundly consequential" and notes Europe exits winter with empty stores and doubled prices. Physical supply of LNG is materially constrained by wartime damage. Repair will take "many months" even if the war stopped immediately. This creates a tight physical market, particularly for European and Asian buyers, disconnected from near-term political headlines. WATCH due to sustained fundamental tightness. The supply damage is real and long-lasting, providing a price floor and volatility catalyst separate from the daily war headlines that move oil. A faster-than-expected repair timeline or a collapse in global demand due to economic recession would alleviate the supply pressure. An attack on even more critical gas infrastructure would exacerbate it.
03:36
Mar 23
Mar 23
The longer this goes on the higher Cheniere Energy LNG will go. If Strait of Hormuz stays closed for 6 months, Wood Mackenzie predicts JKM could sustain $45-$55/mmBtu. Under that scenario LNG would trade at $500+.
HIGH
23:46
Mar 20
Mar 20
Cheniere Energy is a pure-play LNG exporter with record volumes, generating $19.4B in LNG revenue out of $20.0B total in 2025. Middle East disruptions (Qatar facility damage) increase global demand for U.S. LNG; Cheniere is largest and most established player. Cleanest and most direct way to benefit from LNG supply shift, trading at <20x earnings estimates. Resolution of Middle East conflict or repair of Qatari facilities could reduce demand premium.
21:02
Mar 20
Mar 20
The head of the Panama Canal explicitly expects increased US LNG transit due to geopolitical shifts, and is allocating capacity accordingly, signaling sustained high demand for US exports.
MED
08:24
Mar 20
Mar 20
The trade is to be long LNG exporters as the EU's firm commitment to phasing out Russian gas creates a structural, price-inelastic demand for seaborne LNG imports into Europe.
MED
00:00
Mar 20
Mar 20
Morgan Stanley is forecasting a significant LNG supply shortfall in 2026, which they believe will drive the JKM price to $30/MMBtu.
HIGH
19:05
Mar 19
Mar 19
Qatar's Ras Laffan LNG plant, the world's largest, suffered extensive damage (17% of the facility), with repairs taking up to three years. As a major global LNG exporter, this damage significantly reduces supply, leading to higher gas prices, especially in Asian markets like Pakistan. LONG on LNG prices due to constrained supply and increased demand pressure from supply chain disruptions. Alternative LNG sources or faster-than-expected repairs could mitigate supply shortages.
11:34
Mar 19
Mar 19
Middle Eastern LNG supply (Qatar, UAE) is severely compromised due to ongoing military strikes. With 20% of global supply offline, Europe will desperately need to secure alternative LNG cargoes, heavily benefiting US-based LNG exporters like Cheniere Energy. Long US LNG exporters to capitalize on the massive supply vacuum left by Qatar. US regulatory export caps or shipping bottlenecks.
HIGH
11:01
Mar 19
Mar 19
Iran has reportedly struck a Qatari gas facility, taking 17% of Qatar's LNG export capacity offline for up to 5 years. Qatar has declared force majeure on contracts. This is a massive, long-term supply shock to the global natural gas market. The reduction in supply, especially to key importers in Europe and Asia, will likely cause a sustained spike in LNG and, by extension, oil prices. Go long on energy assets (LNG producers, oil, related ETFs) to capitalize on the significant and prolonged supply disruption caused by the geopolitical conflict. The market could reverse sharply on news of de-escalation or a swift end to the conflict, as hinted by comments about reopening the Strait of Hormuz causing a market pump.
LOW
09:30
Mar 19
Mar 19
An Iranian attack has reportedly damaged ~17% of QatarEnergy's LNG production capacity, with repairs estimated to take 3-5 years. This significant, long-term supply disruption in the global LNG market will likely lead to a sustained increase in LNG prices due to the supply/demand imbalance. A long position on LNG or related equities is warranted to capitalize on the expected price surge from a major supply shock with a multi-year recovery timeline. The initial report could be inaccurate, or other producers could ramp up production faster than expected, mitigating the price impact. WTI / BRENT - SPREAD (LONG WTI, SHORT BRENT) | confidence: 0.70 | sentiment: +0.30 Speaker: r/stocks community Thesis: The community notes that the spread between Brent and WTI crude oil is at its widest point in over a decade. Such a wide spread often presents an arbitrage opportunity, as the prices are expected to revert toward their historical mean. The geopolitical tension in the Middle East is likely inflating Brent's price relative to WTI. A long/short arbitrage play (long WTI, short Brent) is proposed to profit from the eventual narrowing of this historically wide price spread. Geopolitical events could worsen, further widening the spread. An export ban on US oil, as speculated, would dramatically increase the spread by trapping WTI domestically. US HOUSING MARKET - SHORT | confidence: 0.70 | sentiment: -0.70 Speaker: r/stocks community Thesis: New home sales for January fell to 587k, significantly missing the 722k expectation, marking a 17.6% month-over-month decline. This sharp drop in sales, combined with mortgage rates that have surged since January, indicates a rapidly cooling housing market and broader economic weakness. The data points to a potential downturn in the housing market, making a short position on housing-related assets (e.g., homebuilders, REITs) a viable strategy. The Federal Reserve could pivot to a more dovish policy (rate cuts, QE) in response to economic weakness or geopolitical events, which could re-stimulate the housing market.
LOW
13:11
Mar 16
Mar 16
"The US is also pressing China to buy more US oil and natural gas as well. So the US clearly also emerging a winner in this Iran conflict, given they are the largest exporter of LNG globally." To appease US trade demands and balance the trade deficit, China will likely direct its state-owned energy companies to sign long-term offtake agreements for US natural gas. Pure-play US LNG exporters and infrastructure companies with export terminal capacity will secure highly lucrative, decades-long contracts as a direct result of this diplomatic pressure. LONG. US LNG exporters are perfectly positioned to absorb state-directed Chinese energy purchases, locking in long-term cash flows. If the Strait of Hormuz is closed, global energy markets will fracture, potentially causing extreme volatility that disrupts standard shipping routes and global LNG pricing dynamics.
16:54
Mar 15
Mar 15
"You see these Asian countries that have relied so heavily in the Middle East for their crude oil... Now, they start looking east to the United States... President Trump has been advocating strongly for a new liquid LNG facility pipeline." Asian economies facing severe energy insecurity due to Middle East disruptions will accelerate their transition to U.S.-sourced liquefied natural gas. U.S. LNG exporters and infrastructure developers will secure lucrative, long-term supply contracts as nations prioritize supply chain diversification. LONG. Geopolitical shifts are forcing a permanent realignment of global energy supply chains toward reliable U.S. exports. Regulatory hurdles, permitting delays, or a change in U.S. administration policy could slow down the expansion of LNG export infrastructure.
14:09
Mar 15
Mar 15
Asian countries are "looking east to The United States... President Trump, has been advocating, strongly for a new, liquid LNG, facility, a pipeline that would run alongside the Trans Alaska pipeline... to deliver that crude oil to to Asia, to Japan." Middle East instability is forcing Indo-Pacific nations to secure reliable energy from the US. Midstream companies and LNG exporters will see increased long-term contracting and federal support for infrastructure expansion (especially West Coast/Alaska routing) to meet this massive Asian demand. LONG. Geopolitical shifts are creating a permanent demand increase for US energy exports, backed by a federal push to build the necessary export infrastructure. Aggressive US tariff policies could trigger retaliatory trade measures, complicating bilateral energy deals with Asian nations.
About LNG Analyst Coverage
Buzzberg tracks LNG (Cheniere Energy, Inc.) across 18 sources. 39 bullish vs 0 bearish calls from 52 analysts. Sentiment: predominantly bullish (53%). 73 total trade ideas tracked.