The New Energy Order
The thematic embrace of Oilfield Services
The thematic embrace of Oilfield Services
15 April 2026
For investors, understanding thematic exposures in real time provides greater clarity of portfolio shape and behaviour. Thematic baskets form an important element of how we think about portfolio risk. In particular, we believe they have a role as an additional means to highlight when newly emerging themes begin to alter relationships between stocks and sectors - patterns that traditional multi-factor risk models can be slow to reflect.
We spotted a new basket from Bank of America last week, called 'New Energy Order' which resonates with our energy sovereignty views outlined in last month's blog on oilfield services companies. Interestingly, the oilfield services companies had not been well-represented in the baskets of similar, overlapping 'real asset' themes such as 'Hard Assets, Low Obsolescence' (HALO), 'AI Facilitators' and so on. Therefore, it is notable that they are now being embraced in the universe of thematic baskets. This admittedly tends to bring greater chance of volatility due to consensual positioning, but we believe there is a firm distinction to be made between volatility and true "risk" to intrinsic value. Well‑held stocks can remain investable where fundamental conviction is supported, even if this entails higher volatility during risk‑on/risk‑off market episodes. (we'll go deeper into this in a future blog post).
The 'New Energy Order' basket, by sector, is 45% Energy, 41% Utilities and 14% Cap Goods1. Within that, Oilfield Services alone make up nearly a quarter of the basket.
The Bank of America European ‘New Energy Order’ basket
Beyond Green v Black: why renewables and fossils are pragmatic new bedfellows
The world has firmly moved on from the 'renewables good, oil bad' narrative of earlier in the decade. The basket is testament to a new 'whatever it takes' attitude to energy supply. For us, it is nice to see an element of thematic basket validation after our initial conviction view of the theme, but it should not breed complacency, particularly given the aforementioned volatility implications of increasingly well-held stocks. That said, as we outlined in March, oilfield services stocks are currently trading at a discount to the European market average, implying potential higher earnings growth. Indeed, the simple consensus 12m forward mean P/E of the ‘New Energy Order’ basket is almost 20x, while the quarter that is oilfield services is <15x*.
We also saw the launch of a similar but broader Thematic Basket from BofA called 'Defence, Energy, Infra and Security', composed of 57% Cap Goods, 18% Energy (entirely made up of Oilfield Services), 17% Utilities*, plus some technology companies. The average consensus 12m forward P/E of the basket is 27x, greater than the 'New Energy Order' P/E of 20x*, due to the presence of Defence companies which have been ascribed much higher terminal values post the events of recent years. Oilfield Services and Utilities are the cheapest stocks in this condensed Hard Assets basket. Again, as with ‘New Energy Order’, we have high conviction in the ‘Defence, Energy Infra and Security’ theme.
The Bank of America European ‘Defence, Energy, Infra and Security’ basket
Tom O’Hara, Jamie Ross and David Barker manage European Equities strategies at GAM Investments. You can find out more information on the team here.
Bitte wählen Sie Ihr Profil oder besuchen Sie unsere Kontakte & Standorte.