Goldman Sachs is adopting a favorable stance on a group of oil producers with significant Canadian exposure, identifying a handful of upstream names it believes can deliver meaningful free cash flow growth and strong investor returns.
In a recent research note, the bank's analysts recommended institutional investors focused on Canada consider Cenovus Energy Inc (TSX:CVE), ConocoPhillips DRC (NLB:ZCOP), Canadian Natural Resources Ltd (TSX:CNQ), and Ovintiv Inc (TSX:OVV). The analysts also highlighted Suncor Energy as a company with an attractive cash-generation profile and a clear framework for allocating that cash to shareholders.
For Cenovus, Goldman projects a pronounced ramp in free cash flow beginning in 2027 and continuing into 2028. The firm ties that expected uplift to two company-specific developments: the coming onstream of the West White Rose project and production gains from the Christina Lake North asset, both of which the bank says should support a broader production increase.
Canadian Natural Resources is singled out for its nearer-term financial inflection, the analysts say. Management has been actively working to lower leverage, and Goldman suggests that this de-leveraging could accelerate returns to shareholders, particularly if commodity markets move into a higher-price regime.
Goldman reiterated a positive view of Ovintiv, calling attention to the company's flexible capital allocation strategy, which targets returning between 50% and 100% of free cash flow to investors. The analysts further note Ovintiv's solid financial profile is supported by expectations for robust Canadian condensate prices in 2026 and by a demonstrated record of improving capital efficiency.
Looking further ahead, Goldman expects ConocoPhillips to post a large expansion in free cash flow driven mainly by its Willow development. The research note states that first oil from the multi-billion-dollar Alaskan project is currently anticipated to flow in early 2029. As major capital expenditures decline and these cornerstone projects come online, Goldman projects ConocoPhillips could realize a dramatic cash-flow inflection. The bank quantifies that outlook by forecasting a 20% to 25% compound annual growth rate in free cash flow per share for ConocoPhillips through 2030.
Suncor Energy also features in Goldman’s analysis. The bank describes Suncor as maintaining an appealing free cash flow growth profile alongside a commitment to returning roughly 100% of that cash to shareholders. That shareholder distribution plan is noted as having been reinforced after Suncor met its net debt target of approximately C$8 billion in late 2024.
Underlying Goldman’s selection of names is a thesis that links visible production milestones and disciplined balance-sheet planning with reliable returns to shareholders. The analysts emphasize the role of scheduled capital expenditure roll-offs and explicit debt-reduction targets in creating predictable inflection points for free cash flow across the sector.
Goldman’s list concentrates on companies that combine project-backed production upside with clear frameworks for capital allocation. For investors seeking exposure to the Canadian oil complex, the bank’s research highlights a pathway to potential total-return outperformance that rests on both operational milestones and financial discipline.
Sector impact - Energy producers, particularly upstream oil companies with Canadian operations, are the primary focus. Financial markets that price these stocks and bond markets for issuers in the sector may be affected by shifting expectations for free cash flow and shareholder returns.