2 Stocks I Bought With Millionaire-Maker Potential

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Let me tell you a little story about disruption and opportunity.

About 15 years ago, the United States was expected to run out of oil and natural gas. For most of the mid-2000s, this idea of "peak oil" became the common wisdom: America had tapped all of its oil and gas, and it was just a matter of time before we would have to import every barrel and cubic foot we needed. Natural gas, which was particularly difficult to transport overseas at the time, skyrocketed.

Then shale changed everything.

Geologists have known about shale gas and crude oil for decades, but we didn't have any way to cost-effectively extract them. Enter hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling, which have made those resources recoverable, and the U.S. quickly went from fears of running out of domestically produced oil and gas to being awash in both within a mere few years.

There's so much natural gas that prices have cratered, down more than two-thirds since the mid- and late 2000s. And all that cheap, plentiful gas is expected to turn the U.S. into one of the biggest natural gas exporters in the world. That's right: A decade and a half removed from fears of running out of gas, America is now on track to send billions of metric feet of natural gas to markets all over the world.

Man drawing scales with risk and reward on chalkboard.
Man drawing scales with risk and reward on chalkboard.

Image source: Getty Images.

For investors, that's creating an opportunity to profit from a massive shift in global energy. Two companies in particular, Tellurian (NASDAQ: TELL) and NextDecade (NASDAQ: NEXT), should be high on investor's watchlists. While both are at relatively risky stages of their development, these pure-play LNG exporters have the potential to create enormous wealth for investors willing to buy early, and ride out the next few years. That's why I've added both to my portfolio in recent months, and why you should consider doing the same thing.

What Tellurian and NextDecade do

Both companies aim to become major exporters of natural gas, with plans to tap some of the lowest-cost natural gas supplies in the world, from the Permian, Haynesville, and Eagle Ford shale. These shale plays are particularly compelling because they generate substantial amounts of associated gas, that is, natural gas which comes from oil wells. At present, there simply isn't much of a market for a lot of this gas, and there's minimal infrastructure in place to gather and get it to market.

The end result is that a massive amount of associated gas simply gets flared, or burned off near the wellhead to dispose of it; simply letting it escape into the atmosphere results in about 20 times the greenhouse gas emissions versus flaring it. Put it together, and producers will benefit by monetizing associated gas that's only costing them money at this point, while Tellurian and NextDecade can benefit from access to lower-cost gas that's exceedingly plentiful.