The Perfect Trade for the Natural Gas Vehicle Boom

That car in your garage should be running on natural gas. With oil prices around $100 and unlikely to fall much lower in coming years, and natural gas selling for less than $3 per thousand cubic feet (MCF), the cost differential is far too big to ignore.

Consider this: $3 of natural gas gets you about one million BTUs (British thermal heating units) of energy. It takes about eight gallons of gasoline (or about $25 to $30 worth at current prices) to get the same amount of energy. The gas price is wholesale while the gasoline price is retail, but even on an apples-to-apples basis, gasoline is at least five to six times more expensive.

So why is Honda (NYSE: HMC) the only major auto maker selling a factory-built natural gas-powered car? Because Honda also arranges for consumers to fill up their tanks in their own garage through expensive, specialized devices. Simply put, if you buy one of these cars, you won't find a natural gas filling station nearby.

In his recent State of the Union address, President Obama appeared to tacitly support a move to natural gas as a transportation source.

But as we know with Washington, even the most practical legislation is nearly impossible to achieve these days. Indeed, there are an array of natural gas users, most notably in the industrial sector, that want natural gas to stay cheap and abundant, so they've blocked legislation that would boost demand for natural gas at every turn.

Yet hope springs eternal. Shares of Westport Innovations (Nasdaq: WPRT), which retrofits truck engines to run on natural gas, have been on a tear, surging from $14 to $38 in the past year. The company would be a clear beneficiary if Washington ever took action. But it's unclear if that will ever happen, and investors may be overestimating this company's potential success, considering it is expected to be barely profitable in fiscal (March) 2013.

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Meanwhile, a key rival has completely missed the rally. Fuel Systems Solutions (Nasdaq: FSYS), which is similarly exposed to any upside that legislation may bring, has fallen from $50 in late 2009 to $40 in late 2010 to $30 last spring to a recent $20. As a result, Fuel Systems is quite undervalued compared to Westport Innovations, by a variety of measures.



This means Fuel Systems has firmer downside support if natural gas bulls see their hopes dashed if Congress again fails to pass the NAT GAS Act. (Two pieces of legislation were proposed in Congress last year, though neither made it to a floor vote. You can read about them here.)