Why Wells Fargo Believes Cheniere Energy Will Climb to $335 as Middle East Chaos Reshapes Energy Markets

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By Joel South Published

Quick Read

  • Cheniere Energy (LNG) shares surged 51.94% year-to-date to $294.58, with Wells Fargo raising its price target to $335 based on geopolitical disruption in the Middle East driving structural demand for U.S. LNG. CCL Stage 3 Train 5 achieved first LNG production in February 2026, while multi-decade contracts with Taiwan’s CPC Corporation for 1.2 mtpa through 2050 and JERA for 1.0 mtpa from 2029-2050 lock in revenue visibility; a $10+ billion buyback program through 2030 targets 175 million shares and a $30/share run-rate distributable cash flow target.

  • The Iran war is creating a structural shift in global energy markets that accelerates demand for reliable American LNG supply, positioning Cheniere as the largest U.S. producer and exporter to capture elevated global LNG pricing and geopolitical tailwinds.

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Why Wells Fargo Believes Cheniere Energy Will Climb to $335 as Middle East Chaos Reshapes Energy Markets

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Cheniere Energy (NYSE:LNG | LNG Price Prediction) has been one of the market’s strongest performers in 2026, with shares up 51.94% year-to-date with shares currently trading at $294, approaching the 52-week high of $299.49. Most analysts carry a consensus target of $286.64, but Wells Fargo analyst Michael Blum just raised his price target to $335 from $271, maintaining an Overweight rating and pointing to a geopolitical inflection point reshaping global energy. That target represents roughly 14% upside from current levels. Can LNG realistically reach $335 by year-end?

Michael Blum’s $335 LNG Prediction

Blum argues the Iran war will create a “structural shift” in global energy markets, driving a durable surge in demand for U.S. LNG exports. The thesis: geopolitical disruption to Middle Eastern energy supply routes accelerates the pivot toward reliable American supply. Cheniere, as the largest LNG producer and exporter in the United States, is the most direct beneficiary. Blum’s run-rate distributable cash flow target of approximately $30 per share upon full execution of the buyback program and expansion project FIDs provides the financial backbone for the call.

Key Drivers of LNG Stock Performance

  1. Capacity Expansion Locking In Long-Term Cash Flows: CCL Stage 3 Train 5 produced its first LNG in February 2026, with the remaining trains expected to reach substantial completion by year-end. CCL Midscale Trains 8 & 9 are already 31.8% complete with expected delivery in 2H 2028, adding roughly 5 mtpa of capacity backed by long-term contracts that compound free cash flow for decades.
  2. Aggressive Buybacks Amplifying Per-Share Value: Cheniere’s $10+ billion share repurchase authorization through 2030 is designed to shrink the share count toward approximately 175 million shares, directly driving the $30/share run-rate DCF target that underpins Blum’s valuation.
  3. Long-Term Contract Visibility Through 2050: New SPAs with CPC Corporation Taiwan for up to 1.2 mtpa through 2050 and JERA for approximately 1.0 mtpa from 2029 through 2050 provide contracted revenue visibility that compounds income over multi-decade horizons.

What Will It Take for LNG to Reach $335?

At $335 per share against approximately 175 million shares assumed in management’s run-rate target, the implied market cap would be roughly $58.6 billion. Three conditions are required. First, the remaining CCL Stage 3 trains must complete on schedule, delivering the production ramp that drives 2026 EBITDA guidance of $6.75 to $7.25 billion. Second, the Iran-driven structural demand shift must sustain elevated global LNG pricing. Third, the buyback program must execute at pace, compressing the share count and lifting per-share metrics.

The primary risk is derivative fair value volatility, which swung earnings dramatically in both directions across 2025 and could obscure underlying business performance. With record 670 cargoes exported in 2025, a trailing PE of just 12x, and geopolitical tailwinds accelerating, Blum’s $335 target reflects a credible path for long-term investors building energy exposure.

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About the Author Joel South →

Joel South covers large-cap stocks, dividend investing, and major market trends, with a focus on earnings analysis, valuation, and turning complex data into actionable insights for investors.

He brings more than 15 years of experience as an investor and financial journalist, including 12 years at The Motley Fool, where he served as an investment analyst, Bureau Chief, and later led the Fool.com investing news desk. He has also co-hosted an investing podcast and appeared across TV and radio discussing market trends.

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