By Dan Strumpf, Matt Wirz and Nicole Friedman 

Energy stocks are on sale following a five-month plunge in crude oil, but so far few investors are heeding the temptation to bargain-hunt.

Portfolio managers and analysts covering the sector are bracing for a wave of dividend cuts, share-repurchase delays and capital-spending reductions that will likely ripple across an industry reeling from the 38% tumble in U.S. crude futures since June. Distressed-debt investors are circling a handful of deeply indebted U.S. shale-oil producers that are deemed unlikely to survive further oil-price declines without mergers or overhauls.

Driving the tumult, traders and analysts say, is a steepening decline in the price of crude oil. Entering 2014, few analysts predicted that crude futures would move much from a range of $80 to $110 that has prevailed since the financial crisis.

But now, following an unexpected decision by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to maintain its existing output target, prices could soon plumb new depths, analysts say, testing the finances of many energy companies large and small. Early Monday in Asia, Nymex crude stood at $64.74 a barrel, a five-year low.

"There's lower prices ahead," said Ed Morse, global head of commodities research at Citigroup Inc.

On Friday, energy companies in the S&P 500 tumbled 6.3% in the wake of the OPEC decision. Over the past three months, they have fallen 18.3%. The broader S&P 500 is up 3.2% in the same period.

Some investors say that if the crude-price slump intensifies, many energy firms will suffer from an accelerating retreat from the sector. More firms likely will pull back on investment spending, dimming their growth prospects, while others will trim dividend payouts and share-buyback plans, reducing the appeal of their shares.

Oil-field-service companies and drillers have been among the hardest hit, owing to the likelihood that producers will spend less on new projects. The biggest service company by market capitalization, Schlumberger Ltd., is down 22% in the past three months, while Halliburton Co., which is in the process of buying rival service provider Baker Hughes Inc., has slid 38%.

Last Wednesday, Norwegian offshore driller Seadrill Ltd. suspended its dividend to focus on paying down its debt. Shares of the company have plunged 29% since the announcement. Other drilling companies have tumbled as well, amid fears that they could follow suit in cutting dividends. Shares of Transocean Ltd. are down 17% since the news.

"Everyone's paying the price for this drop in oil prices," said Jason Kotik, senior investment manager at Aberdeen Asset Management, which manages about $520 billion. "Expectations have been ratcheted down."

Mr. Kotik owns shares of large service companies but said he is "struggling to find quality companies" of smaller size.

While the tumble has made some shares less expensive, many investors say it is too soon to step in. The price/earnings ratio of S&P 500 energy companies over the next 12 months stood at 13.5 on Friday, down from 14.7 on June 30, according to FactSet. For the broader S&P 500, the figure is 16.2, up from 15.6 at midyear.

"If their earnings fall even more due to depressed oil prices and low demand for energy services, these stocks could still be expensive, even at these lower prices," said Margie Patel, a portfolio manager who oversees $1.4 billion in stock and bond investments at Wells Fargo Asset Management.

Ms. Patel remains parked in shares of oil-and-gas pipeline and storage companies, whose fortunes are less bound to the price of oil than producers and service firms are. "I think it's too early to look for bargains in the energy sector," she said.

Many investors say the drop in oil prices has reduced their appetite for the many highly indebted, more speculative companies in the sector. Aaron Dunn, energy analyst on the $8.6 billion value-investing team at fund manager Eaton Vance Corp., said in the past two months one fund he works on has bought shares of large integrated oil companies including Exxon Mobil Corp., whose shares have held up better in the downturn. He has been avoiding smaller companies with high levels of debt.

"There's a fair amount of companies that can't survive under their leverage with lower oil prices," Mr. Dunn said.

To be sure, crude prices could yet recover if the global economy rebounds, a new geopolitical risk emerges or OPEC lowers its production ceiling. At the same time, investors say a sustained drop in crude prices could drive a wave of consolidation among producers with shakier finances, leaving the sector in stronger shape in the long run.

The downturn has implications for energy companies' bonds as well as their shares. A growing number of companies behind the bond bonanza are struggling to service the debt they took on now that oil sells for less than $70 a barrel. Credit-ratings firm Moody's Investors Service on Nov. 25 changed its outlook on oil-and-gas producers to negative from positive, citing the likelihood of sustained weakness in oil prices.

Scott Roberts, senior portfolio manager at Invesco Ltd., who helps manage $3 billion in high-yield bond investments, said he cut his holdings of energy bonds by half around midyear on expectations of lower prices, to about 5% of his portfolio.

He still has a modest position, but he has recently been selectively buying bonds of producers with relatively low leverage and stronger assets, including those of California Resources Corp. and Denbury Resources Inc. He said he expects U.S. crude prices to rise starting in the first quarter of 2015 and finish the year at $80 a barrel.

"There's been an opportunity here over the last couple of months to add to quality names that got oversold in this selloff," he said.

The energy industry has issued $1.22 trillion of new bonds since 2009 and accounted for about 7% of all corporate bonds over that period, according to Dealogic. That is about twice the $622 billion the industry borrowed from 1995 through 2008.

Offshore oil driller Energy XXI Ltd. has been a hedge-fund darling in recent years with Mount Kellett Capital Management LP and Kyle Bass's Hayman Capital LP holding as much as 11% of its shares, according to Capital IQ.

The company more than doubled its debt load to $3.8 billion this year to acquire EPL Oil & Gas, and a bond it sold in May to finance the deal has fallen 25% to 75 cents on the dollar since September. Its stock fell 37% on Friday to $4.01.

In a statement, the company said it has hedges in place to help weather a downturn in oil prices and said it is "cash-flow neutral" with oil around "the mid $60s" through next year.

In 2011, private-equity firm KKR & Co. acquired Samson Resources Corp. for $7.2 billion with more than $4 billion of debt, making the deal the second-largest leveraged buyout of the year. But Samson's cash flows are "significantly impacted by the price we receive for our oil," the company said in its third-quarter earnings report.

Samson's bond prices have fallen by 42% since early September, according to FactSet. The company couldn't be reached for comment.

Oil's dramatic move downward takes the commodity far below where one of the world's most well-known oil speculators, former Citigroup Inc. trader Andrew Hall, pegged as a potentially profitable entry point.

Mr. Hall told investors this fall in his Astenbeck Capital Management LLC hedge fund that oil at $85 a barrel "could be a bargain," particularly for delivery contracts several years into the future, as relatively low prices should stimulate demand by boosting global GDP growth, according to investor communications viewed by The Wall Street Journal.

Astenbeck's November performance wasn't immediately available, but the fund lost money in October amid falling oil prices, paring its gains for the year.

Rob Copeland contributed to this article.

Write to Dan Strumpf at daniel.strumpf@wsj.com, Matt Wirz at matthieu.wirz@wsj.com and Nicole Friedman at nicole.friedman@wsj.com

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