Coterra:到 2024 年,钻井、服务成本可能下降 5%

勘探与生产公司在第二季度财报中报告称,Coterra Energy 的钢铁、砂石和压裂人员等高价项目的油井成本已开始下降。

多盆地勘探与生产 Coterra Energy 预计,根据当前市场定价,明年钻井和服务成本有可能下降 5%。

总部位于休斯敦的Coterra Energy Inc.在 8 月 7 日股市收盘后公布第二季度财报,该公司最近开始看到一些高价项目的油井成本有所缓解。

Coterra 在投资者介绍中表示,钻机成本已下降约 10%;压裂人员和沙子的成本下降了 10%,钢管货物的成本也下降了 15%。

然而,Coterra 尚未发现油井成本通胀的其他来源有多大变化。

Coterra 首席财务官 Shannon Young 在该公司 8 月 8 日的财报电话会议上表示,“包括劳动力和地面租金在内的其他成本类别一直更具粘性,持平甚至小幅上涨。” Young 此前曾担任离岸 E&P Talos Energy Inc.的首席财务官,今年夏天加入 Coterra 担任首席财务官。

包括Diamondback EnergyMatador ResourcesRange Resources在内的其他几家勘探生产公司也报告称,钢铁、燃料、沙子和其他钻井相关商品的成本有所下降。

Coterra 指出,由于其合同在一年内错开,该公司可能无法完全实现 5% 的节省预测。

但科特拉也在寻找其他减少支出的方法。在该公司 Marcellus 的足迹中,如果天然气价格继续保持低位,资本支出每年可能会减少至少 2 亿美元,同时产量仍保持相对平稳。

Coterra 董事长、总裁兼首席执行官托马斯·乔登 (Thomas Jorden) 在电话会议上表示:“我们可以选择重新调整资本方向,或者只是以较慢的节奏进行投资。” “如果天然气宏观经济大幅复苏,我们还保留恢复活动的能力。”

Coterra 最近将其 Marcellus 钻机活动减少至两台钻机和一名完井人员。该公司在二叠纪盆地运行六台钻机和三名完井人员,在阿纳达科盆地运行一台钻机和一名人员。

减少在马塞勒斯的支出使 Coterra 有可能将更多资金分配到其液体丰富的二叠纪地区或阿纳达科盆地。然而,乔登表示,该公司尚未就任何资本重新分配做出最终决定。


相关: Coterra Energy 警告股东拒绝“小型投标”要约


收益、股息和回购

Coterra 董事总经理 Gabriele Sorbara 在 8 月 8 日的一份报告中写道, Coterra 超过了Siebert Williams Shank & Co.对第二季度盈利几个关键指标的预期,包括原油产量和总产量、自由现金流 (FCF) 和 EBITDA报告。

上半年强劲的油井表现导致 Coterra 将 2023 年总产量指导上调 2%,石油产量指导上调 2.8%。

但是, Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co.的分析师表示,鉴于 2023 年下半年石油产量前景疲软,该公司第二季度的强劲业务似乎并未得到充分延续。

第三季度石油产量预计在 88,000 桶/日至 91,000 桶/日之间,较第二季度的 95,800 桶/日中值下降 6% 以上。

第三季度总产量预计将在 630,000 桶油当量/天至 655,000 桶油当量/天之间,较第二季度的 665,000 桶油当量/天下降 3% 左右。

TD Cowen 分析师表示,产量下降是由于现场压裂人员减少而导致本季度油井转入作业时间的影响。

Coterra还在第二季度向股东返还了2.08亿美元,其中包括1.51亿美元的已宣派股息和5700万美元的股票回购。

该公司董事会宣布季度基本股息为每股 0.20 美元,与上季度股息一致。当前股息将于 8 月 31 日支付给 8 月 17 日登记在册的 Coterra 持有人。

Coterra 在本季度以每股 23.55 美元的平均价格回购了 240 万股已发行股票。该公司在 20 亿美元的股票回购授权中还剩 17 亿美元。

总的来说,Coterra 在第二季度向股东返还了 184% 的季度自由现金流,而其承诺返还 50% 的自由现金流。

“公司庞大的现金余额使我们能够返还超过季度自由现金流的资本,并继续以有吸引力的价格反周期购买我们的股票,”杨在电话会议上表示。

根据今年股票回购的速度和预期宣派的股息,Coterra 预计今年将至少 75% 的自由现金流返还给投资者。今年迄今为止,Coterra 已向股东返还 6.28 亿美元,占其自由现金流总额的 94%。


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原文链接/hartenergy

Coterra: Drilling, Services Costs Could Fall 5% into 2024

Coterra Energy has started to see relief in well costs on big-ticket items like steel, sand and frac crews, the E&P reported in second-quarter earnings.

Multi-basin E&P Coterra Energy sees potential for drilling and service costs to fall 5% next year based on current market pricing.

Houston-based Coterra Energy Inc. is starting to see relief in recent well costs on some big-ticket items, the company reported in second-quarter earnings after markets closed on Aug. 7.

Drilling rig costs have fallen by around 10%, Coterra said in an investor presentation; costs for frac crews and sand are down 10% and costs for steel tubular goods have also dropped by 15%.

However, Coterra has yet to see much movement on other sources of well cost inflation.

“Other cost categories, including labor and surface rentals, have been more sticky and flat to modestly up,” said Coterra CFO Shannon Young on the company’s Aug. 8 earnings call. Young joined Coterra as CFO this summer after previously working as CFO for offshore E&P Talos Energy Inc.

Several other E&Ps, including Diamondback Energy, Matador Resources and Range Resources, have also reported softening in costs for steel, fuel, sand and other drilling-related goods.

Coterra noted that since its contracts are staggered over the course of the year, the company may not realize the full 5% savings forecast.

But Coterra is also looking at other ways to decrease spending. In the company’s Marcellus footprint, capital spending could decline by at least $200 million per year while still holding production relatively flat if natural gas prices continue to remain low.

“We have the option to redirect the capital or to simply invest at a slower cadence,” said Coterra Chairman, President and CEO Thomas Jorden on the call. “We also retain the ability to restore activity if the gas macro were to significantly recover.”

Coterra recently reduced its Marcellus rig activity to two rigs and one completion crew. The company is running six rigs and three completion crews in the Permian Basin and one rig and one crew in the Anadarko Basin.

Reducing spending in the Marcellus gives Coterra the potential to allocate more capital to its liquids-rich Permian acreage or toward the Anadarko Basin. However, the company has yet to make a final decision on any reallocation of capital, Jorden said.


RELATED: Coterra Energy Warns Stockholders to Reject 'Mini-tender' Offer


Earnings, dividends and buybacks

Coterra beat Siebert Williams Shank & Co.’s estimates on several key metrics in its second-quarter earnings, including crude oil production and total output volumes, free cash flow (FCF) and EBITDA, managing director Gabriele Sorbara wrote in an Aug. 8 report.

Strong well performance in the first half of the year led Coterra to raise its total 2023 production guidance by 2% and its oil production guidance by 2.8%.

But, the company’s strong operations in the second quarter don’t appear to be fully carried forward given a weaker oil production outlook in the back half of 2023, according to analysts at Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co.

Oil production in the third quarter is expected to range between 88,000 bbl/d and 91,000 bbl/d—down over 6% at the midpoint from 95,800 bbl/d in the second quarter.

Total third-quarter output is expected to come in between 630,000 boe/d and 655,000 boe/d—down around 3% at the midpoint from 665,000 boe/d in the second quarter.

The decline is a function of timing of well turn-in-lines during the quarter as a spot frac crew rolls off, according to analysts at TD Cowen.

Coterra also returned $208 million to shareholders during the second quarter, including $151 million in declared dividends and $57 million in share buybacks.

The company’s board declared a quarterly base dividend of $0.20 per share—in line with last quarter’s dividend. The current dividend is payable on Aug. 31 to Coterra holders of record on Aug. 17.

Coterra repurchased 2.4 million of its outstanding shares at an average price of $23.55 per share during the quarter. The company has $1.7 billion remaining on a $2 billion share buyback authorization.

In total, Coterra returned 184% of its quarterly FCF to shareholders during the second quarter, versus its commitment to return 50% of FCF.

“The company's large cash balance afforded us the luxury to return capital in excess of our quarterly FCF and continue to buy our shares countercyclically at attractive prices,” Young said on the call.

Based on the pace of its share buybacks and expected declared dividends for the year, Coterra expects to return at least 75% of its FCF to investors this year. Coterra has returned $628 million to shareholders so far this year—representing 94% of its total FCF.


RELATED: Energy Bests All Sectors in Q1 Dividend, Buyback Yields