商业/经济

2023 年美国上游并购金额将创下 1,920 亿美元纪录

第四季度并购市场活动超过 1,400 亿美元,创下了今年的最佳表现。

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资料来源:盖蒂图片社

根据 Enverus Intelligence Research (EIR) 的数据,第四季度的三笔重磅交易使 2023 年的并购 (M&A) 价值跃升至创纪录的 1,920 亿美元。

这三笔悬而未决的交易——埃克森美孚收购先锋自然资源公司、雪佛龙收购赫斯公司以及西方石油公司收购CrownRock——第四季度的交易价值达到创纪录的1,440亿美元。

Enverus 高级副总裁安德鲁·迪特马尔 (Andrew Dittmar) 表示:“石油和天然气行业正在经历一场历史性的整合浪潮,可与 20 世纪 90 年代末和 2000 年代初发生的情况相媲美,从而催生了现代超级巨头。”

经过十年勘探投资的减少以及美国主要页岩油区的基本确定,并购已成为弥补储量下降并确保这些公司盈利的上游业务长寿的首选工具。对于最优质的资源,现在买家多于卖家,推动价格上涨,”他说。

EIR 表示,二叠纪盆地“在剩余资源方面名列前茅,提供了最优质的剩余钻探机会,以及从多产地区的堆积资源基础上进行资源扩张的最大潜力。”

今年二叠纪盆地的并购活动交易额达 1030 亿美元,其中包括埃克森美孚以 650 亿美元收购 Pioneer,以及西方石油公司以 120 亿美元收购私人 CrownRock。

“二叠纪盆地是 2023 年交易的主宰,无论是私人销售还是企业并购,”迪特玛说。“买家越来越愿意不惜一切代价来扩大他们在这一关键领域的影响力,未来钻探库存的价格攀升至新高。”

不过,他指出,虽然买家兴趣依然存在,但 2024 年不太可能出现重演,因为可用的有吸引力的外卖目​​标清单已经变少。

他表示:“在缩减目标清单中名列前茅的是私营企业奋进能源公司 (Endeavour Energy Resources),该公司极有可能实现 2024 年最大的交易。”

随着二叠纪盆地的整合日益巩固,而且美国很少有其他油气田能够提供如此广泛的未开发库存,EIR 建议买家可能会在美国以外寻找收购机会。例如,据 EIR 报道,雪佛龙以 530 亿美元收购 Hess 主要是为了在圭亚那开展业务。

然而,该分析公司补充说,有吸引力的国际收购机会也更具挑战性。

“加拿大在美国公司中脱颖而出,因为它在一个发达且稳定的国家提供了庞大的资源基础。该公司表示,按照目前的开发速度,Montney 可以提供近 20 年的高质量钻井库存,美国公司可能会密切关注,担心国内剩余库存的规模和质量。

虽然二叠纪盆地在大型交易中位居榜首,平均交易规模增长至近 40 亿美元,并且仅考虑已宣布的至少 1 亿美元的交易,但 2024 年可能会在更广泛的分布范围内恢复更多规模较小、资产规模的交易戏剧,EIR 说。

“大型企业并购自然会导致投资组合修剪,西方石油公司就是一个例子,它宣布计划削减 4.5 至 60 亿美元的资产,其中大部分来自其国内投资组合,”迪特玛说。

“对于一些规模较小的公共勘探和生产企业以及私人资本来说,这应该是一个受欢迎的发展,这些资本已经被定价或缺乏在二叠纪核心战略交易中竞争的规模。2024 年交易量可能会增加的公司包括俄克拉荷马州的 SCOOP/STACK、德克萨斯州的 Eagle Ford 和北达科他州的 Bakken。到 2023 年,这些公司的交易总额仅为 110 亿美元,”他说。

EIR 表示,私募股权公司的游戏规则已经改变。民间资本筹集和部署的步伐已经放缓。

EIR 表示,“这些公司可能会寻求廉价购买相对发达的资产,并为私人投资者带来股息,而不是购买有前景的勘探面积并希望在出售给公共运营商之前证明其有效性。”

2023 年的上游并购绝大多数集中在石油领域,针对石油的交易金额为 1,860 亿美元,而针对天然气的收购交易仅为 60 亿美元。东京燃气于 2023 年 12 月宣布以 27 亿美元收购海恩斯维尔页岩的 Rockcliff Energy。

2023 年天然气并购总额已在 2024 年达到顶峰,其中切萨皮克能源公司 (Chesapeake Energy) 与天然气同行西南能源公司 (Southwestern Energy) 的合并金额近 120 亿美元,其中包括西南能源公司的债务。

EIR表示,“随着期待已久的美国液化天然气产量增加的临近,人们对天然气资产的兴趣可能会增加,美国计划在未来36个月内增加10 Bcf/D的液化天然气出口能力。” “这最终应该会让生产商摆脱天然气价格低迷的困扰,尽管他们可能需要保持耐心。由于储气库充装和生产仍然强劲,2024 年大部分时间的天然气价格可能会与充满挑战的 2023 年市场一样低或更低。”

原文链接/jpt
Business/economics

US Upstream M&A Sets $192 Billion Record for 2023

At more than $140 billion, M&A market activity in the fourth quarter delivered the best showing of the year.

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Source: Getty Images

A trio of blockbuster deals in the fourth quarter vaulted the mergers and acquisitions (M&A) value for 2023 to a record $192 billion, according to Enverus Intelligence Research (EIR) data.

The three pending deals – ExxonMobil’s bid for Pioneer Natural Resources, Chevron’s offer for Hess, and Occidental Petroleum’s quest for CrownRock—brought deal values to a record-setting $144 billion in the fourth quarter.

“Oil and gas is undergoing a historic consolidation wave comparable to what occurred in the late 1990s and early 2000s, giving rise to the modern supermajors,” said Andrew Dittmar, senior vice president at Enverus.

“After a decade of lowered investment in exploration and with the major US shale plays largely defined, M&A has become the preferred tool to replace declining reserves and secure longevity in these companies’ profitable upstream businesses. For the best-quality resource, there are also now more buyers than sellers, driving prices upward,” he said.

EIR said the Permian Basin stands “well atop the heap for remaining resources, offering both the most high-quality remaining drilling opportunities and the greatest potential for resource expansion from the prolific region’s stacked resource benches.”

M&A activity in the Permian for the year closed at $103 billion transacted, including ExxonMobil’s purchase of Pioneer for $65 billion and Occidental’s purchase of private CrownRock for $12 billion.

“The Permian was a juggernaut for deals in 2023, both for private sales and corporate M&A,” said Dittmar. “Buyers increasingly showed a willingness to pay whatever it took to boost their footprint in this critical play, and prices for future drilling inventory climbed to new highs.”

However, he noted that while the buyer interest is still there, it is unlikely to see an encore in 2024 because the available list of attractive takeout targets has grown short.

“At the top of that reduced target list is privately held Endeavor Energy Resources, which has an excellent chance of generating the largest transaction of 2024,” he said.

With the Permian becoming increasingly consolidated and few other US plays offering the breadth of undeveloped inventory, EIR suggests that buyers may look outside the US for acquisition opportunities. For example, according to EIR, Chevron’s purchase of Hess for $53 billion was largely for exposure to Guyana.

The analytics firm, however, added that attractive international acquisition opportunities are also more challenging.

“Canada stands out for US companies as offering a large resource base in a developed and stable country. The Montney, which offers almost 20 years of high-quality drilling inventory at current development rates, will likely get some close looks from US companies concerned about the scale and quality of inventory left to buy at home,” the firm said.

While the Permian secured the top spot for megadeals, with average deal size growing to almost $4 billion, and looking just at announced deals of at least $100 million, 2024 may return to a higher flow of smaller, asset-sized transactions across a wider distribution of plays, EIR said.

“Bigtime corporate M&A naturally leads to portfolio pruning, with Occidental as one example by announcing it was planning to shed from $4.5 to $6.0 billion of assets, mostly from its domestic portfolio,” said Dittmar.

“That should be a welcome development for some of the smaller public E&Ps plus private capital that has been priced out or lacked the scale to compete in the strategic core Permian deals. Among the plays likely to see an uptick in 2024 deals are the SCOOP/STACK in Oklahoma, Eagle Ford in Texas, and North Dakota’s Bakken. These plays had just a combined $11 billion of deals in 2023,” he said.

The game has changed for private-equity firms, according to EIR. The pace of private capital being raised and deployed has slowed.

“Rather than buying promising exploratory acreage and hoping to prove it up before selling to a public operator, the firms will likely be looking to buy relatively developed assets cheaply and generate dividends for their private investors,” EIR said.

Upstream M&A in 2023 was overwhelmingly focused on oil, with $186 billion in deals targeting oil vs. just $6 billion in gas acquisitions. Tokyo Gas purchased Rockcliff Energy in Haynesville Shale for $2.7 billion, announced in December 2023.

Total gas M&A for 2023 has been topped in 2024 with Chesapeake Energy merging with gas peer Southwestern Energy for nearly $12 billion, including Southwestern’s debt.

“There will likely be increasing interest in gas assets as the long-awaited US LNG ramp nears, with the US slated to add 10 Bcf/D of LNG export capacity over the next 36 months,” EIR said. “That should eventually offer relief for producers from low natural gas prices, although they will likely need to be patient. With gas storage filling and production still strong, gas prices through most of 2024 are likely to be as low or lower than the challenged 2023 market."