Patterson-UTI 通过收购 OFS 提高利润

距离与 NexTier 的合并以及对 Ulterra Drilling Technologies 的收购不到一年,Patterson-UTI 正在努力避免成为最新的过气企业。

Patterson-UTI总裁兼首席执行官安迪·亨德里克斯 (Andy Hendricks) 在 7 月 25 日与投资者的电话会议上表示,越来越明显的是,未来几年油田领域将会有赢家和输家。

距离与NexTier 的合并以及对Ulterra Drilling Technologies 的收购完成不到一年,这家油田服务公司正在努力避免成为最新的过气公司。

亨德里克斯表示,Patterson-UTI 新合并的平台非常有益,使公司能够为客户提供“一体化的服务套件”并降低债务。

Evercore ISI 分析师 Jason Bandel 在 7 月 25 日的一份报告中写道:“阿特森-UTI 继续利用其合并平台的竞争优势,推动改善服务质量、提高效率并产生稳定的自由现金流。”

Patterson-UTI 首席财务官安德鲁·史密斯 (Andrew Smith) 在电话会议中表示,公司预计到 2024 年将 40% 的调整后 EBITDA 转化为自由现金流。

Bandel 写道:“自由现金流生成能力是 Patterson-UTI 进行这些近期收购的一个关键原因,自完成收购以来,该公司已返还 4.07 亿美元,其中包括 3.09 亿美元的股票回购。”

亨德里克斯表示,Patterson-UTI 的电动压裂技术有助于抵消第二季度出现的天然气短期活动下滑。

亨德里克斯表示:“尽管受到加拿大正常季节性春假的影响,但钻井产品本季度表现依然强劲,市场份额进一步扩大,利润率也随之提高。”

亨德里克斯表示,该公司预计美国的钻井活动将在今年剩余时间内持续稳定,并在 2025 年回升,尤其是在天然气盆地。

安迪·亨德里克斯
Patterson-UTI Energy 总裁兼首席执行官 Andy Hendricks。(来源:IADC)

亨德里克斯表示:“对于 Patterson-UTI 而言,我们相信我们还有其他途径实现资本回报增长,其速度应超过行业钻井数量恢复速度。”

亨德里克斯说,一旦二叠纪盆地的管道建设(例如马特洪峰管道)完成,该地区的输送能力将得到改善,对燃烧天然气的设备的需求也将回升。

“我们目前运行的设备中大约 80% 都燃烧天然气,这种设备已经售罄,”他表示,“因此,当需求增加时,我们将需要更多能够燃烧各种形式天然气的高规格设备。”

除了天然气驱动的压裂设备外,数据中心预计将成为电力需求的主要驱动力。

亨德里克斯说:“如今建设的数据中心中单个服务器组件所需的能耗是以前的网络数据服务的三倍,而人工智能搜索所需的能耗是标准互联网搜索的十倍。”  

该公司在电话会议中表示,Patterson-UTI 还打算介入无法满足 E&P 生产设施电气化所需电力需求的当地公用事业公司。

亨德里克斯说,除了石油和天然气行业,其他行业可能也需要一些额外的电力。

他说道:“除了公用事业之外,对电力的需求也是真实存在的。”

亨德里克斯表示,在收购 Ulterra 之后,Patterson-UTI 也处于国际增长的早期阶段,尤其是在中东和离岸市场。

他说道:“我们相信这只是进入这个潜在大市场的开始,我们将继续利用我们的资本配置策略来提高我们的回报。”

原文链接/HartEnergy

Patterson-UTI Boosts Bottom Line with OFS Acquisitions

Less than a year out from the closing of its merger with NexTier and its acquisition of Ulterra Drilling Technologies, Patterson-UTI is taking strides not to be the latest has-been.

It's increasingly clear that there will be winners and losers in the oilfield over the next several years, Patterson-UTI President and CEO Andy Hendricks said during a July 25 conference call with investors.

Less than a year out from the closing of its merger with NexTier and its acquisition of Ulterra Drilling Technologies, the oilfield services company is taking strides not to be the latest has-been.

Patterson-UTI’s newly combined platform has been beneficial, allowing the company to provide its customers with “an integrated suite of services” and lower debt, Hendricks said.

“Patterson-UTI continues to leverage the competitive advantages of its combined platform to drive improving service quality, greater efficiencies and solid free cash flow generation,” Evercore ISI analyst Jason Bandel wrote in a July 25 report.

The company expects to convert 40% of its adjusted EBITDA to free cash flow in 2024, Patterson-UTI CFO Andrew Smith said during the call.

“The free cash flow generation capability was a key reason Patterson-UTI made those recent acquisitions and the company has returned $407 million, including $309 million in share repurchases, since closing on the acquisitions,” Bandel wrote.

Patterson-UTI’s electric frac technology helped to offset recent natural gas short-term activity declines seen in the second quarter, Hendricks said.

“Drilling products had another strong quarter with additional market share gains and margin growth, despite the impact from normal seasonal spring break up in Canada,” Hendricks said.

The company expects drilling activity in the U.S. to continue steadily through the rest of the year and pick up in 2025, particularly in natural gas basins, Hendricks said.

Andy Hendricks
Andy Hendricks, president and CEO of Patterson-UTI Energy. (Source: IADC)

"For Patterson-UTI, we believe we have additional paths for capital returns growth that should exceed the industry rig count recovery,” Hendricks said.

Once pipeline construction in the Permian—such as the Matterhorn—are complete, the region’s takeaway capacity will improve and demand for equipment that can burn natural gas will pick up, Hendricks said.

“About 80% of the equipment that we're operating today burns natural gas, and we are sold out of this type of equipment,” he said. “So when demand increases, we are going to need more high-spec equipment that can burn various forms of natural gas.”

Outside of natural gas-powered frac equipment, data centers are anticipated to be big drivers of the demand for power.

“An individual server component in the data center built today requires three times the energy consumption of a previous network data service, and an AI search takes 10 times the amount of energy as a standard internet search,” Hendricks said.  

Patterson-UTI also intends to step in for the local utilities unable to supply the power demand necessary for E&Ps electrifying their production facilities, the company said in the call.

And outside of the oil and gas industry, other industries may need some extra power too, Hendricks said.

“The demand for power outside of utilities is real,” he said.

Following its acquisition of Ulterra, Patterson-UTI is also in the early stages of international growth, particularly in the Middle East and offshore markets, Hendricks said.

“We believe this is just the beginning of tapping into this potentially large market and we will continue to use our capital allocation strategy to enhance our returns over time,” he said.