Civitas Resources 目前不打算收购

由于 Civitas Resources 从今年开始集中精力整合三项收购,一位分析师表示,科罗拉多勘探与生产公司的同化正在“顺利进行”。

Civitas Resources最近向二叠纪盆地扩张后,科罗拉多勘探与生产公司的钻探业绩超出了预期,但表示,除非符合公司的标准,否则不会接受任何更多收购。

Civitas 首席执行官克里斯·多伊尔 (Chris Doyle) 在 11 月 8 日的第三季度财报电话会议上表示:“收购后我们面临的障碍非常高。”

多伊尔表示,新的收购必须能够产生自由现金流,并延长行业领先的股东回报框架的持续时间。

“我们不仅仅着眼于变得更大。” “我们如何提高股东回报?”多伊尔说。他早些时候在电话会议中表示,他的公司将在 2023 年向股东返还近 10 亿美元。

与最近其他财报电话会议上的首席执行官一样,多伊尔表示,公司将专注于最近收购的整合,他说这些收购已经提前完成。

成立两年的 Civitas 是一家传统的 DJ Basin E&P 公司,由能源私募股权公司Kimmeridge Energy Management Co提供支持。6月份,该公司以总计47亿美元的价格收购了Tap Rock的特拉华盆地资产和Hibernia Resources的米德兰盆地资产,进入二叠纪盆地。Civitas 还于 10 月 4 日宣布以 21 亿美元收购Midland 旗下的Vencer Energy,Doyle 表示该收购将于 1 月份完成。

Truist Securities 分析师尼尔·丁曼 (Neal Dingmann) 在电话会议上称赞道尔“工作出色,取得了扎实的业绩”,并在一份报告中写道,“最近收购的二叠纪资产的整合进展顺利”。运营移交比预期提前至少一个月。丁曼写道,Truist“如果该公司在最近收购的盆地投资更大规模的项目,从而提高回报,就不会感到惊讶。”

多伊尔在电话会议上表示,Civitas 将寻求在 2024 年中期之前出售 3 亿美元的非核心资产。

“收益将帮助我们减少债务,同时对我们的投资组合进行高评级,”多伊尔说。

丁曼的报告和财报电话会议都指出,“卡特金斯地区”的表现超出了预期,该地区是丹佛机场以南 DJ 盆地的一部分。

“沃特金斯地区的表现继续明显优于大市。我认为这甚至是轻描淡写的说法,”丁曼在电话中说。

多伊尔说,西维塔斯带着保守的期望进入该地区,从一口两英里长的井开始,然后增加了三英里长的井。

“最近的结果非常非常积极,”他说,并补充说,公司最近部署的 6000 万美元资本中有一部分是针对该地区“高质量、高回报”的垫子。沃特金斯地区,该地区已“合并为我们投资组合的核心部分。”

第三季度,Civitas DJ 盆地的产量为 168,000 桶油当量/天,比二叠纪盆地的产量多 67,000 桶油当量/天。

“本季度我们在 DJ 运行了两台钻机,在二叠纪运行了 7 台钻机,按照计划,我们将于 10 月份在二叠纪运行,到年底我们将减少到 4 台钻机,”Doyle 说。

丁曼的报告称,他预计 Civitas 将“到 2024 年在该地区部署增量资本,以捕捉运营效率日益提高、产量更高的油井产生的现金流上升空间。”

Civitas 在其指导中假设石油成本为 80 美元,并将在 2 月份给出新的指导。

Civitas 公布的第三季度 EVITDAX“未计利息、折旧、摊销和勘探利润”为 7.089 亿美元。该公司报告本季度现金流为 2.05 亿美元。

原文链接/hartenergy

Civitas Resources Not Looking to Acquire for Now

As Civitas Resources concentrates on integrating three acquisitions from this year, an analyst said the Colorado E&P’s assimilations are going “swimmingly.”

Following Civitas Resources’ recent expansion into the Permian Basin, the Colorado E&P outperformed its expectations in drilling, but said it won’t entertain any more acquisitions unless it meets the company’s criteria.

“The hurdle for us to go after an acquisition is very high,” Civitas CEO Chris Doyle said on its third quarter earnings call on Nov. 8.

Doyle said a new acquisition must be able to generate free cash flow and extend the duration of the industry’s leading shareholder return framework.

“We’re not just looking at getting bigger. It’s ‘how do we improve shareholder returns?’” Doyle said. He said earlier in the call that his company returned nearly $1 billion to shareholders in 2023.

Like CEOs on other recent earnings calls, Doyle said the company would focus on the integration of recent acquisitions, which he said are ahead of schedule.

The two-year-old Civitas is a legacy D-J Basin E&P backed by energy private equity firm Kimmeridge Energy Management Co. It entered the Permian Basin in June by purchasing Tap Rock’s Delaware Basin assets and Hibernia Resources’ Midland Basin assets for a total of $4.7 billion. Civitas also announced the $2.1 billion acquisition of Midland’s Vencer Energy on Oct. 4, which Doyle said will close in January.

Neal Dingmann, an analyst with Truist Securities, complimented Doyle for a “nice job on the solid results” on the call, and wrote in a note that “the integration of the recently acquired Permian assets has gone swimmingly,” with operational handovers made at least a month earlier than expected. Dingmann wrote that Truist “would not be surprised if the company invested in larger scaled projects in the recently acquired basins, enhancing returns.”

On the call, Doyle said Civitas will seek to sell $300 million in non-core assets by mid 2024.

“Proceeds will help us reduce debt while also high grading our portfolio,” Doyle said.

Both Dingmann’s note and the earnings call noted a greater than expected performance in the “Watkins area,” a part of the D-J Basin just south of the Denver Airport.

“The Watkins area just continues to notably outperform. I think that’s even an understatement,” Dingmann said on the call.

Civitas went into the area with conservative expectations, starting with a two-mile well and then adding three milers, Doyle said.

“Early results have been really, really positive,” he said, adding that the some of the company’s recent deployment of $60 million in capital was directed at the “high-quality, high-return” pads in the Watkins area, which has “emerged as a core part of our portfolio.”

Civitas produced 168,000 boe/d in the D-J Basin in the third quarter—67,000 boe/d more than it produced in the Permian.

“We ran two rigs in the D-J, seven in the Permian during the quarter and, as planned, we’ve dropped in the Permian in October, and we’ll drop to four rigs by year end,” Doyle said.

Dingmann’s note said he expects Civitas to “deploy incremental capital in the area in 2024 to capture cash flow upside generated from increasingly operationally efficient and more productive wells.”

Civitas assumes an $80 cost of oil in its guidance and will give new guidance in February.

Civitas reported third quarter EVITDAX – earnings before interest, depreciation, amortization and exploration – at $708.9 million. The company reported $205 million in cash flow for the quarter.