油气连锁反应:勘探与生产并购引发OFS整合

破纪录的勘探与生产整合正在波及油田服务领域,更多并购正在进行中。

Liberty Energy 作为压力泵领域的顶级行业参与者不断扩张,包括收购 SLB 在北美的陆上水力压裂业务。 (来源:自由能源

在快速、持续的勘探与生产整合浪潮中,Kodiak Gas Services在 4 月份完成了一项秘密交易,收购CSI Compressco,并创建业内最大的合同压缩船队。

由于油田服务和中游行业分散,生产石油和天然气的潜在客户减少,承包商意识到他们需要赶上与美国产量创历史新高的最大企业开展更多业务。

在埃克森美孚雪佛龙大型交易的带动下,从 2023 年初到 3 月份,上游行业完成了近 2500 亿美元的并购交易。这使得 OFS 领域现在正在与似乎对减缓交易竞赛不感兴趣的勘探与生产公司进行追逐。

“我认为规模确实很重要。 Kodiak 总裁兼首席执行官 Mickey McKee 表示:“我们的客户正在经历整合阶段。” “我不会说我们必须跟上他们的步伐,但我认为明智的做法就是跟上”他们的步伐。现在这个行业,由于缺乏更好的措辞,周围有一条巨大的护城河,因为没有大量新的私募股权资金进来。”

麦基表示,供应链、劳动力和利率都面临挑战,因此战略收购变得更加重要。这就是科迪亚克去年罕见地进行能源 IPO 以增强增长潜力的部分原因。

“看看运营二叠纪盆地的各大公司,一家初创公司不可能在没有安全历史的情况下就进入并为康菲石油公司或埃克森美孚公司工作,”他说。 “按照目前的利率,发展小型私营企业确实很困难。当我们达到这样的规模时,我们基本上是免费借钱的。

“因此,这些夫妻店的收入可能会比过去低,”麦基补充道。 “那真的会很困难。”

今年早些时候,Evercore ISI 高级董事总经理 James West 问道:“当您的客户群整合速度比您更快时,会发生什么情况?”

答案是:“你正在瓦解并失去市场力量。”

“由于我们的客户较少,因此需要看到对勘探与生产方面发生的一些主要活动的反应,”韦斯特在谈到 OFS 行业时说道。 “他们[勘探与生产]将拥有更多的市场力量,但这并不好。”

West 表示,另一方面,服务整合终于开始加速,尤其是在行业领先的 SLB 巨头的帮助下。 4月初,SLB同意支付近80亿美元收购ChampionX,并大幅增加其在生产化学品和人工举升领域的产品。就在几天前,SLB 表示将以3.8 亿美元收购 Aker Carbon Capture

其他近期或悬而未决的交易包括Innovex Downhole SolutionsDril-Quip的合并ProPetro 收购 Par Five Energy ServicesDrilling Tools International收购深套管工具和高级钻井产品Forum Energy Technologies收购Veriperm Energy ServicesPrecision Drilling收购CWC Energy ServicesAtlas Energy Solutions收购了Hi-Crush进行固沙,Select Water Solutions 收购了Tri-State Water Logistics 和 Iron Mountain Energy等。


有关的

Apollo 将以 $1.85B 交易收购并私有化 US Silica


油气连锁反应:勘探与生产并购引发服务整合
James West,Evercore ISI 高级董事总经理

“我认为,通常情况下,交易会带来更多交易。因此,如果它为那些想要把事情做好的人释放出一些动物精神,我不会感到惊讶,”韦斯特在谈到 OFS 整合时说道。 “我认为,行业正在接受我们在这个周期中所处的位置以及这个周期的持续时间,并且感觉现在是时候采取一些战略行动了。我希望这些能够继续下去。”

当前的趋势是生产商希望规模更大但更精简,这意味着 OFS 公司更少。 SLB、哈里伯顿贝克休斯可能不会互相消耗,特别是在十年前哈里伯顿试图收购贝克休斯时联邦政府介入之后。但其他一切都摆在桌面上。

韦斯特告诉《石油与天然气投资者报》:“随着客户规模的不断扩大和成熟,当他们想要良好的交付时,他们希望与更少的供应商打交道。” “他们不想与 20 个不同的人交谈。他们希望与一个人交谈,并在预算范围内或最好是在预算范围内按时或更快地交付成果。”

开始奔走相告

高管们表示,服务业有好消息,但它会产生赢家和输家。获胜者可以看到更可预测的利润和稳定的增长,同时扩大市场份额。失败者可能会失败,或者被迫以很少甚至没有溢价出售。

油气连锁反应:勘探与生产并购引发服务整合
Drilling Tools International 最近收购了 Deep Casing Tools,现在正在收购 Superior Drilling Products。 (来源:国际钻具

这是一个不寻常的难题,因为生产商数量正在萎缩,活动也在下降,但由于技术和效率的提高,美国的产量仍保持在或接近历史最高水平。而且,尽管能源转型正在进行,但分析师预测认识到,北美需要更长期的石油和天然气,包括更多的原油出口和液化天然气来为世界服务。

因此,巴克莱银行在四月份重新启动了对勘探与生产股票的报道,包括向犹豫不决的投资者发出“道歉石油和天然气”的信息。

整合和定价上涨是巴克莱看涨情绪的重要原因,但这意味着更多 OFS 参与者的上涨空间较小。毕竟,整合会导致“美国页岩油产量趋于稳定”,这反过来又有助于定价。

“行业整合让谨慎的公共运营商掌握了更多的资金。巴克莱分析师 Betty Jiang 写道:“我们预计该集团的产量增长将会放缓。” “经过一系列并购之后,我们还看到私人活动大幅放缓。”

口号是“页岩4.0”,通过更多的整合、库存期限和稳定的制造模式,以适度的资本支出产生最自由的现金流和回报。

“资本纪律将继续存在,”姜补充道。 “价值重于数量已成为新常态,管理团队优先考虑资本回报,并将资本回报置于产量增长之上。”

对于那些希望获得可预测性和财务状况良好的客户的最大钻井公司、压力泵公司和 OFS 提供商来说,许多此类信息听起来都很棒。但这也可能意味着生意减少。

油气连锁反应:勘探与生产并购引发服务整合
自由能源公司总裁罗恩·古塞克。

Liberty Energy总裁罗恩·古塞克 (Ron Gusek) 在接受采访时表示,勘探与生产整合创造了更明智的生产商,而这些生产商反过来又

对服务提供商有更高的期望。

——这可能会稍微改变市场。我认为你会看到一些自然的整合,”古塞克说。 “一些油田服务提供商最终可能无法在这些大型勘探与生产项目中找到自己的角色。我认为这些公司的数量可能会自然减少,并且你会看到世界围绕更大、也许更垂直整合的油田服务提供商进行更多整合。

“我认为这让人们思考他们在其中的位置,”他补充道。 “那”可能正在路上。也许我们在第三或第四局。我不知道今天我们已经完成了一半。那里有很多机会。我认为有很多东西在出售。”

自然地,他将 Liberty 视为位置最好的顶级玩家之一。 Liberty 在 2020 年底收购了 SLB 的北美水力压裂业务,随后在 2021 年收购了 PropX 支撑剂业务,从而实现了更多的垂直整合。

因此,Gusek 重视与规模更大、更可预测的勘探与生产公司密切合作。

“这使得规划您的业务变得更加容易,而不必在可能稍微间歇性的情况下经历起起落落,在这种情况下,您必须排队两个、三个或四个客户来共享钻机或压裂装置车队或者任何你出售的东西,”他说。 “当然,一项工作并不恰好在下一项工作开始时结束,您可以将其与这些较大的操作员进行比较,在这些操作员中,您会得到一个又一个垫子的稳定节奏。当然,就我们而言,作为压裂供应商,这是非常有益的。”

效率收益胜出

这种“节奏”得益于钻更长的支管和更快、更同步地完井所带来的更高效率。

据贝克休斯称,美国石油和天然气钻井平台数量早在 2011 年 11 月就达到了 2,026 座的峰值,当时油价轻松地徘徊在 100 美元/桶附近。当然,产量落后于活动水平,但美国原油产量在 2011 年 11 月新达到 6 MMbbl/d,不到当前产量的一半,而大约 13 年前部署的钻井平台中只有 30%。

由于钻机计划和完井策略与那个时代截然不同,钻机数量的比较即使不是苹果与橙子的比较,至少也是苹果与苹果酱的比较。

现代疫情后的峰值出现在 2022 年 11 月,钻机数量为 784 台,此后一直在稳步下降,截至 4 月中旬,钻机数量下降了 20% 以上,至 617 台。但美国原油产量仍接近 13.1 万桶/日的历史最高水平。

油气连锁反应:勘探与生产并购引发服务整合
安迪·亨德里克斯 (Andy Hendricks),帕特森-UTI 能源公司总裁兼首席执行官。

安迪·亨德里克斯 (Andy Hendricks) 表示,尽管钻井技术和同步压裂正在帮助运营商以更少的活动生产更多产量,但整合也发挥了作用,因为更块状、连续的面积允许更长的水平支线延伸三到四英里。Patterson-UTI Energy总裁兼首席执行官接受采访。

“他们在美国所做的事情的有趣之处在于,他们正在寻求收购,以便将租赁和土地所有权整合在一起,从而提高效率,更好地连接到自己的基础设施,亨德里克斯说,他们可以在二叠纪划定租赁线,以便钻探更长的支线。

“我们从不同的勘探与生产公司那里听到了不同的消息,这些公司正处于整合过程中,但收购尚未完成,”他说。 ” 他们中的一些人说,“是啊,一旦我们掌握了这家公司,我们就可以重新划定其中一些租赁额度。我们可以钻更长的支管。我们将加速我们的活动。”其他人会说,“好吧,我们将把一切整合在一起。然后我们可能会暂停一下。”所以,不同的是,不是活动的暂停,而是活动增长的暂停。他们仍然会很忙。这实际上取决于 E&P 的收购战略。”

这些趋势与 Patterson-UTI 去年决定以势均力敌的合并方式收购 NexTier Oilfield Solutions ,然后进一步收购 Ulterra Drilling Solutions 的决定不谋而合。

亨德里克斯解释说,活动减少的趋势与效率和资本纪律有关。勘探与生产整合浪潮的大部分都是新鲜事,许多交易,包括最大的交易,甚至还没有结束。整合影响将于今年晚些时候开始显现,直至 2025 年。

泰纳瑞斯美国总裁卢卡·萨诺蒂 (Luca Zanotti)基本同意这一观点。他表示,他期待运营商转向可预测的制造模式,因为这非常适合泰纳瑞斯作为石油管材 (OCTG) 制造商的角色。

油气连锁反应:勘探与生产并购引发服务整合
卢卡·萨诺蒂 (Luca Zanotti),泰纳瑞斯公司美国总裁。

扎诺蒂说,人们担心的是规模较小的勘探生产公司和卖家是否会恢复到更高的活动水平,包括销售管理团队是否会带着新的初创公司回归。

但亨德里克斯相信这些团队将会卷土重来,尤其是在未来几个月较大的整合者转向出售非核心土地的情况下。

亨德里克斯说:“今天,勘探与生产高管团队正在处理这些交易,试图收拾掉大型收购中的碎片。” “这意味着更多的钻机将在他们的土地上作业。有很多移动的部分。这不仅仅是两家大公司的合并。有时,您还必须考虑那些经验丰富的勘探与生产高管会因大型整合而遭受哪些损失,他们将进行钻探并为这些资产带来价值。”

Zanotti 表示,尽管钻机活动较少,但泰纳瑞斯通过每口井使用更多的钻杆、套管和油管来平衡。

“随着时间的推移,准备好油井所需的天数正在减少,支管施工的时间也更长,”他说。 “我们估计现在的 650 台钻机相当于 2019 年的 950 台钻机。这就是该行业在管道消耗方面的效率。这也是因为我们开发了更容易、更快速运行的新技术、新连接。它们可以允许更长的水平线、更长的横向线。”

Zanotti 表示,除了新日铁和美国钢铁公司即将合并之外,他希望看到 OCTG 领域出现更多整合,但这具有挑战性,因为美国消费的 OCTG 产品 50% 是进口的,而外国企业也在参与竞争通过不均匀的关税。虽然总部位于卢森堡的泰纳瑞斯不是一家美国公司,但其大部分油井管产品都是在休斯顿地区生产的。

传播海外和海底

除了与外国参与者的问题外,OCTG 领域是 OFS 领域内最整合的领域之一。据 Evercore ISI 称,高规格钻机以及最近达成的交易后的压力泵领域也是如此。

但其他领域仍然更加分散,包括钻机设备、电缆服务、检查和涂层、人工举升、特种化学品、沙子等。

油气连锁反应:勘探与生产并购引发服务整合
泰纳瑞斯在休斯顿郊外开设了大型制造厂,在扩大国内 OCTG 市场方面迈出了一大步。 (来源:泰纳瑞斯

亨德里克斯表示,由于潜在买家的缺乏以及 OFS 领域私募股权的日益缺乏,这些领域始终没有一条清晰的道路。

然而,他非常看好完成过程中发生的整合,尤其是他所扮演的角色。 NextTier 是 C&J Energy Services 和 Keane Group 于 2019 年合并而成的。如今,NexTier 成为 Hendricks 公司的新一部分。

“现在你拥有了一个完井压力泵市场,它表现出几乎与钻机市场一样严格的纪律,这对这些公司的股东来说确实是积极的,”他说。

尽管亨德里克斯对美国持续增长持乐观态度,但整合趋势的一部分还在于在原油价格上涨的情况下拥抱国际上行的更大潜力。这是 Patterson-UTI 收购 Ulterra 的一个重要因素。

Ulterra 约 30% 的收入来自海外,尤其是中东地区。 Ulterra 目前正在扩建沙特阿拉伯的钻头制造工厂,以便与阿美公司和其他地区企业开展更多业务。

SLB 首席执行官 Olivier Le Peuch 在电话会议上表示,这种全球视野也是 SLB 收购 ChampionX 的一个因素,特别是能够利用 SLB 的广度在全球范围内提供 ChampionX 的产品和服务。

“我相信市场和我们客户的战略重点正在日益转向生产和回收,”SLB 的目标是“解决这个问题并提供集成能力,就像我们在其他领域所做的那样生命周期。”

可以说,最分散的领域是油田工具和设备。这正是总裁兼首席执行官 Wayne Prejean 希望他的 Drilling Tools International 成为美国和国际市场整合者的地方。

油气连锁反应:勘探与生产并购引发服务整合
钻井工具国际公司总裁兼首席执行官韦恩·普雷让。

DTI 去年与一家名为 SPAC 的特殊目的收购公司合并后上市,此后​​一直表现强劲,今年收购了 Deep Casing Tools 和 Superior Drilling Products。 Prejean 重视规模、产品和地理多样性。但这些交易仍然必须有意义。

“正确的策略不是为了整合而大肆破坏,将公司联合起来,”普雷让说。 “不要专注于特定的空间、细分市场或专业,并确保您拥有适合特定文化的所有工具、产品、服务或技术组合。您可以更有效地使用该工具系列来执行操作,而不仅仅是充当各种事物的提供者。”

他说,公司不仅需要整合,还必须扩大机器学习和分析方面的规模,以提供最高效的服务。小型本地 OFS 公司通常无法提供这些服务。

“你现在必须经营你的业务,并通过以数据为中心的资本配置决策来高效运作,而不仅仅是凭借约翰尼·哈斯特(Johnny Hustle)的老式经验,”他说,并认为 DTI 将继续收购。

同样,Forum Energy Technologies 公司在一月份以近 2 亿美元的价格完成了对加拿大 Variperm Energy Services 的收购,以提供更多的井下技术解决方案和更大的地理覆盖范围。

论坛总裁兼首席执行官尼尔·勒克斯 (Neal Lux) 表示,“整合生产商将提高资本支出效率,在美国,他们将放弃钻井平台和压裂人员”。 ”所以,在活动方面,一加一小于二。对于一家小公司来说,这更具挑战性。

油气连锁反应:勘探与生产并购引发服务整合
论坛总裁兼首席执行官尼尔·勒克斯

“虽然我们的压裂人员和钻井平台可能会减少,但正在工作的人员正在以比以前更快的速度消耗他们的设备,”勒克斯补充道。 “这就是 FET 的用武之地。我们的产品和解决方案旨在提高客户的运营效率。因此,我们致力于帮助客户延长设备的使用寿命。”

另一方面,近年来,由于活动疲软和投资不足,离岸行业的 OFS 整合缓慢但稳定。三大钻井公司——ransocean、Noble Corp.和Valaris——都出力帮忙,从2018年到2022年收购了Songa Offshore、Ocean Rig、Pacific Drilling和Maersk Drilling。Valaris于2019年通过Ensco和Rowan Cos合并而诞生。

但有许多海底行业仍然分散,包括在页岩和深水领域运营的公司。 Innovex Downhole Solutions 和 Dril-Quip 合并,创建更名为 Innovex International 的陆上和海上领域一项全新但悬而未决的合并。

Innovex 于 2016 年由 Antelope Oil Tools、Team Oil Tools 和 Isotech 三重合并而成。在 AmberJack Capital Partners 的支持下,Innovex 继续进行收购,尤其是在疫情期间和之后,近年来收购了 Rubicon Oilfield International、Applied Oil Tools 和 Pride Energy Services。

论坛总裁兼首席执行官尼尔·勒克斯
Dril-Quip 和 Innovex Downhole Solutions 即将合并,更名为 Innovex International。 (来源:Innovex国际

但最大的一笔交易被保留到了 3 月份,即与 Dril-Quip 进行了价值约 8 亿美元的合并。 Dril-Quip 正式收购 Innovex。但实际上,Innovex 首席执行官 Adam Anderson 将接任更名为 Innovex 的首席执行官,该公司将在“股票代码”“NVX”下公开交易。

油气连锁反应:勘探与生产并购引发服务整合
Innovex 首席执行官亚当·安德森。

“OFS 行业历来都是相当分散的,”安德森说。 “然而,就 Innovex 和 Dril-Quip 而言,我们倾向于提供具有“大影响、小成本”动力的产品和服务。我们的产品只占油井成本的一小部分,但对油井的性能却有着巨大的影响。因此,我们的客户更关注产品性能而不是价格。因此,我们的业务不像其他 OFS 产品和服务产品那样容易受到碎片化的影响。”

Evercore ISI 的 West 表示,随着十多年前页岩油热潮的兴起,服务业、钢铁、劳动力等领域的 OFS 碎片化也随之兴起。随着页岩气的成熟,不再需要这么多的参与者。

传达的信息是通过颠覆性或升级的技术来扩大规模或使自己脱颖而出。坦率地说,如果这是不可能的,那么未来就是光明的。

“如果您没有足够的财务能力来做到这一点——无论是压裂钻机还是类似的设备——要满足下一代需求,最终这将是一个艰难的处境“考虑到你所带来的技术可能会日落西山,”Liberty 的 Gusek 说道。 “整合一家技术或压裂泵属于上一代技术的小型企业并没有多大意义。”

原文链接/hartenergy

Oil and Gas Chain Reaction: E&P M&A Begets OFS Consolidation

Record-breaking E&P consolidation is rippling into oilfield services, with much more M&A on the way.

Liberty Energy has continued to expand as a top industry player in pressure pumping, including the acquisition of SLB's onshore hydraulic fracturing business in North America. (Source: Liberty Energy)

Amid a rapid, ongoing wave of E&P consolidation, Kodiak Gas Services closed an under-the-radar deal in April to acquire CSI Compressco and create the industry’s largest contract compression fleet.

With fewer potential customers churning out oil and gas amid fragmented oilfield services and midstream sectors, contractors realize they need to catch up to do more business with the biggest players producing record-high U.S. volumes.

Led by megadeals from Exxon Mobil and Chevron, the upstream sector completed nearly $250 billion in M&A transactions from the beginning of 2023 through March. That leaves the OFS space now playing chase with E&Ps that don’t seem interested in slowing the dealmaking race.

“I think scale does matter. We’ve got customers that are undergoing a consolidation phase,” said Mickey McKee, Kodiak president and CEO. “I wouldn’t say we have to keep up with them, but I think the smart thing to do is to keep up with ’em. You’ve got an industry right now that, for lack of a better phrase, has a tremendous moat around it because there’s not a lot of new private equity money coming in.”

Supply chains, labor and interest rates are all challenging, McKee said, so strategic acquisitions become more important. That’s partly why Kodiak underwent a rare energy IPO last year for enhanced growth potential.

“You look at the majors that are operating the Permian Basin, and a startup company can’t just go in with no safety history and work for ConocoPhillips or an Exxon Mobil,” he said. “With interest rates where they’re at right now, it’s really tough to grow a small private business. When we were that size, we were borrowing money for free, basically.

“And so these mom-and-pop-type shops are probably going to get paid lower multiples than they have been in the past,” McKee added. “That’s going to be really difficult.”

Earlier this year, James West, senior managing director for Evercore ISI, asked, “What happens when your customer base consolidates faster than you do?”

The answer: “You are deconsolidating and losing market power.”

“We need to see a response to some of the major activity that’s happened on the E&P side because we have fewer customers,” West said of the OFS sector. “They [E&Ps] are going to have more market power, and that’s not good.”

On the other hand, services consolidation has finally begun to pick up steam, West said, especially courtesy of industry-leading juggernaut SLB. In early April, SLB agreed to pay nearly $8 billion to acquire ChampionX and substantially boost its offerings in production chemicals and artificial lift. That came just days after SLB said it would buy Aker Carbon Capture for $380 million.

Other recent or pending deals include the merger of Innovex Downhole Solutions with Dril-Quip, ProPetro acquiring Par Five Energy Services, Drilling Tools International buying both Deep Casing Tools and Superior Drilling Products, Forum Energy Technologies scooping up Veriperm Energy Services, Precision Drilling gaining CWC Energy Services, Atlas Energy Solutions acquiring Hi-Crush in a sand consolidation, and Select Water Solutions picking up Tri-State Water Logistics and Iron Mountain Energy, among others.


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Oil and Gas Chain Reaction: E&P M&A Begets Services Consolidation
James West, senior managing director for Evercore ISI

“I think, usually, deals beget more deals. So, it wouldn’t surprise me if it unleashes some animal spirits here for people that want to get things done,” West said of OFS consolidation. “I think that the industry is coming to terms with where we are in this cycle and what the duration looks like in this cycle, and it feels it’s time to step up and make some strategic moves. And I would expect those to continue.”

The current trend is for producers to desire bigger but more streamlined, and that means fewer OFS companies. SLB, Halliburton and Baker Hughes may not consume each other, especially after the federal government intervened when Halliburton attempted a Baker Hughes takeover a decade ago. But everything else is on the table.

“More customers, as they get larger and more sophisticated, want to interface with fewer vendors when they want a well delivered,” West told Oil and Gas Investor. “They don’t want to talk to 20 different people. They want one guy to talk to and have that well delivered on time or faster, and on budget or, preferably, under budget.”

Start spreading the news

There is good news for the services sector, but it’s going to create winners and losers, executives said. The winners could see more predictable profits and steady growth while expanding market share. The losers may fail or be pressured to sell with little to no premium.

Oil and Gas Chain Reaction: E&P M&A Begets Services Consolidation
Drilling Tools International recently bought Deep Casing Tools and is now acquiring Superior Drilling Products. (Source: Drilling Tools International)

It’s an unusual conundrum because the number of producers is shrinking and activity is on the decline, but U.S. production volumes remain at or near all-time highs thanks to technology and efficiency gains. And, despite the ongoing energy transition, analyst projections recognize the need for more North American oil and gas for longer, including more crude exports and LNG to serve the world.

As such, Barclays reinitiated its E&P stock coverage in April, including an “Unapologetic oil and gas” message to hesitant investors.

Consolidation and pricing upside are big reasons for Barclays’ bullish sentiments, but that means less upside for a larger pool of OFS players. After all, consolidation leads to “plateauing of U.S. shale production,” which, in turn, helps with pricing.

“Sector consolidation has put more barrels in the hands of prudent public operators. We expect production growth from this group to slow down,” wrote Barclays analyst Betty Jiang. “After a flurry of M&A, we have also seen private activity slow down materially.”

The mantra is “Shale 4.0” with more consolidation, inventory duration and steady manufacturing mode to generate the most free cash flow and returns at modest capex.

”Capital discipline is here to stay,” Jiang added. “Value over volume has become the new norm, with management teams prioritizing return on capital and return of capital over production growth.”

A lot of this messaging sounds great to the biggest drillers, pressure pumpers and OFS providers that desire predictability and financially healthy customers. But it can also mean less business to go around.

Oil and Gas Chain Reaction: E&P M&A Begets Services Consolidation
Liberty Energy President Ron Gusek.

Liberty Energy President Ron Gusek said in an interview that E&P consolidation creates wiser producers that, in turn, have

higher expectations for their services providers.

“That probably changes the market a little bit. I think you see some natural consolidation as a result of that,” Gusek said. “There will be some oilfield services providers who, ultimately, may not find a role going forward with these larger E&Ps. I think the number of those probably naturally shrinks and you see the world consolidate more around the bigger, maybe more vertically integrated oilfield services providers.

“I think that has people thinking about what their place in that is going to be,” he added. “That’s probably on its way. Maybe we’re in the third or fourth inning. I don’t know that we’re halfway through that today. There’s lots of opportunity out there. I think there’s lots of stuff for sale.”

Naturally, he counts Liberty among those best-positioned top players. Liberty was ahead of the curve at the end of 2020 when it acquired SLB’s North American hydraulic fracturing business, then followed with more vertical integration by buying the PropX proppants business in 2021.

So, Gusek values working closely with larger, more predictable E&Ps.

“That makes planning your business much, much easier, rather than having to navigate the ups and downs of maybe a slightly more intermittent scenario where you’ve got to line up two or three or four customers to share a rig or a frac fleet or whatever it is that you’re selling,” he said. “Of course, one job doesn’t end exactly when the next job’s going to start, and you compare that to these larger operators where you get this steady cadence of one pad after another. And, certainly, in our case, as a frac provider, that’s incredibly beneficial.”

Efficiency gains win out

That “cadence” is benefitting from greater efficiencies gained with drilling longer laterals and completing wells more quickly and simultaneously.

For context, the U.S. oil and gas rig count peaked at 2,026 back in November 2011 when oil prices were comfortably hovering near $100/bbl, according to Baker Hughes. Production trails activity levels, of course, but U.S. crude production had freshly hit 6 MMbbl/d in November 2011, less than half of current volumes generated with only 30% of the rigs deployed almost 13 years ago.

With drilling rig programs and completions strategies so different from that era, comparing rig count numbers is, if not apples to oranges, at least apples to applesauce.

The modern, post-pandemic peak occurred at 784 rigs in November 2022 and has steadily declined since, plunging more than 20% to 617 rigs as of mid-April. But U.S. crude volumes still were at the near-record of 13.1 MMbbl/d.

Oil and Gas Chain Reaction: E&P M&A Begets Services Consolidation
Andy Hendricks, president and CEO of Patterson-UTI Energy.

As much as drilling techniques and simul-fracs are helping operators produce more volumes with less activity, so, too, is consolidation playing a role as the more blocky, contiguous acreage allows for longer horizontal laterals to extend three or four miles, said Andy Hendricks, president and CEO of Patterson-UTI Energy, in an interview.

“What’s interesting about what they’re doing in the U.S. is they’re looking for acquisitions where they can pull lease and land holdings together where they can be more efficient, where they can connect better to their own infrastructure, where they can delineate their lease lines out in the Permian so they can drill longer laterals,” Hendricks said.

“And we hear different things from different E&Ps who are in the middle of their consolidation, not necessarily closed on their acquisitions yet,” he said. “Some of them are saying, ‘Yeah, as soon as we get our arms around this company, we can redraw some of these lease lines. We can drill longer laterals. We’re going to accelerate our activity.’ You’ve got others that are saying, ‘Well, we’re going to pull it all together. Then we’re going to maybe take a pause.’ So, different, not a pause in activity, but a pause in growing activity. They’ll still stay busy. It really depends on what the E&P’s strategy is for their acquisition.”

These trends mesh with Patterson-UTI’s decision last year to acquire NexTier Oilfield Solutions in a merger of near-equals, and then to further scoop up Ulterra Drilling Solutions.

Hendricks elaborated that the lower activity trends are tied to efficiency and capital discipline. Much of the E&P consolidation wave is fresh and many of the deals, including the biggest ones, have not even closed yet. The consolidation impacts will begin to come late this year and into 2025.

Luca Zanotti, the U.S. president for Tenaris, largely agreed. He said he looks forward to operators pivoting to predictable manufacturing modes, because that fits nicely with Tenaris’ role as an oil country tubular goods (OCTG) manufacturer.

Oil and Gas Chain Reaction: E&P M&A Begets Services Consolidation
Luca Zanotti, the U.S. president for Tenaris.

The concern is waiting to see whether the smaller E&Ps and the sellers ever return to higher activity levels, including whether the selling management teams return with new startups at all, Zanotti said.

But Hendricks is confident those teams will come back, especially as the larger consolidators pivot to sell non-core acreage in the months ahead.

“You’ve got teams of E&P execs today that are working those deals to try to pick up the pieces that fall out of the large acquisitions,” Hendricks said. “That means more drilling rigs are going to go to work on their properties. There’s a lot of moving pieces. It’s not just two big companies coming together. Sometimes, you also have to consider what falls out of those large consolidations to experienced E&P execs who will drill and bring value to those properties.”

Despite the lower rig activity, Zanotti said, Tenaris is balanced out by more drill pipe, casing and tubing being used in each well.

“The number of days needed to ready wells is decreasing over time, and laterals are much longer,” he said. “Our estimation is 650 rigs today are equivalent to more or less 950 rigs in 2019. This is the kind of efficiency that the industry has in terms of pipe consumption. This is also enabled by the fact that we develop new technologies, new connections that are easier and quicker to run. And they can allow longer horizontals, longer laterals.”

Zanotti said he would like to see more consolidating in the OCTG space, apart from the pending merger of Nippon Steel and U.S. Steel, but that it is challenging because 50% of the OCTG products consumed in the U.S. are imports, and the foreign players play by uneven tariffs. While Luxembourg-based Tenaris is not a U.S. company, it manufactures much of its OCTG products in the Houston area.

Spreading overseas and subsea

Apart from issues with foreign players, the OCTG space is one of the most consolidated within the realm of OFS. So is the world of high-spec drilling rigs and, after more recent deals, pressure pumping, according to Evercore ISI.

But other areas remain much more fragmented, including rig equipment, wireline services, inspection and coating, artificial lift, specialty chemicals, sand and more.

Oil and Gas Chain Reaction: E&P M&A Begets Services Consolidation
Tenaris took a big step toward expanding the domestic OCTG market when it opened its massive manufacturing mill outside of Houston. (Source: Tenaris)

There just isn’t always a clear path in those areas because of the potential lack of buyers and the growing absence of private equity in the OFS space, Hendricks said.

He is, however, quite bullish on the consolidation occurring in completions, especially the role he’s played. NextTier was formed through the combination of C&J Energy Services and the Keane Group in 2019. Today, NexTier is newly part of Hendricks’ company.

“Now you’ve got a completion pressure pumping market that’s showing almost as much discipline as the drilling rig market, and that’s really positive for the shareholders of those companies,” he said.

Despite Hendricks’ optimism on continued U.S. growth, part of the consolidation trend also is about embracing greater potential for international upside amid higher crude pricing. That was a big factor in Patterson-UTI’s Ulterra acquisition.

About 30% of Ulterra’s revenue is overseas, especially in the Middle East. Ulterra is currently expanding a drill bits manufacturing facility in Saudi Arabia to do more business with Aramco and other regional players.

That global vision also factored into SLB’s acquisition of ChampionX, especially the ability to use SLB’s breadth to deliver ChampionX’s products and services around the world, said SLB CEO Olivier Le Peuch in a conference call.

“I believe that the market and the strategic priority of our customer is increasingly turning toward production and recovery,” and SLB’s goal here is to “address this to scale and provide integration capability there the same way we do across the rest of the life cycle.”

Arguably the most fragmented space is in oilfield tools and equipment. And that’s where President and CEO Wayne Prejean wants his Drilling Tools International to emerge as a consolidator in the U.S. and internationally.

Oil and Gas Chain Reaction: E&P M&A Begets Services Consolidation
Drilling Tools International President and CEO Wayne Prejean.

DTI went public last year when it merged with a special-purpose acquisition company, called a SPAC, and has been on a tear since, acquiring Deep Casing Tools and Superior Drilling Products this year. Prejean values scale and product and geographic diversity. But the deals still have to make sense.

“The right strategy is not to do a smash and bring companies together just for the sake of consolidation,” Prejean said. “But to instead focus on a particular space or segment or specialty, and make sure you have all the portfolio of tools or products or services or technologies that fit within a certain culture. You can more efficiently execute in that family of tools as opposed to just being a purveyor of all sorts of things.”

Companies not only need to consolidate, he said, but they also must scale up in terms of machine learning and analytics to offer the most efficient services. Small, local OFS firms often cannot offer that.

“You have to run your business now and be efficient off of data-centric, capital allocation decisions, not just with good old-fashioned Johnny Hustle experience,” he said, arguing that DTI will continue to acquire.

Likewise, Forum Energy Technologies in January closed on the acquisition of Canada-based Variperm Energy Services for nearly $200 million to offer more downhole technology solutions and a greater geographic footprint.

“Consolidating producers are going to find efficiencies in their capex spend and, in the U.S., they’re going to drop rigs and frac crews,” said Forum President and CEO Neal Lux. “So, one plus one is less than two on the activity side. For a small company, that’s more challenging.

Oil and Gas Chain Reaction: E&P M&A Begets Services Consolidation
Forum President and CEO Neal Lux

“While we may get fewer frac crews and rigs, the ones that are working are burning through their equipment at a much faster rate than before,” Lux added. “That’s where FET comes in. Our products and solutions are meant to increase the efficiency of our customers’ operation. So, we’re there helping our customers make their equipment last longer.”

The offshore sector, on the other hand, has seen slow, but steady OFS consolidation in recent years amid weaker activity and underinvestment. The big three drillers—Transocean, Noble Corp. and Valaris—have all helped, buying up Songa Offshore, Ocean Rig, Pacific Drilling and Maersk Drilling from 2018 through 2022. Valaris emerged in 2019 through the combination of Ensco and Rowan Cos.

But there are plenty of subsea sectors that remain fragmented, including companies that operate in the shale and deepwater realms. One brand-new, but pending combination in both the onshore and offshore space is the merger of Innovex Downhole Solutions and Dril-Quip to create the renamed Innovex International.

Innovex formed in 2016 through the triple merger of Antelope Oil Tools, Team Oil Tools and Isotech. Backed by AmberJack Capital Partners, Innovex continued to be acquisitive, especially during and after the pandemic, scooping up Rubicon Oilfield International, Applied Oil Tools and Pride Energy Services in recent years.

Forum President and CEO Neal Lux
Dril-Quip and Innovex Downhole Solutions are merging to create the renamed Innovex International. (Source: Innovex International)

But the biggest deal was saved for March with the roughly $800 million merger of near equals with Dril-Quip. Formally, Dril-Quip is acquiring Innovex. But, in reality, Innovex CEO Adam Anderson will take over as CEO of the renamed Innovex to be publicly traded under the “INVX” stock ticker.

Oil and Gas Chain Reaction: E&P M&A Begets Services Consolidation
Innovex CEO Adam Anderson.

“The OFS industry has historically been quite fragmented,” Anderson said. “However, in the case of Innovex and Dril-Quip, we tend to operate in product and service offerings that have a ‘big impact, small ticket’ dynamic. Our products represent a relatively small part of the cost of the well but have an outsized impact on the performance of the well. Consequently, our customers are much more focused on product performance than price. So, our businesses have not been as susceptible to the fragmentation that is present in other OFS product and service offerings.”

As the shale boom took off more than a decade ago, so did OFS fragmentation for services, steel, labor and more, said West of Evercore ISI. As shale matures, so many players simply aren’t needed any longer.

The message is to scale up or differentiate yourself with disrupting or upgraded technology. If that’s not possible, bluntly stated, the future isn’t bright.

“If you’re not in the financial position to be able to do that—whether it be frac or drilling rigs or something like that—to meet that next-generation demand, ultimately that’s a tough spot to be in given a potential sunset for the technology that you bring to the table,” said Gusek of Liberty. “Consolidating a smaller player whose technology or frac pumps are a past generation just doesn’t make a ton of sense.”