Diamondback 在超过 10 亿美元剥离目标后着眼于进一步出售

二叠纪盆地的Diamondback Energy公司在第二季度将更多的中游资产货币化,这是一项更广泛的10亿美元剥离计划的艺术,旨在剥离不参与资本竞争并减少债务的非核心资产。

二叠纪盆地的Diamondback Energy公司在第二季度将更多的中游资产货币化,这是一项更广泛的10亿美元剥离计划的艺术,旨在剥离不参与资本竞争并减少债务的非核心资产。 (来源:Shutterstock) 

响尾蛇能源公司在第二季度实现了非核心资产剥离目标,而二叠纪盆地的纯粹业务可能不会完成营销资产。

总部位于德克萨斯州米德兰的Diamondback Energy Inc.在 7 月 31 日收盘后发布的第二季度财报中披露,该公司于 7 月剥离了 OMOG 原油采集系统 43% 的股权。

根据 Diamondback 监管文件,OMOG JV LLC 在德克萨斯州米德兰、马丁、安德鲁斯和埃克托县运营着约 400 英里的原油收集和区域运输管道,以及约 35 万桶原油储存。

该公司表示,此次剥离为 Diamondback 带来了 2.25 亿美元的总收益。

自启动出售计划以来,Diamondback 已宣布或完成了 11 亿美元的非核心资产剥离。该公司此前计划通过资产出售筹集 5 亿美元,但今年早些时候将 2023 年剥离目标提高至 10 亿美元

尽管到年底超过了 10 亿美元的剥离目标,Diamondback 可能会寻求将更多资产货币化。

TD Cowen分析师在 7 月 31 日的一份研究报告中指出,Diamondback 第二季度末持有待售资产 7.42 亿美元,这表明“更多收益可能会有助于建立现金储备,以实现进一步的资本回报”。 ”

这高于 5 月份第一季度收益中报告的 1.43 亿美元待售资产。

Diamondback 在第二季度末的资产负债表上还有 5.87 亿美元的权益法投资。

Siebert Williams Shank & Co. 董事总经理 Gabriele Sorbara 在《Diamondback》中指出,“Diamondback”并未提高其非核心资产出售目标,但其中游资产和权益法投资继续具有重大价值,这些价值可能会在未来货币化。 8 月 1 日的报告。

Diamondback 正在部分利用资产出售收益来偿还债务:该公司的总债务在第二季度降至 67 亿美元左右,低于上一季度的约 70 亿美元。

该公司的目标是在第三季度通过产生自由现金流、即将完成的资产剥离所得收益以及减少应收所得税来继续去杠杆化。

Diamondback 总裁兼首席财务官 Kaes Van’s Hof 在 8 月 1 日与分析师举行的公司财报电话会议上表示,Diamondback 强调了其资产剥离,但本季度在阻止和解决租赁方面也取得了进展。

该公司第二季度斥资 1.45 亿美元收购与二叠纪盆地租赁活动相关的房地产。

“我们一直在考虑通过我们的一些头寸租赁米德兰盆地的一些更深层次的权利,因此这与现金流量表中的一些购买有关,”范霍夫说。

Diamondback 的业务开发团队还就该公司在其经营区域内不拥有的未开发权益和非经营职位提出要约。


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Diamondback 关闭二叠纪资产剥离,着眼于中游销售


股东回报、服务成本缩减

Diamondback 承诺通过股息和股票回购将至少 75% 的自由现金流返还给投资者

Permian E&P 第二季度超出了目标,股东回报约占季度自由现金流的 86%(4.73 亿美元)。

索巴拉表示,响尾蛇并没有像预期的那样宣布本季度的可变股息。但该公司将季度基本股息提高了 5%,达到每股 0.84 美元。第二季度股息将于 8 月 17 日支付给截至 8 月 10 日登记在册的 Diamondback 股东。

该公司还在本季度斥资 3.21 亿美元回购了超过 240 万股已发行普通股;据该公司报道,第三季度迄今,Diamondback 已斥资 5400 万美元回购了近 40 万股股票。

今年迄今为止,Diamondback 已回购约 536 万股股票。

董事长兼首席执行官 Travis Stice 在 7 月 31 日致股东的信中表示,Diamondback 预计将在今年剩余时间内大幅削减资本支出,这将导致以当前大宗商品价格计算的预期自由现金流增加。

E&P 预计,随着 Diamondback 开始看到油井成本降低和钻井活动减少的好处,第三季度资本支出将下降约 5%,至 6.5 亿至 7 亿美元之间。该公司还预计第四季度现金资本支出将进一步下降。

“原材料(包括钢铁、柴油和沙子)和服务成本持续下降,为我们在进入 2024 年时降低完井成本做好了准备,”Stice 说道。

第二季度现金支出总计 7.11 亿美元,低于公司季度指引的上半部分。


有关的

能源行业第二季度股息收益率创下标普最高

原文链接/hartenergy

Diamondback Eyes Further Sales After Exceeding $1B Divestiture Target

Permian Basin pure-play Diamondback Energy monetized more midstream assets in the second quarter—part of a broader $1 billion divestiture plan to shed non-core assets that don’t compete for capital and reduce debt.

Permian Basin pure-play Diamondback Energy monetized more midstream assets in the second quarter—part of a broader $1 billion divestiture plan to shed non-core assets that don’t compete for capital and reduce debt. (Source: Shutterstock) 

Diamondback Energy reached its non-core divestiture target during the second quarter—and the Permian Basin pure-play might not be done marketing assets.

In July, Midland, Texas-based Diamondback Energy Inc. divested a 43% equity ownership in the OMOG crude oil gathering system, the company disclosed in second-quarter earnings released after markets closed on July 31.

OMOG JV LLC operates about 400 miles of crude oil gathering and regional transport pipelines, as well as approximately 350,000 bbl of crude storage in Midland, Martin, Andrews and Ector counties, Texas, according to Diamondback regulatory filings.

The divestiture generated gross proceeds of $225 million to Diamondback, the company said.

Diamondback has announced or closed $1.1 billion in non-core asset divestitures since launching the sale program. The company had previously planned to raise $500 million through asset sales but upped its 2023 divestiture target to $1 billion earlier this year.

Despite exceeding its $1 billion divestiture target by year-end, Diamondback might be looking to monetize more assets.

In a July 31 research report, analysts at TD Cowen noted that Diamondback ended the second quarter with $742 million in assets held for sale—suggesting that “further proceeds are likely on the way that would favorably build cash reserves towards further capital returns.”

That’s up from $143 million in assets held for sale reported in first-quarter earnings in May.

Diamondback also ended the second quarter with $587 million in equity method investments on its balance sheet.

“[Diamondback] did not increase its non-core asset sale target but continues to have significant value in its midstream assets and equity method investments that may be monetized down the road,” Siebert Williams Shank & Co. Managing Director Gabriele Sorbara noted in an Aug. 1 report.

Diamondback is using proceeds from its asset sales in part to pay down debt: The company’s total debt fell to around $6.7 billion in the second quarter, down from about $7 billion in the previous quarter.

The company aims to continue deleveraging in the third quarter through free cash flow generation, proceeds from divestitures that are set to close and reducing its income tax receivable.

Diamondback highlighted its divestitures but also made headway on blocking-and-tackling leasing during the quarter, Diamondback President and CFO Kaes Van’t Hof said on the company’s Aug. 1 earnings call with analysts.

The company spent $145 million on second-quarter property acquisitions related to Permian Basin leasing activity.

“We've been looking at leasing some of the deeper rights in the Midland Basin across some of our positions, so that's tied to some of those purchases in the cash flow statement,” Van’t Hof said.

Diamondback’s business development team is also making offers on undeveloped interests and non-operated positions the company doesn’t own in its operating areas.


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Diamondback Closes Permian Divestitures, Eyes More Midstream Sales


Shareholder returns, service cost deflation

Diamondback committed to returning a minimum of 75% of its free cash flow back to investors through dividends and share buybacks.

The Permian E&P exceeded its target in the second quarter, with shareholder returns representing approximately 86% ($473 million) of quarterly free cash flow.

Diamondback did not declare a variable dividend for the quarter, as expected, Sorbara said. But the company boosted its quarterly base dividend by 5% up to $0.84 per share. The second-quarter dividend is payable on Aug. 17 to Diamondback stockholders of record as of Aug. 10.

The company also repurchased over 2.4 million shares of its outstanding common stock for $321 million during the quarter; Diamondback has bought back nearly 400,000 shares for $54 million so far in the third quarter, the company reported.

Year to date, Diamondback has repurchased about 5.36 million shares.

Diamondback has “line of sight to significant capex reductions through the remainder of the year, which will result in higher expected free cash flow at current commodity prices,” Chairman and CEO Travis Stice said in a July 31 letter to shareholders.

The E&P anticipates that capital spending will fall by around 5% to between $650 million and $700 million in the third quarter as Diamondback begins to see the benefits of lower well costs and lower drilling activity. The company also expects to see cash capex fall further in the fourth quarter.

“Both raw materials (including steel, diesel and sand) and service costs continue to decline, setting us up for lower completed well costs as we head into 2024,” Stice said.

Cash spending in the second quarter totaled $711 million, which fell in the upper half of the company’s quarterly guidance.


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