分析师:埃克森美孚与先锋的交易可能引发页岩油并购热潮

专家表示,埃克森美孚以 600 亿美元的交易收购二叠纪盆地巨头先锋自然资源公司可能会刺激美国石油领域的其他大型交易。

专家表示,埃克森美孚公司收购二叠纪盆地巨头先锋自然资源公司可能会推动石油领域的其他大规模交易。

据报道,总部位于德克萨斯州斯普林的埃克森美孚即将达成协议,收购总部位于德克萨斯州欧文的先锋公司,这笔交易可能价值 600 亿美元;然而,《华尔街日报》指出,德克萨斯州两家石油巨头之间的交易谈判仍可能失败。

根据谣言的进展以及股票投资者对这些谣言的反应,专家认为埃克森美孚与先锋的大型交易这次可能会达成。

“我认为这将会发生。Pickering Energy Partners创始人兼首席投资官丹·皮克林 (Dan Pickering) 表示,“目前看来还太成熟了。”

“根据最后的传言,[Pioneer] 的股价上涨了 5%、6%,”他说。“这一次,上涨了 11%。” 我认为这笔交易正在取得进展。”

据雅虎财经数据显示,10 月 6 日,先锋股价从每股 214.96 美元上涨至每股近 237.43 美元。

一项潜在的交易将把二叠纪盆地的两个最大参与者聚集在一起,二叠纪盆地是美国最大的石油生产地区,也是美国石油产量增长的主要推动力。

Enverus Intelligence Research总监安德鲁·迪特玛(Andrew Dittmar)表示,长期以来,先锋公司一直被视为埃克森美孚有吸引力的大规模并购目标,因为先锋公司在米德兰盆地的地位具有巨大的规模、质量和未开发的库存深度。

先锋公司是米德兰最大的生产商,第二季度该公司原油产量平均为 369,000 桶/天,总产量为 711,000 桶油当量/天。

埃克森美孚在二叠纪也拥有相当大的足迹。这家美国超级巨头对二叠纪盆地制定了积极的增长计划,埃克森美孚将其定位为未来几十年全球石油生产的主要支柱之一。

第二季度,埃克森美孚二叠纪盆地产量从上一季度的 615,000 桶油当量/天增至创纪录的 620,000 桶油当量/天。

该公司计划到 2027 年将二叠纪产量提高到 100 万桶油当量/天。但对于埃克森美孚来说,通过有机方式(而不是通过并购无机方式)达到这一生产水平将是一项挑战。

“对于 100 万桶和他们拥有的库存量,他们必须仔细考虑才能到达那里,”迪特马告诉哈特能源公司。“一旦他们达到 100 万桶,就不一定会给他们留下他们想要的运行空间,如果这是他们长期维持这一目标的话。”


有关的

据报道,埃克森美孚正在就购买先锋自然资源进行高级谈判


超级交易势头

随着埃克森美孚与先锋公司的协议可能顺利推进,分析师和专家们想知道:一项价值 600 亿美元的页岩油大型交易是否会刺激其他大型企业和大型独立企业进行其他大规模并购?

“我认为这迫使整个行业思考,‘我会在哪里?’”皮克林说。“逻辑辩论变成了,‘好吧,如果埃克森美孚正在这样做,我应该这样做吗?’”

近年来,勘探与生产企业总体上并未进行大规模收购,而是选择将其充裕的现金流用于股东回报。

Rystad Energy高级页岩分析师 Matthew Bernstein通俗地将当前页岩行业的资本纪律称为“页岩 3.0 强化”,这与早期的水力压裂创新和钻探形成鲜明对比。在接下来的几年里,勘探与生产不惜成本地繁荣起来。

埃克森先锋公司规模的交易能否开启以大规模整合为标志的美国页岩油新时代?

伯恩斯坦表示,“虽然资本纪律仍将占据主导地位,但‘页岩 4.0’时代将毫无疑问地以整合为标志。”

他表示:“我们将看到已经拥有大部分致密油库存的高支出超级巨头将整合大量页岩资源。”

这种规模的收购机会相对较少,可以推动埃克森美孚及其大型同行的发展。随着二叠纪盆地整合的继续,对错失良机(FOMO)的恐惧可能会助长其他大型交易。

“势头会产生动力,”皮克林说。


有关的

ECC 2023:页岩油投资者再次获得产量增长的回报

独家:Rystad 表示二叠纪并购的未来仍悬而未决 [观看]


下一步是谁、何时、何地?

迪特玛表示,当石油巨头开始成为买家时,就打开了可能并购目标的潘多拉魔盒。其中可能包括康菲石油公司西方石油公司等行业巨头

迪特玛表示, Coterra EnergyDevon Energy等二叠纪盆地位置高度集中的小型勘探开发公司也可能成为未来二叠纪盆地并购的有吸引力的目标。

二叠纪盆地是当今 48 州下游最多产的页岩油区,因此 Pickering 预计该盆地近期将出现盘整。

随着二叠纪盆地越来越多地被收购和开发,勘探与生产公司将开始关注更成熟的美国页岩油区,例如巴肯盆地。公司也可能越来越多地考虑增加国际曝光度。

“你开始思考‘下一步’是什么?”皮克林说。“接下来是多盆。”


有关的

分析师:顶级钻井库存减少,成本上升

原文链接/hartenergy

Analysts: Exxon-Pioneer Deal Could Usher in Shale M&A Flurry

Exxon Mobil scooping up Permian Basin giant Pioneer Natural Resources in a $60 billion deal could spur other megadeals across the U.S. oil patch, experts say.

Exxon Mobil Corp. acquiring Permian Basin juggernaut Pioneer Natural Resources could fuel other massive deals in the oil patch, experts say.

Spring, Texas-based Exxon Mobil is reportedly nearing an agreement to acquire Irving, Texas-based Pioneer in a deal potentially worth $60 billion; however, The Wall Street Journal notes that deal negotiations between the two Texas oil giants could still fall through.

Based on the progression of the swirling rumors and how stock investors have responded to those rumors, experts believe the Exxon-Pioneer megadeal could come together this time.

“I think it is going to happen. It feels too baked at this point,” said Dan Pickering, founder and chief investment officer of Pickering Energy Partners.

“The last rumor, [Pioneer] stock was up 5%, 6%,” he said. “This time, it’s up 11%. I think this deal’s moving ahead.”

Pioneer’s stock price grew from $214.96 per share to nearly $237.43 per share on Oct. 6, according to Yahoo Finance data.

A potential deal would bring together two of the biggest players in the Permian Basin, America’s top oil-producing region and the main driver of U.S. oil production growth.

Andrew Dittmar, director at Enverus Intelligence Research, said Pioneer has long been seen as an attractive large-scale M&A target for Exxon—due to the massive scale, quality and undeveloped inventory depth of Pioneer’s position in the Midland Basin.

Pioneer is the largest producer in the Midland with the company’s crude oil production averaged 369,000 bbl/d during the second quarter, while total production came in at 711,000 boe/d.

Exxon also holds a sizable footprint in the Permian. And the U.S. supermajor has aggressive growth plans for the Permian, which Exxon has positioned as one of its main pillars of global oil production for decades to come.

Exxon’s Permian production grew to a record 620,000 boe/d during the second quarter up from the 615,000 boe/d seen a quarter prior.

The company plans to boost its Permian production up to 1 million boe/d by 2027. But getting to that production level organically, as opposed to inorganically through M&A, would be challenging for Exxon.

“For 1 million barrels and the amount of inventory that they have, they’d have to chew through it to get there,” Dittmar told Hart Energy. “It wouldn’t necessarily have left them with the running room they want once they got to that 1 million barrels, if that’s their goal to sustain it for long term.”


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Megadeal Momentum

With the Exxon-Pioneer agreement potentially working its way through the pipeline, analysts and experts wonder: Could a $60 billion shale megadeal spur other large-scale M&A by other majors and large-cap independents?

“I think it forces the entire sector to think, ‘Where am I going to be?’” Pickering said. “The logical debate becomes, ‘Well, if Exxon is doing this, should I be doing it?’”

Rather than pursue large-scale acquisitions, E&Ps, by and large, have opted to direct their abundant cash flows toward shareholder returns in recent years.

Matthew Bernstein, senior shale analyst at Rystad Energy, colloquially refers to the current period of capital discipline by the shale industry as “Shale 3.0”—which stands in stark contrast to the earliest days of fracking innovation and the drill-at-any-cost boom by E&Ps in the years that followed.

Could a deal the size of Exxon-Pioneer usher in the start of a new era of U.S. shale marked by large-scale consolidation?

“While capital discipline would still reign supreme, the “Shale 4.0” era would be unmistakably marked by consolidation,” Bernstein said.

“It would see high-spending supermajors, already in possession of large portions of the tight oil inventory, consolidate swathes of shale resources under their hold,” he said.

There are a relatively small number of acquisition opportunities of this scale that would push the needle for Exxon and its large peers. And as consolidation in the Permian Basin continues, fear of missing out, or FOMO, could fuel other large deals.

“The momentum begets momentum,” Pickering said.


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Who, When, Where Next?

When oil majors start becoming the buyers, it opens up a Pandora’s box of possible M&A targets, Dittmar said. That could include giants of the industry like ConocoPhillips or Occidental Petroleum.

Smaller E&Ps with highly concentrated Permian positions, such as Coterra Energy and Devon Energy, could also be attractive targets for future Permian M&A, Dittmar said.

The Permian is the Lower 48’s most prolific shale oil play today, so Pickering expects to see the most near-term consolidation play out across that basin.

As the Permian gets increasingly bought up and developed, E&Ps will start looking at more mature U.S. shale plays, like the Bakken. Companies might increasingly look at adding international exposure, too.

“You start thinking about ‘What’s next?” Pickering said. “The what’s next is multi-basin.”


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