一切都是相对的:家族石油公司吸引巨大并购关注

在一个日益由规模主导的行业中,由原始二叠纪盆地野猫钻井公司的后代控制的公司扮演着什么角色?

2021 年,家族拥有的 Petro-Hunt 在巴肯的业务。2012 年,该公司以 14.5 亿美元的价格将其威利斯顿部分资产(净生产面积 81,000 英亩)出售给现在的 Battalion Oil,成为头条新闻。(来源:Petro-Hunt) 

编者注:本文已更新,添加了更多照片和地图。 

经过一个多世纪的勘探和开发,二叠纪盆地是一份源源不断的礼物。

当运营商在美国最大的资源盆地中争夺规模和跑道时,他们正在敲开自该区块开始以来就一直在那里开采石油的野猫家庭的大门。

如今,家族式石油和天然气公司在经历了历史性的整合趋势后,成为该盆地最令人垂涎​​的并购机会之一。

然而,当多伦多律师戴维·法斯肯 (David Fasken ) 于 1913 年在西德克萨斯州购买了一座占地 22 万英亩的牧场时,他根本没有考虑过石油

法斯肯以每英亩 6.50 美元的价格收购了这座未看过的“牧场”,计划将从中分割出农庄并单独出售,以获取丰厚的利润。

不幸的是,他没有考虑到西德克萨斯州贫瘠的土地上水资源匮乏,无法支撑农业发展。他家只剩下一大片连绵不断的土地,又没有可行的退出策略,只能靠自己在牧场上养牛。

大卫·法斯肯于 1929 年去世,他并未意识到自己脚下的岩石中隐藏着巨额财富等待被发掘。

牧场的大部分土地仍归家族所有。Fasken Oil & Ranch仍是德克萨斯州最大的私人土地所有者之一,拥有 C Ranch 以及德克萨斯州南部的几处其他地产。

C 牧场位于德克萨斯州米德兰市西北部新兴郊区的边缘。Fasken Oil & Ranch 多年来一直在 C 牧场钻垂直井。但与周边地区相比,C 牧场从水平角度来看相对尚未开发。

它是米德兰盆地 (Midland Basin) 的核心地块,全球最大的石油生产商以高昂的溢价收购了这片土地。

Enverus Intelligence Research 的数据显示,Fasken Oil & Ranch 拥有超过 900 个运营地点,大多数在油价低于 50 美元/桶时仍能实现收支平衡。

Enverus 首席分析师安德鲁·迪特马尔 (Andrew Dittmar) 表示,由于横向开发相对不足,Fasken 资产在儿童水井位置的利用率也“极低”,不足 10%。

迪特马尔表示,“如果法斯肯斯家族有意出售,那么单是米德兰的库存就可能价值 [30 亿至 40 亿美元],这还未考虑鹰福特 (Eagle Ford) 等其他油田的产量或持股价值。”

地表权、矿产权益和其他基础设施将使 Fasken 资产更加有价值。对于以每英亩 6.50 美元的价格购买的西德克萨斯州一片令人失望的干旱土地来说,这还算不错。

但一个关键问题仍然存在:Faskens 会出售吗?

在历史性的土地争夺战之后,这对留在二叠纪盆地的库存持有者来说最重要。

在一个越来越以规模和效率为主导的行业中,大型公司的规模不断扩大,在投资组合中占据大片土地以备未来开发。

根据 Rystad Energy 的分析,仅六家公司(埃克森美孚、雪佛龙Diamondback Energy康菲石油西方石油EOG Resources)就控制着二叠纪盆地剩余约 62% 的致密油资源。

在过去的一年里,该公司完成了或签署了多起令人瞠目结舌的收购案:

二叠纪盆地还剩下少量规模较小、由私募股权支持的勘探与生产公司,但与该盆地过去十年的蓬勃发展相比,数量只是冰山一角。

当有意收购的 E&P 公司在整个盆地寻找并购选择时,Fasken Oil & Ranch 和Mewbourne Oil等家族石油公司脱颖而出,成为该盆地最大的两家私人库存持有者。

一般来说,家族石油公司比私募股权支持的专门用于出售的勘探与生产公司更犹豫不决。

Mewbourne Oil 和 Fasken Oil & Ranch 已经钻井和生产石油和天然气好几代了。他们经历了数十年商品周期的起起伏伏。这些公司注定会长久存在。

但随着时间的推移和野猫公司高管年龄的增长,越来越多的家族石油公司开始向买家发出邀请。

Endeavor 就是最突出的例子。Autry Stephens 于 1979 年在二叠纪盆地创立了 Endeavor Energy Resources 公司。

根据 Enverus 的计算,今年这位 85 岁的亿万富翁野猫石油投资者同意出售 Endeavor,这将是该行业历史上规模最大的私营石油生产商收购案。

蒂姆·邓恩 (Tim Dunn) 出售了他的家族公司CrownQuest ,这是 CrownRock 和Lime Rock Partners的合资企业

詹姆斯·亨利是二叠纪盆地的资深钻井师,他的职业生涯始于常规岩层钻井,之后转向非常规钻井。去年,他把自己的公司卖给了Vital Energy 。他以 5.65 亿美元的价格将之前的公司 Henry Petroleum 卖给了 Concho Resources(康菲石油公司的一部分)。

亨利于十月去世。享年 89 岁

EOG于 2016 年从 Yates Petroleum 手中收购了新墨西哥州特拉华盆地的基础地位。近一个世纪前,马丁·耶茨 (Martin Yates Jr.) 于 1924 年在新墨西哥州土地上钻探了第一口商业油井。2015 年,Yates 家族的不同成员将 Harvey E. Yates Co. (HEYCO) 出售给了Matador Resources

埃克森美孚和页岩子公司XTO Energy于 2017 年斥资 66 亿美元从沃斯堡巴斯家族手中收购了新墨西哥州,从而进一步深入新墨西哥州。

随着二叠纪盆地的并购活动创下历史新高,这些著名的勘探与生产公司最终是否会被出售?

“我认为我们家族石油业务正濒临灭绝,”Moelis & Co. 董事长兼全球能源与清洁技术主管斯蒂芬·特劳伯 (Stephen Trauber) 表示。

他说道:“现在的石油业务需要大量资本,而且规模非常重要,因此作为家族理财室很难参与竞争。”


有关的

墨尔本石油公司:二叠纪盆地最大的小型生产商


仍在狩猎

家族石油公司面临着独特的挑战,但马歇尔·T·亨特 (Marshall T. Hunt) 认为,有关其破产的报道可能被大大夸大了。

他深知家族石油公司面临的独特挑战。他是亨特石油公司创始人、东德克萨斯油田勘探者 HL Hunt 的曾孙,HL Hunt 在其一生中积累了全球最大的财富之一。

HL Hunt 于 20 世纪 20 年代在阿肯色州埃尔多拉多创立了自己的第一家石油和天然气公司,当时正值阿肯色州石油繁荣的鼎盛时期。他后来获得了位于德克萨斯州基尔戈尔附近的 Daisy Bradford #3 钻井测试权,这是东德克萨斯油田的发现井。  

一切都是相对的:家族石油公司吸引巨大并购关注
20 世纪 20 年代,HL Hunt 在阿肯色州埃尔多拉多创立了自己的第一家石油和天然气公司,当时正值阿肯色州石油繁荣的鼎盛时期。(来源:Petro-Hunt

亨特石油公司于 1934 年在德克萨斯州泰勒成立,随后于 1937 年将总部迁至达拉斯。该公司日后发展成为世界上最大的私营石油和天然气生产商之一。

HL Hunt 的儿子 William Herbert Hunt 和 Nelson Bunker Hunt 于 1961 年在利比亚发现了巨大的萨里尔油田。但该油田以及邦克亨特石油公司的资产最终于 1973 年被穆阿迈尔·卡扎菲领导的利比亚政府征用。

WH Hunt 后来在 1990 年代创立了Petro-Hunt。WH Hunt 的孙子 Marshall T. Hunt 现担任 Petro-Hunt 的首席运营官,他就是在美国独特的文化中长大的。

他的血管里似乎流淌着黑绿色的原油。

亨特告诉《石油与天然气投资者》:“我们小时候在南德克萨斯州时,经常会去油井现场。我们从小就接触到这些事情。”

一切都是相对的:家族石油公司吸引巨大并购关注
(从左到右):年轻的威廉·赫伯特·亨特、纳尔逊·邦克·亨特和拉马尔·亨特。(来源:Petro-Hunt

他一直都知道自己想涉足家族的石油和天然气业务。但这并不意味着要从公司位于达拉斯的舒适住所开始工作。

从事亨特业务的家庭成员需要把时间投入到石油开采中。

“我们曾在密西西比州、德克萨斯州东部、德克萨斯州西部和北达科他州等地工作过,从零开始积累经验,”亨特说,“这确实为我们打下了基础,让我们能够从实地一直到公司层面学习整个业务。”

亨特表示,家族石油公司的影响力可能随着几代人的传承而逐渐减弱,但 Petro-Hunt 仍然看到了未来的增长空间。根据 Enverus 的数据,该公司的日产量约为 41,000 桶,是美国第 16 大私营石油生产商。

但随着对二叠纪盆地 Endeavor Energy Resources(220,400 桶/天)、CrownQuest Operating(93,600 桶/天)以及加利福尼亚州Aera Energy(78,000 桶/天)的收购即将完成,私营生产商的名单将会缩短。

Petro-Hunt 自 2022 年收购 Admiral Permian 公司进入二叠纪盆地以来,一直活跃于该盆地的特拉华盆地。Admiral Permian 公司的收购包括现有产量以及位于德克萨斯州里夫斯县和卡尔伯森县的约 21,000 净英亩土地。

Petro-Hunt 通过一系列交易收购了德克萨斯州洛文县约 4,000 净英亩的土地,作为对 Admiral Permian 交易的补充。去年,Petro-Hunt 收购了德克萨斯州沃德县一块 7,500 净英亩的连续地块。

亨特表示,如今,该公司的资产组合覆盖特拉华盆地超过 35,000 净英亩的土地,Petro-Hunt 在此运营着三座钻井平台。

一切都是相对的:家族石油公司吸引巨大并购关注
Petro-Hunt 已悄然在特拉华盆地德克萨斯州一侧扩大了影响力。注:根据 Rextag 提供的数据显示,所有特拉华盆地油井(绿色)和气井(红色)均由 Petro-Hunt 运营。(来源:Rextag、德克萨斯州铁路委员会

Petro-Hunt 还在威利斯顿盆地运营一座钻井平台,该公司在该地区拥有悠久的历史,并且仍然拥有相当大的资产组合。

Petro-Hunt 也是巴肯和 Three Forks 地层的先驱者:该公司的前身实体于 20 世纪 40 年代开始在北达科他州获得租约。

2012 年,该公司因将其在威利斯顿的部分油田(81,000 英亩净生产油田)以 14.5 亿美元的价格出售给 Halcón Resources(现为Battalion Oil )而成为新闻头条。

对于未来的并购,Petro-Hunt 保留了开放的选择。

冒险式勘探与生产并不反对进入新领域。毕竟,勘探是家族传统。

该公司还认为在现有运营领域进行额外收购具有价值。

“我们仍然在寻找机会,关注美国本土 48 个州的所有地区,”亨特说,“比如海恩斯维尔、二叠纪、落基山脉地区一直到威利斯顿。”

但亨特家族的投资范围已从石油和天然气生产领域扩展到其他领域。家族的 Petro-Hunt 部门专注于收购全国各地盆地的矿产和特许权使用费。亨特家族还拥有普莱西德炼油公司和路易斯安那州波特艾伦炼油厂的部分股权。

Petro-Hunt 是北达科他州 Killdeer 以西的 Little Knife 天然气厂的所有者和运营商,该厂负责处理来自 Little Knife 气田的天然气。

该家族积极投资房地产开发,经营私募股权另类投资部门,并喜欢经营牧场。

亨特家族的石油和天然气企业已经传承了第三代,甚至第四代,这是一个异常现象。

亨特家族和其他家族企业的成员普遍认为,当家族第三代掌权时,情况开始变得混乱。随着时间的推移,家族关系会变得疏远和分裂;企业功能障碍会随之而来。家族的某些成员可能想要出售企业;而其他成员可能希望长期留在企业中。

继任计划是家族企业的另一个重大陷阱。有时,年轻的继任者还没有准备好接管家族企业。

其他时候,即将离任的高级管理人员拒绝真正将控制权移交给年轻一代的领导(如果这听起来像 HBO 获奖节目“继任”的一集,那么该节目虽然是虚构的,但实际上并不遥远)。

亨特说,这个家族的成功和长寿部分归功于运气。

“但与此同时,也许这是一个紧密团结的家庭单位,我们看到了前几代人为我们今天所付出的努力和职业道德,”他说道,“知道我们正在为子孙后代努力,以巩固家族企业。”

亨特石油公司至今仍在运营,由家族的另一个分支管理。事实上,亨特石油公司正在积极营销一项广泛的矿产和特许权使用费套餐,总面积约为 20,000 英亩。根据营销材料,该套餐包括丹佛-朱尔斯堡 (DJ) 盆地、二叠纪盆地和尤因塔盆地、中大陆和德克萨斯州东部的权益。

“我认为未来有很大的增长空间,”亨特说。

4 月 9 日,W. Herbert Hunt 去世,享年 95 岁。12 月,他和家人被选入 Hart Energy 名人堂。


有关的

寻求增长:Petro-Hunt 深入特拉华州和威利斯顿


修补漏洞

Moelis & Co. 的 Trauber 表示,家族拥有的石油公司如今可能不再那么重要,但家族资本并没有完全离开石油和天然气行业。

他们的投资性质刚刚发生了变化,家族办公室资本越来越多地投资于专注于能源的私募股权基金或直接投资于运营商本身。

近年来,由于回报率较低、环境压力和其他原因,银行和公共市场纷纷退出石油和天然气行业。

私募股权资本对该行业仍然很重要,但与十年前相比,该领域部署的专注于上游的私募股权资本数量仅为其一小部分。

但专家表示,家族办公室资本已开始填补这些金融家退出后留下的部分空白。

Haynes & Boone 2024 年春季借款基数重新确定调查的受访者预计,今年股权资本市场的使用量将出现“大幅下降”,而缺口将由家族理财室和私募股权的股权增长弥补。

Haynes and Boone 合伙人兼调查报告作者克雷格·格拉曼 (Kraig Grahmann) 表示,从资本成本的角度来看,家族办公室和私募股权的成本更高。

但家族办公室似乎越来越多地涉足石油和天然气领域,因为运营者变得更加自律,专注于将资金返还给投资者。家族办公室也不必像银行那样面临环境、社会和治理 (ESG) 压力。

特劳伯说:“随着时间的推移,这些家族办公室的影响力越来越大。”

他回忆说,最近的一次行业活动有大约 40 到 50 个家族办公室参加,其中许多代表着沿海家族的资金,与石油和天然气行业没有真正的联系。

这些非能源家庭对能源业务有很多疑问。

特劳伯表示:“这次活动的目的实际上是让对能源不太了解的投资者更加了解能源,了解该业务的优点、该业务的现金流生成情况以及该业务目前的卓越回报。”

家族办公室可能无法一次性为石油和天然气公司带来重大影响。但人数越多,力量就越大。一些家族办公室正在联合起来,汇集资金投资石油和天然气行业。

去年,怀俄明州天然气生产商PureWest Energy被一个家族理财室牵头的财团以 18.4 亿美元现金收购。该财团包括 Petro-Hunt、AG Hill Partners、Cain Capital、Eaglebine Capital Partners、Fortress Investment Group、HF Capital 和 Wincoram Asset Management。

Petro-Hunt 的 Marshall T. Hunt 现在是 PureWest 董事会成员。他认为其他家族理财室主导的财团未来也可能采取类似举措。

亨特说:“我想你会看到这些家族理财室进入石油和天然气领域进行股权投资。”

“这对我们来说很独特,我们不是该业务的运营者,”他表示,“我们进行了投资,但并未积极运营这些资产。”


有关的

家族办公室:石油、天然气行业中熟悉和新的名字


从伊朗到世界

朋友和邻居警告艾拉·耶茨:佩科斯河西岸的那片荒地不会有任何成果。

艾拉·格里菲斯·耶茨 (Ira Griffith Yates) 是一名牧场主、花生挖掘者和西德克萨斯州企业家,他在德克萨斯州兰金经营着一家相对成功的干货店,1915 年,有人向他提出了一个诱人的提议。

商人托马斯·希科克斯 (Thomas Hickox) 想出售他在佩科斯县河南岸的 16,640 英亩牧场。根据耶茨的曾孙艾拉·约翰·耶茨 (Ira John Yates) 的说法,希科克斯提出了一项交易:用耶茨的商店换取河畔牧场。

牧场主对这个提议很感兴趣,但朋友们劝耶茨要谨慎行事。佩科斯河对岸的牧场经常遭受旱灾。由于没有围栏,土地的边界经常受到邻居的争议。

该牧场还因其“油腻的”井水而闻名。耶茨后来回忆说:“即使是水牛也知道不要越过佩科斯河,因为乌鸦飞不过去,而且[牧场]不值得纳税。”

尽管受到警告,耶茨还是继续进行交易。有一段时间,反对他的人是对的:接下来的几年对伊拉·耶茨和他的妻子安来说是艰难的。牧场很难盈利。

到了 20 世纪 20 年代,艾拉·耶茨 (Ira Yates) 开始寻找新事物。

当时,人们才刚刚开始认识到西德克萨斯州的原油潜力。米切尔县的 WH Abrams 1 号井是该盆地的第一口商业发现井,于 1920 年 2 月开始生产,7 月出现井喷。这口井虽然具有历史意义,但规模却不大。

但著名的圣丽塔 1 号油井于 1923 年 5 月 28 日在大学土地上投入使用,随着大湖油田的发现,西德克萨斯州名声大噪。圣丽塔 1 号油井生产了 67 年,直到 1990 年才被封堵

艾拉·耶茨拜访了附近里根县大湖石油公司的总裁利维·史密斯。史密斯还担任跨大陆石油公司的经理。

耶茨说服史密斯在佩科斯县的牧场钻探,尽管那里的地理位置并不理想。当时的传统观点认为佩科斯河以西没有石油,但耶茨和他的钻探合作伙伴 Transcontinental 和俄亥俄石油公司(马拉松石油公司的前身)接受了这一风险。

一切都是相对的:家族石油公司吸引巨大并购关注
耶茨油田是迄今为止开发的最大、地质上最独特的碳氢化合物储量之一,它为德克萨斯州伊朗市奠定了基础,至今仍是美国已探明储量最大的油田之一。(来源:美国宇航局地球观测站

俄亥俄石油公司与 Transcontinental 公司共享租约,在耶茨牧场钻了四口井,最终于 1926 年 10 月 28 日(即盖茨 67 岁生日)发现石油。IG 耶茨 A 1 号井如今被称为耶茨油田的发现井,该油田是有史以来开发的最巨大、地质上最独特的碳氢化合物储层之一。

石油的发现和随之而来的暴富让耶茨立刻成为了百万富翁,在第一个油井喷出后,他就在自家前廊向吵闹的客户出售钻井租约。

它产生了德克萨斯州伊朗镇(发音为“淚ra-Ann”),其土地由耶茨家族捐赠。

耶茨油田为其股东带来了近一个世纪的财富。但也带来了许多麻烦,包括官司缠身以及 1976 年德克萨斯州铁路委员会 (RRC) 的油田合并程序,当时马拉松石油公司成为该油田的运营商。

对于马拉松石油公司来说,这块油田更广为人知的名字是“皇冠上的宝石”。1981年《纽约时报》的一篇文章报道称,“没有耶茨,就没有马拉松石油公司。”

马拉松石油公司最终于 2003 年将其在该油田的权益出售给了金德摩根 (Kinder Morgan)。今年夏天,马拉松石油公司同意以 171 亿美元的价格将其出售给康菲石油公司。

一切都是相对的:家族石油公司吸引巨大并购关注
德克萨斯州佩科斯县耶茨油田的现代开发景观(上图)和 20 世纪 30 年代的油田景观(下图)。(来源:金德摩根公司;美国石油学会照片和电影收藏,美国国家历史博物馆档案中心,史密森学会
一切都是相对的:家族石油公司吸引巨大并购关注

耶茨油田仍然是美国探明储量最大的油田之一,经过多年的技术创新,该油田仍在继续生产。自 20 世纪 70 年代末联合作业以来,耶茨油田一直采用二次采油技术来延长油田的使用寿命。

金德摩根生产公司 (Kinder Morgan Production Co.)目前经营着耶茨油田,采用独特的二氧化碳油工艺来提高石油采收率。

Kinder Morgan CO2公司石油和天然气副总裁 Russ Roemer表示,Yates 采用不混溶性 CO2注入技术来提高石油采收率。 

Roemer 说道, “非混相驱本质上就是将二氧化碳气体的形式注入油藏。”

二氧化碳有效地使石油膨胀,将这种甜物质驱赶到岩石的裂缝中流入油柱,随后在那里被捕获。

其他 EOR 项目,例如位于德克萨斯州斯卡里县的 Kinder Morgan 的 SACROC 油田装置,采用混相 CO2油,其中在超临界压力下注入的 CO2油藏中的作用更像液体而不是气体。

“这是我所知道的唯一一种不混溶性二氧化碳,”罗默说,“这是西德克萨斯州积极进取和敢于冒险的典型例子。”

艾拉·G·耶茨 (Ira G. Yates) 和耶茨油田使得西德克萨斯在公众词汇中几乎成为“il”的同义词。

至于先驱性的 IG Yates A No. 1,经过近一个世纪和三次现代化重建项目后,至今仍在生产。

一切都是相对的:家族石油公司吸引巨大并购关注
IG Yates A No. 1 是 1926 年发现的位于德克萨斯州佩科斯县的 Yates 油田的油井,至今仍在生产,下图是发现时油井的样子。(来源:金德摩根;美国石油学会照片和电影收藏,美国国家历史博物馆档案中心,史密森学会
一切都是相对的:家族石油公司吸引巨大并购关注

但艾拉·G·耶茨的遗产对于他的曾孙艾拉·约翰·耶茨来说并不是早已失传的德克萨斯历史。西德克萨斯油田、伊朗镇和佩科斯河一直是这位奥斯汀本地人一生的坚实基础。

他的母亲 Pauline “olly” Blanton 是 IG Yates 的孙女,积极参与管理她共同拥有的家族土地。

耶茨告诉《石油和天然气投资者》:“他的母亲对那里的财产和油田的运营有着很大的个人兴趣。”

小时候,他经常和母亲一起旅行,母亲向 RRC 和德克萨斯州土地总署请愿,要求生产商清理佩科斯河沿岸的废弃油井。耶茨本人在 70 年代中期参与了 RRC 统一油田的过程。

“这对我来说是一个非常重要的教育过程,”耶茨说。“但更重要的是,我了解了耶茨油田石油工业的运作方式、地质、政治、金钱和争论。”

他还了解了 RRC 所掌握的强大工具集:20 世纪 20 年代末,耶茨的大量产量给生产商带来了储存和运输问题。

到 1928 年夏天,RRC 发布了按比例分配耶茨油田产量的命令,这是该州第一份全油田范围的此类命令。

20 世纪 30 年代东德克萨斯油田发现后,配额分配模式得到了更大规模的实施。这种规定和控制石油和天然气生产率的模式成为 20 世纪 60 年代成立 OPEC 的核心论点。

如今,耶茨致力于回馈伊朗镇和佩科斯河下游的利益相关者。 

2021 年,耶茨成立了非营利组织“佩科斯河之友”,其使命是改善该河段的水质和水量。他希望看到伊朗学校的参与,让孩子们参与 STEM 和农业教育。

讽刺的是,作为通过开采化石燃料而获得的巨额财富的继承人,他为环境保护做出了贡献,但耶茨却对此视而不见。多年来,其他矿产所有者对他的评价也褒贬不一。

“他们正在和老板的曾孙交谈,”耶茨说。“所以,这非常非常困难。”

随着耶茨油田即将迎来第一个百年生产,金德摩根计划在这一历史资产上每年钻探约 50 口水平井。

罗默说:“我认为,如果没有艾拉·耶茨的努力,二叠纪盆地仍然会很特别,但不会像现在这样丰富多彩或富饶。”

原文链接/HartEnergy

It’s All Relative: Family Oil Companies Attract Huge M&A Attention

What role do firms controlled by descendants of the original Permian Basin wildcatters play in a sector increasingly dominated by scale?

Family-owned Petro-Hunt operations in the Bakken, 2021. The company grabbed headlines in 2012 when it sold a portion of its Williston position—81,000 net producing acres—to what is now Battalion Oil for $1.45 billion. (Source: Petro-Hunt

Editor's note: This article has been updated with additional photos and maps. 

After more than a century of exploration and development, the Permian Basin is the gift that keeps on giving.

And as operators jockey for scale and runway in America’s biggest resource basin, they’re knocking on the doors of wildcatting families that have been in the Permian since the play’s beginning.

Today, family-owned oil and gas companies stand out among the most coveted M&A opportunities in the basin after a historical consolidation trend.

But oil was nary a thought on the mind of David Fasken when the Toronto attorney purchased a 220,000-acre ranch in West Texas in 1913.

Fasken, who acquired the “C Ranch” sight unseen for $6.50 per acre, planned to carve out farming homesteads from the property and sell them off individually for a healthy profit.

Unfortunately, he failed to account for the lack of water in barren West Texas to support farming ventures. Left with a massive, contiguous block of land and no conceivable exit strategy, his family resigned themselves to managing cattle on the ranch.

David Fasken died in 1929, unaware of the vast fortune hiding in the rock beneath his feet, waiting to be unearthed.

Most of the ranch has been kept in the family. Fasken Oil & Ranch remains one of the largest private landowners in Texas with the C Ranch, along with a handful of other properties in South Texas.

The C Ranch is on the outskirts of the budding suburbia northwest of Midland, Texas. Fasken Oil & Ranch has drilled vertical wells on the C Ranch for years. But compared to its neighbors, the C Ranch is relatively undeveloped from a horizontal standpoint.

It’s core Midland Basin inventory, the kind of land that commands massive premiums from the world’s largest oil producers.

Fasken Oil & Ranch has an inventory of more than 900 gross operated locations, with most breaking even with oil prices below $50/bbl, according to figures from Enverus Intelligence Research.

Given the relative lack of horizontal development, the Fasken property also has “extremely low” exposure to child well locations, at less than 10%, said Andrew Dittmar, principal analyst at Enverus.

“Were the Faskens to be interested in selling, the Midland inventory alone would likely be worth [$3 billion to $4 billion] before accounting for the value of production or holdings in other plays like the Eagle Ford,” Dittmar said.

Surface rights, mineral interests and other infrastructure would make the Fasken asset even more valuable. Not a bad outcome for a disappointingly arid tract of West Texas land purchased for $6.50 per acre.

But a key question remains: Will the Faskens ever sell?

It’s top-of-mind for inventory holders left standing in the Permian after a historic land grab.

In an industry increasingly dominated by scale and efficiency, the majors are growing bigger—hoarding vast swathes of land in portfolios for future development.

According to a Rystad Energy analysis, only six firms—Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Diamondback Energy, ConocoPhillips, Occidental Petroleum and EOG Resources—control about 62% of the remaining tight oil resource in the Permian Basin.

That’s after a handful of eye-popping acquisitions that have closed or been inked over the past year:

There’s a smattering of smaller private equity-backed E&Ps left in the Permian, but a fraction as many compared to the basin’s booming run last decade.

As acquisitive E&Ps scour the basin for M&A options, family-owned oil companies like Fasken Oil & Ranch and Mewbourne Oil stand out from the crowd as two of the basin’s top private inventory holders.

Generally, family oil companies are more hesitant to sell than private equity-backed E&Ps that are built for that purpose.

Mewbourne Oil and Fasken Oil & Ranch have drilled wells and produced oil and gas for several generations. They’ve weathered decades of the ups and downs of the commodity cycle. The companies are built to last.

But as the years pass and wildcatting executives age, more and more family oil companies are warming up to buyers.

Endeavor is the most prominent example. Autry Stephens launched the company that would become Endeavor Energy Resources in the Permian Basin in 1979.

This year, the 85-year-old billionaire wildcatter agreed to sell Endeavor in what would be the largest buyout of a private oil producer in the history of the sector, according to Enverus’ calculations.

Tim Dunn sold his family’s company, CrownQuest, a joint venture between CrownRock and Lime Rock Partners.

James “Jim” Henry, a longtime Permian Basin wildcatter who began his career with wells in conventional rock before moving into unconventional drilling, sold his company to Vital Energy last year. He sold his previous firm, Henry Petroleum, for $565 million to Concho Resources—now a part of ConocoPhillips.

Henry died in October. He was 89.

EOG acquired a foundational position in the New Mexico Delaware Basin from Yates Petroleum in 2016. Nearly a century earlier, it was Martin Yates Jr. who drilled the first commercial oil well on New Mexico state lands in 1924. In 2015, different members of the Yates family sold Harvey E. Yates Co. (HEYCO) to Matador Resources.

Exxon Mobil and shale subsidiary XTO Energy dug deeper into New Mexico through a $6.6 billion acquisition in 2017 from the Bass family of Fort Worth.

With Permian M&A activity coming off a record high year, will more of these storied E&Ps finally sell?

“I think we’re on the edge of extinction of the family oil business,” said Stephen Trauber, chairman and global head of energy and clean technology at Moelis & Co.

“The oil business now requires so much capital, and scale is so important,” he said, “that it’s hard to be a family office and compete.”


RELATED

Mewbourne Oil: The Biggest Little Producer in the Permian


Still hunting

Family oil companies face unique challenges, but Marshall T. Hunt thinks the reports of their demise could be greatly overexaggerated.

He knows well the unique challenges of family oil companies. He’s the great-grandson of H.L. Hunt, Hunt Oil founder and East Texas Oil Field wildcatter who during his time amassed one of the world’s largest fortunes.

H.L. Hunt founded his first oil and gas business in the 1920s in El Dorado, Arkansas, during the height of the Arkansas oil boom. He would go on to acquire the drill test of the Daisy Bradford #3 near Kilgore, Texas, the discovery well for the massive East Texas Oil Field.  

It’s All Relative: Family Oil Companies Attract Huge M&A Attention
H.L. Hunt founded his first oil and gas business in the 1920s in El Dorado, Arkansas., during the height of the Arkansas oil boom. (Source: Petro-Hunt)

Hunt Oil was incorporated in Tyler, Texas, in 1934 before moving its headquarters to Dallas in 1937. It would grow into one of the world’s largest private oil and gas producers.

H.L. Hunt’s sons, William Herbert Hunt and Nelson Bunker Hunt, discovered the massive Sarir Field in Libya in 1961. But the oil field, and Bunker Hunt Oil’s assets, were eventually expropriated by the Libyan government of Muammar Gaddafi in 1973.

W.H. Hunt later founded Petro-Hunt in the 1990s. Marshall T. Hunt, the grandson of W.H. Hunt who serves as COO of Petro-Hunt today, grew up in that unique American culture.

Black-green crude might as well run through his veins.

“Oftentimes as kids in South Texas, we’d make trips out to a well site,” Hunt told Oil & Gas Investor. “We were exposed to it at an early age.”

It’s All Relative: Family Oil Companies Attract Huge M&A Attention
(Left to right): A young William Herbert Hunt, Nelson Bunker Hunt and Lamar Hunt. (Source: Petro-Hunt)

He always knew that he’d like to get into the family’s oil and gas business. But that didn’t mean starting out working in the company’s cushy Dallas digs.

Family members who took up the Hunt business would be required to put in their time in the oil patch.

“We worked in places like Mississippi, East Texas, West Texas and North Dakota, gaining experience from the ground up,” Hunt said. “That really gave us the foundation and knowledge to be able to expand on learning the entire business—from the field all the way up to the corporate level.”

The influence of family oil companies may have waned over the generations, but Petro-Hunt still sees a runway of growth into the future, Hunt said. The company produces about 41,000 bbl/d, making it the 16th-largest private oil producer in the U.S., per Enverus data.

But the list of private producers is set to shrink with the pending acquisitions of Endeavor Energy Resources (220,400 bbl/d), CrownQuest Operating (93,600 bbl/d) in the Permian Basin, and the acquisition of Aera Energy (78,000 bbl/d) in California.

Petro-Hunt has been active in the Permian’s Delaware Basin since entering the play through an acquisition from Admiral Permian in 2022. The Admiral Permian deal included existing production and around 21,000 net acres in Reeves and Culberson counties, Texas.

Petro-Hunt complemented the Admiral Permian deal by acquiring about 4,000 net acres in Loving County, Texas, through a series of transactions. Last year, Petro-Hunt acquired a contiguous block of 7,500 net acres in Ward County, Texas.

Today, the company’s portfolio spans over 35,000 net acres in the Delaware Basin, where Petro-Hunt operates three rigs, Hunt said.

It’s All Relative: Family Oil Companies Attract Huge M&A Attention
Petro-Hunt has quietly been growing a footprint on the Texas side of the Delaware Basin. NOTE: All Delaware Basin oil (green) and gas (red) wells operated by Petro-Hunt, according to available Rextag data. (Source: Rextag, Texas Railroad Commission)

Petro-Hunt is also running one rig in the Williston Basin, where the company has had a long history and still owns a sizable portfolio.

Petro-Hunt was also a pioneer in the Bakken and Three Forks formations: The company’s predecessor entities began picking up leases in North Dakota in the 1940s.

The company grabbed headlines in 2012 when it sold a portion of its Williston position—81,000 net producing acres—to Halcón Resources (now Battalion Oil) for $1.45 billion.

Petro-Hunt is keeping its options open when it comes to future M&A.

The wildcatting E&P isn’t opposed to jumping in somewhere new. Exploration runs in the family, after all.

The company also sees value in bolting on additional acquisitions in its existing operating areas.

“We’re still opportunistic, looking at all areas across the Lower 48,” Hunt said, “such as the Haynesville, Permian, the Rockies region all the way up to the Williston.”

But the Hunt family has diversified investments outside of oil and gas production. The Petro-Hunt side of the family has verticals focused on acquiring minerals and royalties in basins around the country. The Hunt family is also a part owner in the Placid Refining Co. and a refinery in Port Allen, Louisiana.

Petro-Hunt is the owner and operator of the Little Knife Gas Plant west of Killdeer, N.D., which processes natural gas volumes from the Little Knife field.

The family actively invests in real estate development, operates a private equity alternative investment division and enjoys ranching.

That the Hunt family’s oil and gas enterprises have lasted through a third, even into a fourth generation, is an anomaly.

There’s a widely held belief, by members of the Hunt family and other family businesses, that the situation starts to get messy by the third generation of family ownership. As the years go on, families can become distant and fragmented; business dysfunction can begin to ensue. Certain parts of the family might want to pursue a sale; other parts of the family might want to stay in the business for the long haul.

Succession planning is another major pitfall for family-owned companies. Sometimes, a younger successor just isn’t ready to take over the family enterprise.

Other times, an outgoing senior executive refuses to truly cede control to a younger generation of leadership (If this sounds like an episode of HBO’s award-winning show “Succession,” the show, though fictitious, really wasn’t far off).

Chalk some of the family’s success and longevity up to luck, Hunt said.

“But also, at the same time, maybe it’s being a close-knit family unit and seeing the work and work ethic that the generations before us have put in for us today,” he said. “Knowing that we’re working for the future generations to build upon the family business.”

Hunt Oil is still around today, managed by a different branch of the family. In fact, Hunt Oil is actively marketing an expansive minerals and royalties package spanning around 20,000 net royalty acres in aggregate. The package includes interests in the Denver-Julesburg (D-J) Basin, the Permian and Uinta basins, the Midcontinent and East Texas, according to marketing materials.

“I think we see a lot of room for growth in the future,” Hunt said.

W. Herbert Hunt died at age 95 on April 9. He and his family were inducted into Hart Energy’s Hall of Fame in December.


RELATED

Hunting for Growth: Petro-Hunt Digs Deeper into Delaware, Williston


Fixing a hole

Family-owned oil companies might be less relevant today, but family capital hasn’t completely left the oil and gas sector, according to Moelis & Co.'s Trauber.

The nature of their investment has just changed, with family office capital increasingly investing in energy-focused private equity funds or directly into operators themselves.

Banks and public markets have backed away from the oil and gas sector in recent years due to poor returns, environmental pressures and other reasons.

Private equity capital is still important for the sector, but there’s a fraction of the amount of upstream-focused private equity capital deployed in the space compared to a decade ago.

But family office capital has stepped up to fill part of the void left in the wake of those exiting financiers, experts say.

Respondents in Haynes & Boone’s Spring 2024 Borrowing Base Redeterminations Survey expect to see a “meaningful drop” in the use of equity capital markets this year, with the shortfall made up by growth in equity from family offices and private equity.

Family office and private equity are more expensive from a cost of capital standpoint, said Kraig Grahmann, a Haynes and Boone partner and the survey report’s author.

But family offices seem to be increasingly tapping oil and gas since operators have become more disciplined and focused on returning money to investors. Family offices also don’t have the same kinds of environmental, social and governance (ESG) pressures that banks face.

“It has gotten bigger over time, the influence of these family offices,” Trauber said.

He recalled a recent industry event hosting around 40 to 50 family offices, many of which represented coastal family money with no real ties to the oil and gas industry.

These non-energy families are asking a lot of questions about the energy business.

“[The event was] really meant to make non-energy-sophisticated investors more sophisticated about energy,” Trauber said, “about the merits of the business, the cash flow generation of the business, the superior returns of the business today.”

A family office may not move the needle for an oil and gas company on a one-off basis. But there’s strength in numbers. Some family offices are banding together and pooling their money to invest in the oil and gas sector.

Last year, Wyoming natural gas producer PureWest Energy was acquired by a family office-led consortium for $1.84 billion in cash. The consortium included Petro-Hunt, A.G. Hill Partners, Cain Capital, Eaglebine Capital Partners, Fortress Investment Group, HF Capital and Wincoram Asset Management.

Petro-Hunt’s Marshall T. Hunt now serves on the PureWest board. He thinks other family office-led consortiums could make similar moves in the future.

“I think what you’ll see is these family offices coming in and doing equity-type investments in the oil and gas space,” Hunt said.

“That was kind of unique to us where we’re not the operator of the business,” he said. “We made the investment, but we’re not actively operating those assets.”


RELATED

Family Offices: Familiar and New Names Coming to Oil, Gas Table


From Iraan to the world

Friends and neighbors warned Ira Yates: Nothing would come of that barren land west of the Pecos River.

Ira Griffith Yates, a rancher, peanut digger and West Texas entrepreneur, operated a relatively successful dry-goods store in Rankin, Texas, when he was approached in 1915 with a tempting proposition.

Businessman Thomas Hickox wanted to offload his 16,640-acre ranch property south of the river in Pecos County. The story holds, according to Yates’ great-grandson, Ira John Yates, that Hickox proposed a trade: Yates’ mercantile store in exchange for the River Ranch.

The offer appealed to the rancher, but friends urged Yates to take caution. The ranch across the Pecos River was often beset by drought. The land’s boundaries were frequently disputed by neighbors since it was unfenced.

The ranch was also known for its “greasy” well water. Yates later recounted that “even buffalo know better than to cross the Pecos—that a crow would not fly over, and [the ranch] was not worth the taxes.”

Yates went forward with the trade, despite the warnings. And for a time, his naysayers were right: The following years were difficult ones for Ira Yates and his wife, Ann. The ranch struggled to turn a profit.

By the 1920s, Ira Yates was on the hunt for something new.

The crude oil potential of West Texas was only just beginning to be understood at that time. The W.H. Abrams No. 1 well in Mitchell County, the first commercial discovery well in the basin, began producing in February 1920 before its gusher event in July. That well, while historically significant, was a small endeavor.

But the famed Santa Rita #1, brought online on university lands on May 28, 1923, put West Texas on the map with the discovery of the Big Lake oil field. Santa Rita #1 produced for 67 years before being plugged in 1990.

Ira Yates called upon Levi Smith, president of the Big Lake Oil Co. in nearby Reagan County. Smith also operated as manager for the Transcontinental Oil Co.

Yates convinced Smith to drill at the Pecos County ranch, though its location was unfavorable. Conventional wisdom at the time held that there was no oil to be found west of the Pecos River, but Yates and his drilling partners, Transcontinental and the Ohio Oil Co. (an ancestor of Marathon Oil) accepted the risk.

It’s All Relative: Family Oil Companies Attract Huge M&A Attention
One of the most prodigious and geologically unique hydrocarbon reservoirs ever developed, the Yates Oil Field established the city of Iraan, Texas and is still one of the largest oil fields by proved reserves in the nation. (Source: NASA Earth Observatory)

Sharing the lease with Transcontinental, Ohio Oil drilled four wells on the Yates ranch before finally striking oil on Oct. 28, 1926—Yates’ 67th birthday. The I.G. Yates A No. 1 is known today as the discovery well for the Yates oil field, one of the most prodigious and geologically unique hydrocarbon reservoirs ever developed.

The oil discovery and ensuing bonanza made an instant millionaire out of Yates, who sold drilling leases to clamoring customers from his front porch after the first gusher came in.

It yielded the town of Iraan, Texas, (pronounced “Ira-Ann”) on acreage donated by the Yates family.

The Yates field has yielded nearly a century of fortunes for its stakeholders. It also yielded headaches from squabbling court battles and the Texas Railroad Commission (RRC) field unitization process in 1976, when Marathon Oil became operator.

For Marathon Oil, the field was better known as The Crown Jewel. An article in the 1981 New York Times reported, “There is really no Marathon Oil without Yates.”

Marathon Oil eventually sold its interest in the field to Kinder Morgan in 2003. This summer, Marathon agreed to a $17.1 billion sale to ConocoPhillips.

It’s All Relative: Family Oil Companies Attract Huge M&A Attention
A view of modern development at Yates oil field in Pecos County, Texas, (above) and the field as it looked around the 1930s (below). (Source: Kinder Morgan Inc.; American Petroleum Institute Photograph and Film Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution)
It’s All Relative: Family Oil Companies Attract Huge M&A Attention

Yates, still one of the nation’s largest oil fields by proved reserves, continues to produce after years of technical innovation. Secondary recovery techniques have been deployed at Yates to extend the life of the field since the late 1970s, after the unitization process.

Kinder Morgan Production Co. operates the Yates field today using a unique CO2 flood process for EOR.

Russ Roemer, vice president of oil and gas for Kinder Morgan CO2, said Yates uses immiscible CO2 injection for EOR. 

“An immiscible flood is essentially putting CO2 as a gas into the reservoir,” Roemer said.

The CO2 effectively swells the oil, driving the sweet prize into the rock’s fractures to drain into the oil column, where it’s subsequently captured.

Other EOR projects, such as Kinder Morgan’s SACROC field unit in Scurry County, Texas, use miscible CO2 flooding, where CO2 injected under supercritical pressure acts more like a liquid in the reservoir than a gas.

“It’s the only immiscible CO2 flood of which I’m aware,” Roemer said. “It’s a prime example of West Texas can-do attitude and risk taking.”

Ira G. Yates and the Yates field helped to make West Texas almost synonymous with “oil” in the public lexicon.

As for the pioneering I.G. Yates A No. 1, it’s still in production today, after nearly a century and three modernizing recompletion projects.

It’s All Relative: Family Oil Companies Attract Huge M&A Attention
I.G. Yates A No. 1, the 1926 discovery well for the prolific Yates Oil Field in Pecos County, Texas, is still in production today and, below, how it appeared near the time of the find. (Source: Kinder Morgan; American Petroleum Institute Photograph and Film Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution)
It’s All Relative: Family Oil Companies Attract Huge M&A Attention

But the legacy of Ira G. Yates isn’t long-lost Texas history for his great-grandson, Ira John Yates. The West Texas oil field, the town of Iraan and the Pecos River have been consistent foundations throughout the life of the Austin native.

His mother, Pauline “Polly” Blanton, was the granddaughter of I.G. Yates and took an active role in managing the family land she co-owned.

“My mother maintained a significant personal interest in the property out there and the operation of the field,” Yates told Oil and Gas Investor.

As a child, he would travel with his mother as she petitioned the RRC and Texas General Land Office to force producers to clean up abandoned wells along the Pecos River. Yates himself became involved during the RRC’s process to unitize the field in the mid-’70s.

“It was a very important education process for me,” Yates said. “But more importantly, I learned the workings of the oil industry in the Yates field, the geology, the politics, all the money and arguing.”

He also learned about the powerful toolset the RRC wielded: The bountiful production from Yates caused storage and transportation issues for producers in the late 1920s.

By the summer of 1928, the RRC had issued an order prorating production from the Yates field, the first fieldwide order of its kind in the state.

The proration model was deployed on a much larger scale after the discovery of the East Texas Oil Field in the 1930s. That model of dictating and controlling the rate of oil and gas production served as a core thesis in forming OPEC in the 1960s.

Today, Yates is focused on giving back—to the town of Iraan and to stakeholders of the lower Pecos River. 

In 2021, Yates formed Friends of the Pecos River, a nonprofit organization, with a mission to enhance water quality and quantity in that section of the river. He wants to see participation from Iraan schools to get kids involved in STEM and agriculture education.

The irony of his situation—contributing to environmental conservation efforts as the heir to a massive fortune made through fossil fuel extraction—isn’t lost on Yates. Fellow mineral rights owners have had choice words for him over the years.

“And they’re talking to the great-grandson of the owners,” Yates said. “So, it’s very, very difficult.”

As the Yates field nears its first century in production, Kinder Morgan’s plans call for drilling around 50 horizontal wells per year on the historic asset.

“Without [Ira Yates’] effort, I think the Permian would still be exceptional, but it wouldn’t be nearly as colorful or prolific,” Roemer said.