二叠纪脉搏:富兰克林山在特拉华州并购目标中脱颖而出

当富兰克林山公司在 2018 年 BLM 拍卖中竞标特拉华盆地土地时,富兰克林山相对无名。如今,它已成为美国最大的私营石油生产商之一,也是收购的主要目标。

富兰克林山能源公司 (Franklin Mountain Energy ) 在 2018 年土地管理局 (BLM) 新墨西哥州土地租赁拍卖中竞标时,相对无名。

“每个人都认为我们疯了,”富兰克林山公司财务执行副总裁兼联合创始人奥黛丽·罗伯逊 (Audrey Robertson) 说。

几家大型公共勘探和生产公司被美国土地管理局诱人的报价所吸引:有机会购买新墨西哥州特拉华盆地核心未开发区域的钻探权。

成功的竞标者包括西方石油公司马拉松石油公司等大型独立公司。斗牛士资源公司(Matador Resources)以秘密别名运营,后来透露自己是联邦租赁销售中的最高竞标者。

“但人们想,“富兰克林山到底是什么?”罗伯逊在德克萨斯州沃思堡举行的哈特能源超级挖掘会议暨博览会上说道。

业界很快就会知道富兰克林山到底是谁:根据Enverus Intelligence Research的数据,如今,E&P 是美国最大的私营石油和天然气生产商之一。

在二叠纪盆地的私人勘探与生产中,富兰克林山拥有整个盆地中一些最具吸引力和令人垂涎的钻井库存。

专家和分析师认为,富兰克林山将成为一家在特拉华盆地寻求钻探跑道的大型企业的收购目标。

Moelis & Co. 董事长兼能源和清洁技术全球主管 Stephen Trauber最近告诉 Hart Energy,这家总部位于丹佛的勘探开发公司通过出售可能会获得“30 亿美元左右”的价格。

不断发展的勘探与生产公司拥有一支经验丰富的领导团队来规划其发展方向:联合创始人保罗·福斯特 (Paul Foster)、杰夫·史蒂文斯 (Jeff Stevens) 和斯科特·韦弗 (Scott Weaver) 此前创立了位于德克萨斯州埃尔帕索的Western Refining2017 年,Western Refining 以 58 亿美元的价格完成了对Tesoro Corp.的出售,随后Tesoro 以 230 亿美元的价格出售给了马拉松石油公司 (Marathon Petroleum)

罗伯逊此前曾在一家大型私募股权公司工作,然后创立了自己的基金,专注于矿产和非经营投资。西方团队最终成为罗伯逊基金的投资者。

2017 年至 2018 年间,针对新墨西哥州特拉华盆地勘探开发的论文诞生了。通过将私募股权支持的头寸与 BLM 拍卖中的大型块状土地组合相结合,富兰克林山可以整合大量未钻探的二叠纪投资组合。

“如果它成功了,那就太美妙了,”罗伯逊说,“但还有很多事情必须发生。”

“同样,我们可能在 9 月份的一天内需要 25 亿美元,”她说。

富兰克林山目前在新墨西哥州利县的块状油田生产约 50,000 桶油当量/天。

但就在几年前,富兰克林山通过收购获得的少数遗留油井的平均产量仅为 50 桶油当量/天左右。

2018 年 9 月,BLM 租赁出售给富兰克林山提供了利县约 4,000 英亩未开发的原始岩石。

当月晚些时候,该公司通过收购私募股权公司Carnelian Energy Capital的投资组合公司OneEnergy Partners Operating LLC又增加了 4,280 英亩净土地。


有关的

即将到来的并购形式:德文郡是下一个加入狂欢的人吗?


相信过程

富兰克林山公司经历了艰辛的努力才成长为二叠纪顶级私人生产商之一。

该公司在开业的前 33 个月内自掏腰包为运营提供资金。罗伯逊说,富兰克林山不想上市,也不想引入更多的外部投资者。

“这主要是因为我们希望根据资产做出这些运营决策,”她说。 “他不想向其他任何人负责。”

富兰克林山也没有很早就出去寻求银行资金。坦率地说,大银行可能不会向富兰克林山提供所需的贷款。

“说实话,他们可能不会同意我们的道路,”罗伯逊说。

一系列反周期投资——当大多数其他大公众都在大喊大叫的投资者的方向上进行投资时——帮助富兰克林山达到了今天的水平。

当富兰克林山公司于 2020 年底拿起第一台钻机时,全国各地的运营商都在削减钻探活动并削减预算;油价徘徊在 38 美元/桶左右。

“我会说,负油价导致能源环境恶劣,”罗伯逊说。 “但我们坚信我们拥有合适的资产和合适的团队,所以我们正在前进。”

当富兰克林山的第一个井场于 2021 年 7 月上线时,油价已反弹至 62 美元/桶左右。

富兰克林山还优先考虑在特拉华盆地建设自己的基础设施需求,例如中游外卖。

“这促使我们与中游供应商、土地所有者、监管机构建立合作伙伴关系,并努力创造长期的增长机会,”罗伯逊说。

该公司确实在钻探第一个井场时开始向银行寻求融资。富兰克林山公司当时已为其钻探计划投资了 1 亿美元;该公司正在寻找一把价值 4000 万美元的银行左轮手枪。

但富兰克林山钻探了第一口井,在上游领域相对较新。几家主要银行都不愿意借钱。

然而,罗伯逊表示,中小型银行——尤其是俄克拉荷马银行(BOK Financial Corp.)——愿意与富兰克林山合作。

“像联信银行、UMB 银行和Fifth Third这样的大银行纷纷介入,我们得到了 4000 万美元的左轮手枪,”罗伯逊说。

如今,富兰克林山的信贷循环资金包括 16 家银行贷款机构,金额徘徊在 10 亿美元左右。

“而且它将永远由俄克拉荷马银行领导,因为他们很早就给了我们支持,”她说。


有关的

二叠纪并购:Oxy Shops Delaware Assets、Family Oil Cos 脱颖而出


并购混乱

公共勘探和生产公司迫切需要二叠纪盆地的钻探库存,并且他们愿意支付费用。

对钻探跑道的疯狂搜寻推动了二叠纪盆地创纪录的企业并购和资产交易量。

该盆地的几家最大生产商——Pioneer Natural Resources 、Endeavour EnergyCrownRock LP等——在短短几个月内就被抢购一空。

康菲石油公司最近宣布斥资 171 亿美元收购马拉松石油公司这笔交易将进一步巩固二叠纪盆地。该交易还包括在鹰福特、巴肯和中部大陆的互补地位。

在众多私募股​​权支持的勘探与生产公司退出后,盆地周围隐藏的并购机会越来越少。

Enverus Intelligence Research 高级并购分析师 Andrew Dittmar在 2024 年 Enverus Evolve 会议上表示,这就是为什么像富兰克林山这样的私营公司如此引人注目,成为潜在的并购目标。

其他私人并购目标包括Mewbourne OilFasken Oil & Ranch等家族石油公司

二叠纪盆地还有一些有趣的私募股权支持的勘探与生产项目仍在增长:其中之一是 Double Eagle IV,它正在米德兰盆地建立一个有吸引力的地位

据报道,Double Eagle IV 正在考虑以 65 亿美元的价格出售

Ameredev II LLC在EnCap Investments LP的支持下,也在特拉华盆地扩大了规模。据报道,EnCap 正在考虑出售 Ameredev II。

FireBird Energy II在私募股权公司 Quantum Energy Partners 的支持下,也在米德兰盆地建立了自己的地位,包括在德克萨斯州米德兰、厄普顿、格拉斯科克和克兰县的租赁。

FireBird II 正在米德兰盆地西侧开发受欢迎的长凳,并探索一些更深的层段。 FireBird II 目前在厄普顿县和米德兰县拥有大部分租赁和生产权。


有关的

首席执行官:FireBird II在西米德兰盆地进行并购和深度勘探

原文链接/HartEnergy

Permian Pulse: Franklin Mountain Stands Out Among Delaware M&A Targets

Franklin Mountain was a relative nobody when the company bid for Delaware Basin acreage in a 2018 BLM auction. Today, it’s one of the largest private U.S. oil producers and a major target for acquisition.

Franklin Mountain Energy was a relative nobody when the company bid in a 2018 Bureau of Land Management (BLM) lease auction for New Mexico acreage.

“Everyone thought we were crazy,” said Audrey Robertson, executive vice president of finance and co-founder of Franklin Mountain.

Several big public E&Ps were lured by the BLM’s tempting offer: a chance to buy drilling rights for undeveloped acreage in the core of New Mexico’s Delaware Basin.

Successful bidders included large-cap independents like Occidental Petroleum and Marathon Oil. Matador Resources, operating under a stealthy alias, later revealed itself as the top bidder in the federal lease sale.

“But people thought, ‘Who the heck is Franklin Mountain?’” Robertson said during Hart Energy’s SUPER DUG Conference & Expo in Fort Worth, Texas.

It wouldn’t take long for the industry to learn just who the heck Franklin Mountain was: Today, the E&P is one of the largest privately held oil and gas producers in the nation, according to data from Enverus Intelligence Research.

And among private Permian Basin E&Ps, Franklin Mountain owns some of the most attractive and coveted drilling inventory left across the entire basin.

Experts and analysts believe Franklin Mountain will be a target for acquisition by a larger player seeking drilling runway in the Delaware Basin.

The Denver-based E&P could fetch somewhere in the “$3 billionish range” through a sale, Stephen Trauber, chairman and global head of energy and clean technology at Moelis & Co., recently told Hart Energy.

The growing E&P has an experienced leadership team charting its course: Co-founders Paul Foster, Jeff Stevens and Scott Weaver previously founded El Paso, Texas-based Western Refining. Western Refining completed a $5.8 billion sale to Tesoro Corp. in 2017, before Tesoro sold to Marathon Petroleum for $23 billion.

Robertson previously worked at a big private equity firm before founding her own fund focused on minerals and non-operated investments. The Western team eventually became investors in Robertson’s fund.

Between 2017 and 2018, the thesis for a New Mexico-focused Delaware Basin E&P was born. By combining a private equity-backed position with the big, blocky acreage packages from the BLM auction, Franklin Mountain could put together a substantial undrilled Permian portfolio.

“If it worked, it would be beautiful,” Robertson said, “but there were a lot of things that had to happen.”

“Namely, we probably needed a quarter of a billion dollars in one day in September,” she said.

Franklin Mountain is currently producing around 50,000 boe/d from its blocky acreage position in Lea County, New Mexico.

But just a few years ago, output averaged only around 50 boe/d from a handful of legacy wells Franklin Mountain picked up through acquisition.

The BLM lease sale in September 2018 gave Franklin Mountain around 4,000 acres of undeveloped virgin rock in Lea County.

Later that month, the company added another 4,280 net acres through the acquisition of OneEnergy Partners Operating LLC, a portfolio company of private equity firm Carnelian Energy Capital.


RELATED

The Shape of M&A to Come: Is Devon Up Next to Join the Spree?


Trust the process

It took heavy lifting for Franklin Mountain to grow into one of the Permian’s top private producers.

The company financed operations out of its own pockets for its first 33 months in business. Franklin Mountain didn’t want to go public, and it also didn’t want to bring in additional outside investors, Robertson said.

“That was mostly driven to the fact that we wanted to make these operating decisions based on the asset,” she said. “We didn’t want to have to answer to anyone else.”

Franklin Mountain didn’t go out to source bank capital early on, either. And frankly, the big banks probably wouldn’t have loaned Franklin Mountain the money it needed.

“They probably would not have agreed with our path, to be honest,” Robertson said.

A series of countercyclical investments—zigging when most of the rest of the big publics zagged at the direction of their squawking investors—helped Franklin Mountain get to where it is today.

Operators around the nation were slashing drilling activity and cutting budgets when Franklin Mountain picked up its first rig in late 2020; oil prices languished around $38/bbl.

“I would say it was a hostile energy environment coming off of negative oil prices,” Robertson said. “But we had conviction that we had the right asset and we had the right team, so we were moving forward.”

Oil prices had rebounded to around $62/bbl when Franklin Mountain’s first well pad came online in July 2021.

Franklin Mountain also prioritized building out its own infrastructure needs in the Delaware Basin, like midstream takeaway.

“It led to us having partnerships with midstream providers, landowners, regulators and trying to build long-standing opportunities for growth,” Robertson said.

The company did start to approach banks for financing around the time it was drilling the first well pad. Franklin Mountain had invested $100 million into its drilling program at that point; the company was looking for a $40 million bank revolver.

But Franklin Mountain, drilling its first wells, was a relative newcomer to the upstream sector. Several major banks weren’t willing to lend the money.

However, small- and medium-sized banks—Bank of Oklahoma (BOK Financial Corp.) in particular, Robertson said—were willing to play ball with Franklin Mountain.

“Great banks like Comerica, UMB Bank and Fifth Third jumped in and we got our $40 million revolver,” Robertson said.

Today, Franklin Mountain’s credit revolver includes 16 bank lenders and hovers in the range of $1 billion.

“And it will always be led by Bank of Oklahoma because of that support they gave us early on,” she said.


RELATED

Permian M&A: Oxy Shops Delaware Assets, Family Oil Cos. Stand Out


M&A mayhem

Public E&Ps are clamoring for Permian Basin drilling inventory, and they’re willing to pay up.

The frenzied hunt for drilling runway fueled a record amount of corporate M&A and asset transactions in the Permian Basin.

Several of the basin’s largest producers—Pioneer Natural Resources, Endeavor Energy, CrownRock LP and others—were snapped up in a matter of months.

ConocoPhillips recently announced a $17.1 billion acquisition of Marathon Oil, a deal that will further consolidate the Permian Basin. The deal also includes complementary positions in the Eagle Ford, the Bakken and Midcontinent.

After exits by numerous private equity-backed E&Ps, there are fewer M&A opportunities left hiding in pockets around the basin.

It’s why private companies like Franklin Mountain stick out so much as potential M&A targets, said Andrew Dittmar, senior M&A analyst for Enverus Intelligence Research, during the 2024 Enverus Evolve conference.

Other private M&A targets include family-owned oil companies like Mewbourne Oil and Fasken Oil & Ranch.

There are also a handful of interesting private equity-backed E&Ps still growing in the Permian: One is Double Eagle IV, which is building an attractive position in the Midland Basin.

Double Eagle IV is reportedly exploring a sale in the range of $6.5 billion.

Ameredev II LLC, backed by EnCap Investments LP, has also grown a sizable footprint in the Delaware Basin. EnCap has reportedly explored a sale of Ameredev II.

FireBird Energy II, backed by private equity firm Quantum Energy Partners, is also building a Midland Basin position, including leases in Midland, Upton, Glasscock and Crane counties, Texas.

FireBird II is developing the popular benches—and exploring some deeper intervals—on the western side of the Midland Basin. FireBird II currently holds the bulk of its leases and production in Upton and Midland counties.


RELATED

CEO: FireBird II Prowls Western Midland Basin for M&A, Deep Exploration