Chord Energy 走得很远:巴肯勘探与生产公司 (Bakken E&P) 调查四英里支线

随着三英里侧井的持续成功,威利斯顿盆地运营商 Chord Energy 报告第三季度产量高于预期,并正在探索更长的水平钻井。

Bakken E&P Chord Energy Corp.继续享受三英里横向钻探的成果,与 E&P 正在放弃的两英里横向钻探相比,第三季度产量更高,钻探时间更短,从而受益匪浅。

在该公司 2023 年第三季度上线的 45 口井中,一半以上是三英里支线井。2023 年上半年,总共打了 37 口井,其中只有 19% 的井长为 3 英里。

Chord 总裁兼首席执行官丹尼尔·布朗 (Daniel Brown) 在 11 月 2 日的公司会议上表示:“以两英里等效标准进行评估时,这一成就更加令人印象深刻,相当于在一半的时间内将油井输送量提高了 42%”第三季度财报电话会议。 

布朗还谈到了最近的并购趋势,包括雪佛龙公司收购威利斯顿勘探与生产 赫斯公司,称该公司将在适当的情况下对收购或出售持开放态度。

然而,该公司的重点是钻探计划,并从岩石中榨出尽可能多的石油。

布朗表示,对于三英里井,Chord 假设第三英里的产能仅为前两英里的 80%,横向长度增加 50%,而欧元增加 40%,钻井和完井成本增加 20%。

“然而,通过有效的完成和清理实践,我们相信体积响应可能几乎与第三英里清理的百分比成正比,”布朗说。


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第三英里:Chord Energy 更长的横向路线在巴肯获得回报


与 2022 年第三季度相比,Chord 的三英里井钻井时间也减少了 25%,即每口井约 11 天。

布朗表示,鉴于三英里支线钻探的成功,该公司正在研究扩展到四英里支线。

“我们拥有的几何形状确实适合进行四英里的侧向运动,”布朗说。“如果你把时钟倒转,我会告诉你,”进入三支线是迈向未知的一大步,我们对此会有很多担忧。但可以肯定的是,迄今为止,三英里计划……非常成功。我们对它的进展感到兴奋。”

Chord 高管表示,该公司第三季度平均石油产量为 101,400 桶/天,总产量平均为 176,000 桶油当量/天,超出了分析师预期和共识预测。

Chord 表示,其石油产量比公司指导中值高出 4.5%,总产量比指导中值高出 3.8%。

根据 Piper Sandler 分析师 Mark A. Lear 11 月 1 日的报告,Chord 在第三季度“实现了增长并实现了增长”。

李尔表示,息税折旧及摊销前利润 (EBITDA) 和自由现金流超出了派珀·桑德勒 (Piper Sandler) 和普遍预期。Chord 在 2023 年第三季度返还了 75% 的自由现金流,基本股息和可变股息为每股 2.50 美元,并进行了 1.12 亿美元的股票回购。

“公司继续看到其三英里横向钻井计划的强劲表现,并估计西部盆地的经济效益与核心两英里钻井相当,”李尔说。  

布朗表示,在强劲生产的支撑下,该公司产生了 2.07 亿美元的调整后自由现金流,其中 75% 将根据资本回报框架返还给股东。

展望未来,由于Chord 2023年石​​油产量增长,该公司预计2024年年递减率将小幅增加。

“随着我们开始看到与我们生产的三英里井比例不断增加相关的产量下降幅度较小的好处,我们预计这种下降趋势将在 2024 年底和 2025 年之前扭转,”执行副总裁 Michael Lou Chord 首席财务官在电话会议上说道。

Chord 预计 2023 年全年将产生约 17.3 亿美元的调整后 EBITDA 和 8 亿美元的调整后自由现金流。

Chord Energy 还宣布了一项新的 7.5 亿美元股票回购计划,增加了现有的 3 亿美元计划,其中截至 9 月 30 日剩余产能为 1.148 亿美元。第三季度,Chord 回购了 703,862 股普通股,回购总价为 112.3 美元百万。

应对并购趋势

随着整合市场的回暖,Chord Energy 在今年早些时候收购了XTO Energy在威利斯顿盆地的资产后,无论是在巴肯盆地内还是在巴肯盆地之外,都对进一步整合持开放态度

“随着我们的前进,计划参与整合——无论这意味着我们是整合者还是被整合者,无论哪种方式都可以,”布朗说。“我们相信成为更大的股票故事的一部分,我们将寻找明智的机会来做到这一点。”

布朗表示,留在巴肯“对我们来说是一件非常自然的事情”,他引用了该公司的地下知识、运营能力以及将钻井间距单位从两英里横向转换为三英里的能力。

尽管外部整合仍有待讨论,但布朗向分析师强调,该公司对所涉及的更高风险保持“清醒”。

原文链接/hartenergy

Chord Energy Goes Long: Bakken E&P Investigating Four-mile Laterals

With the continued success of its three-mile lateral wells, Williston Basin operator Chord Energy reported higher-than-expected production volumes in the third quarter and is exploring even longer horizontal drilling.

Bakken E&P Chord Energy Corp. continues to enjoy the fruits of three-mile laterals, benefiting from both higher production and shorter drilling times in the third quarter compared to the two-mile analogs the E&P is moving away from.

Of the 45 wells the company placed online in third-quarter 2023, more than half were three-mile laterals. In the entire first half of 2023, a total of 37 wells were placed and only 19% of those were three miles long.

“This accomplishment is even more impressive when evaluating on a two-mile equivalent basis, which amounts to a 42% increase in well delivery in half the time,” said Chord President and CEO Daniel Brown during the company’s Nov. 2 third-quarter earnings call. 

Brown also addressed recent M&A trends, including Chevron Corp.’s purchase of Williston E&P Hess Corp., saying the company would be open to buying or selling under the right circumstances.

The company’s focus, however, is on its drilling program and squeezing as much oil as possible out of the rock.

For three-mile wells, Chord assumes the third mile is only 80% as productive as the first two miles, Brown said, with a 40% EUR uplift for a 50% longer lateral and 20% more drilling and completion costs.

“However, with effective completion and clean out practices, we believe the volume response could be nearly proportional to the percentage of the third mile that's cleaned out,” Brown said.


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The Third Mile: Chord Energy’s Longer Laterals Pay Off in Bakken


Chord also reduced its three-mile well drilling times compared to third-quarter 2022 by 25%—approximately 11 days per well.

Given the success of drilling three-mile laterals, Brown said the company is investigating expanding into four-mile laterals.

“There's certainly geometries we've got that would really lend themselves to doing four-mile laterals,” Brown said. “I'll tell you if you sort of rewind the clock, …moving into three laterals was a big step into the unknown, and we would have had lots of concerns about it. But certainly, the three-mile program, to date, has...been very successful. We're excited about it moving forward.”

The company reported average third-quarter oil volumes of 101,400 bbl/d and overall production averaged 176,000 boe/d, which exceeded analyst expectations and consensus projections, Chord executives said.

Chord said its oil volumes exceeded the company’s guidance by 4.5% at the midpoint and total volumes were 3.8% above midpoint guidance.

In the third quarter, Chord “delivered a beat and raise,” according to a Nov. 1 report by Mark A. Lear, an analyst at Piper Sandler.

EBITDA and free cash flow came in ahead of Piper Sandler and consensus expectations, Lear said. Chord returned 75% of free cash flow in third quarter 2023 with a base and variable dividend of $2.50/share and $112 million of stock buyback.

“The company continues to see strong performance from its three-mile lateral drilling program and estimates economics in [the] western basin is comparable with core two-milers,” Lear said.  

Underpinned by strong production, the company generated $207 million of adjusted free cash flow, of which 75% will be returned to shareholders under its return of capital framework, Brown said.

Looking ahead, the company expects its 2024 annual decline rate to increase slightly due to Chord’s 2023 oil production growth.

“As we start to see the benefits of the shallower declines associated with our growing proportion of producing three-mile wells, we expect this increase in decline to reverse towards the end of 2024 and into 2025,” Michael Lou, executive vice president and CFO of Chord, said on the call.

For full-year 2023, Chord expects to generate approximately $1.73 billion of adjusted EBITDA and $800 million of adjusted free cash flow.

Chord Energy also announced a new $750 million share repurchase program, increasing the existing $300 million program in which there was $114.8 million of capacity remaining as of Sept. 30. In the third quarter, Chord repurchased 703,862 common shares for a total repurchase price of $112.3 million.

Addressing M&A trends

As the market for consolidation picks up, Chord Energy is staying open to further consolidation, whether in-basin or outside of the Bakken, following its acquisition of XTO Energy’s assets earlier this year in the Williston Basin.

“We plan to participate in consolidation as we move forward—whether that means we are the consolidator or the consolidatee, either way is okay,” Brown said. “We believe in being part of a larger equity story, and we'll look for sensible opportunities to do that.”

Staying in the Bakken would be a “very natural thing for us to look at,” Brown said, citing the company’s subsurface knowledge, operational capabilities and ability to convert drilling spacing units from two-mile laterals to three.

While outside consolidation is still open to discussion, Brown emphasized to analysts that the company is staying “clear-eyed” to the higher risk involved.