Energy M&A reaches post-price drop high; Permian a big focus

Drillinginfo

Drillinginfo, an Austin-based energy SaaS and data analytics company, announces that U.S. upstream oil & gas M&A clocked in at $84 billion in 2018 for the highest total since oil prices fell from their peak in late 2014.

Billion dollar plus deals fueled the surge in the back half of the year with a record-setting $32 billion in 3Q18 and $21 billion in 4Q18. BP’s transformational $10.5 billion buy of most of BHP’s shale assets is the largest deal of the year and fourth largest since 2009. The deal underpins BP’s strategy to roll-out BPX as an independent and leading U.S. shale player. The year also ran a close tie with 2014 for the most public company consolidations with RSP Permian, Energen, Newfield, WildHorse and Penn Virginia leading the exit list in 2018.

As Drillinginfo predicted in July 2018 the pace of consolidation picked up late in 2018 with corporate-level deals accounting for over 70 percent of the $21 billion total deal value in 4Q18. That is the highest quarterly corporate deal total since 3Q14.

“Investors continue to demand that companies deliver a clear line-of-sight to positive free cash flow,” said Drillinginfo M&A Analyst Andrew Dittmar. “Scale is one piece of the puzzle on how to get there given efficiencies in developing larger acreage blocks, optimizing supply chain logistics to lower costs and G&A savings. Wall Street no longer supports growth for growth sakes and is ready to punish buyers who do deals without a clear profit strategy.”

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With the precipitous drop in oil prices that broke all support levels beginning in early November, the deal markets ground to a virtual stall. This came almost immediately on the heels of perhaps the most talked about week in the industry’s recent history. In a span of just five days, public company consolidation went into a frenzy with Plano-based Denbury buying Penn Virginia, then Oklahoma City-based Chesapeake buying WildHorse and Encana purchasing Newfield.

The shift towards corporate-level M&A late in 2018 also cut into private equities’ share of deal activity. After hitting a high-water mark in 4Q17 by taking the buyer role in 46 percent of deals, private equity’s share of acquisitions fell to only 7 percent in 4Q18. Private equity wasn’t overly active as a seller in 4Q18 either, accounting for only 4 percent of sold deals by value versus 23 percent in 4Q17.

Private and institutional capital is still highly active in the upstream business and playing an important role. PE-backed companies continue to explore emerging areas like the Louisiana Austin Chalk as well as the margins of more established resource plays. PE capital is also ready to move in when it feels public markets are undervaluing assets or companies as seen by the letter put out by Elliott Management addressing QEP’s stock performance and including a firm offer to buy the company.

Another clear theme from 2018, according to Drillinginfo, was the institutionalization of the minerals market with deal activity in this sector growing 100 percent over 2017 with deal value reaching nearly $3 billion. Buyers cross all capital sectors from public royalty companies like Fort Worth-based Kimbell Royalty Partners to institutional players like Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan to public E&Ps like Continental Resources.

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Looking forward into 2019, Drillinginfo expects the pace of oil and gas deal markets to remain impacted by oil price volatility which ultimately provides numerous special situation opportunities, particularly for oil equities that have been oversold. According to Brian Lidsky, Sr. Director Market Intelligence, “The straight-line $31 drop in WTI spot oil prices from $76 to $45 per barrel from the start of October to just before Christmas coincided with the risk-off appetite that was pervasive across the capital markets. US E&P equities responded largely in lock-step with the rapid decline. Looking ahead, the reality is that albeit global oil demand may slow some, growth remains unabated and for all intents and purposes has surpassed the 100 million barrel per day level. All eyes are on the impact of the start of OPEC+ round two cuts, Iran sanctions plus the trend of global oil demand.”

Currently, Drillinginfo quantifies $39 billion of deals in play in the U.S., of which 50 percent is located in the Permian. There is certainly high-quality assets in the marketplace and buyers ready to acquire. The only barrier is bridging the bid/ask price. Historically, if the gap has widened, deals often come with contingent payments predicated on a price or asset performance benchmark, according to Drillinginfo.

Top Takeaways from 2018:

• Total of $84.3 billion in 2018 with $20.9 billion in 4Q18 and 63% of total value in 2H18.

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• For 2018, Permian is again most active area for deals with $28.3 billion or 33% of total.

• Funding asset acquisitions via an overnight equity raise became virtually non-existent.

• SPAC business model (raise public market cash then find an asset) continues to work.

• The IPO market for E&Ps remains largely closed.

• Royalty markets double and rapidly gain institutional attention.

Outlook for 2019:

• Expect the launch of numerous non-core asset sales from public E&Ps with BP likely leading the charge.

• Private equity likely to reemerge as a key buyer on asset deals with willingness to pay for PDP and take risk on upside.

• Markets will reward scale and low-cost leaders which translates into richer equity currency for large players to make accretive buys of smaller players.

• Remains to be seen if rapid drop in oil prices will affect the closing of 4Q18’s corporate deals.

• Leveraged E&Ps likely to find themselves under renewed pressure to take action to improve balance sheets.

• drillinginfo.com.