US oil and gas M&A hits quarterly record after blockbuster 2023

admin admin | 04-25 00:30

The Chesapeake acquisition and last year's blockbuster deals by Exxon Mobil and Chevron remain stalled by antitrust reviews in part because they concentrate holdings in the Permian or Haynesville shale fields, said Dittmar.
US oil and gas deals hit a record USD 51 billion in the first quarter, a continuation of last year's fierce merger pace centered in the top US shale field, data provider Enverus said on Tuesday.

Energy companies have rushed to expand oil and gas drilling inventories, especially in the Permian Basin of West Texas and New Mexico, where producer break-even costs are about USD 64 a barrel. Oil prices averaged about USD 77 a barrel last quarter and this week traded near USD 83 per barrel.

Most of the high-quality US drilling prospects are in the Permian "so it is unsurprising the prolific basin was yet again the primary driver for M&A within oil and gas," said Andrew Dittmar, Enverus Intelligence Research's principal analyst.

The biggest proposed acquisition last quarter was Diamondback Energy's USD 26 billion bid for closely held Endeavor Energy Partners, a merger that brings together two Permian-centric drillers.

Apache Corp parent APA's USD 4.5 billion deal for Permian oil rival Callon Petroleum, and natural gas Chesapeake Energy's April USD 7.4 billion deal for Southwestern Energy rounded out the period's most valuable deals.

The Chesapeake acquisition and last year's blockbuster deals by Exxon Mobil and Chevron remain stalled by antitrust reviews in part because they concentrate holdings in the Permian or Haynesville shale fields, said Dittmar.

"The most likely outcome is all these deals get approved, but federal regulatory oversight may pose a headwind to additional consolidation within a single play," he added.

The number of deals rose to 27 last quarter, compared with 20 in the same period a year ago, and 60% of first quarter transactions by value were in the Permian, Enversus calculates.

That high pace is unlikely to persist, Dittmar said, with strong oil prices allowing more companies to justify holding onto non-core drilling assets rather than discard them as they once did.

"Inventory scarcity is the top theme among E&Ps (exploration and production companies)," he said.


Disclaimer: The copyright of this article belongs to the original author. Reposting this article is solely for the purpose of information dissemination and does not constitute any investment advice. If there is any infringement, please contact us immediately. We will make corrections or deletions as necessary. Thank you.


ALSO READ

Ola Electric responds to ARAI notice, says prices of S1 X 2 kWh scooter unchanged

Ola Electric provided an invoice dated October 6, showing a INR 5,000 discount given to customers, a...

Hyundai Motor IPO’s off to a slow start

Around 35% of the total shares in the offering are reserved for retail investors, while QIBs and NII...

Under fire, Ola Electric taps EY India to get back on track

Close to a dozen executives from EY came on-board at Ola Electric a few weeks ago on deputation for ...

Tata Motors secures 5-star BNCAP safety ratings for Nexon, Curvv, and EV models in latest crash tests

Tata Curvv.EV BNCAP testTata Motors did it again! Tata Motors has once again secured 5 star rating i...

India needs to step up manufacturing to meet Viksit Bharat goal: Volvo Grp India MD

Volvo Group India Managing Director and President, Kamal Bali. The manufacturing sector is a weak li...

Dollar pullback to help Indian rupee, weak risk appetite to weigh

Investors are now nearly certain that the U.S. Federal Reserve will deliver a 25-basis-point rate cu...