Shale Driller EOG To Buy Yates Petroleum -- WSJ
September 07 2016 - 3:03AM
Dow Jones News
By Lynn Cook and Tess Stynes
EOG Resources Inc., one of the most prolific shale drillers in
the U.S., agreed to acquire privately owned Yates Petroleum Corp.
for roughly $2.34 billion in a deal that expands its presence from
Texas and New Mexico to Colorado and Wyoming.
Houston-based EOG's shares, up 32% so far this year, rose 6.7%
to $94.89 in midday trade.
EOG management has famously shunned deals in recent years,
saying the company's best prospects for growth came directly
through the drill-bit by tapping new oil-and-gas wells. But Yates,
one of the nation's biggest privately held oil firms, has land in
prime oil basins that is too good to pass up, Bill Thomas, EOG's
chief executive, told investors Tuesday.
Yates, which is controlled by descendants of Martin Yates Jr.,
an early wildcatter who helped discover New Mexico's oil reserves,
has been the target of multiple corporate inquiries over the years.
It has assembled vast acreage in some of the sweetest oil drilling
prospects. Even though Yates's oil production is relatively low,
the company's tracts, combined with EOG's cutting-edge technology,
will be transformational to the company and the development of
several big fields, Mr. Thomas said.
"This really isn't about getting bigger. It's about getting
better," he said.
Much of the acreage that Yates controls borders EOG's existing
leases in places like the Delaware Basin in West Texas, which has
emerged as one of the hottest drilling spots even during a
two-year-long oil bust. Joining the companies' acreage together
will allow EOG to drill longer horizontal wells, ultimately
unlocking more crude oil.
Typical oil-and-gas leases measure one square mile, or 640
acres. But as energy companies try to reduce the cost of their
operations that footprint is often considered too small, experts
say. For U.S. producers to drill down vertically and then out
horizontally for more than a mile, more tracts of land need to be
cobbled together. Some companies are swapping acreage in West Texas
in an effort to create larger contiguous blocks of land they can
control.
EOG said the Yates deal will give it adjoining acreage in some
of the best plays around the U.S.
"It's no secret any more that the Delaware Basin is one of the
best resource plays in the country," Mr. Thomas said. "EOG's
acreage position will increase by 78% through this transaction to a
whopping 424,000 net acres."
Yates's extensive holdings in New Mexico also establish a new
play in the state for EOG, Mr. Thomas said.
Including the assumption of $245 million of debt, partly offset
by $131 million of cash on hand, the enterprise value of the deal
is estimated at $2.5 billion. The transaction, expected to close in
October, includes 26.06 million newly issued EOG shares valued at
roughly $2.3 billion and $37 million in cash.
EOG is one of top shale producers in the U.S., operating in
areas such as the Eagle Ford formation in South Texas and the
Delaware Basin in West Texas. The company has been realigning its
assets to create a premium inventory of drilling acreage that can
generate strong returns even when oil prices are weak.
The addition of Artesia, N.M.-based Yates's premium drilling
locations in the Delaware Basin in New Mexico and Powder River
Basin in Wyoming will increase EOG's premium drilling locations by
40%. EOG defines premium drilling locations as those with an
after-tax rate of return of at least 30%, assuming a $40 flat crude
oil price.
Last month EOG swung to a second-quarter loss and posted a sharp
revenue decline, though the company also increased its target for
2016 well completions amid cost cuts and improved efficiency.
Write to Lynn Cook at lynn.cook@wsj.com and Tess Stynes at
tess.stynes@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
September 07, 2016 02:48 ET (06:48 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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