Freehold Royalties Ltd. (Freehold or the Company) (TSX:FRU)
announces third quarter results for the period ended September 30,
2023.
President’s MessageThe third
quarter marked another strong period for Freehold as the Company
was able to execute on the core aspects of its North American
strategy, while providing a consistent and sustainable return for
our shareholders. Record production and premium pricing within
Freehold’s U.S. portfolio was a key driver in funds from operations
of $65 million or $0.43/share for the quarter. Freehold returned
$41 million or $0.27/share in dividends to its shareholders,
yielding a payout ratio of 62%, while reducing net debt by 19%
quarter over quarter. Freehold’s high margin, North American
royalty portfolio enables the current dividend to be well-funded at
prices significantly below current strip prices.
Freehold’s U.S. volumes averaged a record of
5,427 boe/d in Q3-2023, representing 12% organic growth over
Q2-2023 and a 17% improvement versus the same period in 2022. Flush
production from robust completion activity on multi-well, high net
royalty interest pads on our Midland and Eagle Ford acreage drove
the oil weighted growth. Well performance across our U.S. asset
base for the quarter continues to be in-line with expectations. We
also continue to benefit from a more oil weighted production base
and Gulf Coast pricing in the U.S., with U.S. production realizing
a 34% premium to that of our Canadian assets over the quarter.
Canadian production was down from the previous
quarter averaging 9,178 boe/d, primarily due to a negative prior
period adjustment for production in wildfire impacted areas being
offline in June longer than originally estimated. This adjustment
was mainly related to natural gas and NGL volumes, which mitigated
the impact to funds flow. For our Canadian oil production, we saw
positive production trends on our southern Saskatchewan and
Clearwater acreage, as drilling resumed post spring break-up. We
have achieved a record year of leasing in Canada with 102 leases
signed through the first nine months (including 24 new leases in
the quarter), concentrated in southeast Saskatchewan and the
Mannville stack. The recent advancements in heavy oil drilling
technology along with a resurgence of well-capitalized junior
operators has revitalized demand for our mineral title acreage
across Alberta and Saskatchewan, providing future momentum for
drilling activity and royalty production.
Highlights included:
- Record U.S.
production of 5,427 boe/d, a 12% increase over Q2-2023; average
total production of 14,605 boe/d (9,178 boe/d in Canada (9,418
boe/d before prior period adjustment) and 5,427 boe/d in the
U.S.);
- 24 new leases
with 13 counterparties; 102 leases signed through Q3-2023, a record
for Freehold;
- $84 million in
revenue; $235 million through nine months of 2023;
- $65 million in
funds from operations ($0.43/share(1)); $177 million through nine
months of 2023;
- $41 million in
dividends paid ($0.27/share); 8% increase over the same period in
2022;
- 251 gross wells
drilled, 116 wells in Canada and 135 wells in the U.S.;
- $61.55/boe
average realized price ($73.28/boe in the U.S. and $54.61/boe in
Canada);(1) See Non-GAAP and Other Financial Measures
David M. Spyker, President and Chief
Executive Officer
Dividend AnnouncementThe Board
of Directors of Freehold has declared a monthly dividend of $0.09
per share to be paid on December 15, 2023, to shareholders of
record on November 30, 2023. The dividend is designated as an
eligible dividend for Canadian income tax purposes.
Operating and Financial Highlights
|
Three Months Ended September 30 |
Three Months Ended June 30 |
FINANCIAL($ millions, except as noted) |
2023 |
|
2022 |
|
Change |
|
2023 |
|
Change |
|
West Texas Intermediate (US$/bbl) |
82.26 |
|
91.56 |
|
(10%) |
|
73.78 |
|
11% |
|
Royalty and other revenue |
84.2 |
|
98.4 |
|
(14%) |
|
73.7 |
|
14% |
|
Funds from operations |
65.3 |
|
80.8 |
|
(19%) |
|
53.0 |
|
23% |
|
Funds from operations per
share, basic ($)(1)(3) |
0.43 |
|
0.54 |
|
(20%) |
|
0.35 |
|
23% |
|
Dividends paid per share
($)(2) |
0.27 |
|
0.25 |
|
8% |
|
0.27 |
|
- |
|
Dividend payout ratio
(%)(3) |
62% |
|
47% |
|
32% |
|
77% |
|
(19%) |
|
Long-term debt |
141.2 |
|
196.9 |
|
(28%) |
|
152.0 |
|
(7%) |
|
Net debt(5) |
106.6 |
|
159.9 |
|
(33%) |
|
130.8 |
|
(18%) |
|
OPERATING |
|
|
|
|
|
Total production (boe/d)(4) |
14,605 |
|
14,219 |
|
3% |
|
14,667 |
|
- |
|
Canadian production
(boe/d) |
9,178 |
|
9,566 |
|
(4%) |
|
9,800 |
|
(6%) |
|
U.S. production (boe/d) |
5,427 |
|
4,653 |
|
17% |
|
4,867 |
|
12% |
|
Oil and NGL (%) |
63% |
|
62% |
|
1% |
|
62% |
|
1% |
|
Petroleum and natural gas
realized price ($/boe)(4) |
61.55 |
|
74.31 |
|
(17%) |
|
54.05 |
|
14% |
|
Cash costs ($/boe)(3)(4) |
5.10 |
|
3.62 |
|
41% |
|
7.19 |
|
(29%) |
|
Netback ($/boe)(3) (4) |
55.63 |
|
69.77 |
|
(20%) |
|
46.07 |
|
21% |
|
ROYALTY INTEREST DRILLING(gross / net) |
|
|
|
|
|
Canada |
116/ 3.9 |
|
147/ 5.8 |
|
(21%)/ (33%) |
|
55/ 1.4 |
|
111%/ 179% |
|
U.S. |
135/ 0.7 |
|
157/ 0.9 |
|
(14%)/ (22%) |
|
124/ 0.4 |
|
9%/ 75% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) Weighted average number of shares
outstanding during the period, basic(2) Based on the number of
shares issued and outstanding at each record date(3) See Non-GAAP
and Other Financial Measures(4) See Conversion of Natural Gas to
Barrels of Oil Equivalent (boe)(5) Net debt is a capital management
measure
Third Quarter Highlights
- WTI prices averaged US$82.26/bbl
for Q3-2023, 10% lower than Q3-2022 but up 11% from the previous
quarter. Prices were impacted quarter-over-quarter by continuing
supply curtailments within OPEC+ and strong consumer demand through
the summer months, driving prices higher relative to Q2-2023.
- Funds from operations totalled
$65.3 million ($0.43/share(1)), this compares to $53.0 million
($0.35/share(1)) in the previous quarter. This increase was driven
by higher commodity pricing, strength in U.S. production and a
slight increase in liquids weighting within Freehold’s
portfolio.
- Royalty and other revenue totalled
$84.2 million up 14% versus the previous quarter. The sequential
revenue increase was driven primarily by a higher commodity price
environment and growing U.S. production.
- Freehold’s corporate realized price
of $61.55/boe was down 17% versus Q3-2022 but up 14% versus the
previous quarter. Freehold continues to benefit from the
advancement of its North American strategy with more favourable
U.S. realized pricing of $73.28/boe, 34% higher than what Freehold
realized in Canada ($54.61/boe) for the period.
- Record year-to-date leasing with
102 agreements signed through the first nine months of 2023. For
the quarter Freehold issued 24 leases with 13 counterparties and
recorded lease bonuses of $1.1 million. Most of the leasing
activity was focused in southeast Saskatchewan and royalty lands
targeting Mannville heavy oil. Approximately 90% of leases signed
through the first nine months of 2023 have been with private/public
junior E&P’s.
- Average production of 14,605 boe/d
in Q3-2023, represented an increase of 3% over Q3-2022 and flat
versus Q2-2023.
- U.S. oil and gas royalty production
averaged a record 5,427 boe/d, up 12% compared to Q2-2023 and 17%
when compared to the same period in 2022. Q3-2023 U.S. production
increased by 560 boe/d from the previous quarter and includes
approximately 350 boe/d from the flush production from three high
net royalty interest, multi-well pads brought onstream in Midland
and the Eagle Ford and approximately 150 boe/d from the improved
base production and new wells in Howard County.
- Q3-2023 Canadian oil and gas
royalty volumes averaged 9,178 boe/d (9,418 boe/d before a prior
period adjustment), down 4% versus the same period in 2022 and 6%
quarter-over-quarter. Volumes were reduced by a prior period
adjustment as volumes in wildfire impacted areas were offline
longer in June than originally estimated. Q3-2023 volumes generally
reflect a lower period of new well volumes as drilling activity
typically slows in Q2-2023 with spring break-up. Canadian volumes
have since rebounded, and we believe production will ramp-up
through year-end.
- Recorded a netback(1) of $55.63/boe
up 21% versus the previous quarter, driven by higher commodity
prices and lower cash costs.
- Dividends declared for Q3-2023
totaled $40.7 million ($0.27 per share), up 4% versus the same
period in 2022 when Freehold declared dividends of $39.2 million
($0.26 per share). Freehold’s dividend payout ratio(1) for Q3-2023
was 62%, versus 47% during the same period in 2022. Given the high
margin nature of royalties, along with our higher oil weighting and
strong price realizations, Freehold’s dividend remains sustainable
at oil and natural gas prices materially below current commodity
price levels.
- Net debt(1) of $106.6 million at
the end of Q3-2023 was reduced by $24.2 million from the previous
quarter and represents 0.4 times trailing funds from
operations.
- Cash costs(1) for the quarter
totalled $5.10/boe, up 41% versus the same period in 2022. This
increase was driven by higher interest costs as well as the partial
settlement of share-based awards for a retired non-management
director.
(1) See Non-GAAP and Other
Financial Measures
Drilling and Leasing Activity
During the first nine months of 2023, 779 gross (14.1 net) wells
were drilled on Freehold’s North American royalty lands,
representing the highest level of gross drilling activity through
the first three quarters in the Company’s 27-year history. For the
quarter, 251 gross (4.6 net) wells were drilled on Freehold’s
royalty lands with 90% of wells targeting oil prospects.
Of the 251 gross wells drilled on Freehold’s
royalty lands over the quarter, 30% of the drilling occurred in the
Permian, 15% was focused in the Eagle Ford, 11% in the Cardium, 9%
in the Clearwater, with the remainder balanced between other plays
in both Canada and the U.S. By geography, approximately 45% of
gross wells on Freehold’s royalty lands targeted prospects in
Texas, 29% in Alberta and 15% in Saskatchewan with the balance
distributed across other regions.
Of the gross wells drilled, approximately 68%
were drilled on Freehold’s mineral title lands in Canada and the
U.S. with the remaining 32% on gross overriding royalty lands.
Royalty Interest Drilling
|
Three Months Ended September 30th |
Nine Months Ended September 30th |
|
2023 |
2022 |
2023 |
2022 |
|
Gross |
Net(1) |
Gross |
Net(1) |
Gross |
Net(1) |
Gross |
Net(1) |
Canada |
116 |
3.9 |
147 |
5.8 |
346 |
12.2 |
366 |
13.9 |
United States |
135 |
0.7 |
157 |
0.9 |
433 |
1.9 |
398 |
2.0 |
Total |
251 |
4.6 |
304 |
6.7 |
779 |
14.1 |
764 |
15.9 |
(1) Equivalent net wells are the aggregate of the numbers
obtained by multiplying each gross well by our royalty interest
percentage
CanadaIn Q3-2023, Freehold had
116 gross (3.9 net) locations drilled on its Canadian portfolio
compared to 147 gross (5.8 net) locations during Q3-2022. Drilling
on our Canadian lands over the first nine months of 2023 totalled
346 gross locations (12.2 net), down 5% and 12% respectively on a
gross and net measure when compared to the same period in 2022.
Some of our top payors had slowed activity and now look to increase
capital programs into year-end as oil prices have improved.
Over the quarter, drilling in Canada was led by
a portfolio of oil weighted plays including the Cardium (26 gross
wells), Clearwater (22 gross wells) and Viking (18 gross
wells).
The Company has also benefitted from significant
leasing throughout our Canadian portfolio in 2023, with nearly half
of the 102 new leases issued to date for Mississippian targets in
southeast Saskatchewan (51%) and for Mannville oil (28%) targets in
Alberta. Freehold continues to see a revitalization of its
southeast Saskatchewan and heavy oil portfolios, with several well
capitalized growth oriented junior producers focusing on these
areas. Multilateral drilling has been a focus by operators in the
heavy oil areas to improve both well productivity and oil
recovery.
U.S.Overall, 135 gross wells
were drilled on our U.S. royalty lands in Q3-2023, which compares
to 157 gross wells during Q3-2022 and 124 gross locations during
the previous quarter. Given the composition of our U.S. portfolio
(>60% investment grade payors), we see sustained development on
our U.S. lands with more than 13 years of multi-zone, oil weighted
drilling inventory.
In the U.S., operators focused drilling on light
oil prospects in the Permian and Eagle Ford with 83% of activity
within these basins. In total, Freehold had 71 gross locations
targeting prospects in the Permian and 35 gross locations in the
Eagle Ford over the quarter. We also saw activity associated with
the Delaware, Bakken and Haynesville plays.
Over the quarter, we saw several multi-well pads
in the Permian (Midland Basin) and Eagle Ford contribute to record
production volumes. We continue to highlight the “saw tooth” nature
of our U.S. portfolio where volumes are expected to increase
significantly when multi-well and/or high interest production pads
are brought onstream, as we saw in Q3-2023. On an annual basis, we
expect our U.S. portfolio to provide organic growth of
approximately 3% over the next twelve months, aligned with
third-party projections of production growth in the U.S. producing
basins.
Although Freehold’s U.S. net well additions were
lower than in Canada, U.S. wells are significantly more prolific as
they generally come on production at approximately ten times that
of an average Canadian well in our portfolio.
2023 GuidanceFreehold is
maintaining its 2023 guidance after incorporating actual results
for the first nine months of 2023. The following table summarizes
our key operating assumptions for 2023 with production expected to
be weighted approximately 62% oil and NGL’s and 38% natural
gas.
|
|
2023 Guidance |
March 1, 2023 |
Production (boe/d)(1) |
14,500 – 15,500 |
Funds from operations
($MM) |
$250 - $280 |
West Texas Intermediate crude
oil (US$/bbl) |
$80.00 |
AECO natural gas
(Cdn$/Mcf) |
$3.00 |
Nymex (US$/Mcf) |
$3.00 |
Exchange rate (US$/Cdn$) |
$0.75 |
|
|
(1) 2023 production is expected to consist of 8%
heavy oil, 43% light and medium oil, 11% NGL’s and 38% natural
gas
Conference Call DetailsA
webcast to discuss financial and operational results for the period
ended September 30, 2023, will be held for the investment community
on Thursday November 9, 2023, beginning at 7:00 AM MST (9:00 AM
EST).
A live audio webcast will be accessible through
the link below and on Freehold’s website under “Events &
Presentations” on Freehold’s website at www.freeholdroyalties.com.
To participate in the conference call, you are asked to register at
the link provided below.
Live Audio Webcast URL:
https://edge.media-server.com/mmc/p/5fhf4efb
A dial-in option is also available and can be
accessed by dialing 1-800-952-5114 (toll-free in North America)
participant passcode is 5329679#.
For further information, contactFreehold
Royalties Ltd. Matt DonohueInvestor Relations & Capital
Marketst. 403.221.0833e. mdonohue@freeholdroyalties.comw.
www.freeholdroyalties.com
Select Quarterly
Information
|
2023 |
2022 |
2021 |
Financial ($millions, except as noted) |
Q3 |
Q2 |
Q1 |
Q4 |
Q3 |
Q2 |
Q1 |
Q4 |
Royalty and other revenue |
84.2 |
73.7 |
76.6 |
98.5 |
98.4 |
108.5 |
87.6 |
75.2 |
Net Income (loss) |
42.3 |
24.3 |
31.1 |
40.7 |
63.2 |
66.9 |
38.4 |
31.2 |
Per share, basic ($)(1) |
0.28 |
0.16 |
0.21 |
0.27 |
0.42 |
0.44 |
0.25 |
0.21 |
Cash flows from operations |
53.7 |
49.9 |
42.6 |
82.7 |
99.9 |
75.4 |
69.3 |
59.7 |
Funds from operations |
65.3 |
53.0 |
58.6 |
80.0 |
80.8 |
83.8 |
71.9 |
68.8 |
Per share, basic ($)(1)(3) |
0.43 |
0.35 |
0.39 |
0.53 |
0.54 |
0.56 |
0.48 |
0.46 |
Acquisitions & related
expenditures |
1.2 |
3.2 |
4.3 |
7.2 |
161.7 |
20.7 |
1.3 |
67.9 |
Dividends paid |
40.7 |
40.7 |
40.7 |
40.7 |
37.7 |
36.2 |
27.1 |
24.1 |
Per share ($)(2) |
0.27 |
0.27 |
0.27 |
0.27 |
0.25 |
0.24 |
0.18 |
0.16 |
Dividends declared |
40.7 |
40.7 |
40.7 |
40.7 |
39.2 |
36.2 |
30.1 |
25.6 |
Per share ($)(2) |
0.27 |
0.27 |
0.27 |
0.27 |
0.26 |
0.24 |
0.20 |
0.17 |
Dividend payout ratio (%)(3) |
62% |
77% |
69% |
51% |
47% |
43% |
38% |
35% |
Long-term debt |
141.2 |
152.0 |
159.1 |
156.6 |
196.9 |
86.0 |
105.0 |
146.0 |
Net debt |
106.6 |
130.8 |
115.8 |
127.9 |
159.9 |
33.1 |
62.6 |
101.2 |
Shares outstanding, period end (000s) |
150.7 |
150.7 |
150.7 |
150.7 |
150.7 |
150.6 |
150.6 |
150.6 |
Average shares outstanding (000s)(1) |
150.7 |
150.7 |
150.7 |
150.7 |
150.6 |
150.6 |
150.6 |
150.6 |
Operating |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Light and medium oil (bbl/d) |
6,325 |
6,093 |
6,102 |
6,418 |
5,935 |
5,378 |
5,234 |
5,401 |
Heavy oil (bbl/d) |
1,127 |
1,167 |
1,253 |
1,218 |
1,190 |
1,239 |
1,210 |
1,254 |
NGL (bbl/d) |
1,678 |
1,845 |
1,788 |
1,781 |
1,708 |
1,613 |
1,757 |
1,564 |
Total liquids (bbl/d) |
9,130 |
9,105 |
9,143 |
9,417 |
8,833 |
8,230 |
8,201 |
8,219 |
Natural gas (Mcf/d) |
32,851 |
33,372 |
33,486 |
33,744 |
32,319 |
31,336 |
32,845 |
34,700 |
Total production (boe/d)(4) |
14,605 |
14,667 |
14,724 |
15,041 |
14,219 |
13,453 |
13,676 |
14,005 |
Oil and NGL (%) |
63% |
62% |
62% |
63% |
62% |
61% |
60% |
59% |
Petroleum & natural gas realized price ($/boe)(4) |
61.55 |
54.05 |
56.99 |
69.76 |
74.31 |
87.55 |
69.71 |
57.44 |
Cash costs ($/boe)(3)(4) |
5.10 |
7.19 |
5.82 |
5.17 |
3.62 |
8.38 |
3.70 |
3.57 |
Netback ($/boe)(3)(4) |
55.63 |
46.07 |
50.79 |
63.92 |
69.77 |
78.80 |
66.17 |
53.58 |
Benchmark Prices |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
West Texas Intermediate crude oil (US$/bbl) |
82.26 |
73.78 |
76.13 |
82.64 |
91.56 |
108.41 |
94.29 |
77.19 |
Exchange rate (Cdn$/US$) |
1.34 |
1.34 |
1.35 |
1.35 |
1.30 |
1.28 |
1.26 |
1.26 |
Edmonton Light Sweet crude oil (Cdn$/bbl) |
107.89 |
94.97 |
99.03 |
109.83 |
116.85 |
137.79 |
115.67 |
93.28 |
Western Canadian Select crude oil (Cdn$/bbl) |
93.05 |
78.76 |
69.31 |
77.08 |
93.49 |
122.09 |
101.02 |
78.71 |
Nymex natural gas (US$/mcf) |
2.64 |
2.17 |
3.30 |
6.03 |
8.20 |
7.17 |
4.64 |
4.75 |
AECO 7A Monthly Index (Cdn$/Mcf) |
2.42 |
2.40 |
4.34 |
5.58 |
5.50 |
6.27 |
4.58 |
4.93 |
(1) Weighted average number of shares
outstanding during the period, basic(2) Based on the number
of shares issued and outstanding at each record date(3) See
Non-GAAP and Other Financial Measures(4) See Conversion of
Natural Gas to Barrels of Oil Equivalent (boe)
Forward-Looking Statements
This news release offers our assessment of
Freehold’s future plans and operations as of November 8, 2023 and
contains forward-looking statements that we believe allow readers
to better understand our business and prospects. These
forward-looking statements include our expectations for the
following:
- our expectation
that our North American royalty portfolio enables the current
dividend to be well-funded at prices significantly below current
strip prices;
- our expectation
that recent advancements in heavy oil drilling technology along
with a resurgence of well-capitalized junior operators has
revitalized demand for our mineral title acreage across Alberta and
Saskatchewan, providing future momentum for drilling activity and
royalty production;
- our expectation
that our Canadian production volumes will ramp through year-end
2023;
- our expectation
to see sustained multi-year development on our U.S. lands with more
than 13 years of multi-zone, oil weighted drilling inventory;
- our expectation
that volumes from our U.S. portfolio will ramp-up significantly
when large or high interest pads are brought onstream;
- our expectation
that our U.S. portfolio will provide growth in the 3% range over
the next twelve month, aligned with third party projections of
production growth in the U.S. producing basins; and
- Freehold’s 2023
production guidance (including production mix), underlying
commodity and exchange rate assumptions.
By their nature, forward-looking statements are
subject to numerous risks and uncertainties, some of which are
beyond our control, including general economic conditions,
inflation and supply chain issues, the impacts of conflicts in the
middle-east and eastern Europe on commodity prices and the world
economy, industry conditions, volatility of commodity prices,
currency fluctuations, imprecision of reserve estimates, royalties,
environmental risks, taxation, regulation, changes in tax or other
legislation, competition from other industry participants, the
failure to complete acquisitions on the timing and terms expected,
the failure to satisfy conditions of closing for any acquisitions,
the lack of availability of qualified personnel or management,
stock market volatility, our inability to come to agreement with
third parties on prospective opportunities and the results of any
such agreement and our ability to access sufficient capital from
internal and external sources. Risks are described in more detail
in our Annual Information Form for the year-ended December 31, 2022
available at www.sedar.com.
With respect to forward-looking statements
contained in this news release, we have made assumptions regarding,
among other things, future commodity prices, future capital
expenditure levels, future production levels, future exchange
rates, future tax rates, future legislation, the cost of developing
and producing our assets, the quality of our counterparties and the
plans thereof, our ability and the ability of our lessees to obtain
equipment in a timely manner to carry out development activities,
our ability to market our oil and gas successfully to current and
new customers, the performance of current wells and future wells
drilled by our royalty payors, our expectation for the consumption
of crude oil and natural gas, our expectation for industry drilling
levels, our ability to obtain financing on acceptable terms,
shut-in production, production additions from our audit function,
our ability to execute on prospective opportunities and our ability
to add production and reserves through development and acquisition
activities. Additional operating assumptions with respect to the
forward-looking statements referred to above are detailed in the
body of this news release.
You are cautioned that the assumptions used in
the preparation of such information, although considered reasonable
at the time of preparation, may prove to be imprecise and, as such,
undue reliance should not be placed on forward-looking statements.
Our actual results, performance, or achievement could differ
materially from those expressed in, or implied by, these
forward-looking statements. We can give no assurance that any of
the events anticipated will transpire or occur, or if any of them
do, what benefits we will derive from them. The forward-looking
information contained in this document is expressly qualified by
this cautionary statement. To the extent any guidance or
forward-looking statements herein constitute a financial outlook,
they are included herein to provide readers with an understanding
of management's plans and assumptions for budgeting purposes and
readers are cautioned that the information may not be appropriate
for other purposes. Our policy for updating forward-looking
statements is to update our key operating assumptions quarterly
and, except as required by law, we do not undertake to update any
other forward-looking statements.
You are further cautioned that the preparation
of financial statements in accordance with International Financial
Reporting Standards (IFRS), which are the Canadian generally
accepted accounting principles (GAAP) for publicly accountable
enterprises, requires management to make certain judgments and
estimates that affect the reported amounts of assets, liabilities,
revenues, and expenses. These estimates may change, having either a
positive or negative effect on net income, as further information
becomes available and as the economic environment changes.
To the extent any guidance or forward-looking
statements herein constitutes a financial outlook, they are
included herein to provide readers with an understanding of
management's plans and assumptions for budgeting purposes and
readers are cautioned that the information may not be appropriate
for other purposes. You are further cautioned that the preparation
of financial statements in accordance with IFRS requires management
to make certain judgments and estimates that affect the reported
amounts of assets, liabilities, revenues, and expenses. These
estimates may change, having either a positive or negative effect
on net income, as further information becomes available and as the
economic environment changes.
Conversion of Natural Gas to Barrels of Oil Equivalent
(BOE)
To provide a single unit of production for
analytical purposes, natural gas production and reserves volumes
are converted mathematically to equivalent barrels of oil (boe). We
use the industry-accepted standard conversion of six thousand cubic
feet of natural gas to one barrel of oil (6 Mcf = 1 bbl). The 6:1
boe ratio is based on an energy equivalency conversion method
primarily applicable at the burner tip. It does not represent a
value equivalency at the wellhead and is not based on either energy
content or current prices. While the boe ratio is useful for
comparative measures and observing trends, it does not accurately
reflect individual product values and might be misleading,
particularly if used in isolation. As well, given that the value
ratio, based on the current price of crude oil to natural gas, is
significantly different from the 6:1 energy equivalency ratio,
using a 6:1 conversion ratio may be misleading as an indication of
value.
Non-GAAP and Other Financial Measures
Within this news release, references are made to
terms commonly used as key performance indicators in the oil and
gas industry. We believe that net revenue,
netback, dividend payout ratio,
funds from operations per share and cash costs are
useful non-GAAP financial measures for management and investors to
analyze operating performance, financial leverage, and liquidity,
and we use these terms to facilitate the understanding and
comparability of our results of operations. However, these terms do
not have any standardized meanings prescribed by GAAP and therefore
may not be comparable with the calculations of similar measures for
other entities. This news release also contains the capital
management measure net debt, as defined in note 12 to the September
30, 2023 unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements.
Net revenue, which is
calculated as revenues less ad valorem and production taxes (as
incurred in the U.S. at the state level, largely Texas, which do
not charge corporate income taxes but do assess flat tax rates on
commodity revenues in addition to property tax assessments) details
the net amount Freehold receives from its royalty payors, largely
after state withholdings.
The netback, which is also
calculated on a boe basis, as average realized price less
production and ad valorem taxes, operating expenses, general and
administrative and cash interest charges and share-based payouts,
represents the per boe netback amount which allows us to benchmark
how changes in commodity pricing, net of production and ad valorem
taxes, and our cash-based cost structure compare against prior
periods.
Cash costs, which is calculated
on a boe basis, is comprised by the recurring cash based costs,
excluding taxes, reported on the statements of operations. For
Freehold, cash costs are identified as operating expense, general
and administrative expense, cash-based interest, financing and
share-based compensation payouts. Cash costs allow Freehold to
benchmark how changes in its manageable cash-based cost structure
compare against prior periods.
The following table presents the computation of Net
Revenue, Cash costs and the
Netback:
|
Three Months Ended September 30 |
Three Months Ended June 30 |
$/boe |
2023 |
2022 |
Change |
2022 |
Change |
Royalty and other revenue |
$62.67 |
$75.24 |
(17%) |
$55.21 |
14% |
Production and ad valorem taxes |
(1.94) |
(1.85) |
5% |
(1.95) |
1% |
Net revenue |
$60.73 |
$73.39 |
(17%) |
$53.26 |
14% |
Less: |
|
|
|
|
|
General and administrative
expense |
(2.29) |
(2.17) |
6% |
(2.61) |
(12%) |
Operating expense |
(0.18) |
(0.15) |
20% |
(0.26) |
(31%) |
Interest and financing cash
expense |
(2.11) |
(1.30) |
62% |
(1.94) |
9% |
Cash
payout on share-based compensation |
(0.52) |
- |
nm |
(2.38) |
(78%) |
Cash costs |
(5.10) |
(3.62) |
41% |
(7.19) |
(29%) |
Netback |
$55.63 |
$69.77 |
(20%) |
$46.07 |
20% |
(nm) not meaningful
Dividend payout ratios are
often used for dividend paying companies in the oil and gas
industry to identify dividend levels in relation to funds from
operations that are also used to finance debt repayments and/or
acquisition opportunities. Dividend payout ratio is a supplementary
measure and is calculated as dividends paid as a percentage of
funds from operations.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Three Months Ended September 30 |
Three Months Ended June 30 |
($000s, except as noted) |
2023 |
2022 |
Change |
2023 |
Change |
Dividends paid |
$40,683 |
$37,658 |
8% |
$40,682 |
- |
Funds
from operations |
$65,251 |
$80,783 |
(19%) |
$53,039 |
23% |
Dividend payout ratio (%) |
62% |
47% |
32% |
77% |
(19%) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Funds from operations per
share, which is calculated as funds from operations
divided by the weighted average shares outstanding, provides
direction if changes in commodity prices, cash costs, and/or
acquisitions were accretive on a per share basis. Funds from
operations per share is a supplementary measure.
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