07 August 2015 – Energy explorers reeling from the rout in oil prices are looking for liquidity in an obvious place: their rocks. Having exhausted other ways to raise cash as a glut of global supply depresses prices, a slew of producers from Anadarko Petroleum Corp. to Comstock Resources Inc. announced more than $2.4 billion in asset sales last month, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Selling oil and gas fields to pay off lenders and fund new drilling — often a wildcatter’s option of last resort — is surging after a six-month lull.
There’s more to come — by one estimate, another $20 billion this year — as executives at Occidental Petroleum Corp., Whiting Petroleum Corp., Penn Virginia Corp., Exco Resources Inc., Chesapeake Energy Corp. and Ultra Petroleum Corp. have all said in recent weeks that they are selling assets or exploring sales.
The surge shows how the industry’s two-pronged strategy for staying financially healthy since oil prices started tanking — raising capital while tightening belts — may not be enough, particularly for companies with a lot of outstanding debt. Bank regulators are getting nervous about the industry’s exposure to drillers, creating another incentive to sell assets.
“For the most part, lending banks have worked with their clients to provide temporary relief,” said Ron Gajdica, co-head of energy acquisitions and divestitures investment banking with Citigroup Inc. “That relief can’t go on forever.”
Energy companies tend to meet with their lenders to review their credit lines in April and October. While conversations were relatively painless this spring they are likely to be more heated this fall, Gajdica said.
SIDELINED RIGS
Until July, explorers were reluctant to sell assets because prices were so low. U.S. explorers sold $6.8 billion of assets in the first half of 2015, a decline of about 76 percent from the year-earlier period, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
Instead, they negotiated lower fees from services providers while sidelining rigs and cutting employees.
The industry also issued record levels of new equity and debt during the first six months of the year. Investors looking for bargains amid a booming stock market plowed money into depressed energy stocks, betting that prices would rebound.
“We didn’t see the selloff of assets that we had expected” after oil prices collapsed, said Michael Darden, global chair of Latham & Watkins LLP’s oil and gas transactions practice. “We didn’t see that selloff because companies were able to tap capital markets.”
LIMITED RECOURSE
Now, the industry appears to be losing access to capital markets as investors retrench from the oil patch. U.S. explorers — which had announced at least $1 billion in stock offerings every month in the first half of 2015 — raised just $300 million selling shares in July, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
With capital-raising off the table and cost-cutting mostly done, companies have little recourse except to sell assets. In the past two months, Goodrich Petroleum, Comstock Resources and Whiting Petroleum have sold fields.
“It’s clear that the asset market has higher valuation right now than the equity market,” Michael Watford, chief executive of Houston-based Ultra Petroleum, said in a conference call with analysts to discuss earnings on July 30.
There is “a growing benefit” in selling assets to raise money for paying off loans or buying back shares, he said.
‘TOUGH’ MARKETS
Penn Virginia announced this week it had retained Jefferies Group to “evaluate strategic alternatives” for its assets in the Eagle Ford shale basin. The news came just days after the Radnor, Pennsylvania-based company ruled out raising cash by issuing debt.
“The markets are pretty tough right now across the board,” Steven Hartman, the company’s chief financial officer, said in a conference call with analysts on July 30.
A rebound in dealmaking is good news for companies eager to buy good assets cheaply, such as Concho Resources Inc. and QEP Resources Inc. It could also bode well for U.S. private equity firms, which have raised an estimated $100 billion to bet on shale.
“There may be opportunities as things continue to play out in the second half of the year and into 2016 to pick up low-cost assets out of the chaos that this commodity price environment is creating,” Charles Stanley, chief executive of Denver-based QEP, said in a conference call with analysts this week.
EnerVest Ltd., a Houston-based investment firm that specializes in buying and operating orphaned assets, projects that $20 billion in asset sales could be announced in the U.S. in the next five months.
“We made a bid yesterday; we made a bid today,” John Walker, chief executive of EnerVest, said in July. “The market has changed.”
*Matthew Monks, [email protected]. Jeffrey McCracken, [email protected] Elizabeth Wollman, Larry Reibstein – Bloomberg