As the U.S. upstream sector consolidates at a historic pace, Coterra Energy is keeping its M&A plans close to the vest.

Coterra, formed out of the all-stock merger between Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. and Cimarex Energy Co. in 2021, spent just $10 million on leasehold and property acquisitions in 2023, the Houston-based company reported in earnings on Feb. 22.

Meanwhile, U.S. upstream M&A activity totaled $192 billion last year, including a whopping $144 billion transacted in the fourth quarter alone, according to Enverus Intelligence Research.

The Permian Basin—where Coterra has deployed the bulk of its drilling operations—has been the epicenter of the dealmaking deluge:

Some of the Permian’s oldest and largest oil producers have been scooped up in just a matter of months. Many of the top private equity-backed E&Ps in the Permian have similarly been acquired by smaller operators, including Civitas Resources, Vital Energy, Ovintiv Inc. and Matador Resources.

There’s a feeding frenzy afoot across the U.S. shale patch; Coterra Chairman, President and CEO Thomas Jorden acknowledged as much.

“I think The Wall Street Journal should have a weekend breaking story that says, ‘Flash: Everybody Looking at Everybody Else in E&P Space’—because that’s what we have,” Jorden said during Coterra’s fourth quarter earnings call on Feb. 23.

Coterra hasn’t deeply engaged in evaluating M&A opportunities that have come and gone, Jorden said.

But the company definitely isn’t ruling out inorganic growth through acquisition.

“We remain deeply curious about what consolidation could offer for Coterra owners,” Jorden said, “but the bar is very, very high.”

Lease line look-around

The bulk of Coterra’s operations and production are in the Permian’s Delaware Basin. The company also has operations in the Midcontinent’s Anadarko Basin and in Appalachia’s gassy Marcellus Shale play.

Given the weak macro environment for natural gas, Coterra is choosing to allocate most of its capital spending toward its liquids-rich assets in 2024. The company plans to reduce drilling activity in Appalachia this year, and the Anadarko is attracting a small fraction of Coterra’s overall capital spending budget.

The company plans to use most of its development spending—an estimated $1 billion—on drilling and completion activity in the Permian this year.

So if Coterra wants to deepen its Permian Basin inventory, what might the E&P be able to digest? And what does the market still have to offer?

The remaining prospects out there in the basin are extremely limited after the past six months of M&A, said Rystad Energy Senior Analyst Matt Bernstein.

On the private side, Mewbourne Oil and Continental Resources are the most attractive remaining private E&Ps with sizeable portfolios of undrilled locations.

“It’s really Mewbourne and Continental and then everybody else right now as far as inventory goes,” Bernstein told Hart Energy.

coterra mewbourne continental map
Mewbourne Oil and Continental Resources are the top remaining private inventory holders in the Permian Basin, according to Rystad Energy. Both E&Ps have significant footprints in the Delaware Basin near Coterra’s existing operations. (Source: Rextag)

Small- to medium-sized public operators have also gained a strong foothold in the Delaware Basin in recent years.

Permian Resources grew in the Delaware—and gained some oil production in the Midland Basin—through a $4.5 billion acquisition of publicly-traded Earthstone Energy last year.

Permian Resources, though, has become more expensive for a potential takeover. The company’s market valuation is around $12 billion, compared to Coterra’s roughly $21 billion market cap.

There’s also Matador Resources, which grew in New Mexico last year with the $1.6 billion acquisition of Advance Energy Partners from private equity firm EnCap Investments.

Matador has a market valuation of around $7 billion.

coterra pr matador
Permian Resources and Matador Resources are two SMID-cap public E&Ps with large footprints near Coterra in the Delaware Basin. (Source: Rextag)

After the whirlwind of Permian consolidation over the past year, analysts expect a robust market for non-core divestitures as E&Ps parse through their portfolios.

Diamondback doesn’t feel compelled to sell off non-core assets as the company integrates its $26 billion acquisition of Endeavor. But non-core asset divestitures could happen eventually as the company works to reduce debt after the deal, CFO Kaes Van’t Hof said during the company’s recent earnings call.

APA Corp., parent company of Apache, also has a sizable footprint in the Delaware. APA recently inked a $4.5 billion takeover of publicly-traded Callon Petroleum Co.

coterra diamondback apache
Diamondback and Apache—both of which are engaged in large-scale transactions—both have sizable footprints in the Delaware Basin. (Source: Rextag)

Then there are the majors, Exxon Mobil and Chevron Corp., which are each engaged in massive acquisitions of their own.

Exxon Mobil, and its subsidiary XTO Energy, have acreage across the Permian’s Midland and Delaware basins. But Exxon will become much more Midland-weighted after the nearly $65 billion acquisition of Pioneer Natural Resources.

Chevron signed a roughly $60 billion acquisition of rival Hess Corp. last year, giving the major a foothold offshore Guyana, in the Bakken Shale of North Dakota and in the Gulf of Mexico. The Hess deal didn’t include any more Permian acreage, where Chevron already has massive operations.

Coterra exxon chevron
U.S. supermajors Exxon Mobil and Chevron both have massive acreage portfolios in the Delaware Basin near Coterra’s portfolio. (Source: Rextag)

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Gas woes

Coterra churns out large volumes of natural gas from Appalachia, the Permian and the Midcontinent. But the company wants to bring down gas production this year amid prolonged low natural gas prices.

Coterra plans for gas output to come in between 2.65 Bcf/d and 2.8 Bcf/d in 2024; gas production averaged 2.97 Bcf/d during the fourth quarter.

2024 capex is expected to range between $1.75 billion and $1.95 billion, down 12% year-over-year at the midpoint due in part because of lower activity planned in the Marcellus.

“In the Marcellus, we are currently running two rigs and one frac crew, with plans to go to one rig and lower our frac activities,” said Blake Sirgo, Coterra’s senior vice president of operations.

Chesapeake Energy also plans to slash drilling and completion activity this year, the natural gas giant announced in fourth-quarter earnings on Feb. 20.


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