Buoyed by still-elevated crude oil, natural gas and NGL prices — and discipline on capital spending and production growth — U.S. E&Ps have been generating unprecedented cash flow and using much of that bounty to reduce debt, increase dividends and buy back shares. A number of producers have also been investing some of that cash to expand their holdings, mostly to complement their existing acreage in the Permian and other plays and thereby allow for increased efficiency and, in many cases, longer laterals. Few have been doing more in this regard lately than Devon Energy, the Oklahoma City-based E&P, which completed a big bolt-on acquisition in the Bakken in late July and just followed that up with a plan for an even bigger buy in the Eagle Ford. In today’s RBN blog, we look at the company’s strategy.
As we said recently in Rollin’ on the River and Make It Rain, the run-up in hydrocarbon prices through the first half of 2022 put oil and gas producers in their best financial shape in years. And, in sharp contrast to boom times of the past, the vast majority of publicly owned E&Ps have been maintaining strict financial discipline and spending only enough on new drilling-and-completion work to either keep their production steady or increase it only by a few percentage points. Many of the 43 U.S. producers we monitor also have been laser-focused on returning cash to shareholders, either by increasing their dividends, issuing special dividends or buying back shares — or some combination of the three. Debt reduction also is in vogue among E&Ps, as are mergers and acquisitions — the topic of our Buy Buy Buy, We Go Together, and Baby (I’m-a Want You) blogs. A commonality among much of the M&A activity — large, medium or small — has been that it involves assets and acreage in the hottest production areas, especially the Permian (of course!) and, to a much lesser extent, the Haynesville and Marcellus/Utica plays.
Today, we shift our spotlight to Devon Energy, which closed on the $865 million acquisition of privately held RimRock Oil & Gas in July and announced August 9 that it has agreed to acquire privately held Validus Energy for $1.8 billion in cash. The deals, which we’ll discuss in detail in a moment, follow Devon’s all-stock merger of equals with WPX Energy, which was valued at $12 billion and consummated in January 2021, and the October 2020 sale of Devon’s assets in the Barnett Shale to Banpu Kalnin Ventures for $320 million in cash.
About the song
“Spread Your Wings” was written by John Deacon and appears as the fifth song on side one of Queen’s sixth studio album, News of the World. It was released in Britain in 1978 as the second single from the album and went to #34 on the UK Singles chart. A live version of the song later appeared as the B-side to Queen’s single, “Crazy Little Thing Called Love,” which went to #1 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 Singles chart in 1979. A video was released showing the band lip-syncing the song in Roger Taylor’s snow-covered backyard. “Spread Your Wings” was the first Queen single without background vocals. Personnel on the record were: Freddie Mercury (lead vocal, piano), John Deacon (bass, acoustic guitar), Brian May (electric guitar), and Roger Taylor (drums, percussion).
News of the World was recorded between July and September 1977 at Sarm Studios and Wessex Sound in London. Produced by Mike Stone and Queen, the album was released in October 1977. It went to #3 on the Billboard 200 Albums chart and has been certified 4x Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America. Three singles were released from the LP.
Queen is a British rock band formed in London in 1970 by Freddie Mercury, Brian May, Roger Taylor, and John Deacon. May and Taylor had previously played together in the London band, Smile. Queen has released 15 studio albums, 10 live albums, 16 compilation albums, two EPs, two soundtrack albums, and 72 singles. The band has won four Brit Awards and four Ivor Novello Awards; has been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Songwriters Hall of Fame and UK Music Hall of Fame; and has received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. Six members have passed through Queen since its inception. Freddie Mercury died in 1991, and John Deacon retired from the band in 1997. May and Taylor have continued as Queen, with Paul Rodgers as the vocalist in 2004-09 and Adam Lambert from 2011 to the present. The band has been supported live by various touring musicians. In June 2022, Queen with Adam Lambert played a three-song set for the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee outside Buckingham Palace. Queen released the live pay-for-view concert film, Rhapsody Over London, in July 2022.