CLR Update - May 5
Posted: Sat May 05, 2018 10:17 am
I will update my forecast/valuation model for Continental Resources late today. Below are notes from their conference call.
Management commented that while production was flat sequentially in Q1 and will be in Q2, volumes will ramp aggressively in 2H:18 as larger Bakken pads come online and as needle-moving infill projects in the STACK debut.
Oil production is also biased higher going forward as CLR is reallocating three rigs to the oily STACK from the gassier portion of the basin – in total 11 more gross oil wells are now planned, while four gross gas wells are taken off the books.
In total management feels very comfortable with both capex and production guidance for 2018 and reiterated its comfort with FY19 expectations of 15%-20% growth from a $2.5B-$2.8B budget, which is expected to generate FCF at a clip similar to the $1B expected in FY18.
The SCOOP’s Springboard project got a lot of attention on the call – further color beyond the press release states that the project will utilize five rigs to “mow the grass” across four rows of wells, with the rows being up to nine miles wide. Multi-well pads are expected to come online every 60 days. The Springer formation will be targeted first, where returns are currently pegged at 180% IRRs. This oil manufacturing play is expected to reduce drilling times 19 days per well and generate $1MM/well of savings.
Management notes it has another area in the SCOOP were it could employ a similarly sized additional project.
In the Bakken the last 164 wells drilled confirmed CLR 1.1 MMboe type curve, and management noted it sees upside to this figure. Returns are now pegged at 140% IRRs on the asset.
On the balance sheet front, management expects to continue to retire debt in an effort to get its absolute debt figure down to $5B.
Management noted that it is still working on asset sales and expects to have something to report soon.
None of CLR' oil is hedged, so of the Sweet 16 companies it has the most exposure to rising oil prices.
Management commented that while production was flat sequentially in Q1 and will be in Q2, volumes will ramp aggressively in 2H:18 as larger Bakken pads come online and as needle-moving infill projects in the STACK debut.
Oil production is also biased higher going forward as CLR is reallocating three rigs to the oily STACK from the gassier portion of the basin – in total 11 more gross oil wells are now planned, while four gross gas wells are taken off the books.
In total management feels very comfortable with both capex and production guidance for 2018 and reiterated its comfort with FY19 expectations of 15%-20% growth from a $2.5B-$2.8B budget, which is expected to generate FCF at a clip similar to the $1B expected in FY18.
The SCOOP’s Springboard project got a lot of attention on the call – further color beyond the press release states that the project will utilize five rigs to “mow the grass” across four rows of wells, with the rows being up to nine miles wide. Multi-well pads are expected to come online every 60 days. The Springer formation will be targeted first, where returns are currently pegged at 180% IRRs. This oil manufacturing play is expected to reduce drilling times 19 days per well and generate $1MM/well of savings.
Management notes it has another area in the SCOOP were it could employ a similarly sized additional project.
In the Bakken the last 164 wells drilled confirmed CLR 1.1 MMboe type curve, and management noted it sees upside to this figure. Returns are now pegged at 140% IRRs on the asset.
On the balance sheet front, management expects to continue to retire debt in an effort to get its absolute debt figure down to $5B.
Management noted that it is still working on asset sales and expects to have something to report soon.
None of CLR' oil is hedged, so of the Sweet 16 companies it has the most exposure to rising oil prices.