Danny Brown
Analyst · Stifel. Please go ahead
Thank you, Michael. Good morning to all, and thank you for joining our call. I'm Danny Brown, Chief Executive Officer for Oasis Petroleum. We sincerely appreciate your interest today and I think we have some exciting news to share. But before we start, I want to voice my appreciation to the entire Oasis team for being so welcoming to me, and for all their hard work, which is culminated in the news that we're sharing today. Thank you. I also want to pass on our appreciation for those of us here – from those of us here at Oasis to all the first responders, health care providers and leaders that have been working around the world to assist with the COVID-19 pandemic. You have our appreciation and support. Also, to our teams and vendors, we thank you for the same reasons. So, quickly a brief intro. I've met many of you through my prior roles, where I had a lot of opportunity to engage with the investor community. For those, who may not be familiar with me just some quick background. I've been in the oil and gas industry for over 23 years, with much of that time at Anadarko Petroleum, where I was most recently Executive Vice President of US Onshore Operations. And while I say, I've spent most of my time on the operations side, I've had a good amount of exposure to the finance side as well. I've managed through various business and commodity cycles and have obviously had a lot of experience working as a company with a unique mixture of upstream and midstream assets. I plan to comment on our specific strategic initiatives in a moment, but as a general introductory thought, I'd like to emphasize the absolutely amazing progress this company has made year-to-date. As our Board Chair noted last call, Oasis is accomplishing things in months that it would take most years to do. I expect to build upon the great work management and the Board have accomplished so far, and continue to aggressively pursue additional value creation. In the coming months, Oasis will be attending numerous conferences and roadshows and I look forward to meeting with you and engaging with you in a dialogue on our industry, our business, and on the actions we've taken thus far. And I say this, because I just want to emphasize that the management team here, and I personally very much value your feedback. And as you probably already noticed, it's been very influential in setting our strategy priority and plans. We put in place major initiatives to ensure alignment with shareholders, with just one example being our industry-leading performance-based management compensation program. I took this role at Oasis, because candidly, I saw it as a great opportunity to lead a company, not only with strong people and strong assets, but importantly, also one that was on the right path. Since joining on April 14, I've been thoroughly engaged with the teams, and I'm very impressed by the quality of the people here, and they're focused on making Oasis a better company. I just want to take a minute in thanking employees again for all their hard work. I know it's been a long road, and a lot of work over the past year, but you should be proud of what you've accomplished and understand Oasis is in an excellent position to succeed going forward. Given this is my first formal conference call with Oasis, I want to spend a little longer this morning than I normally would, reviewing some key points on our strategy, the progress we've made, and my vision for Oasis in the new energy paradigm. But before we do that, I wanted to talk about the very exciting announcement we made yesterday afternoon. As you've no doubt noticed, we've seen quite a few deals in the Bakken this year. The basin is maturing, and we think it's likely to consolidate further as activity levels moderate. And companies rationalize their portfolios. The transaction we announced yesterday significantly increases our scale and is aligned with Oasis' core strategy. The company exercised capital discipline and prudent risk management with the purchase price almost entirely based on PDP value with very little value attributed to the development of top-tier inventory or potential synergies. That's not to say that, we don't see opportunities to invest -- to invest in the strong inventory this acquisition brings, because we do. And in fact, they compete favorably in our portfolio. But they play very little role in underpinning our price. Additionally, despite meaningful opportunity to improve operational efficiencie,s we assume no synergies in the valuation. The transaction further decreases Oasis' E&P cash G&A, with our year-end 2021 exit-rate expected at approximately $1.25 to $1.35 per BOE and lowers our reinvestment rate to below 55%. We financed the deal prudently, using our strong balance sheet to drive accretion, while keeping leverage below our targeted levels. And we see a clear path to delever further, with the strong free cash flow expected from the pro forma business. So pro forma for the deal, the combined asset base, results in even higher free cash generation, supports an even lower reinvestment rate, and put Oasis in an even stronger position to return capital to shareholders. To that end, we have also announced that we plan to increase our fixed quarterly dividend by 33% to $0.50 per share after the acquisition closes. I should also mention that Oasis has a strong operating track record. And we can tell you to demonstrate our commitment, to our communities and environment by running the acquired assets in a sustainable manner, respectful of all of our stakeholders, including the three affiliated tribes on The Fort Berthold Indian Reservation. So with that exciting news, I'd like to return to my comments on Oasis' strategy and my vision for the organization. First, financial security and flexibility will remain a key strategic objective for Oasis. Pro forma for the acquisition we announced yesterday, we expect leverage to be at 0.8 times and to trend substantially lower as we use a portion of our cash flow to delever from that level. Given the inherent volatility of oil prices, having a strong balance sheet helps protect the capital program and gives us flexibility. Second, our new business model is returns focused. To be frank, we recognize that this industry has destroyed a lot of capital over the past decade and investors are right to demand improvements here. Our Capital Allocation Committee, which is led by the Board, oversees a new formal capital allocation process and has instituted a rigorous framework that, test every dollar of capital spending. The Board is updated regularly on our progress and monitors returns on every project we do. At a corporate level, we expect strong returns driven by our peer-leading reinvestment rate and stringent investment criteria. Third, following return on capital, return of capital is a key pillar to our strategy. As you've seen, we've worked hard to institute a fixed dividend sooner than many expected, in this quarter shared our plans to increase it after our announced acquisition closes. We feel having a sustainable dividend is important, as it demonstrates discipline and our commitment to shareholder returns. In addition, concurrent with our Midstream simplification we initiated a $100 million share repurchase program, which provides another avenue for Oasis to return cash to shareholders. Many of you have noted our free cash flow outlook at current pricing exceeds our dividend obligations and the repurchase authorization. Management and the Board continue to assess our options here. And we will continue to act in the best interest of shareholders. Fourth, alignment between management and shareholders is extremely important. As you know, at the beginning of the year, Oasis instituted a peer-leading compensation program with 75% of incentive compensation tied to returns. Frankly, our personal upside is extremely limited, if shareholders don't make money. Fifth, ESG remains a strong focus at Oasis. And we think each of these letters is important. We're dedicated to producing a cleaner, low-cost barrel, while being engaged with local communities and conscious of stakeholder interest. So just a couple of things to highlight here, on the environmental side, Oasis continues its peer-leading gas capture in the Williston Basin, and we're also capturing essentially all oil and water on pipeline as opposed to truck. And while I mentioned, our leading governance structure earlier, I think it's important to note that the Board oversees our efforts here through the newly formed, Nominating Environment, Social and Governance Committee. You're going to see us provide more disclosure around these important issues going forward. And I'd be remiss if I didn't share, that we remain focused on the health and safety of our employees and communities in these unprecedented times. Sixth, the asset base here is very strong. And our recent acquisition is a great complement to our existing base. But we know that strong assets in and of themselves are not enough. We have to be a leader on cost. And we've made tremendous progress on that front. Oasis has dramatically reduced its capital, operating and overhead cost structure. And we expect we will see even more reduction through our work with a third-party to achieve substantial process optimizations, which has and will result in material savings. Pro forma for the recent purchase our E&P cash G&A rate is exceptionally strong. Seventh, the organization has made important strides in improving enterprise risk identification and the systems and controls necessary to mitigate and manage these risks. Oasis has codified and is implementing a risk management system to ensure organizational reliability and protect against possible events, disruptions and challenges to our environment, our people, our communities and our stakeholders. Simply put, Oasis has implemented new systems to more effectively manage processes and mitigate risk. And finally, Oasis remains differentiated versus many of our peers given our large ownership in our midstream company Oasis Midstream Partners. During the quarter, the company took the important step of simplifying its ownership by selling our remaining interest in the Bobcat and Beartooth DevCos to OMP. The transaction was accretive to both companies and strengthen Oasis' balance sheet, while increasing its ownership in OMP. This has resulted in a business that is now more transparent and understandable. The investor feedback we've received on this has been positive, and we continue to evaluate additional actions we can take to unlock what we see as track value to shareholders. In closing, the energy industry is becoming more industrialized. And given it's a commodity business we need to strive towards increased scale to drive higher volumes over lower cost to enhance returns. We believe the opportunity set for consolidation is quite strong and Oasis plans to participate where it makes sense. We believe we're a logical consolidator in the basin given our extensive footprint, our low-cost structure, our operating track record, our midstream business and our deep understanding of the subsurface, but ultimately whatever action we take will be guided by our desires to be prudent and maximize creation for shareholders. So with that, I'm going to turn it over to Taylor to give some operational color and talk a bit more about our recently acquired assets. I've spent some time outlining our recent progress and our strategic priorities going forward, and I hope I've made it clear that we are strongly aligned with you the shareholder, and we'll continue to pursue strategies to unlock value. Taylor?