Nick O'Grady
Analyst · Johnson Rice. Please proceed with your question
Thanks, Bahram. All right. Let's get down to it in nine points. Number one, it was a solid quarter. Production was up, costs were down and our conservative outlook has paid dividends. Cost savings have really started to flow through in the form of lower operating drilling costs. Number two, our focus on continuing to work on the balance sheet has a meaningful impact for our equity investors. Our interest expense was down 32% year-over-year, we retired 17.1 million of bonds and preferred stock this quarter through negotiated exchanges. With these deals, we captured $4.4 million of discount and an additional $1 million in annual fixed charge savings. This is real cash and real accretion to our enterprise value comprising over $30 million per year in run rate interest savings versus last year, which flows directly to the bottom line. We should see another significant sequential drop in interest expense in the fourth quarter and first quarter of 2021. Number three, we continue to be well-protected, despite the challenging environment, it's important to understand that the company remains well-insulated in the coming 18-plus months. The world may in fact get worse in the near-term. And we're okay with that. Our hedge book still has a gross value of nearly $150 million. And our cash flows will remain stable. As I have said in each of the last three quarters, the hedges and the cash flow that they provide means that we do not have to waste our volumes in a low price environment to generate cash flow. As Bahram stated, they're simply being stored for free and we'll save them for better days ahead. Number four, the setup for 2021 is strong. While as a non-operator, timing is always the most challenging thing to forecast. We have built-in momentum through our large wells and process list. We expect to end the year with a record number. And these wells are of the highest quality as you'd expect in the downturn. This simply means that as we look out the next year for perhaps some of the best capital productivity in our history. As we've shown in our guidance sensitivities, we're not throwing away our inventory in a low price environment. We'll curtail and throttle back spending in a poor pricing scenario. None of these outcomes is a bad one given the number of wells and process we are carrying. Every $10 move in oil is roughly $2 million in revenue and free cash flow for a new well on an annualized basis. With 30 net wells in process, we don't want $60 million of additional revenue and free cash, potentially frittered away at low prices. As noted in our guidance, we will govern our activity levels based upon common sense, spending driven by the oil pricing strip. There is no losing scenario given our hedge profile. If prices aren't supportive of development activity, we'll simply produce more cash flow and preserve that development for the future. Number five, we are expanding. We closed on our first out of basin acquisition this quarter and the Permian has become front and center over the past two years, simply because of its high levels of activity. We continue to look in the Permian and other basins where we can build inventory, drilling prospects or producing cash flows that are either deeply discounted or meet or exceed our full cycle hurdle rates and preferably both. There will be more to come. Number six, cash is king. We produced over $50 million of free cash flow this year-to-date, reduced our working capital deficit dramatically. And as our cash flow is actually accelerate in the fourth quarter, it will continue to free up additional liquidity throughout 2021. I have personally been observing almost every independent producers’ balance sheet. I continue to believe that Wall Street does not carefully monitor those carrying large working capital deficits, which is effectively shadow debt and are misconstruing company's debt reduction with the fact that they're simply deferring paying their bills, we have not done that. Our working capital deficit is the lowest in years, which means the cash coming in the door can service debt, not past accruals. Number seven, every dollar matters. We continue to remain within our $200 million capital budget this year, the variants in our fourth quarter spend will be any incremental success in the ground game or if we see higher prices and accelerated completions. Many investors ask us about transformational deals, and my response is we're looking at everything. Our backlog today stands at over $750 million in active M&A opportunities we're working through, but we focus on assets that make money. The key is to measure the benefits, costs and risks of every deal. Risk is the factor for these transactions that is not always appreciated, but something we spend an enormous amount of time analyzing. We continue to be on the hunt for big and small deals, but we will not sacrifice our standards. Number eight, as you've seen, we actively manage our business through the ground game and larger M&A program. We are not just a passive ETF to the operators on our organic acreage. Anyone forecasting our business based on Bakken operators, the rig count or our organic footprint have been wrong over the past few years and will be wrong for the foreseeable future, opportunities are everywhere. As I just mentioned, our current backlog of producing assets and drilling prospects were evaluating right now, and the marketplace is nearly $1 billion. What does low activity in the Williston mean for our business? The answer is nothing. As long as we're doing our jobs, I'm here to tell you that we control that not our operators and not the activity in the basin. The key managerial linchpin of this non-operated strategy is that we focus on quality and we focus on cost of entry. Based on deals signed or closed, we should have our first Permian production online this quarter, and the basin already makes up nearly 5% of our wells in process. And so focusing on just the net acres we've acquired is a key misunderstanding of what creates value. Acres only have value when they're converting into cash flow. Adam will provide further color on some of our progress there. Number nine, watch what we do, not what we say. Since this management team rebuilt this company two and a half years ago, we've done $1 billion in equity centric cash flowing acquisitions and over $1.7 billion in gross financings to continue to improve the balance sheet and cut our cost of debt. We have taken many often painful steps to improve the balance sheet and cash flows of the business. We are not even close to done and we will do whatever it takes to ensure that Northern thrives on the other side of COVID. We cannot control the stock market or what it wants to ascribe to a smaller producer in the marketplace today. But as our results show, we're still here, we're still making money. The model we've created is spitting off cash, and we're not going anywhere. While we firmly believe that the market will improve in the next year, hope is not a strategy. We'll take every step just as we have done in the past two plus years, regardless of what the market may say today. You don't have to believe what we say today, but you can trust in what we've done and what we will continue to do. Thank you for your time, Adam?