Following ConocoPhillips’ $9.7 billion acquisition of shale rival Concho Resources, Steven Ho, oil and gas analyst at GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company, offers his view on the acquisition:
“This transaction is beneficial to both parties and in line with what has been expected for the industry in terms of merging opportunities,” Ho said. “A company such as ConocoPhillips with a strong balance sheet has the leverage to acquire Concho Resources and sustain its growth in upstream production.
“The acquisition is a strategic bet for ConocoPhillips—a company that currently has approximately 800,000 total net acres in the U.S. lower 48, but only 167,000 net acres in the unconventional Permian Basin and producing only 56 thousand barrel of oil equivalent per day [mboed] in 2019,” Ho continued. “With the acquisition of Concho, Conoco will be adding a total of 550,000 net acres in the Permian Basin and production of up to 319 mboed. Concho’s unconventional performance is fairly strong for being able to reduce its well cost to less than $800 per foot and generate oil break-even prices below $35 per barrel.
“It is interesting that ConocoPhillips is also the first major U.S. oil operator formally committing to reduce emissions from its operations to net zero by 2045–2055. It shows the company is taking on the challenge of reconciling emissions reduction with the increase in production from unconventional shale. Moreover, there is now more uncertainty on the future of the oil sector due to an accelerated goal to decarbonize economies. Although, at the moment, the fundamental short-term uncertainty is about the recovery of oil demand.
“Additionally, with the coming U.S. presidential election [Ho offered his remarks in late October], there is currently a risk to being over-exposed to federal land acreage as Candidate Biden has announced that he would forbid new leasing and development on such lands. However, Conoco stated that it has considered this risk in the transaction. The company’s overall exposure is limited and it is confident that these resources will be required as part of future oil supply.”