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Monday, October 24, 2011
With the latest flurry of E&P deals (Statoil-Brigham, Kinder Morgan’s impending sale of El Paso E&P)—and still more to come—what might be the impacts of M&A action would be to unconventional drilling? The Unconventional Drilling Report compared rig counts pre- and post-deals for other recent E&P deals focused primarily on unconventional plays and concluded: Not much. ExxonMobil’s U.S. land rig count has scarcely budged since it acquired XTO, averaging 68 vs. their pre-acquisition tallies of 7 and 64, respectively. Post-acquisition Chevron has averaged 20 rigs since closing on Atlas vs. their respective pre-deal averages of 8 and 7. BHP has averaged 25 after closing on Petrohawk vs. pre-deal average tallies of 2 and 18, respectively. The biggest post-deal traction for bolstering rig counts has come not from outright acquisitions but from joint venture deals, namely Chesapeake’s, whose rig count jumped from a pre-JV 120 to an average 140 since the last JV closed (and recently peaked at 154). It will climb still further after an imminent JV closes on Chesapeake’s Utica Shale acreage.
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The Unconventional Drilling Report
Category: U.S. Land Industry Review
Tags:
Kinder Morgan
Petrohawk
Unconventional Drilling
BHP Billiton
Chevron
El Paso E&P
Chesapeake
ExxonMobil
XTO Energy
Statoil
Utica Shale
Rig Count
Atlas