Comstock Resources, Inc. (CRK) on Q1 2021 Results - Earnings Call Transcript
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by and welcome to the Quarter One 2021 Comstock Resources Earnings Conference Call. Please note that today's call is being recorded. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker for today, Jay Allison, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. Jay, the floor is yours.
Jay Allison: All right, thank you. Good morning, everybody. Welcome. to the Comstock Resources first quarter 2021 financial and operating results conference call. You can view a slide presentation during or after this call by going to our website at www.comstockresources.com and downloading the quarterly results presentation. There you'll find a presentation titled first quarter 2021 results. I am Jay Allison, Chief Executive Officer of Comstock. With me is Roland Burns, our President and Chief Financial Officer; Dan Harrison, our Chief Operating Officer; and Ron Mills, our VP of Finance and Investor Relations here.
Roland Burns: All right. Thanks, Jay. On slide five, we summarize our reported financial results for the first quarter of 2021. Our production for the first quarter of 2021 totaled 113 Bcf of natural gas and 326,000 barrels of oil. This is 8% lower than the production we had in the first quarter of 2020, but 6% higher than what we're producing in the fourth quarter of last year. Our oil and gas sales, including the realized loss from our hedging, increased 22% to $332 million in the first quarter despite the lower production, due primarily to higher oil and gas prices. Oil prices in the period averaged $47.87 per barrel, and our gas price averaged $2.79 per Mcf, including hedging losses. Natural gas prices were up 37%, partly due to the higher NYMEX index prices we had in the quarter and partially due to higher spot prices we realized in February. Our production costs were also up 2% while our G&A was down 8% and our DD&A was down 1% in the quarter. Adjusted EBITDAX came in at $262.1 million, 30% higher than 2020's first quarter. Operating cash flow was $206.6 million, which was also 30% higher than the first quarter of 2020. We reported a net loss of $138.4 million in the first quarter or $0.60 per share. But that reported loss was mainly due to $238.5 million charge related to the early retirement of the senior notes from our March 4th refinancing transaction and the unrealized loss from the mark-to-market of our hedge positions at the end of the quarter of $13.1 million. Adjusted net income, excluding the loss on early debt extinguishment and the mark-to-market hedging loss and certain other unusual items, was a profit of $63.3 million or $0.25 per diluted share.
Dan Harrison: Okay. Thank you, Roland. Flip over to slide 13. You'll see a map outline and summary of the 13 new wells that we've turned to sales since the last call. The new wells were located on our East Texas and De Soto Parish acreage over in Louisiana. The wells were tested at rates ranging from 19 million cubic feet a day up to 32 million cubic feet a day with an average IP rate of 25 million a day.
Jay Allison: Yeah. We noticed that -- thank you, Dan. We noticed that BJ put a press release out today on the relationship that they've formed now with Comstock on this new natural gas-powered completion facility. So it's the second one. It's a nice press release. If you'll now go to slide 17, I direct you to slide 17 where we summarize our outlook for the remainder of this year. Our operating plan for this year is expected to provide for modest production growth and most importantly really to generate, as Roland said, in excess of $200 million of free cash flow. Our primary focus this year, this is our drumbeat for the year, it's to do three things: one, improve our balance sheet; two, reduce our leverage; and three, lower our cost of capital. Our March refinancing transaction was a strong first step to reducing our cost of capital with the $19.5 million annual savings in interest payments. If natural gas prices stay at current levels, we would expect our leverage ratio to improve to around 2.5 times at the end of 2021, down from about 3.8 times at the end of 2020. On an annualized basis, the first quarter is already down to 2.7 times. We remain focused on maintaining and improving our industry-leading low-cost structure and best-in-class well-drilling returns. With our industry-leading low-cost structure, our Haynesville drilling program generates some of the highest drilling returns in all of North America. Our large inventory of Haynesville/Bossier drilling locations provide us with the decades of drilling inventory. We've currently hedged, as Roland said, about 69% of our 2021 production to protect our high drilling returns, and we have a very strong financial liquidity of $927 million. So now I'll turn it over to Ron, and he can provide some specific guidance for the rest of the year. Ron?
Ron Mills: Thanks, Jay. On slide 18 we show the guidance table. You'll note that it's unchanged from February when we updated the guidance. So despite the impacts of the winter storm, our production guidance still remains in the 1.33 Bcf to 1.425 Bcf a day range. Our CapEx guidance remains on the development side $510 million to $550 million which, as has been mentioned a couple times, contemplates the dropping of one of our operated rigs in the next couple of days. In addition to those development expenditures, we still expect to spend up to $10 million or so on leasing expenditures. LOE and gathering and transportation costs remain in the $0.21 to $0.25 per unit range and $0.23 to $0.27 per unit range, respectively, while production and ad valorem taxes are expected to average $0.08 to $0.10 per Mcfe. DD&A rate is still to be in the $0.90 to a $1 per Mcfe range, and our cash G&A is expected to remain in this $0.05 to $0.07 range. I'll now turn the call back over to the operator for Q&A from analysts who cover the company.
Operator: Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Derrick Whitfield from Stifel. Your line is open.
Derrick Whitfield: To start first with your operational guidance on page 12. You guys are iterating full-year production guidance despite a 1.5 net well decrease in your wells to sales. Perhaps that's simply time, but that seemingly implies improving production performance per well. If so, could you speak to some of the drivers?
Ron Mills: You cut out a little bit, Derrick. But I think you're asking on slide 12 versus the February conference call the number of wells turned to sales on operated standpoint is down about one 1.5 wells and asking -- are you asking to provide some of the drivers as to why the production is still the same despite a 1.5 less wells turned to sales?
Derrick Whitfield: That is correct. And sorry for the connection if there was an issue. So my thought process is perhaps that's simply timing but that would seemingly imply improving production performance per well. And if so, could you speak to those drivers?
Dan Harrison: Yeah. Hey, this is Dan. And I think that's basically just the cadence of the completions. We did have a few -- some wells when we were working with the model. Some of those wells just shifted basically to the first of next year from the end of the year. So basically, it affects the number of wells that we turn to sales, but it really doesn't affect the production because its production is coming on right at the end of the year. Doesn't affect the production for this year.
Derrick Whitfield: Okay. And then maybe it's my follow up for Dan. I wanted to focus on the Roberts well you noted in your prepared remarks. Based on your experience to date, where do you believe the efficient frontier is for Comstock in lateral lengths and are you sensing any material degradation in frac efficiency at that length?
Dan Harrison: So I'll answer the second one first. No, we're not experiencing any degradation in frac efficiency. That I think will be longer, and we do have longer laterals planned in our schedule in the future. As far as what the sweet spot is going to be I think was your first question, it kind of remains to be seen, but we feel pretty strongly about being able to drill 15,000 foot laterals. For us, I think the risk of drilling and completing the 15,000 foot laterals, drilling them especially, is probably not real high on our list, but it's going to be just the risk of when you're completing the well, if you've got to do any kind of well intervention workout, when you get out to laterals that long, it requires you to use a rig to do any kind of clean outs or anything versus coils. So it just kind of changes the risk profile a little bit, but we definitely think the value is there to get longer up to 15,000 foot. Definitely increased value and better returns.
Jay Allison: Well, to Dan's point, if we can extend these wells, we've we drilled wells to 13,000-plus foot this last quarter. But if we can extend our average well to 13,000 to 15,000 foot to lateral, that's like one of the shorter laterals being drilled. So you don't have to add surface or intermediate. So you can get rid of those costs, and it's just a horizontal length that you're drilling. So the economics, the pure dollars that you're spending, makes a lot more sense to drill the lateral length and, like Dan said, so we don't see a lot of issues in the drilling of it, and we've been able to complete these pretty consistently. So we do think there's a lot of value, upside value that's not in any of these numbers if we can continue to extend these laterals, which was your question, I think that was really your question.
Derrick Whitfield: I would agree with your assessment. Thanks again for your time, guys.
Operator: Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Neal Dingmann from Truist. Your line is open.
Bertrand William: Hey. Good morning, guys. It's actually Bertrand filling in for Neal. The first question, the drilling efficiency gains in 1Q that you saw was I think you guys were talking to faster drilling times. Was that just while you were drilling or is that in between wells? Was there was there something driving that more specifically? It just seemed like a large drop quarter-over-quarter.
Jay Allison: So, Dan, you might give some statistics that we've been given from some of the service companies. I want to brag on you a little bit for what you've been able to do.
Dan Harrison: Well, yeah, this basically is a reflection on our drilling group. We've got several of the records set for the amount of footage we've drilled in 24 hours in the intermediate hole and in the lateral. And it's really just a combination of several things. We get a lot of questions on that front. We're drilling a lot faster to intermediate case in point. We've really cut down the number of days there, and we're drilling the laterals a lot faster. Our average 10,000 lateral days to TD was probably in the high 20s here just a couple of quarters ago and prior to that, and now we're in the high teens to low 20s. So it is a culmination of everybody's efforts. So it's just things getting better on so many fronts that have got us to this point. And we saw glimmers of this actually earlier than that, but until you get your entire fleet operating at this level of efficiency, it doesn't show up in your numbers. So we have gotten into that -- we've gotten to that point into the fourth quarter and really in the first quarter, and that's what's driving the percentage decrease we're reporting on today.
Jay Allison: Yeah. Like Dan said, 18 to 20 days to drill these wells, maybe 30 days to complete them. Most of these wells -- we have two wells on the pad side. If you look at the frac stages, maybe three to four, four to five completions per day. We're pretty consistent on that, even with more water and more sand, you saw we increased our completion cost a little bit, but we lowered our drilling cost to that $1,010 a foot. So I think that's going to be the norm from here out, and we haven't had a lot of really issues either on the drilling or completion side. So I think that tells you that we're drilling within the fairways of our footprint either in Harrison, Panola or Caddo Parish or De Soto Parish. We've got a really good footprint that acreage that we're drilling in, and in 2021. We've got a great set of inventory we're drilling, and we've pushed some of those locations into 2022.
Bertrand William: And it sounds like, so you're saying it really is just the drilling speed, so it's more sustainable. It wasn't just a bunch of wells close to each other for the quarter or anything like that?
Dan Harrison: No, not at all.
Jay Allison: That's the beauty of the footprint.
Dan Harrison: It's definitely an improvement.
Jay Allison: That's a great question, though. Yes.
Bertrand William: And then really my second one is just on the BJ Energy agreement. The completion rates that you've locked in, was that $365 per foot that you -- sorry, the $645 per foot you show on slide 14, or is that some sort of did the agreement assume some inflation, that way you could lock in three years. A couple--
Dan Harrison: So basically, it lets us lock in the horsepower costs for three years, So if there's -- if you see the gas prices are up and the activity really picks up, like we've seen the rig count just here in the last week pick up, and you see the inflation in the completion costs, I mean we'll be ahead of the game saving money, because we'll have these completion costs locked in.
Jay Allison: Now you don't lock in, of course, sand, water, stuff like that. You just lock in the horsepower.
Dan Harrison: We're locking in the horsepower cost which is the bulk of the job, but sand costs, freight, all our chemicals, those will still fluctuate with the market.
Jay Allison: Amazing part of that, the environmental footprint is a lot smaller for the BJ crew, and again, we will replace the existing BJ crew with this new BJ crew coming in early 2022, and you look at the emissions, either CO2 or methane emissions, so they're materially better. So those are all positives that we need.
Bertrand William: That's perfect. Thanks, guys.
Operator: Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Kevin Cunane from Citigroup. Your line is open.
Kevin Cunane: Good morning, everyone. Just sticking on the drilling efficiencies. Obviously, you just commented you're getting a bit faster. And then looking at the guidance on slide 12, you moved up total operated wells drilled by five, your DUCs expanded just on lower wells turned to sales. That's inclusive of already dropping of rigs here in May. Is there a possibility that you would be able to reduce your rig activity further and maybe bring those wells drilled back down to the original guidance, or is that kind of a bit higher on a continuity program into 2022? Just kind of get a feel of when you'd be able to kind of reap more cash flows through the better drilling efficiency that you've been experiencing.
Dan Harrison: So we have these faster drill times, basically, faster cycle times on the drilling side is kind of what's creating a little bit larger DUC list than what we would have normally had. I think as far as the number of rigs decreasing further, we don't really see that right now. We're just running the number of rigs to keep us basically in maintenance mode on production. So to keep our production growth basically in the single digits, five rigs looks to be about the right recipe for us.
Jay Allison: Yeah. Again, we've said we're going to have modest growth. I think that's what it is. If you look in 2022, it's 3%, 4% growth, something like that. It's modest. We're going to have a lot of DUCs carried over. I think a lot of that is from efficiency. Again, we said that we're going to drop a rig this month, so I think that'll help. And then I think we've always advertised that we were going to increase the amount of sand and water. So if you look on that slide 14, that's probably a good number for the completion side, that $645 a foot. And then on the drilling side, I know Patrick McGough is listening. He's somewhere in the office listening, and he's VP of Ops. And he pushes really, really, really hard to make sure that our drilling costs are down. He's done a great job. It shows up on slide 14. I think we have the best group out there. Of course, that's our opinion, and the numbers I think show it. But if we can decrease those, we will. I think the good thing is it is very predictable. We're very consistent with these wells. 25 million a day IP rate, we're not trying to trick you with a high IP rate. We drill in all four corners of our acreage, and the 320,000-plus net acres we have and almost 2,000 locations, they're really good quality. It's decades. And all we do now just this year is gave you a preview of what 50 completed wells might look like for the year, and it's really all about the financial integrity. We need to keep hedging like Roland and Ron are doing. Gas prices look really good. I think that the whole sector is going to be disciplined. If you're a public oil company, you're going to be disciplined, and the same thing with gas. And we think Appalachian group's kind of locked in. Swing area may be the Haynesville because of where LNG is and because the pipelines are added. All we're trying to do is give you the basic rule to tell you this is a great engine and a company to invest in if you're looking for low cost, high margins, and run by Dan and Roland and Patrick, and the whole group. So it's a good story.
Kevin Cunane: Great. That's it from me. Appreciate the color.
Operator: Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Steve Dechert from KeyBanc. Your line is open.
Steve Dechert: Hey, guys. Just want to see, do you guys think that the lower number of TILs that you talked about earlier and '21 can maybe push you in the lower half of your '21 CapEx guide?
Jay Allison: I think it's a $510 million to $550 million.
Dan Harrison: No, we think the guidance that's out there is pretty good for basically the plan that we have.
Jay Allison: You never know what tomorrow brings, but that's what we advertise today, though.
Dan Harrison: With the uptick in activity, there's always the chance that you could still see a little bit of material cost increases on the completion side. And even the rigs, the rig count's going up, so most of our rigs are on well-to-well contracts. So that's always a possibility.
Steve Dechert: Got it.
Jay Allison: The only longer-term contract we have, and we've said this, is with BJ. All the rest of them are, like Dan said, whether it's a drilling company or a fracking company. It's really well-to-well.
Steve Dechert: Okay, makes sense. And just to follow up. So can you give some color on the production cadence here in '21 and just what you think you see as the high quarter for this year?
Roland Burns: Steve, similar to what we -- I think I answered in the first quarter as well, we'll have sequential growth here in the second and third quarters and then flattening out in the fourth quarter based on the cadence and the timing of completions that we currently have modeled. So really the growth from the first quarter will probably be split between the second and third quarter. And in the fourth quarter, it flattens out, even maybe comes down just a little bit just based on the cadence of which wells are turned to sales on which day.
Steve Dechert: Okay. That's it for me. Thanks.
Operator: Next question comes from the line of Umang Choudhary of Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.
Umang Choudhary: Great. Good morning, and thank you for taking my questions. My first question is as you look toward 2022 gas futures, the curve appears to be in sharp backwardation. Wanted to get your thoughts around the expectation for gas prices heading into next year. And then within that context, maybe if you can touch upon your plans to manage risk through your hedging program?
Roland Burns: Well, yeah, the question on gas prices, I think we see a pretty constructive situation building up for the summer with gas storage being below average, below the five-year average, far below where we were a year ago, and really driven by really record exports from LNG and exports directly to Mexico. So that's all been very constructive despite the fact that the weather has not been overly constructive for natural gas this year. But overall, the situation looks pretty promising. And I think you've seen the natural gas futures market, especially for '21, react, recently firming up to getting closer to that $3 level. So we're -- as that spills over into 2022, really we need to put hedges in 2022, we're kind of at our targets for '21. That's when we'll hopefully build the '22 position at a higher kind of support level than we were able to do this year. We're already off to a small start there with about 20% hedge for '22. So we're patient and that's kind of why we think over the course of the summer hopefully gas continues to firm further out than just the current month. But obviously, with our cost structure, our industry-leading low-cost structure that we have and very high margins, our margins were 79% here in the first quarter and those will -- with a better curve that we have and the second to the fourth quarter of this year the very better index prices, we see those margins being able to maintain those through this year. So really good backdrop is set out there in our opinion for achieving all our goals for 2021.
Ron Mills: Yeah. And Umang, what we've done and you can see, the recent hedges we've added in '22 have been swaps. We continue to monitor the collar market as well as the '22 strip has moved up. We've just taken the opportunity to do some swaps, but we continue to want to have a combination of both swaps and collars in our '22 hedge book, so that we do create a base level of cash flow, but also have some upside on a significant portion of our hedges when we get to that year.
Jay Allison: And to Ron's point, the swaps give you a little more stability because they're at $2.70. The collars give you a little more upside. So as you said, we blend those in like we did in 2021. And the future, we look at the industrial demand is growing in Mexico. I think 80% of the gas that goes to Mexico, which is about 7 Bs a day comes from the Texas area. Some of that comes from the Permian. If you look at where the LNG export facilities are, we're exporting about 11.5 Bs a day, probably 10.5 Bs of that comes from where we are, the Gulf Coast area. So we see that as a strong market. We see Asia gas is $7, gas in Europe at $8, the spreads $1 or $2, it costs a $2 to liquefy it and transport it over there, and our gas is $3. So you look at the winter they had in Europe, I think the storage is low there. You look at demand growth in Asia, it sets us up for a really good I think next 18 to 24 months really because I think the public companies particularly will be disciplined with growth in CapEx. It's associated gas. We're not fearful it is going to grow because we think these companies will be giving dividends and buying shares back, returning dollars to their stakeholders. That's exactly why our focus is to improve our balance sheet, reduce our leverage, and lower our cost of capital. So I think it's a good drum for this whole sector for 2021, '22.
Umang Choudhary: Great. That's really helpful. And as my follow-up. As you improve your leverage through free cash flow generation and production growth toward your two times goal and given your favorable view of natural gas prices heading into next year, I wanted to get your initial thoughts around activity levels. Like what do you think is the most sustainable activity level which Comstock can sustain over the next few years?
Roland Burns: Well, I think -- and Dan kind of referenced it earlier. This kind of five drilling rig program is a good sustainable low-production growth kind of model that we think the company steered into. Now if they start out performing the efficiencies, maybe we scale that back in. But we're freeing up other parts of free cash flow, not just from the CapEx savings. This new interest savings will create more free cash flow as we don't have to use as much of our margin to service our fixed cost. And hopefully, there's more of that in the future. We've only done half of that work, and we'd like to do in the next year or so finish that work and bring down our overall interest burden of the margin. So we think this will be a great year for building on that foundation. But it's probably a two-year project to really get the balance sheet to where the market and we want it to be, which is leverage way below two times. So off to a good start, but lots of work to do.
Jay Allison: Well, the script looks good. It's $2.90 something today. You go out eight or nine months, it's $3.12, $3.20. It's just now starting to probably act like we thought it would act, and we're starting the summer months. If you give us the today, our goal is to get our leverage ratio to the low-2s, high-1s. That is our goal. I think that the value of this company will explode exponentially if we can do that. And if Dan Harrison, his group with Patrick et cetera can deliver longer laterals because we have such a huge footprint and we have so many tier one locations to drill, but that's how we can create tremendous wealth here. And I think geographically, we're located better than any company if you're looking for dry gas and you're looking to attach it to the LNG export area. I think we're located better than any company, period. I think that's going to be an attractive reason people look at this company. It's our own equity.
Umang Choudhary: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. I would like to turn the call back to Jay Allison for closing remarks.
Jay Allison: Sure. Again, thank you. I want you to know, again, we're like a family here. You hire us to run a company, you give us money for bonds, you give us money because you believe in equity, and we act like that. We've acted like that for 35 years. We've read some notes. I think there's 10 or analysts that follow us. We've read notes, and I think today it's one of those tipping point days. I think everybody agrees with what we are giving you, what we're trying to do, and that the outlook is very favorable. Again, we say we have decades of locations in the Haynesville/Bossier. That's unusual. Most companies have 10 years, 12 years, 15 years of locations. We have decades. We have industry-leading, low-cost structure. We're not trying to get there. We have it. We have high margin return Haynesville wells. We give you those quarter after quarter after quarter. In fact, we advertise some of the highest in North America. That's a big, big geographical area, but we do. We will hedge, we talked about that, to protect our drilling returns. We do have tremendous financial liquidity. A year ago we didn't. But we issued the bonds and then we issued a bond just this year, we do now, $927 million. And we will and we always have focused on reducing our GHG emissions. We're very proactive with BJ, even when they went through their hard times, we were very proactive. We used them and we supported them because we support the service companies. But we are watching GHG, we generate great free cash flow. That's why we were able to tap the capital markets last year to $1 billion and this year for $1.250 billion. I think this is important. We are near LNG market to export Haynesville gas around the globe. I said this one time at a conference, if you look at the last Olympics in South Korea, Haynesville gas was used there to generate the power to light the stadiums. That's where some of this gas goes. It's a global market. We leave you with this. Our drumbeat again this year, improve our balance sheet, reduce our leverage, and lower our cost of capital. If we do that, we've got a blue ribbon coming. So thank you for your time, the rest of year.
Operator: Thank you and again ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for participating, you may now disconnect. Have a great day.
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Comstock Resources, Inc. (NYSE:CRK) Earnings Preview and Financial Challenges
- Comstock Resources, Inc. (NYSE:CRK) is set to release its quarterly earnings on February 18, 2025, with an estimated EPS of $0.02 and projected revenue of $370.6 million.
- CRK's valuation metrics, such as the price-to-sales ratio of 4.19 and the enterprise value to sales ratio of 6.53, reflect investor interest despite financial hurdles.
Comstock Resources, Inc. (NYSE:CRK) is a company involved in the exploration and production of oil and natural gas. As a player in the energy sector, it competes with other companies like ExxonMobil and Chevron. On February 18, 2025, CRK is set to release its quarterly earnings, with Wall Street estimating an earnings per share (EPS) of $0.02 and projected revenue of $370.6 million.
The market anticipates that CRK might surpass these earnings estimates, which could positively impact its stock price. However, there is an expectation of a year-over-year decline in earnings due to lower revenues for the quarter ending December 2024. The actual results will play a crucial role in determining the stock's short-term price movement.
CRK's price-to-sales ratio is 4.19, meaning investors pay $4.19 for every dollar of sales. These figures suggest that while investors see potential, the company faces financial hurdles. The enterprise value to sales ratio is 6.53, and the enterprise value to operating cash flow ratio is 14.52, reflecting CRK's valuation concerning its cash flow. The debt-to-equity ratio of 1.32 indicates a higher level of debt compared to equity, which could be a concern for investors.
CRK's current ratio stands at 0.60, suggesting potential liquidity issues as it is below the standard threshold of 1. The management's discussion during the earnings call will be vital in assessing the sustainability of any immediate price changes and future earnings expectations.