Southwestern Buying Back $1 Billion of Stock Shares by End 2023
The board of directors at Southwestern Energy Company voted to authorize the company to buy back $1 billion of its own stock. The buyback program will run from now until the end of 2023. The aim of stock buyback programs, as well as dividends, is to put more money into the pockets of investors. In the case of a stock buyback, each outstanding share (after the buyback) becomes a little more valuable. Southwestern is attempting to make its stock attractive for investors. This morning SWN share prices were trading around $6.91, up 47% year-to-date. On June 1 it was higher–trading at $9.64.
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Southwestern Energy yesterday announced a multi-year, certified Responsibly Sourced Gas (RSG) sales agreement to the North American subsidiary of Uniper, one of Germany’s largest publicly listed energy supply companies. Uniper will use the RSG gas it buys from Southwestern to resell to its customers here in the U.S., as well as send some of it to LNG export facilities where it will find its way to other countries, primarily in Europe. The molecules for the RSG agreement will come from both the Marcellus/Utica and from Southwestern’s newest plaything–the Haynesville Shale.
It appears the wind has gone right out of the sails when it comes to issuing new permits for shale drilling in the Marcellus/Utica. For the week of May 23-29, only six new permits were issued. Four of the permits were issued in Pennsylvania, two in West Virginia, and none in Ohio. This is the lowest number in a single week we’ve seen in maybe forever. A measly, lousy six permits!
We spotted a story on The Motley Fool investor’s website yesterday noting that several Marcellus/Utica publicly-traded drillers saw “double-digit” increases in their share price just yesterday, for a single day. The article highlights both Range Resources and Southwestern Energy. We started nosing around to see how the stock price for all of the big publicly-traded M-U drillers has performed this year, from the beginning of the year. It was an eye-opener. ALL of them are up from the beginning of the year. Most are up at least 75% in value since Jan. 1. A few have doubled in value, now up more than 100% since Jan. 1. We have the list below for how each one performed. Welcome to the bull market in oil and gas!
Last week Pennsylvania issued 16 new shale well permits. EQT led the way with ten permits, all of them for wells in Greene County. You just HAVE to read the names of the wells (below). After getting skunked for two weeks in a row, Ohio finally issued permits once again last week–ten of them. Ascent Resources scored six permits, mostly in Belmont County. Encino Energy had four permits, all in Carroll County. Finally, West Virginia had nine permits. Antero Resources scored seven of the nine (six in Wetzel County), and Southwestern took the remaining two permits (both in Marshall County).
There’s no question that Southwestern Energy, a pure-play Marcellus/Utica driller as recently as last year, is now giving more love to the Haynesville Shale in Lousiana than to the M-U. In 1Q22 Southwestern spent 57% of its $544 million in capital expenditures on drilling in the Haynesville, versus spending 43% of capex on M-U drilling. During 1Q, Southwestern brought 21 Haynesville wells online to sales, and only 11 Marcellus wells online to sales.
An article in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette highlights and focuses on the financial performance for four of the Marcellus/Utica’s largest publicly-traded companies, including EQT Corp., Antero Resources, Range Resources, and CNX Resources, during first quarter 2022. Even though the price natural gas is fetching is higher than it’s been in 14 years, M-U drillers are losing money. Why? Hedges and derivatives–bad bets on where the price of gas would go and locking in prices much lower than what the market currently supports.
One of the hottest of the hot sectors in which to invest (right now) is shale energy. That’s according to multiple sources, including a veteran finance writer, investor, engineer, and researcher. In an article appearing on the OilPrice.com website, Alex Kimani talks up mid-cap energy stocks as outperforming the supermajors. Among two of Kimani’s top three picks are two Marcellus/Utica drillers, who are having a stellar year in stock performance. We went looking for the stock performance of other M-U drillers too. We have a list to share showing just how much each driller’s share price has increased this year.
According to RBN Energy, 2021 was the most profitable year in at least the last two decades for oil and gas producers (i.e. drillers). Oil and gas producers reported income two-thirds higher than the previous peak in 2014, when commodity prices were significantly higher. There’s every indication that 2022 will be even better for the bottom line of O&G companies. What about Marcellus/Utica drillers? Yep, they’re on the list of phenomenal results too.