ProFrac Goes Public and Scores $288M – 4th Largest IPO This Yr
ProFrac Holding Corp. is an oilfield services company that provides hydraulic fracturing, completion services, and other complementary products and services to drillers in the Marcellus/Utica, the Haynesville, the Midcontinent, and the Permian. The company is owned and backed by billionaires Dan and Farris Wilks, the same guys who bought out CARBO Ceramics (proppant company) in April 2020 after that company filed for bankruptcy (see CARBO Ceramics Files Prepackaged Bankruptcy, Selling to Wilks). ProFrac launched an initial public offering (IPO) last week, selling 16 million shares for $18 per share–well short of the target range.
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Epsilon Energy concentrates most of its effort on developing Marcellus Shale wells in Susquehanna County, PA. Epsilon doesn’t typically do its own drilling. The company joint venture partners with (gives money to) other companies, like Chesapeake Energy, and the other company typically does the drilling. Usually. Epsilon issued its first quarter 2022 update earlier this week. The company’s Marcellus net gas production was 2.4 Bcf (billion cubic feet) in 1Q22.
We don’t normally recommend books to read–especially those we haven’t read yet ourselves. Today we’re making an exception. Last week we received an email about a new book published on Amazon by Chris Bentley, the former President and CEO of Bellatorum Resources, an investment management firm that formerly specialized in Texas oil and gas royalties and mineral rights. Bentley recently published a book called
Every “game” comes to an end when play must stop and a winner, and a loser, are declared. If you watch basketball you know that the final couple of minutes can last what seems like a lifetime. One team, up by 2 or 3 points, gains possession of the ball and they are in the lead. What do they do? Play keep-away. Run the clock down so the opponent can’t score to tie or pull ahead. What does the opponent do? Try to foul the person with the ball, or call for a time-out, in order to stop the clock and (hopefully) when the ball is thrown in and play resumes, regain possession and score. In a sense, that’s what is happening with the 94% complete Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) project, a 303-mile pipeline from West Virginia to southern Virginia. Right now anti-American Big Green groups have possession of the ball (having co-opted leftist judges) and they are ahead by one point, hoping to end the game by running out the clock. Will they succeed?