Despite a tough year for public E&Ps, Lonestar Resources US Inc. still achieved record growth in 2019, the U.S. shale producer said in a Feb. 20 news release.
As of year-end 2019, Lonestar had increased its proved reserves to a record 100.6 million barrels of oil equivalent, all of which are located in the Eagle Ford Shale.
“In a market in which our industry is capital constrained, 2019 was another year of capital-efficient growth for Lonestar, driven by strong results from our drilling program, which saw the majority of our new-drills exceed third party forecasts, resulting in positive reserve revisions,” Lonestar CEO Frank D. Bracken III said in a statement.
Bracken also noted that even without producing property acquisitions, Lonestar’s drilling program generated organic reserve growth via a combination of the outperformance of new wells and reserves additions through newly-leased acreage.
“In doing so, we extended our track-record of low-cost reserve growth, registering exceptional all-sources finding and development costs of $8.77 per boe while replacing 353% of 2019 production,” he said.
Lonestar is a pure-play Eagle Ford operator with more than 57,000 net acres in the crude oil window of the South Texas shale play. The company’s position is located in 11 counties, which are divided into three distinct regions: Western Eagle Ford, Central Eagle Ford and Eastern Eagle Ford.
For 2020, Lonestar is targeting production of between 17,000 and 18,300 boe/d. The company’s 2019 production guidance was between 14,800 and 15,000 boe/d, a roughly 34% increase vs. 2018.
Lonestar also expects its 2020 production targets can be met with less spending and has set its capex for the year at between $90 million to $115 million. In 2019, Lonestar’s capex totaled $171.8 million.
Additionally, the company anticipates generating $5 million to $20 million of free cash flow in 2020.
“With virtually all of our crude oil hedged in 2020 at $56.95/bbl and the bulk of our natural gas hedged in 2020 at $2.58/MMBtu,” Bracken said, “we have a high degree of cash flow certainty that we will judiciously deploy in our 2020 drilling and completion program, and we expect to do so at lower well costs which we expect to yield continued growth in production and EBITDAX.”
Recommended Reading
Patterson-UTI Braces for Activity ‘Pause’ After E&P Consolidations
2024-02-19 - Patterson-UTI saw net income rebound from 2022 and CEO Andy Hendricks says the company is well positioned following a wave of E&P consolidations that may slow activity.
ProPetro Reports Material Weakness in Financial Reporting Controls
2024-03-14 - ProPetro identified a material weakness in internal controls over financial reporting, the oilfield services firm said in a filing.
Aramco Reports Second Highest Net Income for 2023
2024-03-15 - The year-on-year decline was due to lower crude oil prices and volumes sold and lower refining and chemicals margins.
Why Endeavor Energy's Founder Sold His Company After Years of Rebuffing Offers
2024-02-13 - Autry Stephens', the 85-year-old wildcatter, decision to sell came after he was diagnosed with cancer, according to three people who discussed his health with him.
From Restructuring to Reinvention, Weatherford Upbeat on Upcycle
2024-02-11 - Weatherford CEO Girish Saligram charts course for growth as the company looks to enter the third year of what appears to be a long upcycle.