Midcontinent oil and gas producer Mach Resources is planning to go public, regulatory filings show.
Oklahoma City-based Mach Natural Resources LP registered for an IPO with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, according to a Sept. 22 filing.
The preliminary regulatory filing does not list a price per share nor indicate how many shares Mach Resources plans to sell. The company plans to use proceeds from the offering to repay debt from its credit facilities.
Mach is an upstream E&P acquiring oil, gas and NGL reserves in the Anadarko Basin. Through a series of acquisitions, Mach has grown its position to around 936,000 net acres and more than 2,000 undeveloped horizontal drilling locations since launching.
The company operates about 4,500 producing wells across its footprint in western Oklahoma, southern Kansas and the Texas Panhandle. Mach’s average net daily production for the year ended June 30 was approximately 65,000 boe/d.
Mach is currently focused on new drilling projects in Kingfisher and Logan counties, Oklahoma.
Through the first six months of 2023, Mach spent around $182 million to drill 50.4 net wells and on equipment, per the filing. The company deployed about $270 million to drill 87.9 net wells in 2022.
But around 57% of the company’s production comes from its low-decline legacy assets in the Anadarko Basin.
In addition to upstream assets, Mach also owns midstream assets, including gas gathering lines, gas processing facilities and saltwater disposal infrastructure.
RELATED
Mach Resources: Midcontinent Aggregator
Veteran leadership
Mach is led by oil and gas industry veteran Tom Ward as CEO; Ward previously co-founded Chesapeake Energy Corp., SandRidge Energy and Tapstone Energy.
Both Chesapeake and SandRidge are publicly traded E&Ps; Tapstone was acquired by Diversified Energy for $419 million in 2021.
The E&P is backed by Houston-based private equity firm Bayou City Energy as financial sponsor.
Mach and Bayou City Energy partnered together in the Anadarko with a shared business philosophy: Scoop up assets shunned by the sector, operate them through the downturn and wait for a recovery.
In April 2020, BCE-Mach—as they refer to their partnership—closed a $220 million acquisition of bankrupt Oklahoma shale company Alta Mesa Resources and its Kingfisher Midstream affiliate.
Mach has closed on around a dozen acquisitions of oil, gas and midstream assets; last summer, the company spent around $88 million bolting on properties in Oklahoma and Texas in deals with Camino Natural Resources and Scout Energy.
Mach spent nearly $143 million on acquisitions last year. The company said it intends to continue pursuing growth through Anadarko M&A after the IPO.
Mach did not respond to Hart Energy’s request for comment on its IPO process at the time of publication.
Several energy and services companies have launched IPOs this year: Permian Basin E&P startup Rise Oil & Gas; the Africa-focused Elephant Oil Corp.; TXO Energy Partners, led by Bob Simpson; Atlas Energy Solutions, formerly Atlas Sand of Austin, Texas; and Montgomery, Texas-based Kodiak Gas Services.
RELATED
Recommended Reading
Wildcatter at Heart: Autry Stephens (1938-2024)
2024-08-18 - Legendary wildcatter Autry Stephens, founder and chairman of Midland Basin E&P Endeavor Energy Resources, stayed true to his “never sell” strategy.
Utica Oil E&P Infinity Natural Resources Latest to File for IPO
2024-10-05 - Utica Shale E&P Infinity Natural Resources has not yet set a price or disclosed the number of shares it intends to offer.
Murphy Oil Names New CEO, Adds Two Directors to Board
2024-10-06 - Murphy Oil’s current COO Eric M. Hambly has been appointed to CEO and president, succeeding Roger W. Jenkins. The board also added Hambly and Robert B. Tudor III as new directors.
Trans Mountain Appoints New CEO, President
2024-08-23 - Trans Mountain appointed Mark Maki to CEO, succeeding Dawn Farrell who will now be chairman of the board.
Analyst: Is Jerry Jones Making a Run to Take Comstock Private?
2024-09-20 - After buying more than 13.4 million Comstock shares in August, analysts wonder if Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones might split the tackles and run downhill toward a go-private buyout of the Haynesville Shale gas producer.
Comments
Add new comment
This conversation is moderated according to Hart Energy community rules. Please read the rules before joining the discussion. If you’re experiencing any technical problems, please contact our customer care team.