On a recent trip to South Texas the recent impact of the Eagle Ford shale oil play was obvious on every road.
Brand-new pick-ups and SUVs, many with dealer tags, filled the roads, darting in and out of traffic, their drivers seemingly heedless of the risk of a wreck. It’s something you tend to see in an economic boom, this crazy driving of new Detroit iron, and it’s on display in San Antonio right now.
Landowners who can prove mineral rights to their land can get $1,200/acre for a three-year drilling lease, plus a 20% royalty on production. So money goes out long before drilling begins, and the expense of drilling goes in long before production.
It takes careful management for an exploration company to profit in this environment, and not all Eagle Ford players have profited. In this article I will discuss two that have, and one to avoid.
Cabot Oil & Gas Corporation (NYSE:COG)
Most of the best oil exploration companies play in more than one field, and this is true of the best performer in Eagle Ford, Cabot Oil & Gas Corporation (NYSE:COG). The shares have just about doubled in value over the last year as natural gas prices have recovered.
In addition to exploiting Eagle Ford, which winds in an arc from the western portion of South Texas up toward Dallas, including many areas that were formerly considered played-out, Cabot has holdings in Oklahoma and Appalachia.
Like many other players, Cabot has been moving assets toward Eagle Ford and away from other productive areas. In 2011, for instance, it drilled 161 new wells, while selling assets in the Rocky Mountains. While producing about 187 billion cubic feet of gas in 2011, it had proven reserves of over 3 trillion cubic feet.
In addition to its work in oil exploration, Cabot Oil & Gas Corporation (NYSE:COG) also owns over 3,000 miles of pipelines. This is important, because without a way to sell what you produce you’re at the mercy of downstream companies. Cabot isn’t.
Given Cabot’s presence in the gas market, its stock had been under pressure over the last few years, as gas prices cratered. Their recent rise has also benefited Cabot Oil & Gas Corporation (NYSE:COG) shareholders.
Cabot is run conservatively, and in the March quarter it brought more than 10% of revenue to the bottom line, while paying out a minimum two cent dividend to common shareholders and maintaining a reasonable debt-to-equity ratio of 25%.
EOG Resources Inc (NYSE:EOG)
EOG Resources Inc (NYSE:EOG) is the largest producer of oil and gas in the Eagle Ford area, according to the San Antonio Business Journal, having produced 29.5 million barrels of oil and 38.3 million cubic feet of gas in the first 11 months of last year from the area.
Over the last year the stock is up “only” 36% but that’s somewhat misleading, as falling natural gas prices had it on a downslope for the first half of 2012. Since July it’s up 49%.
In addition to Eagle Ford, EOG Resources Inc (NYSE:EOG) has producing assets spread around the world, from China to Argentina. Within the U.S., it has assets in the North Dakota Bakken Shale play as well as the Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania.
The big excitement, however, might be from a deal it signed with the King Ranch last year, which sits at the southern end of the Eagle Ford play. The ranch is currently producing 1.1 million barrels of oil a day, or its equivalent, but it still retains shale oil potential.