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Earnings Call: Q4 2022

Jan 26, 2023

Operator

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Murphy Oil Corporation Q4 2022 earnings conference call. If at any time during this call you need assistance, please press star zero for the operator. I would now like to turn the conference over to Kelly Whitley, Vice President, Investor Relations and Communications. Please go ahead.

Kelly Whitley
VP of Investor Relations and Communications, Murphy Oil

Good morning, everyone, thank you for joining us on our Q4 earnings call today. Joining me is Roger Jenkins, President and Chief Executive Officer, along with Tom Mireles, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, and Eric Hambly, Executive Vice President of Operations. Please refer to the informational slides we have placed on the investor relations section of our website as you follow along with our webcast today. Throughout today's call, production numbers, reserves, and financial amounts are adjusted to exclude non-controlling interests in the Gulf of Mexico. Slide 1. Please keep in mind that some of the comments made during this call will be considered forward-looking statements as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. As such, no assurances can be given that these events will occur or that projections will be attained.

A variety of factors exist that may cause actual results to differ. For further discussions of risk factors, see Murphy's 2001 annual report on Form 10-K on file with the SEC. Murphy takes no duty to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements. I will now turn the call over to Roger Jenkins.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Thank you, Kelly. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for listening to our call today. Excuse me. On slide 2, Murphy continues to deliver a strong value proposition. Our ongoing execution excellence, especially in our oil-weighted assets, ensures that we remain a long-term sustainable company. We operate safely with a focus on continual improvement and our carbon emissions intensity. Our offshore competitive advantage is reinforced with our significant recent project success at our Calliope, Marmot, Samurai fields in the Gulf of Mexico. Murphy has an ongoing exploration portfolio, and we're in the process of a 3 well-operated program in 2023. We continue to generate strong cash flow and have been able to more than double our long-standing dividend from 2021, all while significantly reducing debt.

As a result of this success, we're progressing our capital allocation framework, where we will support increasing returns to shareholders as various debt targets are reached. Slide 3. As we continue focusing on our four priorities to delever, execute, explore, and return, I'm very pleased at the progress we have made as a company. In 2022, Murphy achieved our $650 million debt reduction goal, resulting in a 40% or $1.2 billion reduction since the end of 2020. Our current debt level is $1.8 billion. This has positioned us to begin Murphy 2.0 of our capital allocation framework, where we will allocate 75% of our adjusted free cash flow to debt reduction and 25% of our adjusted free cash flow to shareholder returns beyond our dividend.

Our team has done an incredible job executing our Calliope, Mormont, Samurai project, where we initiated production ahead of schedule. We continue to produce above expectations. Additionally, the King's Quay facility maintains an industry-leading uptime average of 97%. Onshore, we executed our well delivery program well, with 40 operated wells and 15 gross non-op wells during 2022. We maintained a total reserve base of 697 million barrels of oil equivalent at year-end. We've continued our excellent environmental performance with a second consecutive year of no IOGP recordable spills in our business, all while reducing emission intensity. Murphy closed out our 2022 exploration program by spudding the Oso-1 well, excuse me, as operator in the Gulf of Mexico during the Q4. Drilling is ongoing today.

After this well, we look to spud two more operated exploration wells in the Gulf of Mexico early this year. On slide 4. In the Q4 , we produced 173,600 thousand barrels of oil equivalent per day at 62% liquids. Due to the significant impact from our Calliope, Marmot, Samurai field development, we achieved nearly 30% growth in our oil volumes to 97,000 per day of oil since the Q1 of 2022. Our realized oil price was $82.57, while our realized NGL price was $27 per barrel, and nat gas was $3.64 per thousand cubic feet. Turning to slide 5 for the full year, our company produced 167,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day with nearly 90,000 barrels of oil or 54%.

This represents a 6% increase in total production from full year 2021. Our accrued CapEx for the year totaled $1.016 billion, excluding non-controlling interest, acquisitions, and acquisition-related CapEx. For the year, our realized oil price was slightly above the WTI benchmark at nearly $95 per barrel, while NGL was $36 per barrel and nat gas at $3.64 per thousand for the year. I'll now turn the call over to our CFO, Tom Mireles, for an update on our reserves, financials, and our sustainability efforts. Tom?

Tom Mireles
EVP and CFO, Murphy Oil

Thank you, Roger, and good morning, everyone. Slide 6. Our proved reserves totaled 697 million barrels of oil equivalent at year-end 2022, reflecting a 98% total reserve replacement, effectively remaining flat from year-end 2021 proved reserves of 699 million barrels of oil equivalents.

With average annual CapEx of approximately $880 million, excluding non-controlling interest and including acquisitions, Murphy has been able to maintain its proved reserves at around the same level since 2020. Compared to the prior year, Murphy increased its proved developed reserves to 60% from 58% of total proved, while our liquids weighting improved to 47% from 45%. Overall, across our entire portfolio, we preserved our reserve life at an average of more than 11 years. Slide 7.

We closed out the year with outstanding financial results as our Q4 2022 net income totaled $199 million or $1.26 per diluted share, and the full year 2022 net income was $965 million or $6.13 per diluted share, which is the highest Murphy has had since 2019 and second highest in the last 10 years. Including certain after-tax adjustments, we reported adjusted net income of $173 million or $1.10 per diluted share for Q4 2022. With advantaged oil price realizations, we generated significant cash from operations, including non-controlling interest for the quarter and full year.

After accounting for net property additions and acquisitions, we achieved positive adjusted cash flow of $321 million and $1.07 billion for the Q4 2022 and full year 2022 respectively. Now that 2022 has ended, I'm pleased to say that through our continued capital discipline, we generated sufficient cash flow to fund CapEx, acquire higher returning working interests in Gulf of Mexico properties, double our dividend, and reduce debt by $650 million. Slide 8. As of December 31st, 2022, Murphy had $492 million of cash and equivalents on hand, resulting in net debt of just $1.3 billion. Additionally, in November, we entered into a new $800 million senior unsecured credit facility maturing in November 2027, which was undrawn at year-end 2022. Slide 9.

In conjunction with our focus on operational execution, we continue to reduce our impact on the environment through lower greenhouse gas emissions intensity. In 2022, the team reduced our emissions intensity by 5%, and we recorded lower flared volumes onshore, both to the lowest level on company record. I'm proud to say that we have now achieved 2 consecutive years of zero IOGP spills. We also recorded our highest water recycling ratio in company history with 3 million barrels of water recycled, representing 28% of our total onshore water use, which is up from 18% in 2021. With that, I'll turn it over to Eric Hambly, our Executive Vice President of Operations, to discuss our asset success.

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

Thank you, Tom. Good morning, everyone. Slide 11. Our Eagle Ford Shale wells produced an average 32,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in the Q4 with 85% liquids. For the year, production was slightly above at 34,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day as we brought 27 operated wells and 15 gross non-operated wells online. We carried our new completions design through our well program in 2022, which achieved results above expectations, including some of the highest per foot IP30 rates in Murphy's history. Overall, in 2022, Murphy achieved industry-leading well results, which was validated in a recent sell side report on the Eagle Ford Shale. Our team also worked to improve our downtime, which achieved a company record low of 2.8%.

Additionally, our base production management efforts continue, with base declines averaging 12% for wells online prior to 2022. Slide 12. Our Tupper Montney business produced 288 million cubic feet per day for the Q4, which included a 17% royalty rate for the quarter as anticipated. For full year 2022, we produced an average 296 million cubic feet per day and brought online 20 wells during the year. While the majority of our production is protected with fixed price forward sales contracts, we also employ a price diversification strategy for a portion of our volumes. For Q4 2022, we sold approximately 18% of our volumes at Malin, Chicago, Ventura, and Dawn pricing, with the remaining 17 million cubic feet per day exposed to AECO prices. Slide 13.

In the Kaybob Duvernay, Murphy produced 5,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day for the Q4 with 72% liquids weighting. For full year 2022, we produced 6,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day with 74% liquids and brought online three operated wells. Slide 15. Our Gulf of Mexico assets produced 84,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in the Q4 with 81% oil volumes. For 2022, we produced 72,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day and maintained 80% oil weighting. Our Gulf of Mexico production was up 10% for the year. I'm pleased at the progress made with our short-term tieback projects during the year as we drilled a successful well at Dalmatian, which is scheduled to come online in 2023.

Additionally, two non-operated Lucius wells were brought online in the Q4 of 2022 and the Q1 of 2023, while the non-operated St. Malo water flood project is progressing toward completion in early 2024. Slide 16. I'm tremendously pleased with the success of the Khaleesi and Mormont Samurai Field Development Project and the Murphy-operated King's Quay floating production system as production continues to exceed expectations. We recently drilled a successful well at Samurai 5 after previously discovering additional pay zones in the Samurai field during the initial phase of development, and the well is scheduled to come online in the Q2 of 2023. We forecast production to plateau across the three fields for the next several years without additional development.

I'm also excited to say that we are forecasting full cycle payout in the Q2 of 2023 for Khaleesi and Mormont, which is approximately 5 years ahead of our original sanction case. Slide 18. During the Q4, we spud the Oso exploration well in the Gulf of Mexico and drilling is ongoing. We anticipate that we will reach TD in March. We estimate a mean to upward gross resource potential of 155 million-320 million barrels of oil equivalent from Oso, which is forecast to cost approximately $26 million net to Murphy. With that, I will turn it back to Roger.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Thank you, Eric. On slide 20, our 2023 capital plan has a range of spending of $875 million-$1.025 billion. More than two-thirds of our spending is scheduled to occur in the H1 of the year, with approximately 70% of our development capital going towards operated projects. This front-end loading of our spending ultimately generates more free cash flow over the year. I'm excited to say that our cash flow supports our 10% increase in our quarterly dividend that was announced today and allows us to set a $500 million debt reduction goal for 2023 using $75 WTI oil pricing, all with a low reinvestment rate of only 45% of our operating cash flow. On to slide 21.

Our Q1 2023 production guidance of 161,000 to to 169,000 equivalents per day includes approximately 92,000 barrels of oil or 56%, with 62% of our volumes being liquids. This range includes planned downtime of just over 7,000 barrels equivalent per day across all of our assets. I'd like to note that while this production range is lower than the Q4, it reflects our natural production decline due to the weighted CapEx that we use yearly, as we haven't brought on an operated well in our Eagle Ford Shale since September and in the Tupper Montney since July. For the full year 2023, we forecast production range of 175.5 to 183.5 thousand barrels equivalent per day, with 99,000 barrels of oil per day or 55%.

Overall, with lower forecast CapEx for 2023, this guidance represents a 10% oil growth for the year and a 7% in total production growth. Moving now to slide 22. Our total onshore budget for 2023 is $455 million, which we forecast will generate an average production of 90,000 equivalents per day with 35% liquids. In our Eagle Ford Shale business, we plan to spend $325 million to bring online 35 operated and 17 gross non-operated wells, with the majority coming online in the second and Q3. As part of our well delivery plan, we look forward to taking the learnings from our adjusted completions design and applying it to our new Tilden wells. For 2023, we forecast production of 32,000 barrels equivalent per day, with 72% oil volumes or 86% liquid volumes.

In our Tupper Montney asset, our 2023 plan is $125 million, is forecasting to bring online 16 operated wells and produce approximately 313 million cubic feet per day, assuming a CAD 4 per thousand AECO price for the year. We forecast that to equal a 14% royalty rate for 2023. For our Kaybob Duvernay asset, we plan to spend $5 million on field development and estimate production of approximately 5,000 equivalents per day, 57% oil and 69% liquids in that asset. Turning to our offshore business on slide 23. Our plan here calls for $365 million budget, which is forecast to generate 89,000 barrels equivalent oil per day, representing a 20% increase from full year 2022.

In the Gulf of Mexico, we're planning to spend $335 million on operated subsea tieback wells at Samurai, Dalmatian, and Marmalard, as well as two non-operated Lucius wells and a non-operated development in the St. Malo field. The non-operated St. Malo water flood project continues to plan, will be progressing this year. For full year 2023, we estimate production will be 82,000 equivalents per day in the offshore business. In the Gulf, with 79% oil volumes and 72,000 equivalents per day in 2022 was produced. We plan to spend $30 million for our non-operated offshore Canada assets in 2023 to generate production of approximately 7,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day. Plans include development drilling at Hibernia and field development work at Terra Nova in advance of returning to production in the Q2 of 2023.

For our exploration plans on slide 24, our plan calls for $100 million to be spent to target nearly $200 million barrels equivalent mean unrisked resources in the Gulf of Mexico. As previously mentioned, we're currently drilling the operated Oso well, which is spud in the Q4 of 2022. Next, we plan to spud the operated Longhorn well late in the Q1 before moving to a spud of a third operated Gulf of Mexico well towards the middle of 2023. We're still working a third well location with our partner group at this time.

On slide 26, this is a reminder slide of our previously disclosed capital allocation framework, which is a multi-tiered capital framework that allows for additional shareholder returns beyond the quarterly based dividend while advancing toward a long-term debt target of $1 billion. We're pleased by achieving into Murphy 2.0 at this time, allowing us to allocate 25% of our adjusted free cash flow towards shareholders. We maintain a board-authorized initial $300 million share repurchase program, allowing Murphy to repurchase shares through a variety of methods with no time limit. As of today, we've not executed any repurchases under this authorization. As we move to slide 27, we continued our disciplined strategy to delever, execute, explore, and return.

Our near-term plan for 23 through 25 is to follow our capital allocation framework with approximately 40% of our operating cash flow reinvested through 2025, with an average $900 million annual CapEx. We forecast that this will maintain an average of 55% oil weighting in our business and have 195,000 equivalents per day of average production, representing a combined annual growth rate of 8% through 2025, while also supporting our targeted exploration program. Additionally, we plan to maintain offshore production at an average of 90,000 to 100,000 barrels equivalent per day in this period. With excess cash flow, we will continue to execute our plan of enhancing payouts to shareholders through dividend increases and share buybacks, as laid out in our capital allocation framework.

Longer term, in 2026 and 2027, we see Murphy maintaining a sustainable business and targeting investment-grade metrics, and we forecast average annual production of approximately 210,000 barrels equivalent per day, with 53% oil weighting. Further, our ongoing reinvestment of approximately 40% of operating cash flow forecasts ample free cash flow to fund additional debt reductions in our capital allocation framework and enhance shareholder returns, as well as fund high-returning investment opportunities. On slide 28, to support our long-term sustainability, Murphy maintains a sizable North American onshore portfolio with more than 2,800 total locations across the 3 producing areas as of year-end 2022. This multi-basin approach provides ample optionality in various price environments. In the oil-weighted Eagle Ford Shale and Kaybob assets, Murphy maintains more than 20 years of inventory with a break-even price of $40 per barrel or less.

The Eagle Ford Shale standalone, with approximately 12 years of inventory or 360 wells with a break even of $40 per barrel or less. Assuming an annual 30-well delivery program across these two basins, we hold more than 60 years of inventory in Murphy Oil today. In Tupper Montney, Murphy holds more than 50 years of inventory, assuming a 20-well program. Overall, we have more than 200 Montney locations with a break even price of less than $1.45 U.S. per thousand cubic feet. In our offshore development opportunities on slide 29, our very successful offshore business will also be maintained at an average of 90 to 100 thousand barrels equivalent per day, with an average annual CapEx of approximately $325 million a year through 2027.

This plan is supported by a multitude of offshore inventory, with 26 projects combined of 125 million barrels equivalent in total resources at a break-even oil price of $35 or less. An additional 5 projects, representing 45 million equivalent, have a break-even price of $35 to $50. Progressing our priorities on slide 30. Today, we outlined our 2023 program and operating plan, as well as moving us along in the Murphy 2.0 that allows us to share 25% of our adjusted free cash flow with our investors. Further, we've continued to delever with a debt reduction goal of $500 million in 2023 at $75 WTI. Our 3 producing areas maintain a strong base for the company.

In the Gulf of Mexico, we have a full year of production at Calliope, Mormont, Samurai, flowing to King's Quay, which will further be supported by production from our successful Samurai 5 well recently drilled. Also in 23, we'll be completing a previously drilled well at Dalmatian, in addition to a new development well at Marmalard. In offshore Canada, we'll be bringing on substantial production at the non-operated Terra Nova field in the Q2. We have a solid year plan in our North America onshore assets. We're drilling more of our award-winning Eagle Ford Shale locations, as well as rebound well activity in the Tupper Montney now that permitting delays are behind us. Lastly, we're drilling 3 operated exploration wells in the Gulf.

As to the future, we own strong onshore locations, with thousands of high-quality, low break-even wells remaining to be drilled in support of our steady long-term production, as well as sustainable long-term offshore business and ongoing cash returns to shareholders. Murphy remains a long-term, stable company with low investments rates, slight production growth, and a growing offshore competitive advantage. Coupled with our keen eye on protecting the environment, we are positioned for long-term success. In closing, I'd like to thank all our dedicated employees for the solid year we had in accomplishing our key priorities, led by oil-weighted assets in the Gulf and Eagle Ford Shale. We had a great year and look forward to what we'll be able to accomplish in 2023. We'll turn it back over to the operator and look forward to taking your questions today.

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question-and-answer session. Should you have a question, please press the star followed by 1 on your touchtone phone. You will hear a three-tone prompt acknowledging your request. If you would like to withdraw your request, please press the star followed by 2. If you are using a speakerphone, please lift the handset before pressing any keys. One moment please for your first question. Your first question comes from Arun Jayaram with JP Morgan. Please go ahead.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Good morning, Arun. Arun, you hear me?

Operator

One moment please.

Arun Jayaram
Analyst, JPMorgan

Roger?

Operator

Your line is open.

Arun Jayaram
Analyst, JPMorgan

Roger, can you hear me?

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

Yeah, we're hearing you now.

Arun Jayaram
Analyst, JPMorgan

Okay, sorry about that. Roger, I want to start with slide 21. You highlight your expected exit rate for 2023. 12% oil growth, 14% BOEs. That would put you, call it, in the upper 180s for BOEs, and I think 103 for oil. I was wondering if you could help us think about kind of the trajectory from 1Q. In particular, I wanted to get your thoughts on what kind of uplift you expect from the Terra Nova project. You did highlight just over 7,000 BOEs a day of downtime. How do you expect that downtime to play into the volumes? Maybe you could just follow with an update on the St. Malo project in early 2024.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

It's gonna be a mixture of me and Eric handling that for you, Arun. Thank you for that question about production. From a 50,000-foot level, I was looking at it early this morning. It's quite common for us over 2021, 2022, and now 2023 to have a lower production in the Q1 due to our front-end loaded CapEx, where we start drilling. Like today, we have four drilling rigs in North America drilling and only one frac crew, and we're not a company that carries a lot of ducks on our books. We're looking at pretty significant growth throughout the year. You know, we're looking into going to the mid-170s into the high 180s to finish out the year. We really have much more oil production than we've had in the past.

I'll get into the downtime and have Eric handle that in a minute. We have Terra Nova coming on. You know, we have to estimate what we feel Terra Nova will be, and we have that in the Q2. That will probably be 4,000 to 5,000 our way, minimum there. We're looking at that whole business being around seven for the year. That's what that trajectory is. I'll just let Eric address the downtime issues we have this quarter. We'll wrap back up, make sure I handle all of your questions.

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

Okay, thanks, Roger. We did highlight in our release that we have some planned downtime in the Q1, both operated and non-operated, Gulf of Mexico, for maintenance projects and also in onshore. We begin our fracture simulation program, we have some planned shut-ins related to offset frac impact. Those are sort of typical for our business. The rest of the year, from a downtime perspective, we do forecast a number of planned downtimes in our Gulf of Mexico business, ongoing offset frac impact through the Q2 in onshore, also a provision for storm downtime, which is typical for us.

For the full year, our storm downtime is on the order of 2,200 barrels per day, which is calculated by assuming that from July to October, we have a total of 8 days of zero production from the Gulf of Mexico. Just a few more points in terms of production growth. For our offshore business rather, we have some new volumes coming online from Samurai 5, which we expect in the Q2, Dalmatian DC 90 Well in the H2 of the year, and of course Terra Nova, which you highlighted. If you think about rough production rates, Samurai 5 is in the 3,000 to 4,000 net BOE range when it comes online, Dalmatian around 5,000 barrels per day, and Terra Nova should get to about 6,000 barrels per day net to us when it comes online.

That's really how we come up with our offshore forecast. As Roger highlighted, for onshore, with our new volumes, we have quite a bit of growth of Tupper Montney volume from first to Q4, with our wells coming online through the year and being fully online in the Q3. About to see a pretty substantial increase there, that's how we model our business.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Further to that, I think there was a question you had, Arun, and I appreciate these questions because we're really have a big growth year. We're proud of our oil growth and ever-increasing oil production. St. Malo is a great field, one of the best probably margin fields in the world. Very fortunate to be an owner of that. It's a solid 10,000 to 12,000 barrel a day business. The Water Flood project does come and go with CapEx. We're working with a super major here who changes the phasing of the CapEx on occasion. But this is gonna be really about stopping decline and maintaining pressure in the reservoir as we start injecting this in about a year. There'll be an inflection from that to add significant reserves there for us.

That project continues to go well, but they phase CapEx in and out on the year on occasion as they execute it. There's a production well that's coming on at the end of this year, and also the injector wells are being completed. Chevron continues to progress that, have a great relationship with them and moving that forward. It's a very nice asset for us.

Arun Jayaram
Analyst, JPMorgan

Great. Just my follow-up, Roger, is on Murphy 2.0. I think you mentioned you're soon to reach that $1.8 billion or threshold. How should we think about kind of cash returns in 2023? I mean, I was thinking out loud, is it just basically we take your free cash flow forecast and multiply by 0.25

That will be the cash return through the, to the higher dividend and buybacks. Is that the way to think about it this year?

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Arun, thanks for that. That's not how it works. We have adjusted free cash flow that we described in the slide. If you take the CapEx or take the operating cash flow less the capital spending on the cash flow statement, then you have to remove dividends and where we have to pay contingent payments. You remember the focus on contingent payments last year. We'd be removing our NCI payments, our quarterly dividend, and our distributions to pension, abandonments, quarterly dividends, and things of that nature. We get to adjusted free cash flow. This is outlined on slide 26. This year we probably have $200 and something, high $200s of abandonment and contingent payments are the biggest factors in that.

Of course, our dividends, well, calculable at around $170 million. It would have to be pulled out, and we'll share 25% of the rest. It's as per the formula every quarter and trying to get to executing it as fast as we can.

Arun Jayaram
Analyst, JPMorgan

Great. Thanks a lot, Roger. Appreciate it.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Oh, thank you. Appreciate y'all.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question comes from Charles Meade with Johnson Rice. Please go ahead.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Morning. Good morning, Charles.

Charles Meade
Analyst, Johnson Rice

Good morning, Roger, to you and your whole team there. I have a lot of questions I'd like to ask. Well, I'll just do the 2. 1 in a follow-up. The first is on the Tupper Montney. kind of 2, you know, 2 things I'm wondering about there. 1, you guys cited that well performance up there as 1 of the, 1 of the reasons that you're towards the low end of your production guides on the quarter. My question is, was that a kind of a 1-time thing, something you just saw in 4Q?

Is that something that's going to, you know, carry forward, you know, more central, you know, central to your view of the asset? Second, you referenced $4 MCF in your plan, but you know, we're good, you know, call it 20%, 30% below that, as you sit here this morning. Is there any flexibility in your, in what you're going to do, in the Tupper in 2023?

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Eric's gonna handle that for you, Charles.

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

Okay. First let me address the well performance issue that we experienced in the Q4. We were able to pretty successfully execute our plan program in 2022. As we highlighted, we brought online 20 new wells. One consequence of permitting restrictions that were experienced last year is about half of those wells were producing into a facility constrained system. The wells were producing at a near, basically a flat rate because we were not able to construct a debottlenecking pipeline. We expected that those wells that were producing at a flat rate because of a facility constraint would remain effectively flat through the Q4.

As we progressed late into the Q4, we saw that the wells, through natural decline, came down below that facility constraint, and it was a little bit challenging for us to model exactly when that would happen based on the data we have through constrained wells. I would characterize that as a one-time, and our forecast going forward reflects the performance of the wells, and that's reflected in our guidance here today. From a gas price perspective, we did model 2023 at an average of CAD 4 AECO, as you noted. What I would try to provide some color around sensitivity because it is quite sensitive. For every roughly CAD 0.50 AECO, you might see something in the 1,500-2,000 BOE net impact on annual average.

You can use that as a go by. If you have a different perspective on gas price, you can kind of get a sensitivity for how much production might go up or down based on a CAD 0.50 increase or decrease on the AECO price. Hopefully that addresses your question.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

One more bit of color on that, Charles. While there's a lot of talk about royalty in the Montney, new wells now under their regime for the first year only pay a 5% royalty. Even at this elevated price, as you state this morning, we're about 14%. Well, every day in the Haynesville and the Marcellus, it's 25%. A lot of talk, but it's always below the United States.

Charles Meade
Analyst, Johnson Rice

Great.

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

Just one last comment while we're talking about Tupper. You may have noted that on January eighteenth of this year, the Blueberry River Nations entered into an agreement with the province of British Columbia regarding the infringement of treaty rights. While that agreement is significant and impactful to those E&P companies that are affected, on public lands, Murphy's acreage is on private lands, and we do not expect any go forward limitations on our ability to execute our program because we're on private lands, based on our understanding of the agreement that was just reached.

Charles Meade
Analyst, Johnson Rice

Got it. That's all helpful detail. Roger, you guys had that dry hole down in Mexico that you already disclosed, you know, you've got a big block down there and you've got a lot of other prospects down there. Can you tell us what you.

What you've, you know, found, what you learned with this first well, and kind of give us a, you know, kind of what how it's gonna inform your future activities down there?

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Thanks for that question, Charles. Yeah, it was a disappointing well. It was a well that we have in a system. If you really look at the wells in my re-review, which is still ongoing, we've had some trouble getting the data out of the equipment there that we have. It's a little bit slowed in our review at this time. It's really just not enough reservoir there was the issue, and where will the reservoir be? There's a key well being drilled by another operator to our north here this year. We also have our Cholula acreage that we can go back to our review at a later time. We'll be watching that key well to the north and going through our learnings. Not ready to move that off, but we have significant acreage. You know, we have many prospects in our company.

We have that same acreage, Block 5 in the Gulf, the same acreage in Brazil, we have that same acreage in Sergipe-Alagoas Basin. We have four areas of the same acreage that we have net across our business. We're really only spending about $100 million a year on exploration, which includes seismic, the people that work on it, and the drilling. We'll continue to do this. These wells are really about seeking opportunities with better returns than what we have in our business. As we disclosed today, multitude of opportunities to keep our offshore business flat well into 2027 and beyond, all documented, all known, thousands of wells in our onshore business. We can stay sustainable in all the things I mentioned today about our future. Does not include one drop of oil from exploration success.

Something we do unique that puts us well-positioned in a differentiation to others. We'll have plenty of stuff to do on our own outside of that as well.

Charles Meade
Analyst, Johnson Rice

Thank you, Roger.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Well, thank you. Appreciate it.

Operator

Thank you. Next question, we have Leo Mariani with AKM. Please go ahead.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Morning. Morning, Leo.

Leo Mariani
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, MKM Partners

Hey, good morning. Wanted to, you know, start off and just address the Eagle Ford a little bit here. I think if I was reading the slides right, you guys are forecasting that production's down maybe around 7% year-over-year. Looks like it's also down a fair bit in the Q1 of 2023 versus Q4. I know you guys disclosed some downtime there and just kinda some information about the timing of the wells. I just, you know, if I'm reading this right, looks like you are gonna have maybe a few more operated wells in 2023 versus 2022. Could you maybe just kinda talk through Eagle Ford in terms of why you're seeing a decline there?

I always kind of thought the plan was to try to, you know, hold that flat, over the next handful of years.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Actually, Leo. Appreciate that question. Actually, the plan is to be 30,000-35,000 to maximize free cash flow in the Montney. Same thing, trying to grow that asset to fill the plants while producing free cash flow. Free cash flow generation's the number one goal. Eric's gonna address all your questions here right now.

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

Yeah. Okay. Thanks, Leo. There are 2 primary factors that are driving lower production with sort of similar well counts relative to 2022. First of all, our new 2023 wells come online a bit later in the year on average than our '22 program. When you do the average for the year, it's a little bit lower. Second, and probably most significantly, our operated 2023 program is almost evenly split between Karnes, Catarina, and Tilden locations. As we've highlighted on our recent calls, we delivered significantly improved Karnes and Catarina results in '21 and '22 by applying our enhanced completion design. We have not drilled an operated Tilden well since 2019. We're hopeful that our 2023 Tilden wells will see the same level of performance improvement as our recent Karnes and Catarina wells.

However, our guidance for 2023 for Tilden is based on type curves that are aligned with pre-2020 wells. Combination of the mix and our expectations for an area we haven't been to, sort of driving our average production per well down a bit from what we actually experienced in 2022. As Roger noted, we've been targeting production from the Eagle Ford in the 30,000 to 35,000 barrel a day range. We have, in the last two years, exceeded our expectations from the capital we're deploying there, getting higher realized production than we expected. We would love for that to happen in 2023, but we are not assuming that it will.

Leo Mariani
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, MKM Partners

Okay. That's very helpful on the color there on the Eagle Ford. I just wanted to follow up and ask a little bit about CapEx here. You know, as I look at the plan for 2023, you know, very front-end loaded, you know, 70% in the H1, 30% in the H2. I know you guys also were, you know, front-end loaded as well in 2022. As kind of the, you know, the year progressed, you guys did, you know, kind of make the decision to raise CapEx. I know there were some extra projects to get in there. I just trying to get a sense here.

You've got a, you know, a pretty wide range of CapEx in terms of what you have there, in 2023. You know, I guess I'm just trying to understand if there's, you know, talk a little bit between kind of the bottom end and the high end of the range, and is there potential for other activity to come on, you know, late in the year, if you guys decide to do more in the Gulf, if partners are proposing wells? Maybe just kind of talk through that dynamic a little bit.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Thanks for that question. Appreciate that, Leo, this morning. The way we think about it is it's quite common to have a wider range for many of our other peers, so I would be dumb not to have one for myself. I don't see as many... Like, last year, we were drilling Khaleesi, Mormont, Samurai. We had incredible success there, and we were seeing additional zones to complete. We found some additional pay. This year's program, we're completing a non-well that another very successful well at Dalmatian. We know what that is. We're drilling a well at Marmalard, a development well up in the middle of several other wells to accelerate that production. I don't anticipate, like, another Marmalard coming out of it.

The risk we have on CapEx is phasing by super majors in and out of Oxy and Chevron involving Lucius and St. Malo. There's a lot of activity. Eric just talked about the Tilden area. Longer laterals are coming to the Tilden area by many big players, meaning that you cover a lot of activity there with longer laterals and new completion techniques coming to Tilden. Could we be AFE for some non-op wells on the border of our acreage? Probably, yes. Not large amounts of CapEx at all. We have across a wide array of businesses, very successful assets. There could be things to come our way.

I don't see it the same as last year because a lot of that was driven by Samurai 5 and some things we were doing, that were very, very positive for us and greatly positive for us now. That's how I see that, Leo, and I think it's appropriate to have a range today, so that you don't write about it every morning when I have to spend a nickel more primarily.

Leo Mariani
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, MKM Partners

Yep. Understood on that for sure, Roger. Okay. I appreciate that. Then maybe just lastly for me just to follow up on capital returns, you know, here this year, you know, just on the way it's sort of laid out. Should we expect that the buyback's gonna kick in relatively soon? You obviously, you know, raised the dividend here, which is nice to see. In order to kind of, you know, hit those numbers, are we gonna start to see the buyback kick in here in the, in the H1?

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

It would be not that great in the H1. Back to your CapEx question, and Jeff there was poking you at the end. We really wanna keep our CapEx, like, to the midpoint of our guidance. We really wanna execute this plan and get to buying back this undervalued stock. It's gonna be like a lot of things. It's more back-end loaded, Leo, honestly, on that. What we're focused on it. I carried 3 spreadsheets with me every day of how I can buy back the stock. Trying to get to it fast as I can.

Leo Mariani
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, MKM Partners

Okay. Thanks, guys.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Appreciate you. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Paul Cheng with Scotiabank. Please go ahead.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Morning, Paul.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

Hi. Good morning, guys. How you doing?

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Doing good.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

Several question, real quick. In Tupper Montney, when that you think you will reach, the 500 million cubic feet per day growth now?

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

I'm gonna let Eric handle that. Go ahead, Eric.

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

Paul, we expect that that'll happen in our 2024 program.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

Eric, you said, H2 or the H1?

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

This year coming up, I believe.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

Sorry.

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

Typically for our Tupper Montney asset, we have a H1 of the year weighted capital program. When we bring online our 2024 wells, we ought to be, we expect to be at plant full capacity.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

The H2?

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

Midyear, say, of 2024, Q3.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

Mm-hmm. At that time, that what will be net to you? Should we just assume $500 and take 14% royalty out, and that would become your net?

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

Obviously, Paul, it's quite sensitive to your assumption on the price. When we're in AECO prices in the, let's say, 2.50 CAD to 4.50 CAD range, the royalty is extremely sensitive. Based on your view of what the price will be, you can see something from as low as, say, 5% royalty to as high as 20% royalty. We expect gas prices will come down, and our net will improve beyond 2023, that's kind of up to you to make your own assumption, I think.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

Eric, can you remind me? I think you have 100% working interest in all those area, right?

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

In Tupper Montney, yes, sir.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

Right. Okay. Second question, Roger, in your longer term plan, you're saying that by 2026, 2027, you are targeting about 210. I think it's the range of 200-220 that you talk about. For the next several years that you're talking by AFE about 195. What will cause the increase? Where is the area of the increase that lead you to a higher production in the outer years?

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Thanks, Paul, for that question. Appreciate you. Paul, you didn't have but a couple of questions today. Arun was ahead of you. You gotta get more. As you look across our production from 2023 onward, as I look at our onshore business, as you just mentioned, and Eric greatly answered about our increase in the Montney. When you look across our onshore business today, this year, as we just disclosed this morning, 89,000 barrels a day. That's creeping up 90, 110, 112, primarily around the Montney and maintaining the Montney, and toward the end of the program, increase close to 40 in the Eagle Ford at this time. The onshore is growing. Our offshore business is very solid business, as we disclosed today.

We look to maintain this business between 90,000 and 100,000 from now through 2027. In 2024, 2025, and 2026, as we put on all these projects that we mentioned this morning and have the success of Terra Nova coming back on, which is an incredible project for us, we really get close to 100 in that business through 2025 and 2026, leading to this 180, 190, 210, 210, 210 type business.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

Mm-hmm.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

We're real proud of it.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

Okay.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

It makes enormous free cash flow, Paul. Enormous.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

A final one, I want to go back to the earlier question on Eagle Ford. I think Eric's saying that the reason why the production is lower because you're drilling the well in the Tilden.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Right.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

If that's the case, then, I mean, why go back and drill the Tilden? Why not concentrate on Kings and Catarina?

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

I'll give that a try.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

I mean, if that means that we already finished most of the best well over there, or, I mean, what's the reason behind?

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Eric's so excited to answer your question, Paul. I'm gonna let him do it. He's writing notes. He's going crazy. Go ahead, Eric. Thanks, Roger. I don't wanna hold that back, that energy.

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

Paul, we have under our lease agreements with the owners of acreage there in the Tilden area. Some of our leases have some ongoing drilling commitments that every year or 2 or 3 you have to drill another well or 4. Our program in 2023 is oriented toward fulfilling those obligations. Also, as we highlighted earlier, we really would like to see how well they perform with our enhanced completion design. Might be able to see, you know, a larger amount of top-tier performing wells there. It's primarily around fulfilling our obligations and maintaining our leases.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

On top of that, Paul, if you look at many companies that you cover, there's a lot of rigs moving into Tilden. There's a lot of activity because as through the Permian, and we've been doing a long time in the Montney, 10,000-foot laterals are becoming very common. Then companies are working together more in the Tilden area 'cause it's an under-drilled area in the Eagle Ford to add these longer laterals, which the industry believes will be higher production. Our Karnes and Catarina can't be extended in that way.

If there's a game plan, very sophisticated, planned out plan to have offset frack impacts on how we move from Karnes to Catarina and now Tilden, it's a game plan that allows us to maintain this 30 to 35 for a very long time and grow it to any level we want and make a lot of money in the business. Just a year, we're going back to Tilden. I personally believe that all the great work we did on technology around fracking will succeed there as well. It's clear to me by the rig count and what's going on that others believe that as well.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

All right. Great. Eric, just want to, one follow-up on the, on the obligation. For the next several years that you also have a pretty large obligation that you have to drill in, Tilden?

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

I'd have to look at that to get into the details, but I wouldn't view it as a large obligation. It's been relatively minor, and we've been able to manage it within our optimal capital allocation framework. Yeah, I don't, I don't have a very clear answer for you right now. I wouldn't expect it to be significant.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

All right. Thank you.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Paul, every company you cover has drilling obligations in the Eagle Ford.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

Understand. I just want to see that whether we're going to see the next several years that you're also going to drill a fair bit in, Tilden, because of the obligation or not?

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Well, as Eric said, we don't see that as an issue to hit the volumes for the CapEx we have. I can see and understand your question on that, and we appreciate it.

Paul Cheng
Analyst, Scotiabank

Okay. Will do. Thank you.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Thank you, Paul. See you soon.

Operator

Your next question comes from Neal Dingmann with Truist Securities. Please go ahead.

Neal Dingmann
Analyst, Truist Securities

Morning, Roger. I'll try to just keep mine to one or two to keep things moving along today.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Neal, you gotta get in there. You gotta get three or four to compete.

Neal Dingmann
Analyst, Truist Securities

Roger, my question is obviously you've done a fantastic job on the Khaleesi, the Mormont, Samurai field development. Could you just remind us, I assume the plans are there just to try to keep that production relatively flat on King's Quay? If so, will that entail just what, a well, one or two wells a year? How should we sort of think about, you know, over the next one to two to three years, how do you want us to think about that play?

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Thank you, Neal. Thanks for that question on our great asset, now the largest asset in our company and an incredible asset. The way to think about it is Samurai 5 is a great deal for us. We now think that Samurai could be near a 100-million-barrel discovery from exploration out there. Very proud of it. We'll have 3 wells there. Of course, we already have 2 there, and then we have the other wells in the other field at Khaleesi and Mormont. Each of these have recompletion, uphole, and differing ways to add perforations and differing things around technology to add additional zones. There's a lot of zones in these wells. Through all those efforts, which would be just through OpEx and some de minimis CapEx, will allow that to be added.

To keep this flat, there's not a plan today of an additional well, in the next three-year period that we're advertising to remain flat. There is some in-wellbore things to be done that are de minimis capital, to keep it flat with the same, resource base.

Neal Dingmann
Analyst, Truist Securities

Great to hear. Just a follow-up. You do a good job. I'm looking again at slide 28, where you show a remarkable 60-plus years in the Eagle Ford and Duvernay inventory. I'm just wondering, would you all consider, I mean, again, just to, I don't know, maybe pay debt down quicker or even include the pop that show return quicker. Would you all consider divesting any of the assets given obviously there's a high need by many of your peers for inventory and, you know, what appears to be the market not giving you, I don't think, full credit for that position?

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Well, appreciate that, Neil. We have been very active in M&A, both buying and selling $8 billion of deals in 8 years. However, this is part of our business to be a sustainable business, and I've rattled off to Paul a few minutes ago, 210,000 for a long time, without exploration success, without M&A, and delivering billions of dollars to our shareholders. It's just a lot to unravel that. It gives stability to our offshore business. It's all weighted, it's unique, and people the price to buy it may keep going up, Neil, 'cause it's probably not going down. We're happy with what we have.

We have a solid business, long haul here without doing anything, and need to execute into that and start returning to shareholders, but we consider that top opportunity right now.

Neal Dingmann
Analyst, Truist Securities

Great answers. Thanks, Roger.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Thank you. Appreciate it.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, as a reminder, should you have a question, please press the star followed by 1. Your next question comes from Neil Mehta with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Neil Mehta
Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Yeah. Good morning.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Morning, Neil.

Neil Mehta
Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Morning, Roger. The, you know, first question is around bolt-on M&A. You've done some really good stuff, particularly in the Gulf of Mexico. Just what do you think the prospects are there, especially given all that's going on in Brazil right now, but be curious your views on the opportunity set.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Thank you, Neil, for that question. It's been a real key for us as people that's followed us like Goldman for a long time, came out of Malaysia, paying extensive cash taxes, got our money repatriated, bought things at very good prices in the Gulf, produced way more than we originally planned, and paid... Another advantage to Murphy is that we pay no cash taxes all the way into early 25. Incredibly well-positioned with that transaction. We look at this. We consider ourselves the leader in M&A and execution in the Gulf. Everything is brought to Murphy to review. We have incredible database and knowledge and experience around Gulf of Mexico deals. We know every deal, we know every field, and these things continue to come.

We though are very particular in the process around focusing on the resource first and what we will pay. Oftentimes people ask about the bid ask. It doesn't matter to Murphy 'cause we get a price we're gonna pay, and we don't care about the word bid ask. We look at them closely, look at them in with our framework, what will it do to the framework? How can it be financed? Still try like heck to keep the framework 'cause we really want to get into that as soon as we possibly can. All those factors come to bear, when we have a certain type of return and a certain type of EBITDA multiple that we look for, when those come up, we will execute on those.

Not looking at any big deals that require altering our significantly altering our capital structure. Look at a lot of things. A lot of people come to us to partner with them. A lot of situations coming our way due to our outstanding operatorship. As a matter of fact, we're being promoted into drilling a well for the first time due to our operating ability. A lot of things coming our way due to our unique operational skill set that we're very proud of. We're looking at them, and we'll look at all of them, but have a really tight criteria that we don't share around that, Neil. Looking at that, and I appreciate your question on it.

Neil Mehta
Analyst, Goldman Sachs

All right. Great. A quick follow-up is just, you know, you talked about it in the comments around CapEx. You know, we're seeing signs of offshore inflation and things like rig rates and service commentary. How are you guys mitigating it, and what are you seeing firsthand?

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Thanks for that question, Neil. Of course, your company covers all these drillers and everything, our friends. We, when you're in the business like we have been, you know, today we have 2 drill ships in the Gulf. We recently had 3 floating rigs in Mexico and the Gulf. We're an active player, and we have a program. When you're an active player, you'll have the lower or middle part of the market and a bit of the high end. If you're constantly in the business, you very rarely pick up all on the high end. I'd say that half of our program today is at the lower end of rates and the $300 max, and we have some at the $400 level, which is the market today.

It's kinda impossible not to have something at the market unless you know, really contract for a long time. We feel well-positioned. Other inflationary things are really around people costs, and we've talked about this before. There's really not a big increase in rig count in the Gulf of Mexico, which keeps the inflation at bay a little bit on other services. Of course, in the onshore post-COVID, it went up from, you know, all the way to 700 and something rigs. When the rig count's increasing and the ducts are increasing, the frac pressure is more than we see offshore. Really in our business, Neil, it's about days on location and executing 'cause you'll have every kind of rate there is if you're in this business for a long time.

Neil Mehta
Analyst, Goldman Sachs

All right. That's great color, Roger. Thank you.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Appreciate it. Thank you, Neil.

Operator

Your next question comes from Josh Jayne from Daniel Energy Partners. Please go ahead.

Josh Jayne
Managing Director, Daniel Energy Partners

Hi, good morning.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Hey, go ahead.

Josh Jayne
Managing Director, Daniel Energy Partners

Just real quick for me. In the Eagle Ford, I was just wondering how the cadence of activity is gonna play out for the year. Obviously, you guys were, you know, rough numbers around 2 rigs, you know, pretty much every quarter last year with the 3rd rig in the 4th quarter. You know, given how the CapEx is gonna tail in 2023, I was just kinda wondering what you suspect or what you thought your cadence of activity would look like for the rest of the year in the Eagle Ford. Thank you.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

I'll have Eric answer that for you, sir, right away here.

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

Yeah. We have a slide number 22, which shows the cadence of our onshore program. We detail the Eagle Ford program as well as our Tupper Montney program there, both operated and non-operated. You can see that it's 10, so 10 Carnes wells come online in the Q1, and then the Q2 is our biggest quarter from Eagle Ford activity with Q3 contributing a kind of similar level as the Q1.

Josh Jayne
Managing Director, Daniel Energy Partners

Okay. I mean, it's like I guess my question really is, are you gonna sustain a 3-rig program for the remainder of the year in Eagle Ford, or will that drop down to 2 at some point? Sort of, you know, how you see that program flexing?

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

In terms of drilling activity, we have 4 rigs working right now, 2 in Tupper and 2 in the Eagle Ford. They will all be out of work by the Q3.

Josh Jayne
Managing Director, Daniel Energy Partners

Okay. Thank you. That clarifies it. Thanks a lot.

Eric Hambly
EVP of Operations, Murphy Oil

Appreciate it.

Operator

There are no further questions from our phone lines. I would now like to turn the call back over to Roger Jenkins for any closing remarks.

Roger Jenkins
President and CEO, Murphy Oil

Appreciate everyone focusing on our call today and asking good questions. We appreciate that way to talk about our company and our great year ahead. Any questions you have, please get with our IR team here. We look forward to seeing you in our next quarter. I appreciate all the help. Thank you.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes your conference call for today. We thank you for participating and ask that you please disconnect your lines.

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