Hello, thank you for standing by. My name is Regina, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Riley Exploration Permian Inc. Fourth Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. I would now like to turn the conference over to Philip Riley, CFO. Please go ahead.
Thank you, and good morning to everyone. Welcome to our conference call covering the fourth quarter and full year 2022 results. Yesterday, the company published a number of items which can be found on our website under the Investors section. An earnings release, a 10-K, supplemental info on non-GAAP measures, and two presentations. One presentation provides an update for fourth quarter and its full year results, with the second providing an overview of our company's story. Participating on the call today are Bobby Riley, Chairman and CEO, Kevin Riley, President, and myself, Philip Riley, CFO, and EVP of Strategy. Today's conference call contains certain projections and other forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in these statements. We will also reference certain non-GAAP measures.
Reconciliations to the appropriate GAAP measures can be found in our supplemental disclosure on our website. I'll now turn the call over to Bobby.
Thank you, Philip. Thank you again to everyone for joining us on today's call. Yesterday, after the close of the market, we announced the results of our fourth quarter and full year 2022. I'm pleased to report that 2022 was another outstanding year for Riley Permian, with performance continuing to be strong through the fourth quarter. Before we move on to the results, I'd like to take a moment to recognize the outstanding efforts of the entire REPX team. It is through their hard work, dedication, and expertise that we were able to achieve the strong operational and financial results that we are reporting today.
From our operations team who worked tirelessly to optimize production and reduce costs to our finance and accounting teams who ensured that we remain financially disciplined and focused on delivering value to our shareholders, every member of the team played a critical role in our success. Your commitment to excellence and your passion for our business is what makes Riley Permian such a great company, and I am honored to work alongside you. Let's turn to the results for the year. We have worked tirelessly throughout the year to optimize our core business and execute on a variety of growth initiatives. Most significantly, we recently announced that we have entered into a purchase and sale agreement to acquire oil and gas assets in the Yeso Trend of New Mexico.
As we continue to work towards closing the acquisition, our team is already hard at work developing plans to integrate these assets into our existing operations. We are confident that we can achieve a seamless transition that maximizes the potential of these underdeveloped assets. We look forward to updating our shareholders on our progress as we move towards closing the transaction early in the second quarter. In 2022, Riley Permian delivered strong financial and operating results. To highlight just a few of the full year items, we increased our net oil production by 31% year-over-year to 8.8 MBo per day, and total net equivalent production by 25% year-over-year to 11.5 MBoe per day.
We generated $176 million of adjusted EBITDAX, $170 million of operating cash flow from continuing operations, and $56 million of free cash flow. We continue to invest in our business with total cash capital expenditures before acquisitions of $113 million, corresponding to a reinvestment rate of 66% of operating cash flow from continuing operations, down from 88% in 2021. We remain committed to returning value to our shareholders, paying $25 million in dividends during the year, corresponding to 44% of free cash flow. We have now paid dividends for 16 consecutive quarters. Overall, we are proud of our financial and operating results in 2022 and believe they reflect the strength of our assets and the dedication of our team.
We remain focused on creating long-term value for our shareholders and delivering sustainable growth for years to come. I will now turn the call over to Kevin to discuss operational results and give more details on the acquisition.
Thank you, Bobby, and good morning to everyone. I echo Bobby's sentiment as we are proud of our team's dedication and resilience, which enabled us to overcome inflationary pressures and shortages of material, equipment, and labor to deliver outstanding results. Before we dive into our exciting new initiatives, I want to take a moment to highlight a few of the accomplishments we achieved in executing our plan during 2022. First, we maintained our momentum through the fourth quarter with production growing from 12.7- 13.3 MBoe/d in the fourth quarter, representing a 4% increase quarter-over-quarter.
On a full year basis, we grew our year-over-year average production from 9.2- 11.5 MBoe/d , which is a 25% increase. This growth was all achieved organically with the 15 gross 11.8 net wells brought online during the year. In addition, our lease operating expenses were $8.8 million, or $7.16 per BOE for the three months ended December 31, and $32.5 million or $7.73 per BOE for the year ended December 31. This represents a 5% decrease quarter-over-quarter and a 5% increase year-over-year. Regarding our EOR pilot, we continue to inject water and CO2. We are still early in the process of repressurizing the reservoir.
Now let's turn our attention to some of the exciting new initiatives we have planned for 2023 and beyond. On February 28th, we announced we have entered into a purchase and sale agreement to acquire the oil and gas assets of Pecos Oil & Gas, LLC in Eddy County, New Mexico. These assets are focused on the development of the Yeso trend of the Northwest Shelf. The Yeso trend and Riley Permian's existing core assets focused on the San Andres share several similarities in geology, reservoir type, and drilling, completion, and production techniques. Though this asset will boost Riley Permian's production near term, we believe this is an underdeveloped asset with extensive development potential, allowing for value creation through the drill bit. In addition, acquiring the assets adds a new area to Riley's operating footprint, diversifying the company's portfolio and reducing similarity area concentration risk.
Lastly, no less important, on March 2nd, we announced we have formed a joint venture that will own and operate on-site power generation for Yoakum County, Texas assets. The first phase of the project will provide 10 MW of on-site power generation and is expected to be operational by June 2023. We believe initiatives like this further differentiate us from our peers, as it will not only provide us with more control over long-term energy cost, power supply, and reliability, but also help us reduce carbon emissions by utilizing gas that may otherwise be flared to power operations. At this point, I'll now turn the call over to Philip to review our financial results.
Thank you, Kevin. For the quarter, total revenue net of derivative settlement losses was approximately $64 million, or $7 million and 10% below the third quarter, driven primarily by 13% lower realized oil prices and partially offset by higher production and lower derivative settlements. Cash costs were approximately $3 million, or 15% lower quarter-over-quarter, despite higher volumes. On a per BOE basis, cash costs were 19% lower quarter-over-quarter. The combination of these factors in turn drove a 12% decrease quarter-over-quarter in cash flow from operations before changes in working capital from $50 million to $44 million, which you can see visually in the chart on slide four of our fourth quarter results presentation.
For the full year, our cash flow from operations before working capital increased 89% year-over-year from $89 million to $169 million. This is driven by a combination of higher volumes and price. I'll offer some comments on capital allocation, referencing slide five of the same deck. First, we grew volumes materially more in 2022 than in 2021, while reinvesting a lower amount of cash flow. Very few companies out there grew more than low double digits, and we grew by 30%. In 2022, we allocated 2/3 of cash flow to cash CapEx, down materially from 88% in 2021. The lower reinvestment allowed us to allocate more to dividends in the balance sheet.
Total dividends paid were up 22% versus 2021. We paid debt down by 14%, with a small increase in the fourth quarter for several large surface land positions we acquired. Operating cash flow growth more than offset CapEx increases for net benefit increase free cash flow of more than 6x year-over-year. Okay, let's talk about forward guidance. In both the earnings release and the results update presentation, you'll find summary tables of our guidance, including for both the first quarter and the full year. Our New Mexico acquisition is scheduled to close at the beginning of the second quarter. The first quarter represents standalone legacy production and cash flows. We have a January 1 effective date with the acquisition. The cash flows between January 1 and closing will represent a forecasted downward adjustment to purchase price.
The acquisition production and cash flow is captured effectively for the second quarter through fourth quarter for 75% of the full year. We've included a column at far right for illustrative pro forma at 100% contribution, as if the acquisition hypothetically closed January 1. This offers you an idea of the run rate production metrics. Starting with oil production. You'll see we're guiding roughly 10,000 barrels a day for the first quarter, flat with fourth quarter. We only brought online one well in the fourth quarter. We have a large amount of activity occurring now with wells coming on now and into the second quarter. We see a bigger bump to legacy production in the second quarter, then declining modestly in the third or fourth quarters.
For the year, maybe it's a bit over 10,000 barrels a day average, which would represent 15% year-over-year growth from the 8,800 barrels a day in 2022. Some good organic growth before accounting for the acquisition. Looking at the New Mexico acquisition production, we won't take over the asset until second quarter. With just a modest delay there to get development started, second quarter production could decline just a bit. The growth would come in the third and fourth quarter following a mid-year development, hopefully exiting the year at a higher rate, but averaging overall for the year something closer to the current level of a bit over 4,000 barrels a day. Combining the two legacy and acquisition, the development growth profiles and timing could complement each other well.
Comparing to 2022, we see full year 2023 total BOE production but growing by more than 60% or on the illustrative pro forma run rate basis by nearly 80%. A few words on investing. For the legacy assets, it's very much weighted to the first half of the year, even the first quarter, with roughly 30% of total combined investment for 2023 occurring in the first quarter. This could lead to a modest amount of outspend on a free cash flow basis in the first quarter, but something we encourage you to look beyond for the full year view. This is a function of honoring some rig and other service commitments we've made to secure those offerings.
For the year, we've got a fair amount allocated for gas and power infrastructure, not directly related to the power JV, and investment in the EOR pilot, which was delayed from the fourth quarter. We forecast ramping the acquisition CapEx starting in the second and third quarters. Separate from the NP CapEx, we're forecasting investing approximately $10 million-$15 million into our power JV, which could flex based on speed of development there. For the full year, we're seeing our overall reinvestment rate, at least when compared to adjusted EBITDAX, decline even further from last year while still achieving this impressive volume growth. Lastly, a huge thank you to our team for another year of strong performance and for your efforts across the various new ventures and acquisitions we've been pursuing. Thank you to our board and our shareholders for your continued support.
I'll turn it back to Bobby for closing comments.
Thank you, Philip. Again, thank you for your support. We remain focused on driving profitable growth and investing in our business for the long term. Operator, you may now open it up for questions. Thank you all for joining us today.
At this time, if you'd like to ask a question, simply press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. Our first question will come from the line of Neal Dingmann with Truist Securities. Please go ahead.
Morning, all. Thanks for the time. My first question is on operations. It might be a little early for this, but just wanted to ask what your thoughts are. The Pecos assets look quite good to us. I'm just wondering, do you know, it looks like you're talking about an early second quarter close. How quickly would those assets compete against others like even you know, I know Philip, you talked about sort of potential cadence going forward here for the first half or better part of this year. I'm just wondering, does that include or some wells, some of the assets immediately competing in there?
Yes, this is Kevin, Neal. We do anticipate starting operations in mid-April. We are currently working with the operator, who we will have a transition services agreement with to prepare for those operations to start. With that, we anticipate bringing on new production hopefully by early to mid-summer.
Got it. Okay. That's what I like to hear. Then, Phil, just on that same vein, just could you maybe hit on inflation costs, what you're seeing today? Are things mitigating a bit or just? Or maybe, I'm sorry, Kevin, for you maybe, what are prices doing on the upside on the inflation side?
We started to see prices maybe start to come down a little bit. Nothing too material yet, but we do believe that adding this acquisition will give us some economies of scale that we can hopefully start to drive more efficiencies and bring costs down outside of other inflationary cost increases.
Okay, good to hear. Last if I could ask one last one, just Philip, you didn't say anything. I think you did a little bit last quarter call just on the CCUS. I don't know if you continue to have some conversations, just if you could give a little color, just anything, potential going on on that side?
Yeah, sure. We put a comment there in both the earnings release and presentation that we are working with partners in advancing a project for what we consider a large-scale storage hub in our region. We're not giving too many details about that, but what I can say is we're working with people in the mix, working to do something that's most efficient with our shareholders' capital. That includes using other people's money. Frankly, we're looking up and down the spectrum on both the capture and then the storage part, but obviously our area of core expertise is gonna be the storage.
Hopefully you can understand we've had a few other things going on on some priorities, but that's something that's, you know, near and dear to our hearts, and we're working on it and, we're gonna keep pushing forward there.
No, just glad to hear it's progressing along. Thank you all.
Your next question will come from the line of John White with ROTH MKM Capital. Please go ahead.
Good morning, congratulations on the strong results. I wanted to follow up on Neal's question on the CO2 project. Are you at a point in any of the negotiations where you could point us to a potential timeframe for closing a deal with somebody or several parties?
Well, John, I appreciate the question. You know, one of the counterparties we're dealing with is a, you know, a large, slow-moving organization that has a very large balance sheet, without giving too much away there. We're cognizant of the pace that they move at. You know, the other thing is, you know, the definition of what do you consider closing, you know, a scoping project versus an FID or such. I'm hoping that we can, you know, we can share something with you here at least, as far as certain, you know, applications and so forth. We are getting the asset ready. We've taken certain moves to further, I guess, the positioning.
There's different philosophies on how to sequence those different steps for all the different, you know, permits and needs there. We've done certain of those, and then I think we'll be in better position to share more with you come midyear.
I understand the position you're in and appreciate the, a little bit of additional detail. Thank you. On the CapEx split between New Mexico and Texas, it looks like you carefully designed the program to do all In first quarter, all drilling will be in Yoakum County, and that's, of course, to account for the closing date of the New Mexico deal. I have to think it's also to give your technical team some time to do further detailed work, subsurface work on the New Mexico assets. Is that correct?
Yeah, that's a fair way to put it, John. As we said, it complements each other there, the way that those overlap. It's kind of when I why I went into that extended description of how they tie in there. Let me just give a little bit more color there. You know, we're not giving totally explicit or disaggregated CapEx. If you look at it, you know, on a legacy basis, we're actually down year-over-year, basically flat to a little bit down. I challenge you to find many other companies that are growing or forecasting to grow at the level we are with CapEx being down. Some of that is because last year was a little bit higher with more EOR pilot project spend.
You know, either way, that's a bit lower. We've got, you know, a decent amount for the acquisition CapEx there. There's a couple ways you can back into that, including from the data we gave you in the press release. That's, you know, basically reinvesting about half of the EBITDAX we see there from that asset. Like I said, that'll be more in the middle of the year with the way Kevin described that coming on by summer. For the overall year, we see the reinvestment rate declining yet again. Bobby described in his opening remarks, and we've got there on our slide, how our reinvestment rate from cash flow went from 88% to 66%. We see that getting down even lower.
I think that's pretty exciting. You know, there's been maybe a little bit of confusion. I recognize it's hard to forecast the coming year before we even give guidance and with an acquisition. Overall, we see that exciting for those dual components of the legacy CapEx being down and then the really efficient CapEx on the new acquisition.
Hey, that's great additional detail, and thank you for it, and I'll respectfully decline to accept your challenge, because I know you know your numbers. Can you refresh me one last time on the completed well costs for the New Mexico assets? I'm sorry, the line's breaking up.
Currently, the costs are between [audio distortion] , which is closely mirrored by the costs on that asset.
All right. Thanks very much, and I'll pass it back to the operator.
Once again, for any questions, please press star one on your telephone keypad. Our next question will come from the line of Jeff Robertson with Water Tower Research. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning. On the Yeso assets, can you talk a little bit about any infrastructure issues that you'll have to deal with as you start your development plan?
Currently for a couple of years horizontally. We've got 15 wells, so they involve multiple disposal. We have approximately 70 miles of gathering line. There's plenty of oil and natural gas infrastructure that's currently in place. Outside of laying the small lines that connect to new facilities or new pad sites, we don't anticipate any large infrastructure CapEx in the foreseeable future.
Kevin, I couldn't hear the first part of your response. Are there any takeaway constraints or anything like that that affects that area or those, the assets in that area?
No, there are not. I'm sorry about the connection, but we do not have any takeaway constraints at this point in that area.
Okay. Are there incremental-
Jeff, this is Phil. I'm sorry to interrupt. I'd just add to that. you know, we're excited. It's actually a less remote area, the Eddy County area, as we surely know, than where we are in Yoakum. So we have quite a few options, actually, more than one midstream provider. So that provides a little bit of competition. We like what we see out there with lots of different options.
Philip, do you have some flexibility with the midstream contracts you will inherit to do anything that might be able to maximize economics versus what the prior operators were doing?
I think we do over the medium term, not immediately out of the gate. Yes is the, yes is the short answer.
Question on the power project that the first phase is due in, I think in middle of this year in June, the second phase late this year, early next. Can you talk about what impact that might have on either just your operating efficiency in Yoakum County and/or your operating costs?
At a high level, we are doing this first and foremost just to improve operational quality. You know, what you may see from the public point of view may not be quite so visible, but we can assure you that it is meaningful to us behind. You know, the power we've got fluctuating power quality, dirty power that affects everything from line pressures to, you know, you've got something and you've got an outage and an ESP, electric submersible pump. You, if you lose it drops, it ends up being a costly workover. It really ripples throughout the operations there.
We hope that improves just overall oil production, which at the end of the day, you know, more than anything else, every barrel we can produce more makes the biggest impact to our business. At the same time, the second tenet, I guess, would be cost, controlling cost. I don't know that we're out of the gate gonna drop costs so much as what we see is hopefully controlling the cost increases going forward. You know, clearly it's been a very volatile time for natural gas pricing. We're in a lower environment, vastly lower environment now than we were, you know, last year. On the margin, you know, we certainly see volatility increasing or continuing. Prices, we certainly see a scenario where gas prices could be high again.
We have an increasingly intermittent grid, but with gas price often influencing obviously power prices in our region. On the whole, we're hoping to kind of control those costs. We've got an increasing load with our continued growth out there. With some compressors, we're gonna be starting here in the spring with the EOR project that increases the power load. Overall, we saw that as an exciting opportunity. Lastly, you know, it's very important to us to control the flaring, and for the most part, that's out of our control, based on midstream capacity. Where we could, we like to be able to control that, and this is an exciting way to take that otherwise flared gas and create something useful with it.
The power project will allow you to displace compressors in the field, which ultimately kind of be positive from a cost standpoint?
No, to clarify there, the power project will provide electrical power to the compressors that will run on electricity. So you're instead of necessarily pulling it from the grid, you're pulling it from our on-site power generation. Now, we will have, backup capacity from the grid that we can pull from and, you know, for overall, you know, operational redundancy.
Is having the more reliable source of power, is there a greater premium on that aspect of operations as you move into the EOR project?
I think that's fair. Yeah. In general, you know, the overall load is increasing, and I think that's a fair way to put it.
Okay.
For the most part, it's, you know, we have a large field. The pilot is, you know, one small part of it in a section and lots of different places that we need and use power.
Thank you.
Your next question will come from the line of David Derrick with Derrick & Companies . Please go ahead.
Good morning, guys, congratulations on having quite a productive year and some real interesting projects coming up. I've got really three questions. One addresses if you could elaborate on the response you're seeing so far on the water and CO2 injection. Secondly, kind of a little unrelated, how do your hedge positions look like on oil going forward? Thirdly, on the electric generation, I think that's a wonderful project. Congratulations on that. I'm wondering if you'll have any excess capacity to sell back into the grid. That's it.
All right. Thank you, David. Yes, sure, we can rip through these. The first question on the EOR, you know, what we'd say is we're early in the life of repressurizing the reservoir. As you may be familiar, EOR projects are very long-term in nature. It takes a lot to repressurize those. We're producing from this field or from this section, including adjacent sections. You've got a little bit of a competition for the depressuring and refreshing there. That's a longer-term deal, and we will be sure to update you when we have something different to say there. Let's see. The second question, I believe, involves selling power back to the grid.
We do have some flexibility there, to take non-dedicated gas and sell back to the grid, to the degree we have excess power. That's certainly a consideration there and some flexibility that, you know, we're happy about. Let's see. The third question. Remind me there.
On your hedge positions for oil.
Right. Hedging, we disclose that both in the appendix of our presentation and in the earnings release. I'd note that there's a slight difference. We show some in the 10-K as of 12/31 and then some more recently. You know, the short answer on hedging is that we are choosing to increase hedge positions as a result of this acquisition, both given that we've agreed to a purchase price and a financing capital structure, and thus we wanna protect some of those cash flows. We will have further covenants for hedging. I can tell you just in general, with a larger debt load, we're gonna be much more amenable to hedging. You know, that said, we're pretty happy with some of the trades we've made so far in the year.
We did a fair amount earlier in January when prices were higher, got a lot of nice collars that allow for protection a little bit below where we are, quite a bit higher including some in the $90 range and such. You know, just to elaborate there, David, just a little bit more on the deleveraging profile that we see with this asset. You know, coming out of the gates, we may be kind of in the neighborhood 1.3, 1.4 times levered. We hope to pay down quite a bit of debt here in the back half of the year. We described first quarter, we have quite a bit of CapEx, may have a slight outspend.
Second quarter, roughly the same, back half really start to pay that down. With that increasing EBITDA, you're gonna see leverage come down. We're hoping to get it down to about one times by the end of the year. That gives us a little bit more flexibility, potentially with hedging, but you can expect that we'll be hedged going forward.
Great. That answers my question. Thanks, guys.
We have a follow-up question from the line of John White with ROTH MKM Capital. Please go ahead.
Thank you, operator. I was gonna ask about power sales to third parties, which was just asked and answered by David. Thank you.
We also have a follow-up question from the line of Jeff Robertson with Water Tower Research. Please go ahead.
Thanks, Kevin. To back up to, I think part of what Neal was asking earlier, can you talk about the flexibility that the New Mexico assets provide in terms of capital allocation and competition for capital between your legacy assets in Texas and now the new operating area?
Sure. Happy to. You know, the term competing for capital, I see that in so many competitors' press releases, and I recognize the concept there. I think we're thrilled the fact that while this does compete for capital, in a lot of ways the asset is very similar. We've got a whole lot of tier one wells that we see as good or some even better than our best over in Yoakum. We're gonna really mix in the allocation there. For the most part, the way we've guided both the activity and the spend in the budget we've just disclosed, it really doesn't stray too much in taking away from the legacy. It's really just added to, Jeff.
We've got a similar amount of wells and frankly, D&C type of investing over on the legacy kind of Yoakum properties, slightly less EOR spend and hence the lower year-over-year effective total spend on the legacy. Whereas the new we're reinvesting roughly half of the asset level EBITDAX. You know, I think it's a really proportionate amount of allocation there. If you think of the acquisition, you know, kind of cost and such as roughly half of where we are, it's really proportionate there.
If there's a right way to think about it, then you have more geographic diversity and a new asset that still, at least the way you initially plan capital, will generate pretty substantial excess cash flow that you can allocate as you see fit.
Yeah, absolutely. We do appreciate the geographic diversity for certain operational constraints we face from time to time, midstream power and such as we described. You know, the differentials are volatile in our industry and our region. You know, I'd say on those, just quick note is those are, for the most part, out of our control, right? We give guidance there mainly for your benefit, but it's not something we control, so lower confidence on those. The appearance of lower differentials there or I guess, higher differentials to the index versus last year is really just a function of kind of fixed fee applying to lower index prices on the gas and the NGL.
The geographic diversity there helps us, you know, we always at least have the ability later in the year, Jeff, to, you know, throttle up or throttle back one area versus the other if we should run into any constraints.
I guess in terms of competing, that ability to flex capital between the area that makes the most sense is what's really important.
Yes, exactly. That's what some other big boy companies have, and it's something that I think we're really gonna benefit from now.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
We have no further questions at this time. Ladies and gentlemen, that will conclude today's meeting. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.