Good morning. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Summit Midstream Partners fourth quarter 2022 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during this session, you'll need to press star one one on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please be advised today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Randall Burton. Please go ahead.
Thanks, operator, and good morning, everyone. If you don't already have a copy of our earnings release, please visit our website at www.summitmidstream.com, where you'll find it on the homepage, Events and Presentation section or Quarterly Results section. With me today to discuss our fourth quarter of 2022 financial and operating results is Heath Deneke, our President, Chief Executive Officer, and Chairman, Bill Mault, our Chief Financial Officer, along with other members of our senior management team. Before we start, I'd like to remind you that our discussion today may contain forward-looking statements. These statements may include, but are not limited to, our estimates of future volumes, operating expenses, and capital expenditures. They may also include statements concerning anticipated cash flow, liquidity, business strategy, and other plans and objectives for future operations.
Although we believe that the expectations reflected in such forward-looking statements are reasonable, we can provide no assurance that such expectations will prove to be correct. Please see our 2021 annual report on Form 10-K, which was filed with the SEC on February 28, 2022, our 2022 annual report on Form 10-K, which will be filed soon, as well as our other SEC filings for a listing of factors that could cause actual results to defer materially from expected results. Please also note that on this call we use the terms EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA, distributable cash flow, and free cash flow. These are non-GAAP financial measures, and we have provided reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measures in our most recent earnings release. With that, I'll turn the call over to Heath.
Great. All right. Thank you, Randall, and good morning, everyone. I'm gonna start the call with a recap of key highlights on Summit Midstream's performance and major accomplishments during 2022, and then set the stage for what we think is a very exciting outlook for 2023, which is expected to generate 40% or more year-over-year Adjusted EBITDA growth. I'll hand the call over to Bill Mault to provide more details on our fourth quarter segment results, as well as additional details on our 2023 financial guidance. Starting with our 2022 financial results, we generated $212.3 million of Adjusted EBITDA for the year, which exceeded the midpoint of our original guidance range.
As Bill will elaborate further on in the call, our fourth quarter results were negatively impacted by approximately $4 million of one-time adjustments, for compensation-related expenses and some production shut-ins that were caused by extreme weather along the Front Range in December. Otherwise, we should have come in closer to the top end of our guidance range. On the strategic front, Summit made a tremendous amount of progress executing on our plans to high grade our portfolio of assets, generates, and generate scale in a balance sheet enhancing manner. During the year, we sold our underperforming Lane G&P system and Bison Gas system for approximately 15x LTM EBITDA multiple, which generated about $115 million of cash proceeds.
We utilized those proceeds along with a well-executed $85 million second lien tack on financing, which by the way was executed in a very challenging high yield market. We used those proceeds to help fund two synergistic and value accretive bolt-on acquisitions around our Hereford DJ system. Closing four separate A&D transactions over roughly a six-month period is no small task, I wanted to recognize and thank all of the Summit employees for their extraordinary efforts and accomplishments to not only close the deals, but also superbly manage a safe, smooth transition and integration of the assets employees into our operations. I'm pleased to report that within two months from closing the DJ transactions, we're now fully running a fully integrated super system in the DJ Basin, which is driving a lot of growth in our 2023 outlook.
We also launched our first fulsome ESG annual report in the second quarter, which has been very well received by our employees and stakeholders. We also set up a new group that we refer to internally as Summit Climate Solutions, which is focused on energy transition and emission reduction opportunities in the U.S. Our BD and commercial team originated several new commercial opportunities and contracts around our existing footprint to really help expand our dedicated inventory and acreage around our footprint. Our EC&O team has stepped up in a big way to really help plan for a busy year with more than 300 new wells that are slated to come online during 2023, and roughly about two-thirds of which are actually scheduled to come online during the first half of the year.
That's on top of connecting roughly 50 new wells during the fourth quarter of 2022. Look, it's been a very busy year, a very productive year for Summit and our employees for sure. Let's shift gears now to our 2023 outlook. Earlier this morning, we announced full year 2023 Adjusted EBITDA guidance of $290 million-$320 million, which at the midpoint represents again over 40% year-over-year growth on an absolute basis and approximately 15% growth after you normalize for the 2022 acquisitions and divestitures.
With more than 350 new well connects on our producer schedules this year, 2023 is shaping up to be a year that is much more in line with our historical levels of activities on our systems versus what we have experienced and frankly endured over the past couple of years during the pandemic. There are currently 12 active rigs running on our system as we speak, and we already have roughly 235 DUCs, drilled but uncomplete wells in our inventory across our footprint. While crude prices have held out relatively well in the upper $70+ levels, we're very mindful that gas prices have declined by more than 45% since October. Therefore, we have really intensified our efforts to update and reconfirm all of our producer plans, particularly those in our gas-weighted basins.
As always, our producer plans can and do change at times throughout the year, but our well counts and the turn-in-line dates and schedules reflect real-time feedback from each of our producers. We have taken steps to further risk those plans in the 2023 guidance range that we have provided. If our producers hit their current turn-in-line dates and production targets, we expect to be at the high end of our Adjusted EBITDA guidance range. The low end of our range reflects roughly a 20% reduction in planned well connects, and we have further risked the timing of wells that are slated to come online in the second quarter and beyond. As always, we'll continue to monitor customer activity, and we'll provide updates as we progress throughout the year.
While we're certainly seeing the ramp-up in activity levels and volumes, we continue to benefit from the fact that our systems are largely built out and have plenty of available capacity to handle the anticipated volume growth. For our 2023 capital guidance, ranges from $45 million-$65 million this year, including maintenance, and that also reflects $10 million-$15 million of one-time expenditures to kind of fully integrate and optimize, the, Hereford, Outrigger DJ and Sterling DJ systems in the DJ. Moving to the balance sheet, which remains at the top of our priority list, we expect to generate between $100 million-$130 million of free cash flow that's available for debt paydown, within our range.
At the midpoint of the range, we expect total leverage at year-end to be around 4.35 times, which keeps us on track to achieve our long-term target leverage ratio of 3.5 times or less by the year-end of 2024. Before I turn over the call to Bill, I wanted to spend a minute on Double E and other strategic objectives for Summit in 2023. As we've been discussing, fundamentals in New Mexico continue to support further commercialization of our Double E pipeline system. As you all know, New Mexico has been extremely active with over 100 rigs running for several quarters now, which we continue to believe will lead to residue gas pipeline constraints as early as late 2023, early 2024.
Summit continues to progress and gain traction on commercial discussions with various customers along the pipeline system. We remain optimistic that we'll be successful in securing new FT commitments to fill up our existing capacity, which would have a very meaningful impact starting in 2024 and beyond. On the M&A front, while we will continue to opportunistically evaluate both value and credit accretive bolt-ons as well as non-core divestitures that, you know, could further accelerate delevering and improve our credit metrics. You know, our focus is on executing and optimizing our existing business and the footprint that we have. Fully capturing the synergies and the opportunity set around our newly acquired DJ assets and building liquidity while we maximize debt paydown throughout the year.
With that, I'll hand it over to Bill and to provide additional details on our financial results and 2023 guidance. Bill?
Thanks, Heath. Good morning, everyone. As Heath mentioned, we had a great year and are extremely excited about how 2023 is shaping up. I'll start by discussing our financial performance, followed by providing a bit more color on our 2023 guidance. Summit reported a fourth quarter net loss of $23.9 million, Adjusted EBITDA of $50.3 million, resulting in full year 2022 Adjusted EBITDA of $212.3 million above the midpoint of our original guidance range and free cash flow of over $70 million for the year. There were approximately $4 million of weather and unusual compensation related expenses incurred during the quarter. Obviously, there is a bit of noise going on in the fourth quarter, given we sold Bison in September of 2022 and closed on the DJ acquisitions on December 1st.
If we'd owned the DJ businesses for the full fourth quarter, we estimate we would have generated an additional $8 million of Adjusted EBITDA. We want to provide some clarity, as we know a lot of our investors look at run rate EBITDA. At $50 million of as reported, plus $4 million of weather and unusual expenses, plus another $8 million for a full quarter's contribution of DJ acquisitions, that would suggest a run rate EBITDA closer to $62 million for the fourth quarter, providing a little bit more context for everyone as we look forward into 2023. Capital expenditures totaled $10.6 million for the quarter and $31.5 million for the full year 2022.
With respect to SMLP's balance sheet, we had approximately $330 million outstanding under our $400 million ABL credit facility, and just over $11 million of unrestricted cash on hand. Our available borrowing capacity at the end of the fourth quarter totals approximately $64.1 million, which included $5.9 million of LCs. Given the DJ Basin acquisitions in the fourth quarter, we should see that ABL balance continue to reduce throughout the course of the year. Turning to the segments.
In the Northeast, which is inclusive of our SMU system, our proportionate share of Ohio Gathering Joint Venture and our Marcellus system. The segment averaged 1.35 BCF per day during the quarter, which is inclusive of $754 million a day of 8/8ths OGC volumes, and segment Adjusted EBITDA totaled $19.1 million, a slight decrease of $0.3 million from the third quarter of 2022. The variance was largely due to natural declines on wells on the system, partially offset by higher margin mix behind our OGC joint venture and 14 new wells brought online during the quarter, of which 6 were connected behind our wholly owned Utica system and the remainder behind OGC.
There are currently four rigs running behind our system, two behind our wholly owned SMU system, and more than 40 docks behind the OGC and SMU and Mountaineer systems. The Rockies segment, which is inclusive of our DJ and Williston Basin systems, generated Adjusted EBITDA of $13.8 million, which was down by $0.4 million relative to the third quarter, largely due to a winter storm in December that caused several days of outages and interruptions in North Dakota and Colorado. We estimate the winter storm negatively impacted gross margin by approximately $1 million during the quarter. Liquids volumes averaged 64,000 barrels a day, a decrease of 2,000 barrels a day, and natural gas volumes averaged 42 million a day, an increase of 24 million cubic feet per day relative to the third quarter.
This was primarily due to the addition of the Outrigger and Sterling assets that closed in December of 2022. The Rockies segment currently has two rigs running behind the systems and more than 150 DUCs, which represents nearly every well connection we are expecting in 2023. On to the Permian Basin segment, which includes our 70% interest in the Double E pipeline. Reported Adjusted EBITDA of $4.2 million was down $0.7 million relative to the third quarter, primarily due to lower volumes on Double E. We believe that the low natural gas prices in Waha were the primary driver for customers diverting some of their volumes off of the Double E to other higher priced end markets during the quarter.
The Piceance segment reported Adjusted EBITDA of $14.7 million, up $0.4 million relative to the third quarter, due primarily to lower operating expenses during the quarter, partially offset by natural production declines and no new wells connected to the system. Volumes averaged 295 million cubic feet per day, a slight decline relative to the third quarter. There's one rig running behind the system today, 17 wells have started coming online here in late February 2023. The Barnett segment reported Adjusted EBITDA of $7.2 million, a decrease of $0.6 million relative to the third quarter, primarily due to lower natural gas sales and an increase in direct operating expenses. Volumes were up 8 million cubic feet per day quarter-over-quarter due to eight new wells connected to the system during the second half of 2022.
There are currently three rigs running and 13 docks behind the system today. With that, I'd like to focus now on our 2023 guidance. To reiterate, a few of Heath's comments, the midpoint of our guidance range risks the timing of well connections relative to what customers provided. The low end risks all of that even further, and the high end assumes customers hit their timing targets. We have 12 rigs behind the system and 235 docks, which represents just over 70% of the expected well connections at the midpoint of the range. In addition, nearly 65% of those well connections are expected in the first half of 2023, which provides great visibility into the level of activity we are expecting.
Breaking the activity down even further, 50% is in crude-oriented areas, 35% is in liquids-rich gas areas, and only 15% is in dry gas areas. We also spent a significant amount of time reviewing customer hedge portfolios and believe a significant portion of 2023 volumes in the Northeast are fairly well hedged. The breadth and diversity of the increase in activity is driving volume and EBITDA in every region behind Summit systems. In the Northeast, we are currently expecting 75-85 well connects in 2023, which is nearly double the 41 well connects in 2022. With that level of activity, along with the significant volume growth we've experienced behind OGC in the third and fourth quarter of 2022, we are expecting more than a 10% increase in volume throughput year-over-year.
As we've mentioned on prior calls, the anchor customer behind our SMU system recently acquired 27,000 net acres in the Utica and is beginning development on that acreage with two rigs running currently. In the Rockies, which compared to last year, the region has seen quite a transformation. Just as a reminder, that segment includes our Williston oil and produced water gathering businesses, the Hereford Gathering and Processing System, and now the recently acquired DJ Basin Gathering and Processing Systems. 2022 included nine months worth of Bison Midstream assets, which we sold in September, and only one month of the DJ acquisitions. We are currently expecting 140-180 well connects in 2023, with 70-80 coming from the Williston, all of which our DUCs are currently being drilled, and the remainder in the DJ.
This level of activity will drive significant volume growth in both liquids and gas volumes in 2023. I'd like to add that we've been extremely encouraged by the commercial discussions we've had in the DJ Basin in the last couple of months. While we haven't included any upside in our guidance range, we do believe there are some near-term opportunities that could provide significant long-term value to our stakeholders. Over to the Piceance, we are expecting 55-70 well connects in 2023, 17 of which have started coming online in February 2023, compared to 0 in 2022. We expect this level of activity will result in flat to modest volume growth and approximately 4% EBITDA growth. Now to the Barnett.
We're expecting 25-30 wells in 2023, which we expect will result in about 15% volume throughput growth from the prior year. There are currently three rigs running and 13 DUCs down the system, and several of these wells are slated to come online in the next few months, with the remainder expected in the second half of the year. While we have seen a sizable decline in expected 2023 natural gas prices over the last couple of months, the level of activity and recent customer conversations continue to suggest that all these wells will turn in line here in 2023. Shifting to the Permian, as Heath mentioned, we remain very optimistic with the long-term outlook for Double E and the commercialization efforts ongoing, and we expect to have some material updates for you all throughout the course of the year.
Finally, I'll spend some time discussing CapEx for the year. We're expecting $35 million-$50 million in growth CapEx for 2023 and $10 million-$15 million in maintenance CapEx. The majority of the growth CapEx for 2023 will be spent in the Rocky segment. In the Williston and DJ, we have a number of pad connects given the increase in well connections expected for the year. Additionally, in the DJ Basin, we have some additional integration work that we will continue to optimize those systems beyond what's already operational today. This represents approximately $10 million-$15 million of our 2023 capital plan. With $290 million-$320 million of expected Adjusted EBITDA and $45 million-$65 million of capital expenditures, we expect significant debt paydown throughout the course of the year.
With that, I'll turn the call back over to Heath for closing remarks.
Great. All right. Thanks, Bill. You know, as we discussed on the call today, we're obviously very pleased with the progress that we made in 2022, and we're really excited about the outlook and opportunity set for Summit in 2023 and beyond. We're laser focused on maximizing free cash flow in the business, fully commercializing our recently acquired DJ Basin businesses, as well as our Double E systems, and we're also focused on paying down debt and driving leverage to below 4.5 times by year-end. We thank you for your time and continued support. With that, operator, I'd like to open the call up for questions.
Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone. Please wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, you may press star one one again. One moment while we compile our Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of Gregg Brody with Bank of America. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Good morning, guys. Appreciate all the very thoughtful throughput and well count forecasting that to help us think through what's happening. Maybe just to start on the Permian. You said you're thinking about we should expect to hear some announcements this year. How do you see the pipe filling up in your view? Could we see some additional volumes this year, and it's not in the guidance or is that likely a 2024 event?
Yeah. I mean, I think hi, Gregg, it's Heath. I think we'll see some volume growth throughout the year on Double E. I think what we're stating is that a lot of the conversations we're having about starting up new contracts, you know, is probably gonna be more impactful in a, you know, 2024, 2025 time period than in 2023.
That's what I heard, so that's helpful. Just turning to the balance sheet. I know you're planning on paying down debt. I know there's a special provision that you have to make an offer to the second lien there, I believe by in April. Could you just remind us how that works and then what you'll do with that cash if the bonds if it's not accepted? If the offer is not accepted.
Yeah. Bill, you wanna take that one? Yeah.
Yeah. Gregg, hey. Good morning, and thanks for joining. Gregg, given the DJ Basin acquisitions, we actually utilized all our free cash flow in 2022, you all should expect, you know, a 50 basis point step up here in April. As we look at 2023 and the cash flow profile for the year, as a reminder, if we get to then $100 million of cumulative offers by the end of 2023, that interest rate will step back down to the 8.5%. You know, this was a fairly conscious decision, obviously, when we made the decision to acquire the DJ Basin assets, you know, it's call it another $3.5 million-$4 million of incremental interest expense for 2023.
Am I correct that the 23 offers wouldn't be made until 24, though?
Yeah, that's right. Yeah. Yep. Basically after we file our 10-K, we've got a handful of days to make notification to the extent there's cash flow available for sweep. I think the actual process of making those offers probably takes up to 30 days. You're looking some time in kind of March, April timeframe.
Got it. For now, the assumption is a 50 basis point step up for a year, and next year...
You got it.
Got it. Just the last one, going back to volumes. I appreciate in the Northeast, you've, you know, the hedging profiles of your customers. How do you think about 2024? I know it's a little early to do that, but maybe you can create a frame, just sort of frame that for us in terms of risk to volumes.
I think for 2024, look, I mean, we're certainly seeing the impact on the gas strip here. I think a lot of it is due to just the abnormally warm weather, certainly in the Northeast and most of the U.S. I actually feel like, you know, if we continue to see these sustained, you know, low gas prices, I think that could probably start adversely impacting 2024. You know, I feel like that we're gonna see some normalization and hopefully some more normal-like weather this upcoming winter that, you know, kind of continues to support the trajectory that we're on.
Yeah. Greg, I'd just add too that, you know, while we're seeing some decent growth behind our footprint, when we look at kind of the aggregate level of activity of our key customers, this isn't necessarily suggesting growth from their perspective. Probably more maintenance related activity levels. When you look at the Utica in general over the past, call it three years, rig counts have been actually fairly steady. You didn't see kind of that dramatic increase in rig count like you did in the Haynesville. A lot of these producers are really just kinda keeping volumes in maintenance mode.
I think this year is a little bit of a tailwind for Summit that more of that activity is hitting our systems than some of our competitors from a midstream perspective over the past couple years.
I think that's consistent with we see considering we cover a lot of those Northeast guys on the E&P side. I'm curious about maybe in your other basins, what are you seeing there for 24? What do you think?
Yeah.
What do you think about it?
Yeah, I mean, it's hard to speculate on now. Again, I think in a, you know, $3 plus gas price environment, I would expect to see the, you know, the programs that our customers, for example, in the Piceance are working on. You know, they're getting... I think we have over 200 wells that are in the process of getting permitted, and, you know, we're working with them on the infrastructure to be able to, you know, connect and flow those wells. You know, in our 2023 guidance, we have shifted some of those volumes and well connect activity out and some have, we've actually kind of moved it, would likely go back into 2024.
We try to reflect that, you know, a bit in 23, but, like I said, I think it's really just gonna depend on, you know, longer term, do we start seeing a little bit more recovery in the gas price depth than what we're seeing here in 23.
I appreciate the...
Yeah. In the Barnett. Yeah, Gregg, in the Barnett too, we've got, you know, Total is one of our large customers. We've got a private equity backed, customer out there. You know, Total has various uses for that gas, whether it's on the electric generation side or LNG exports. I think there's a little bit of different equation for a producer like that. Again, I think in a $3-plus environment, given the proximity to Barnett kind of basis differentials in that area, you know, we think that will continue to support activity. You know, I think, as Heath mentioned, where we're seeing prices today is a bit of anomaly given, you know, how warm of a winter we had.
Great. Last... I appreciate that, and I know it's very early, but appreciate your perspective. Just last one. M&A, can you talk about the opportunity set? Do you think there's a lot to do? You alluded to it in your press release. Maybe you can give a little color around that.
Yeah. I mean, look, it's clearly not our focus in 2023. We do see a fair amount of good opportunities like we did, you know, with the Sterling and Outrigger systems. There's more of that around our footprint. But, you know, the focal point here is to continue to build liquidity and, you know, reach our target debt level. You know, with that being priority number 1, you know, yeah, if we can, you know, execute on a deal that improves our credit metrics and, you know, or a divestiture that we could sell and accelerate de-levering, you know, in a non-core system, we'll certainly continue to look at those things.
You know, I don't think our intent today, or at least what we're staring at today, we kinda feel like we've got a really solid portfolio. We've got a lot of activity. We're seeing a fair amount of or a lot of growth actually this year on system. Our focus is really just capturing, you know, as much, you know, just ensuring that we execute this year and that we, you know, maximize all the volumes and optimize those assets and really kinda get our debt pay down that we're targeting here. That's the focal point.
longer term and, you know, certainly as we look out, you know, and, you know, once we get to our, you know, levels, we definitely see quite a few systems that, you know, fit really well, that we think we can buy at a good valuation, and that, you know, long term, we can continue to kinda consolidate in and around our footprint. Just not a priority for us in 23.
Thank you for the time, guys.
You bet.
Thanks.
Thank you. This does conclude today's question and answer session. Ladies and gentlemen, this does also conclude today's conference call. Thank you for participating, and you may now disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.