NYSE:AR Antero Resources Q1 2024 Earnings Report $33.17 -0.06 (-0.19%) As of 03:45 PM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Antero Resources EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.03Consensus EPS N/ABeat/MissN/AOne Year Ago EPSN/AAntero Resources Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$1.12 billionExpected Revenue$1.08 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$37.83 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AAntero Resources Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2024Date4/24/2024TimeN/AConference Call DateThursday, April 25, 2024Conference Call Time11:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsAntero Resources' Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Wednesday, April 30, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Thursday, May 1, 2025 at 11:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Antero Resources Q1 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrApril 25, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Greetings, and welcome to the Antero Resources First Quarter 2024 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce Brandon Krueger, Vice President of Finance and Treasurer of Antero Resources and Chief Financial Officer of Antero Midstream. Operator00:00:33Thank you. You may begin. Speaker 100:00:36Good morning. Thank you for joining us for Antero's Q1 2024 investor conference call. We'll spend a few minutes going through the financial and operating highlights and then we'll open it up for Q and A. I would also like to direct you to the homepage of our website atwww.anteroresources.com, where we have provided a separate earnings call presentation that will be reviewed during today's call. Today's call may contain certain non GAAP financial measures. Speaker 100:01:03Please refer to our earnings press release for important disclosures regarding such measures, including reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP financial measures. Joining me on the call today are Paul Rady, Chairman, CEO and President Michael Kennedy, CFO Dave Cannelongo, Senior Vice President of Liquids Marketing and Transportation and Justin Fowler, Senior Vice President of Natural Gas Marketing. I will now turn the call over to Paul. Speaker 200:01:33Thank you, Brendan. Good morning, everyone. I'll start my comments on Slide number 3 titled Drilling and Completion Efficiencies. As I started my comments off last quarter, the year 2023 was a transformational year for Antero for operational efficiency gains. This year 2024 continues that trend. Speaker 200:01:58Starting with the chart on the top left hand side of the slide, days per 10,000 lateral feet drilled averaged 5.4 days during the first quarter down from 5.5 days in 2023. On the completion side, we averaged a quarterly record of 11.3 stages per day during the Q1, an increase from the pace in 2023 of just under 11 stages day. These operational improvements result in shorter cycle times as shown on the bottom of the page. Our year to date cycle time per pad is currently trending ahead of last year's 2023 average. There are many inputs that lead to these operational improvements as every single line item gets examined by our team. Speaker 200:02:50However, the most impactful change in 2024 has been improved efficiency in zipper swaps that allows us to move from well to well on a pad without having any true downtime. We estimate that this new completion technology will save more than an hour of pumping time each day and will result in further increases in completion times. Our operations also benefit from Antero Midstream's water infrastructure providing industry leading water deliverability rates for our completions. Avoiding the use of water trucks significantly reduces at site congestion that we would otherwise get from water and sand trucks accessing the FAD something that many of our peers have to contend with. Now let's look at how these improvements led to our peer leading capital efficiency. Speaker 200:03:49The chart on Slide number 4 compares capital efficiency of the natural gas peer group. Put simply, this is the amount of capital required to achieve a maintenance level of production. Antero has the lowest capital per Mcf equivalent of its peer group at just $0.55 per Mcfe. This is 40% below the peer average of $0.90 per Mcfe. Our best in class operating efficiency combined with significant liquids exposure led to positive free cash flow during the Q1 and is expected to generate free cash flow for the full year. Speaker 200:04:29Now to touch on the current liquids and natural gas liquids or NGL fundamentals, I will turn it over to our Senior Vice President of Liquids Marketing and Transportation, Dave Cannelongo for his comments. Speaker 300:04:44Thanks, Paul. The start of 2024 demonstrated improved fundamentals for liquids. Ongoing geopolitical tension particularly in the Middle East has increased the risk premium on crude pricing in 2024 year to date. Internationally, the canal related challenges seen last year have diminished but global geopolitical tensions remain high. On the domestic front record propane demand occurred simultaneously with significant January freeze offs drawing down storage and resulting in upward pressure on propane prices. Speaker 300:05:20Propane as a percentage of WTI has averaged 44% since the start of this year compared with 36 driven by growing global demand. This year China PDH build out continues to progress with 3 new facilities placed in service in the Q1 and another 3 expected to start up there in the second quarter totaling nearly 170,000 barrels per day of capacity additions in the first half of 2024. At the same time, propane exports have averaged 1,800,000 barrels per day in 2024 year to date, an increase of 14% over the average in 2023. Notably, propane exports reported an all time record high this week at over 2,300,000 barrels per day. This export growth is depicted on Slide 5. Speaker 300:06:21The chart illustrates that the U. S. Remains the most important source of waterborne export LPG to meet fast growing global demand. As a reminder Antero exports over 50% of our C3 plus production skewed heavily towards propane directly out of the Marcus Hook terminal in Pennsylvania. This year we have elected to sell a greater portion of our waterborne barrels against international indices as well as in the spot market instead of entering into longer Mont Belvieu linked term deals. Speaker 300:06:53In the event that Mont Belvieu propane prices disconnect from Europe and Asian pricing due to dock constraints or rising domestic storage levels, Antero is well positioned to avoid additional Mont Belvieu exposure. The strength in international pricing has allowed us to increase our guidance for full year 2024 C3 plus differentials to a premium to Mont Belvieu pricing. As Paul just touched on, our first quarter results benefited from our significant exposure to liquids prices. Slide number 6 illustrates the approximately 125,000 barrels per day of C3 plus NGLs plus condensate that we produce. You can see the breakout of those products in the barrel on the left. Speaker 300:07:37The barrel on the right hand side of the slide separates the approximately 40,000 barrels per day of liquids that are closely linked to WTI oil prices. This includes isobutane, natural gasoline and condensate. Butane markets have also been a strong tailwind to Antero's C3 plus realizations mainly due to implications of the Tier 3 gasoline specifications enacted in the U. S. Many U. Speaker 300:08:05S. Refiners are unable to desulfurize gasoline down to 10 parts per million without also downgrading the octane of their motor gasoline. As a result there is a strong demand for octane enhancement products made with butane as feedstock. Isobutane has been particularly strong as it is used in the production of alkali which is a key octane enhancement product. Just this morning you've seen isobutane trade at over a $0.40 per gallon premium to normal butane. Speaker 300:08:35In conclusion, Antero's NGL strategy, product diversification and pricing is distinct when compared to other producers. Supportive fundamentals witnessed this past quarter illustrate the promising signs that are ahead. With that, I'll turn it over to our Senior Vice President of Natural Gas Marketing, Justin Fowler to discuss the natural gas market. Speaker 400:08:57Thanks, Dave. I'd like to open it up by turning to Slide number 7 titled Not All Transport the U. S. Gold Coast is Equal. As a reminder, we sell substantially all of our natural gas out of basin, including approximately 75% to the LNG corridor. Speaker 400:09:15Our firm transportation portfolio provides us with direct exposure to growing LNG demand along the Gulf Coast and importantly in the Tier 1 pricing points in the vicinity of the major LNG facilities. With several new LNG facilities starting up over the next year, we expect to see a widening spread between sales points near Henry Hub and sales points outside of this premium market. The blue call out box highlights a recent quote from a research commodity team that emphasizes this view. They believe sales points within 100 miles of Henry Hub could see prices comfortably above $5 per MMBtu, while sales points outside of that range could price at $3 to $4 per MMBtu. Looking closely at this map, the yellow stars highlight Antero sales points and are located well within this 100 mile range to Henry Hub. Speaker 400:10:12These sales points were strategically selected beginning over 10 years ago order to access the feeder lines at the doorstep of the LNG Fairway. The chart on the top left hand side of this slide highlights that Antero sells 75% of our gas at Henry Hub Link Prices, while our peers on average sell less than 15 percent of their natural gas into this premium market. Looking ahead over the next 2 years as LNG export capacity increases by nearly 6 Bcf per day, in addition to an expected rise in NYMEX pricing, we expect Antero sales points to be priced at even higher premiums than NYMEX as these LNG facilities compete for supply. An example of this is the pricing along the TGP 500L pool in the summer of 20252026. We've watched those summer premiums increase to $0.40 above Henry Hub on financial basis alone in anticipation of Venture Global's Plaquemines facility startup in the next few months. Speaker 400:11:20Just last year, those same implied summer premiums were only $0.03 above NYMEX. Venture Global received FERC approval this week to begin immediately introducing gas into the feeder Gator Express pipeline that brings supply from the TGP 500L pool to the Plaquemines LNG facility. This initial feed gas requirement will potentially lead to higher demand and pricing in the TGP 500 region as well as NYMEX Henry Hub prices this summer. According to Market Intelligence, the Tennessee Gas Pipeline Phase 1 Evangeline Pass project that feeds the Plaquemines LNG facility is expected to be online by July 1, 2024 with capacity of 900,000,000 per day. As a reminder, Ontario Pounds 570,000,000 per day of the firm delivery to the 500 L pool or 63% of the supply that will feed the Phase 1 project capacity. Speaker 400:12:26Next, I would like to touch on the outlook for power burn demand. The charting Slide number 8 depicts a third party estimate for the increasing natural gas power demand as a result of AI data centers, crypto mining and electric vehicles. It projects nearly 8 Bcf of incremental natural gas demand through 2,030 in its base case scenario or 14% growth per year. Next turning to the chart on Slide number 9, we illustrate the significant expected natural gas demand growth coming from LNG exports, Mexico exports along with this increasing electric power generation need. Combined, these are expected to result in an increase in demand of 30 Bcf by 2,030, an increase of over 100% from these same demand sources today. Speaker 400:13:25It is in the early innings of increasing electrification demand. We believe there has been a structural shift toward reliable, clean and affordable natural gas that will continue to increase power burn demand annually going forward. This demand growth combined with rising LNG and Mexico exports creates a significantly higher base demand level than we have ever experienced in the past. We expect these fundamentals will provide support to natural gas prices and lead the periods of higher prices in the coming years. With that, I will turn it over to Mike Kennedy, Antero's CFO. Speaker 500:14:05Thanks, Justin. I'd like to start with slide number 10 and our continued focus on reducing absolute debt. We plan to allocate future free cash flow to paying down the remainder of the credit facility balance and the higher coupon near term notes we have outstanding. We will then be in a position to return to our fifty-fifty strategy of 50% of free cash flow going to debt reduction and 50% going towards our share repurchase program. 2024 free cash flow breakeven levels. Speaker 500:14:41We highlighted our peer leading breakeven price shown on this slide during our last conference call. Our $2.27 break even level compares to the average NYMEX natural gas price of $2.24 in the Q1. Despite the low price, Antero generated an unhedged $10,000,000 of free cash flow during the Q1. Our quarterly results benefited from low maintenance capital requirements and high exposure to liquids. And as shown on this slide, results in the lowest unhedged free cash flow breakeven price among our natural gas peers. Speaker 500:15:22I will conclude my comments today with Slide number 12 titled Antero Resources, the unconstrained E and P company. We believe the differentiated strategy that we built here at Antero set up for success in today's macro backdrop. We have significant scale with production volumes of 3.4 Bcfe a day and over 20 years of premium inventory. We have integrated upstream and midstream, which provides development reliability and long term visibility into our program. This is critical in the development of the asset as evidenced by recent transactions in the basin. Speaker 500:16:03We have the firm transportation portfolio that allows us to sell 75% of our production to the LNG Fairway in the Gulf Coast. Many of our peers lack firm transportation capacity forcing them to sell gas at discounted prices well back at Henry Hub. The start up of the Plaquemines LNG terminal this summer is expected to lead to higher prices at our TGP 500 sales point, potentially leading to higher premiums to NYMEX Henry Hub. Lastly, we have the lowest reinvestment rate of our natural gas peer group. This peer leading capital efficiency drives higher free cash flow conversion. Speaker 500:16:44Our low investment rate and high leverage to liquids was highlighted during the Q1 when we generated positive free cash flow despite being unhedged at a 2.24 dollars NYMEX Henry Hub natural gas price. With that, I will now turn the call over to the operator for questions. Operator00:17:06Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Arun Dhiram with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 600:17:40Yes, good morning. Maybe one for Justin. Justin, given the strong demand growth potential for gas to the end of the decade, I was wondering maybe if you could comment a little bit more on what you see is kind of advantaged molecules from a margin perspective in this kind of environment. Obviously, historically Appalachia has garnered a discount just given the lack of takeaway capacity in some of the gas on gas competition. But would rising demand in that area for data centers, etcetera, could that start to narrow some of the discounts that we've seen for Appalachia Gas? Speaker 400:18:25Good morning, Arun. It's Justin. Yes, so when we look at just the Feet, 2 VCF down to the LNG corridor, we see those premiums continuing to gain value versus Henry Hub in the outer years. So we think that our delivery points, the ANR Southeast Head Station, CGT Onshore, TGP 500L will continue to be very strong in terms of Appalachia versus AI data centers, etcetera, and the basis compressing and gaining value back toward Henry, Antero will have that ability to sell local production volumes as well if those prices increase seasonally or in different months of the year because we do again have a transport position of 75% to the Gulf. So we can measure that on variable costs, etcetera, and make that decision over time. Speaker 600:19:34Great. Thanks Justin. Just a follow-up on the liquids marketing front. Dave, you mentioned that maybe you're exporting a little bit more than 50% or so of your C3 plus molecules. What kind of flex do you have in the system? Speaker 600:19:51And if you saw a greater arbitrage, could you flex a higher mix in terms of export volumes? And maybe just give an update on what you're seeing in terms of shipping rates? Speaker 300:20:04Yes Arun, we've done that now. This is Dave. We've done that Flex in particular in the call it the shoulder to shoulder season through the summer. So we've it will be reported in our second and third quarter results where it shows the amount of volume that we export versus domestic and those percentages go higher in the summer where we are at times well over 80% of our propane in particular is going to the dock. So we flex that already. Speaker 300:20:34I think there are some ways to take that higher if the market called for it, but we don't have a lot left in the domestic pool during those times of the year to begin with. And then on the freight rates, I mean things have improved dramatically since where we were. Late last year, you had all the concerns about the Panama Canal and how much that was going to de optimize the global LPG shipping fleet. And what actually happened, what we're seeing is more LPG ships getting through the Panama Canal since that announcement was made. I think first the canal has been able to move more ships in general through the canal than they initially had forecasted when they announced those restrictions. Speaker 300:21:15So we've seen now freight rates collapse dramatically from where we were in the Q4 and that's ultimately allowing prices at the dock to be closer linked to Speaker 200:21:27the international price. And we Speaker 300:21:27had a large build out of the have its effect and you're now seeing that today in the forward freight pricing. Speaker 600:21:43Great. Thanks a lot. Operator00:21:48Our next question comes from the line of Subash Chandra with Benchmark. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 700:21:56Thank you. Probably for Dave first. Dave, what do you think propane dock capacity is? And yes, I mean that 2.33 was a shocking number OE, pretty close. And I guess those propane hedges you kind of added there show some caution through December, maybe some updated commentary there? Speaker 400:22:23Yes, I think we are there on Speaker 300:22:24the dock capacity, Subhas. The number of the 2.3, I mean, it is a bit of a head scratcher that can happen just kind of based on timings of when ships officially loaded. If they kind of fall a minute into the next week that can certainly allow a number like that to happen. But we ultimately believe that's well above the kind of average rate that you could run across the U. S. Speaker 300:22:46Stock. So it's somewhere in that 1.85000000 to 1,900,000 barrels a day of propane because you still have butane that needs to move across those docks as well. So we'll see what they're able to hit this summer and sometimes when it's hotter that deoptimizes their refrigeration a bit. So I think we'll expect to see those docks highly utilized this summer, but I think we're about at the levels of what we expect that they can do until the call it the second half of next year when there is some expansion projects on the way from the Gulf Coast midstream players. And then on the hedges, yes, great question. Speaker 300:23:25We've talked about our concerns around propane pricing and kind of a decoupling in Mont Belvieu if you saw inventory levels rise as a result of these docks being fully utilized. And so we just thought it was prudent to while we do export the vast majority of our propane, we still had some domestic exposure and we just wanted to be conservative with that and take that risk off the table if we saw things play out somewhere to what we saw last year where propane was down in the $0.65 per gallon range. Thought it was a wise move at this time. Speaker 500:23:56Yes, but put some context around that's 10,000 barrels a day which is only 15% of our total propane production because the vast majority gets international pricing. That's right. Speaker 700:24:06Right. Thank you for that. And Paul I think on the zipper fracs just curious the adoption this year versus prior years and what does it look like for the balance of the year, maybe percent of well count, percent of till, something like that? And sort of why it's come about now whereas maybe another basin has been more common for a while, based on topology or things of that nature? Yes, Speaker 200:24:41so of course Subash there's the zipper fracs have been around quite a while. But earlier maybe in a more primitive stage there's been a lot of decoupling iron and re hooking it up for different wells and so we've just found a way to be much more efficient on that and with the flip of some switches and turning on and off some valves we can flip the zipper frac to different wells as we're pumping. So it's become much more efficient whereas in the past it'd be at least an hour of downtime when we're changing zipper fracs. Speaker 700:25:22And in terms of sort of application here in the early months of 'twenty four, how new is it versus say last year? Speaker 200:25:34I think it's a development in the last 6 months to a year where we've perfected it and it will continue. Speaker 700:25:46Thanks, Paul. Thanks, guys. Operator00:25:50Our next question comes from the line of Bert Jones with Truist. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 800:25:57Hey, good morning guys. Just wanted to ask around the data center demand question a little bit differently. You've continued to kind of avoid the temptation to go overseas with an LNG contract. Is there maybe a thought process that if we see a data center driven boost, maybe there's no reason to leave the U. S? Speaker 800:26:15And does that lead you to maybe trying to lock in a long term contract in the U. S? Speaker 500:26:21Yes. No, it wasn't around the data centers. It's just around we're the only company that can really get the molecule to the docs or to the LNG actual facilities. So we didn't have any need to enter into long term contracts around that. We've already done our commitments on the pipeline in itself. Speaker 500:26:41And so we just wanted to stay floating and retain that optionality for us on what that pricing would look like when they'd have to compete for our gas. But with the data centers that actually adds more obviously demand for that gas so that competition just continues to grow. Speaker 800:26:59Okay. And no interest in maybe boosting legacy Northeast volumes for a long term contract or anything direct, you rather just say indirect for both kind of uplifts? Speaker 500:27:11Yes. That's our philosophy. Stay in the Gulf Coast. I mean an interesting thing that was highlighted in our prepared remarks. TGP that $500 line we talked about this time last year would have set a $0.03 premium for next year and now it's at $0.40 such as going continue to go higher. Speaker 500:27:28So as it gets closer and closer you're going to see the premiums continue to go higher in the Gulf Coast and that's where we sell our gas. Speaker 800:27:36Great. And then changing gears on the Marcellus rates, on a per foot basis it was surprisingly strong quarter over quarter. They were shorter laterals. Is there maybe some logic going on that the shorter laterals are more economic and maybe 18,000 foot laterals are a little bit too long or is that just one data point and you are not shifting gears? Speaker 500:28:03Yes, I would say it's one data point. Generally the longer laterals are more economic. You just spread the cost around longer lateral foot. But we are so good at drilling and completing these that the longer laterals still provide the economics that it would Speaker 800:28:20suggest. So maybe on the tail end there will be a stronger later dated production from the longer laterals? Speaker 200:28:27Yes. I mean, I would say a shorter lateral will clean up more quickly, will dewater more quickly and so it will get to peak rate in shorter period of time. But over the longer run, as Mike just said, the economics are so much better when we're going out to 16,000, 18,000 and even 20,000 feet. Those are really big wells. And so wait a little longer until you get to peak rate, but it's worth it. Speaker 800:28:57Thanks for the answers guys. Operator00:29:02Our next question comes from the line of Neil Mehta with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 900:29:07Good morning team. I had a couple of questions on capital allocation. The first one on Slide 10, you've done a great job of getting your debt down to this level and you talk about the next area to deploy free cash flow is to pay down your credit facility balance. So maybe curious on your perspective of how shareholder returns specifically buybacks fit into this equation and given the strengthening of the balance sheet, when do you think you're at that inflection point to buy back stock? Speaker 500:29:43Yes. I said in the remarks, the first call on that free cash flow is to pay down the credit facility in that near term maturity in 'twenty six. So that's about $500,000,000 And then after that, we will return to our fifty-fifty strategy of paying down debt plus buying back shares. It will depend on commodity prices when we actually achieve those. But based on today's commodity prices, it would be in the first half of next year. Speaker 900:30:11Helpful. And then, we have seen a lot of consolidation across the E and P space, Gruff Energy space broadly. You have a really deep inventory. So I just love your perspective on how do you see Antero fitting within the M and A landscape and is the right strategy and organic strategy? Speaker 500:30:29We do believe the right strategy is the organic strategy. You saw we were able to add I believe 19 locations in the Q1. We had $26,000,000 of land. That's highly economic compared to how much location go for in the M and A landscape. So and we continue to consolidate our areas of operation right where we're drilling these terrific wells and just continue to build out our position in the liquids portion of the Marcellus. Speaker 500:30:57So we believe that's the best way to add value and continue to increase our 20 year inventory position. Speaker 900:31:05Perfect. Thanks, Steve. Operator00:31:10Our next question comes from the line of Jacob Roberts with TPH. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 500:31:17Morning. Morning, Nik. Speaker 1000:31:20Dave, I wanted to circle back to the liquids market and I apologize if you did hit on this in your answers, I may have missed it. But I was hoping you could comment just on storage levels at the moment, specifically them being above the 5 year it appears as well as the production coming out of PADD 3 and just where you see those playing out through the summer? Speaker 300:31:41Yes, good morning Jacob, this is Dave. If you go back to the Q1 we actually had that polar vortex in January went from the top of the 5 year range to the 5 year average and then kind of continued along that trend until the last 5 or 6 weeks. We've had, I would say, some pretty unusual EIA data. It didn't really change at all for month, month and a half and then we had a pretty significant change last week and then a below expectation build this week. So we are back kind of in that between the 5 year range and the top of the range below last year, but above that 5 year average. Speaker 300:32:17And we'll see what the inflection point looks like, how does that slope rise over the summer. I think there's a lot of different forecasts out there on propane production this year. Hard to say exactly who's right on that. We do pay attention to the rig count in all the basins and watch that. And so that's again part of what drove our earlier comments and just taking that small amount of domestic Mont Belvieu propane exposure we have doing some hedging there this year. Speaker 300:32:42But sorry, did I answer all of your question there, Jacob? Speaker 1000:32:45Yes, that's perfect. I appreciate it. And just a second question, can you remind us on the current expected timeline of the Martica payments, when those direct hold will be hit and what that ultimately looks like once they are once that threshold is met? Speaker 500:33:01Yes. As you rightly recall, they've actually they no longer participate in our wells that ended March 31, 2023, but there is kind of that runoff of the PDP base. That does revert back to us when they hit certain rates of return and right now we're forecasting that to be starting in 2026. Speaker 1000:33:24Appreciate the time. Thank you, guys. Speaker 200:33:27Thank you. Operator00:33:30Our next question comes from the line of Kevin McCurdy with Pickering Energy Partners. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1100:33:39Hey, good morning. And we appreciate all the detail you gave on the NGL marketing in the prepared remarks. But my question is, as it relates to realized prices, it looks like your C3 plus prices were much better than the weekly average benchmark pricing. And just curious if there were some one time items that benefited you in the Q1 versus the benchmark or do you expect that premium to continue? Speaker 500:34:04Yes. No, there weren't any one time items. We've really switched this year to more international exposure, better contracts not linked to Mount Bellevue. So we are still kind of working through those relationships. Obviously, the international pricing has been better than domestic pricing and as that continues, we see higher and higher NGL realizations. Speaker 500:34:25You saw that in our increased guidance, increased it by $1 So as we continue to kind of watch the actuals versus kind of our forecast, we will get a little more dialed in on that. But it's really just due to us switching to internationally linked liquids contracts versus domestically linked in prior years. Speaker 1100:34:47Great. And as a follow-up, we've heard from other gas companies that are changing their activity plans given kind of the weak spot prices. What would make you consider pushing out wells till later in the year? Or are you overall happy with the equivalent price you receive? Speaker 500:35:04Yes, it's really dominated by liquids pricing. I mentioned on prior calls, we do have one pad. I mean, we're only running 2 rigs and 1 completion through. We do have one pad in the capital program that's a spot pad for the Q3 of this year and that's one that's still to be determined. If it was based on current month prices today that was one that potentially be deferred. Speaker 500:35:30And then that would put you at the low end of the capital guidance range. The other pads, it's just one completion line. So running now with our 2 rigs is very efficient and it's very much 1275 to 1300 Btu gas, so very high in the liquids content. So that's what drive the economics. I think in the Q1 of our revenue, 55% was liquids and only 45% was gas. Speaker 500:35:58So you can see how much the liquids prices really influences the economics of these wells. Operator00:36:11Our next question comes from the line of Benny Jiang with Barclays. Please proceed with Speaker 400:36:20your question. Operator00:36:28Betty, your line is going in and out. Speaker 1200:36:32All right. Sorry. Operator00:36:33There we go. Speaker 1200:36:35All right. Can you provide a bit more detail on the start up of the Plaquemines LNG? Do we need to see the 1st cargo loading or say mechanical startup before seeing any material fee gas demand. You mentioned that the TGP line, the 500 line has capacity of 900 M. Just any view on how quickly we could see those fee gas demand reach those levels? Speaker 400:37:07Hi, Betty. It's Justin. Yes, so when we look at the data that we have so far on Plaquemines, you're correct. The Tennessee project, the Evangeline Pass project should start up July 1, Capacity of 900, the marketing analysts will be tracking the vessels that will be parked waiting to load. So that will be a data point to watch the vessels that are showing up to the facility as we approach July and then we'll see that gas through the nominations into that new Avance Form Pass project. Speaker 400:37:48So in theory, once we get to July, the physical gas is flowing, we'll start getting a better gauge of how quickly the liquefaction trains are ramping to at least mechanical completion. Speaker 1200:38:05Got it. No, that's helpful. And just following up on pricing, clearly, your guys' view is that the current future strip prices is not reflecting the dynamic around that hub. Why do you think that's the case and what will be the catalyst to drive that relative hub pricing higher? Speaker 400:38:27So you're referring to the Henry Hub pricing? Speaker 1200:38:31The TGP 500 line pricing relative to Henry Hub? Speaker 400:38:37Yes, Betty, we are seeing the price reaction at 500 L in the forward markets and that's just looking at financial basis alone. So looking at financial basis alone in the summers on Cal 25 and Cal 26 are already showing plus $0.40 That is again just financial. So those points will command a physical premium, which will start to develop as we get closer to delivery. But there will be a physical premium component as well. So if it were a dime to $0.20 let's say, you're now at $0.60 or $0.70 over Henry Hub as that physical gas starts to price closer to delivery. Speaker 1200:39:21Got it. And is there a physical gas physical premium today for that gas? Speaker 400:39:26Today, it varies, Betty. We've seen different premiums. Last summer, we were seeing very high premiums in the summer months on the physical side and that's because there still is power generation requirements in the southeast when the temperatures get hot and AC load starts to increase. So yes, we have seen those premiums in the past, but it can trade flat to plus. Speaker 1200:39:56Got it. That's helpful. Thank you. If I could throw in a question just on the Speaker 200:40:01certified gas side, it's good to see Speaker 1200:40:02that you guys Do you expect all of your production to get certified at some point? And emission intensity on the production that's really low relative to your peers. Is there much more room you can do to reduce emissions organically from here? Yes. Speaker 500:40:33So on your first question on Project Canaro, we do see that going across all of our field. We're up to 2 Bcf a day. So that's about 2 thirds, maybe around 50% of the field on a gross basis. So over time, we do see it continuing to build that out across our entire field. On the emissions, so we're getting close to being as low as we can. Speaker 500:40:56We've eliminated probably about 85 percent of all our pneumatic devices and have done all the valve control work that is necessary to limit the emissions from there. So we're getting as close as we can. We ultimately think we'll get down into that in 2025,000, 250,000 metric tons level that we need to offset and that's why you saw us commence with our project to offset those emissions through our stovetop cookstoves in Ghana initiative. Speaker 1200:41:30Great. Yes. No, I like the project. Thank you very much. Speaker 500:41:34Thank you. Thank you, Betty. Operator00:41:37Our next question comes from the line of Subash Chandra with Benchmark. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 700:41:43Yes, thanks. Back to Plaquemines and TGP 500. So, obviously, the forwards are showing a scarcity of gas beginning with full ramp in the LNG facility. How do you see that being addressed and over what timeframe? Is there absolutely no chance of having incremental premium shows in the Strip? Speaker 400:42:16There could be other volumes drawn to that area just depending on the basis spreads and the premiums. That corridor has a lot of pipes that traverse west to east, filling that southeast power generation load, etcetera. So I think to Mike's point earlier, it just depends on the competition of needs seasonally and monthly. If global spreads and global pricing are spiking, then you would assume that the competition will increase. There is a finite amount of gas that can get into those areas. Speaker 400:42:58So Antero, when we started picking up that capacity years ago or at least putting the contracts together prior to in service date, we knew at the time that to get physical gas on the 500 leg, it is a challenge to get volume over there just with the market pull in the Southeast. So then you add the new liquefaction facility of potentially 3.4 Bcf, 3.8 Bcf a day, it just leads to that competition that we expect and volatility and then price premiums. Speaker 700:43:40Okay, got it. Okay, thank you. Operator00:43:45There are no further questions in the queue. I'd like to hand it back to management for closing remarks. Speaker 100:43:52Thank you for joining us on today's call. Please reach out with any further questions. Thanks. Operator00:43:58Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's teleconference. Thank you for your participation. You may disconnect your lines at this time and have a wonderful day.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallAntero Resources Q1 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Antero Resources Earnings HeadlinesAntero Resources (AR): Among the Best Undervalued Energy Stocks to Invest in NowApril 15 at 8:57 AM | insidermonkey.comAntero Resources (AR) Receives a Buy from Siebert Williams Shank & CoApril 14 at 3:59 PM | markets.businessinsider.com[Action Required] Claim Your FREE IRS Loophole GuideThis shouldn't surprise anyone who's been paying attention, but... Pres. Trump may be about to unleash the biggest "dollar reset" since 1971.April 15, 2025 | Colonial Metals (Ad)Antero Resources price target lowered to $46 from $49 at ScotiabankApril 11, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comAntero Resources (NYSE:AR) Upgraded to Buy at TD CowenApril 11, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comAntero Resources Announces First Quarter 2025 Earnings Release Date and Conference CallApril 9, 2025 | prnewswire.comSee More Antero Resources Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Antero Resources? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Antero Resources and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Antero ResourcesAntero Resources (NYSE:AR), an independent oil and natural gas company, engages in the development, production, exploration, and acquisition of natural gas, natural gas liquids (NGLs), and oil properties in the United States. It operates in three segments: Exploration and Development; Marketing; and Equity Method Investment in Antero Midstream. As of December 31, 2023, the company had approximately 515,000 net acres in the Appalachian Basin; and approximately 172,000 net acres in the Upper Devonian Shale. Its gathering and compression systems also comprise 631 miles of gas gathering pipelines in the Appalachian Basin. The company was formerly known as Antero Resources Appalachian Corporation and changed its name to Antero Resources Corporation in June 2013. Antero Resources Corporation was incorporated in 2002 and is headquartered in Denver, Colorado.View Antero Resources ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Why Analysts Boosted United Airlines Stock Ahead of EarningsLamb Weston Stock Rises, Earnings Provide Calm Amidst ChaosIntuitive Machines Gains After Earnings Beat, NASA Missions AheadCintas Delivers Earnings Beat, Signals More Growth AheadNike Stock Dips on Earnings: Analysts Weigh in on What’s NextAfter Massive Post Earnings Fall, Does Hope Remain for MongoDB?Semtech Rallies on Earnings Beat—Is There More Upside? 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There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Greetings, and welcome to the Antero Resources First Quarter 2024 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce Brandon Krueger, Vice President of Finance and Treasurer of Antero Resources and Chief Financial Officer of Antero Midstream. Operator00:00:33Thank you. You may begin. Speaker 100:00:36Good morning. Thank you for joining us for Antero's Q1 2024 investor conference call. We'll spend a few minutes going through the financial and operating highlights and then we'll open it up for Q and A. I would also like to direct you to the homepage of our website atwww.anteroresources.com, where we have provided a separate earnings call presentation that will be reviewed during today's call. Today's call may contain certain non GAAP financial measures. Speaker 100:01:03Please refer to our earnings press release for important disclosures regarding such measures, including reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP financial measures. Joining me on the call today are Paul Rady, Chairman, CEO and President Michael Kennedy, CFO Dave Cannelongo, Senior Vice President of Liquids Marketing and Transportation and Justin Fowler, Senior Vice President of Natural Gas Marketing. I will now turn the call over to Paul. Speaker 200:01:33Thank you, Brendan. Good morning, everyone. I'll start my comments on Slide number 3 titled Drilling and Completion Efficiencies. As I started my comments off last quarter, the year 2023 was a transformational year for Antero for operational efficiency gains. This year 2024 continues that trend. Speaker 200:01:58Starting with the chart on the top left hand side of the slide, days per 10,000 lateral feet drilled averaged 5.4 days during the first quarter down from 5.5 days in 2023. On the completion side, we averaged a quarterly record of 11.3 stages per day during the Q1, an increase from the pace in 2023 of just under 11 stages day. These operational improvements result in shorter cycle times as shown on the bottom of the page. Our year to date cycle time per pad is currently trending ahead of last year's 2023 average. There are many inputs that lead to these operational improvements as every single line item gets examined by our team. Speaker 200:02:50However, the most impactful change in 2024 has been improved efficiency in zipper swaps that allows us to move from well to well on a pad without having any true downtime. We estimate that this new completion technology will save more than an hour of pumping time each day and will result in further increases in completion times. Our operations also benefit from Antero Midstream's water infrastructure providing industry leading water deliverability rates for our completions. Avoiding the use of water trucks significantly reduces at site congestion that we would otherwise get from water and sand trucks accessing the FAD something that many of our peers have to contend with. Now let's look at how these improvements led to our peer leading capital efficiency. Speaker 200:03:49The chart on Slide number 4 compares capital efficiency of the natural gas peer group. Put simply, this is the amount of capital required to achieve a maintenance level of production. Antero has the lowest capital per Mcf equivalent of its peer group at just $0.55 per Mcfe. This is 40% below the peer average of $0.90 per Mcfe. Our best in class operating efficiency combined with significant liquids exposure led to positive free cash flow during the Q1 and is expected to generate free cash flow for the full year. Speaker 200:04:29Now to touch on the current liquids and natural gas liquids or NGL fundamentals, I will turn it over to our Senior Vice President of Liquids Marketing and Transportation, Dave Cannelongo for his comments. Speaker 300:04:44Thanks, Paul. The start of 2024 demonstrated improved fundamentals for liquids. Ongoing geopolitical tension particularly in the Middle East has increased the risk premium on crude pricing in 2024 year to date. Internationally, the canal related challenges seen last year have diminished but global geopolitical tensions remain high. On the domestic front record propane demand occurred simultaneously with significant January freeze offs drawing down storage and resulting in upward pressure on propane prices. Speaker 300:05:20Propane as a percentage of WTI has averaged 44% since the start of this year compared with 36 driven by growing global demand. This year China PDH build out continues to progress with 3 new facilities placed in service in the Q1 and another 3 expected to start up there in the second quarter totaling nearly 170,000 barrels per day of capacity additions in the first half of 2024. At the same time, propane exports have averaged 1,800,000 barrels per day in 2024 year to date, an increase of 14% over the average in 2023. Notably, propane exports reported an all time record high this week at over 2,300,000 barrels per day. This export growth is depicted on Slide 5. Speaker 300:06:21The chart illustrates that the U. S. Remains the most important source of waterborne export LPG to meet fast growing global demand. As a reminder Antero exports over 50% of our C3 plus production skewed heavily towards propane directly out of the Marcus Hook terminal in Pennsylvania. This year we have elected to sell a greater portion of our waterborne barrels against international indices as well as in the spot market instead of entering into longer Mont Belvieu linked term deals. Speaker 300:06:53In the event that Mont Belvieu propane prices disconnect from Europe and Asian pricing due to dock constraints or rising domestic storage levels, Antero is well positioned to avoid additional Mont Belvieu exposure. The strength in international pricing has allowed us to increase our guidance for full year 2024 C3 plus differentials to a premium to Mont Belvieu pricing. As Paul just touched on, our first quarter results benefited from our significant exposure to liquids prices. Slide number 6 illustrates the approximately 125,000 barrels per day of C3 plus NGLs plus condensate that we produce. You can see the breakout of those products in the barrel on the left. Speaker 300:07:37The barrel on the right hand side of the slide separates the approximately 40,000 barrels per day of liquids that are closely linked to WTI oil prices. This includes isobutane, natural gasoline and condensate. Butane markets have also been a strong tailwind to Antero's C3 plus realizations mainly due to implications of the Tier 3 gasoline specifications enacted in the U. S. Many U. Speaker 300:08:05S. Refiners are unable to desulfurize gasoline down to 10 parts per million without also downgrading the octane of their motor gasoline. As a result there is a strong demand for octane enhancement products made with butane as feedstock. Isobutane has been particularly strong as it is used in the production of alkali which is a key octane enhancement product. Just this morning you've seen isobutane trade at over a $0.40 per gallon premium to normal butane. Speaker 300:08:35In conclusion, Antero's NGL strategy, product diversification and pricing is distinct when compared to other producers. Supportive fundamentals witnessed this past quarter illustrate the promising signs that are ahead. With that, I'll turn it over to our Senior Vice President of Natural Gas Marketing, Justin Fowler to discuss the natural gas market. Speaker 400:08:57Thanks, Dave. I'd like to open it up by turning to Slide number 7 titled Not All Transport the U. S. Gold Coast is Equal. As a reminder, we sell substantially all of our natural gas out of basin, including approximately 75% to the LNG corridor. Speaker 400:09:15Our firm transportation portfolio provides us with direct exposure to growing LNG demand along the Gulf Coast and importantly in the Tier 1 pricing points in the vicinity of the major LNG facilities. With several new LNG facilities starting up over the next year, we expect to see a widening spread between sales points near Henry Hub and sales points outside of this premium market. The blue call out box highlights a recent quote from a research commodity team that emphasizes this view. They believe sales points within 100 miles of Henry Hub could see prices comfortably above $5 per MMBtu, while sales points outside of that range could price at $3 to $4 per MMBtu. Looking closely at this map, the yellow stars highlight Antero sales points and are located well within this 100 mile range to Henry Hub. Speaker 400:10:12These sales points were strategically selected beginning over 10 years ago order to access the feeder lines at the doorstep of the LNG Fairway. The chart on the top left hand side of this slide highlights that Antero sells 75% of our gas at Henry Hub Link Prices, while our peers on average sell less than 15 percent of their natural gas into this premium market. Looking ahead over the next 2 years as LNG export capacity increases by nearly 6 Bcf per day, in addition to an expected rise in NYMEX pricing, we expect Antero sales points to be priced at even higher premiums than NYMEX as these LNG facilities compete for supply. An example of this is the pricing along the TGP 500L pool in the summer of 20252026. We've watched those summer premiums increase to $0.40 above Henry Hub on financial basis alone in anticipation of Venture Global's Plaquemines facility startup in the next few months. Speaker 400:11:20Just last year, those same implied summer premiums were only $0.03 above NYMEX. Venture Global received FERC approval this week to begin immediately introducing gas into the feeder Gator Express pipeline that brings supply from the TGP 500L pool to the Plaquemines LNG facility. This initial feed gas requirement will potentially lead to higher demand and pricing in the TGP 500 region as well as NYMEX Henry Hub prices this summer. According to Market Intelligence, the Tennessee Gas Pipeline Phase 1 Evangeline Pass project that feeds the Plaquemines LNG facility is expected to be online by July 1, 2024 with capacity of 900,000,000 per day. As a reminder, Ontario Pounds 570,000,000 per day of the firm delivery to the 500 L pool or 63% of the supply that will feed the Phase 1 project capacity. Speaker 400:12:26Next, I would like to touch on the outlook for power burn demand. The charting Slide number 8 depicts a third party estimate for the increasing natural gas power demand as a result of AI data centers, crypto mining and electric vehicles. It projects nearly 8 Bcf of incremental natural gas demand through 2,030 in its base case scenario or 14% growth per year. Next turning to the chart on Slide number 9, we illustrate the significant expected natural gas demand growth coming from LNG exports, Mexico exports along with this increasing electric power generation need. Combined, these are expected to result in an increase in demand of 30 Bcf by 2,030, an increase of over 100% from these same demand sources today. Speaker 400:13:25It is in the early innings of increasing electrification demand. We believe there has been a structural shift toward reliable, clean and affordable natural gas that will continue to increase power burn demand annually going forward. This demand growth combined with rising LNG and Mexico exports creates a significantly higher base demand level than we have ever experienced in the past. We expect these fundamentals will provide support to natural gas prices and lead the periods of higher prices in the coming years. With that, I will turn it over to Mike Kennedy, Antero's CFO. Speaker 500:14:05Thanks, Justin. I'd like to start with slide number 10 and our continued focus on reducing absolute debt. We plan to allocate future free cash flow to paying down the remainder of the credit facility balance and the higher coupon near term notes we have outstanding. We will then be in a position to return to our fifty-fifty strategy of 50% of free cash flow going to debt reduction and 50% going towards our share repurchase program. 2024 free cash flow breakeven levels. Speaker 500:14:41We highlighted our peer leading breakeven price shown on this slide during our last conference call. Our $2.27 break even level compares to the average NYMEX natural gas price of $2.24 in the Q1. Despite the low price, Antero generated an unhedged $10,000,000 of free cash flow during the Q1. Our quarterly results benefited from low maintenance capital requirements and high exposure to liquids. And as shown on this slide, results in the lowest unhedged free cash flow breakeven price among our natural gas peers. Speaker 500:15:22I will conclude my comments today with Slide number 12 titled Antero Resources, the unconstrained E and P company. We believe the differentiated strategy that we built here at Antero set up for success in today's macro backdrop. We have significant scale with production volumes of 3.4 Bcfe a day and over 20 years of premium inventory. We have integrated upstream and midstream, which provides development reliability and long term visibility into our program. This is critical in the development of the asset as evidenced by recent transactions in the basin. Speaker 500:16:03We have the firm transportation portfolio that allows us to sell 75% of our production to the LNG Fairway in the Gulf Coast. Many of our peers lack firm transportation capacity forcing them to sell gas at discounted prices well back at Henry Hub. The start up of the Plaquemines LNG terminal this summer is expected to lead to higher prices at our TGP 500 sales point, potentially leading to higher premiums to NYMEX Henry Hub. Lastly, we have the lowest reinvestment rate of our natural gas peer group. This peer leading capital efficiency drives higher free cash flow conversion. Speaker 500:16:44Our low investment rate and high leverage to liquids was highlighted during the Q1 when we generated positive free cash flow despite being unhedged at a 2.24 dollars NYMEX Henry Hub natural gas price. With that, I will now turn the call over to the operator for questions. Operator00:17:06Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Arun Dhiram with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 600:17:40Yes, good morning. Maybe one for Justin. Justin, given the strong demand growth potential for gas to the end of the decade, I was wondering maybe if you could comment a little bit more on what you see is kind of advantaged molecules from a margin perspective in this kind of environment. Obviously, historically Appalachia has garnered a discount just given the lack of takeaway capacity in some of the gas on gas competition. But would rising demand in that area for data centers, etcetera, could that start to narrow some of the discounts that we've seen for Appalachia Gas? Speaker 400:18:25Good morning, Arun. It's Justin. Yes, so when we look at just the Feet, 2 VCF down to the LNG corridor, we see those premiums continuing to gain value versus Henry Hub in the outer years. So we think that our delivery points, the ANR Southeast Head Station, CGT Onshore, TGP 500L will continue to be very strong in terms of Appalachia versus AI data centers, etcetera, and the basis compressing and gaining value back toward Henry, Antero will have that ability to sell local production volumes as well if those prices increase seasonally or in different months of the year because we do again have a transport position of 75% to the Gulf. So we can measure that on variable costs, etcetera, and make that decision over time. Speaker 600:19:34Great. Thanks Justin. Just a follow-up on the liquids marketing front. Dave, you mentioned that maybe you're exporting a little bit more than 50% or so of your C3 plus molecules. What kind of flex do you have in the system? Speaker 600:19:51And if you saw a greater arbitrage, could you flex a higher mix in terms of export volumes? And maybe just give an update on what you're seeing in terms of shipping rates? Speaker 300:20:04Yes Arun, we've done that now. This is Dave. We've done that Flex in particular in the call it the shoulder to shoulder season through the summer. So we've it will be reported in our second and third quarter results where it shows the amount of volume that we export versus domestic and those percentages go higher in the summer where we are at times well over 80% of our propane in particular is going to the dock. So we flex that already. Speaker 300:20:34I think there are some ways to take that higher if the market called for it, but we don't have a lot left in the domestic pool during those times of the year to begin with. And then on the freight rates, I mean things have improved dramatically since where we were. Late last year, you had all the concerns about the Panama Canal and how much that was going to de optimize the global LPG shipping fleet. And what actually happened, what we're seeing is more LPG ships getting through the Panama Canal since that announcement was made. I think first the canal has been able to move more ships in general through the canal than they initially had forecasted when they announced those restrictions. Speaker 300:21:15So we've seen now freight rates collapse dramatically from where we were in the Q4 and that's ultimately allowing prices at the dock to be closer linked to Speaker 200:21:27the international price. And we Speaker 300:21:27had a large build out of the have its effect and you're now seeing that today in the forward freight pricing. Speaker 600:21:43Great. Thanks a lot. Operator00:21:48Our next question comes from the line of Subash Chandra with Benchmark. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 700:21:56Thank you. Probably for Dave first. Dave, what do you think propane dock capacity is? And yes, I mean that 2.33 was a shocking number OE, pretty close. And I guess those propane hedges you kind of added there show some caution through December, maybe some updated commentary there? Speaker 400:22:23Yes, I think we are there on Speaker 300:22:24the dock capacity, Subhas. The number of the 2.3, I mean, it is a bit of a head scratcher that can happen just kind of based on timings of when ships officially loaded. If they kind of fall a minute into the next week that can certainly allow a number like that to happen. But we ultimately believe that's well above the kind of average rate that you could run across the U. S. Speaker 300:22:46Stock. So it's somewhere in that 1.85000000 to 1,900,000 barrels a day of propane because you still have butane that needs to move across those docks as well. So we'll see what they're able to hit this summer and sometimes when it's hotter that deoptimizes their refrigeration a bit. So I think we'll expect to see those docks highly utilized this summer, but I think we're about at the levels of what we expect that they can do until the call it the second half of next year when there is some expansion projects on the way from the Gulf Coast midstream players. And then on the hedges, yes, great question. Speaker 300:23:25We've talked about our concerns around propane pricing and kind of a decoupling in Mont Belvieu if you saw inventory levels rise as a result of these docks being fully utilized. And so we just thought it was prudent to while we do export the vast majority of our propane, we still had some domestic exposure and we just wanted to be conservative with that and take that risk off the table if we saw things play out somewhere to what we saw last year where propane was down in the $0.65 per gallon range. Thought it was a wise move at this time. Speaker 500:23:56Yes, but put some context around that's 10,000 barrels a day which is only 15% of our total propane production because the vast majority gets international pricing. That's right. Speaker 700:24:06Right. Thank you for that. And Paul I think on the zipper fracs just curious the adoption this year versus prior years and what does it look like for the balance of the year, maybe percent of well count, percent of till, something like that? And sort of why it's come about now whereas maybe another basin has been more common for a while, based on topology or things of that nature? Yes, Speaker 200:24:41so of course Subash there's the zipper fracs have been around quite a while. But earlier maybe in a more primitive stage there's been a lot of decoupling iron and re hooking it up for different wells and so we've just found a way to be much more efficient on that and with the flip of some switches and turning on and off some valves we can flip the zipper frac to different wells as we're pumping. So it's become much more efficient whereas in the past it'd be at least an hour of downtime when we're changing zipper fracs. Speaker 700:25:22And in terms of sort of application here in the early months of 'twenty four, how new is it versus say last year? Speaker 200:25:34I think it's a development in the last 6 months to a year where we've perfected it and it will continue. Speaker 700:25:46Thanks, Paul. Thanks, guys. Operator00:25:50Our next question comes from the line of Bert Jones with Truist. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 800:25:57Hey, good morning guys. Just wanted to ask around the data center demand question a little bit differently. You've continued to kind of avoid the temptation to go overseas with an LNG contract. Is there maybe a thought process that if we see a data center driven boost, maybe there's no reason to leave the U. S? Speaker 800:26:15And does that lead you to maybe trying to lock in a long term contract in the U. S? Speaker 500:26:21Yes. No, it wasn't around the data centers. It's just around we're the only company that can really get the molecule to the docs or to the LNG actual facilities. So we didn't have any need to enter into long term contracts around that. We've already done our commitments on the pipeline in itself. Speaker 500:26:41And so we just wanted to stay floating and retain that optionality for us on what that pricing would look like when they'd have to compete for our gas. But with the data centers that actually adds more obviously demand for that gas so that competition just continues to grow. Speaker 800:26:59Okay. And no interest in maybe boosting legacy Northeast volumes for a long term contract or anything direct, you rather just say indirect for both kind of uplifts? Speaker 500:27:11Yes. That's our philosophy. Stay in the Gulf Coast. I mean an interesting thing that was highlighted in our prepared remarks. TGP that $500 line we talked about this time last year would have set a $0.03 premium for next year and now it's at $0.40 such as going continue to go higher. Speaker 500:27:28So as it gets closer and closer you're going to see the premiums continue to go higher in the Gulf Coast and that's where we sell our gas. Speaker 800:27:36Great. And then changing gears on the Marcellus rates, on a per foot basis it was surprisingly strong quarter over quarter. They were shorter laterals. Is there maybe some logic going on that the shorter laterals are more economic and maybe 18,000 foot laterals are a little bit too long or is that just one data point and you are not shifting gears? Speaker 500:28:03Yes, I would say it's one data point. Generally the longer laterals are more economic. You just spread the cost around longer lateral foot. But we are so good at drilling and completing these that the longer laterals still provide the economics that it would Speaker 800:28:20suggest. So maybe on the tail end there will be a stronger later dated production from the longer laterals? Speaker 200:28:27Yes. I mean, I would say a shorter lateral will clean up more quickly, will dewater more quickly and so it will get to peak rate in shorter period of time. But over the longer run, as Mike just said, the economics are so much better when we're going out to 16,000, 18,000 and even 20,000 feet. Those are really big wells. And so wait a little longer until you get to peak rate, but it's worth it. Speaker 800:28:57Thanks for the answers guys. Operator00:29:02Our next question comes from the line of Neil Mehta with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 900:29:07Good morning team. I had a couple of questions on capital allocation. The first one on Slide 10, you've done a great job of getting your debt down to this level and you talk about the next area to deploy free cash flow is to pay down your credit facility balance. So maybe curious on your perspective of how shareholder returns specifically buybacks fit into this equation and given the strengthening of the balance sheet, when do you think you're at that inflection point to buy back stock? Speaker 500:29:43Yes. I said in the remarks, the first call on that free cash flow is to pay down the credit facility in that near term maturity in 'twenty six. So that's about $500,000,000 And then after that, we will return to our fifty-fifty strategy of paying down debt plus buying back shares. It will depend on commodity prices when we actually achieve those. But based on today's commodity prices, it would be in the first half of next year. Speaker 900:30:11Helpful. And then, we have seen a lot of consolidation across the E and P space, Gruff Energy space broadly. You have a really deep inventory. So I just love your perspective on how do you see Antero fitting within the M and A landscape and is the right strategy and organic strategy? Speaker 500:30:29We do believe the right strategy is the organic strategy. You saw we were able to add I believe 19 locations in the Q1. We had $26,000,000 of land. That's highly economic compared to how much location go for in the M and A landscape. So and we continue to consolidate our areas of operation right where we're drilling these terrific wells and just continue to build out our position in the liquids portion of the Marcellus. Speaker 500:30:57So we believe that's the best way to add value and continue to increase our 20 year inventory position. Speaker 900:31:05Perfect. Thanks, Steve. Operator00:31:10Our next question comes from the line of Jacob Roberts with TPH. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 500:31:17Morning. Morning, Nik. Speaker 1000:31:20Dave, I wanted to circle back to the liquids market and I apologize if you did hit on this in your answers, I may have missed it. But I was hoping you could comment just on storage levels at the moment, specifically them being above the 5 year it appears as well as the production coming out of PADD 3 and just where you see those playing out through the summer? Speaker 300:31:41Yes, good morning Jacob, this is Dave. If you go back to the Q1 we actually had that polar vortex in January went from the top of the 5 year range to the 5 year average and then kind of continued along that trend until the last 5 or 6 weeks. We've had, I would say, some pretty unusual EIA data. It didn't really change at all for month, month and a half and then we had a pretty significant change last week and then a below expectation build this week. So we are back kind of in that between the 5 year range and the top of the range below last year, but above that 5 year average. Speaker 300:32:17And we'll see what the inflection point looks like, how does that slope rise over the summer. I think there's a lot of different forecasts out there on propane production this year. Hard to say exactly who's right on that. We do pay attention to the rig count in all the basins and watch that. And so that's again part of what drove our earlier comments and just taking that small amount of domestic Mont Belvieu propane exposure we have doing some hedging there this year. Speaker 300:32:42But sorry, did I answer all of your question there, Jacob? Speaker 1000:32:45Yes, that's perfect. I appreciate it. And just a second question, can you remind us on the current expected timeline of the Martica payments, when those direct hold will be hit and what that ultimately looks like once they are once that threshold is met? Speaker 500:33:01Yes. As you rightly recall, they've actually they no longer participate in our wells that ended March 31, 2023, but there is kind of that runoff of the PDP base. That does revert back to us when they hit certain rates of return and right now we're forecasting that to be starting in 2026. Speaker 1000:33:24Appreciate the time. Thank you, guys. Speaker 200:33:27Thank you. Operator00:33:30Our next question comes from the line of Kevin McCurdy with Pickering Energy Partners. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1100:33:39Hey, good morning. And we appreciate all the detail you gave on the NGL marketing in the prepared remarks. But my question is, as it relates to realized prices, it looks like your C3 plus prices were much better than the weekly average benchmark pricing. And just curious if there were some one time items that benefited you in the Q1 versus the benchmark or do you expect that premium to continue? Speaker 500:34:04Yes. No, there weren't any one time items. We've really switched this year to more international exposure, better contracts not linked to Mount Bellevue. So we are still kind of working through those relationships. Obviously, the international pricing has been better than domestic pricing and as that continues, we see higher and higher NGL realizations. Speaker 500:34:25You saw that in our increased guidance, increased it by $1 So as we continue to kind of watch the actuals versus kind of our forecast, we will get a little more dialed in on that. But it's really just due to us switching to internationally linked liquids contracts versus domestically linked in prior years. Speaker 1100:34:47Great. And as a follow-up, we've heard from other gas companies that are changing their activity plans given kind of the weak spot prices. What would make you consider pushing out wells till later in the year? Or are you overall happy with the equivalent price you receive? Speaker 500:35:04Yes, it's really dominated by liquids pricing. I mentioned on prior calls, we do have one pad. I mean, we're only running 2 rigs and 1 completion through. We do have one pad in the capital program that's a spot pad for the Q3 of this year and that's one that's still to be determined. If it was based on current month prices today that was one that potentially be deferred. Speaker 500:35:30And then that would put you at the low end of the capital guidance range. The other pads, it's just one completion line. So running now with our 2 rigs is very efficient and it's very much 1275 to 1300 Btu gas, so very high in the liquids content. So that's what drive the economics. I think in the Q1 of our revenue, 55% was liquids and only 45% was gas. Speaker 500:35:58So you can see how much the liquids prices really influences the economics of these wells. Operator00:36:11Our next question comes from the line of Benny Jiang with Barclays. Please proceed with Speaker 400:36:20your question. Operator00:36:28Betty, your line is going in and out. Speaker 1200:36:32All right. Sorry. Operator00:36:33There we go. Speaker 1200:36:35All right. Can you provide a bit more detail on the start up of the Plaquemines LNG? Do we need to see the 1st cargo loading or say mechanical startup before seeing any material fee gas demand. You mentioned that the TGP line, the 500 line has capacity of 900 M. Just any view on how quickly we could see those fee gas demand reach those levels? Speaker 400:37:07Hi, Betty. It's Justin. Yes, so when we look at the data that we have so far on Plaquemines, you're correct. The Tennessee project, the Evangeline Pass project should start up July 1, Capacity of 900, the marketing analysts will be tracking the vessels that will be parked waiting to load. So that will be a data point to watch the vessels that are showing up to the facility as we approach July and then we'll see that gas through the nominations into that new Avance Form Pass project. Speaker 400:37:48So in theory, once we get to July, the physical gas is flowing, we'll start getting a better gauge of how quickly the liquefaction trains are ramping to at least mechanical completion. Speaker 1200:38:05Got it. No, that's helpful. And just following up on pricing, clearly, your guys' view is that the current future strip prices is not reflecting the dynamic around that hub. Why do you think that's the case and what will be the catalyst to drive that relative hub pricing higher? Speaker 400:38:27So you're referring to the Henry Hub pricing? Speaker 1200:38:31The TGP 500 line pricing relative to Henry Hub? Speaker 400:38:37Yes, Betty, we are seeing the price reaction at 500 L in the forward markets and that's just looking at financial basis alone. So looking at financial basis alone in the summers on Cal 25 and Cal 26 are already showing plus $0.40 That is again just financial. So those points will command a physical premium, which will start to develop as we get closer to delivery. But there will be a physical premium component as well. So if it were a dime to $0.20 let's say, you're now at $0.60 or $0.70 over Henry Hub as that physical gas starts to price closer to delivery. Speaker 1200:39:21Got it. And is there a physical gas physical premium today for that gas? Speaker 400:39:26Today, it varies, Betty. We've seen different premiums. Last summer, we were seeing very high premiums in the summer months on the physical side and that's because there still is power generation requirements in the southeast when the temperatures get hot and AC load starts to increase. So yes, we have seen those premiums in the past, but it can trade flat to plus. Speaker 1200:39:56Got it. That's helpful. Thank you. If I could throw in a question just on the Speaker 200:40:01certified gas side, it's good to see Speaker 1200:40:02that you guys Do you expect all of your production to get certified at some point? And emission intensity on the production that's really low relative to your peers. Is there much more room you can do to reduce emissions organically from here? Yes. Speaker 500:40:33So on your first question on Project Canaro, we do see that going across all of our field. We're up to 2 Bcf a day. So that's about 2 thirds, maybe around 50% of the field on a gross basis. So over time, we do see it continuing to build that out across our entire field. On the emissions, so we're getting close to being as low as we can. Speaker 500:40:56We've eliminated probably about 85 percent of all our pneumatic devices and have done all the valve control work that is necessary to limit the emissions from there. So we're getting as close as we can. We ultimately think we'll get down into that in 2025,000, 250,000 metric tons level that we need to offset and that's why you saw us commence with our project to offset those emissions through our stovetop cookstoves in Ghana initiative. Speaker 1200:41:30Great. Yes. No, I like the project. Thank you very much. Speaker 500:41:34Thank you. Thank you, Betty. Operator00:41:37Our next question comes from the line of Subash Chandra with Benchmark. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 700:41:43Yes, thanks. Back to Plaquemines and TGP 500. So, obviously, the forwards are showing a scarcity of gas beginning with full ramp in the LNG facility. How do you see that being addressed and over what timeframe? Is there absolutely no chance of having incremental premium shows in the Strip? Speaker 400:42:16There could be other volumes drawn to that area just depending on the basis spreads and the premiums. That corridor has a lot of pipes that traverse west to east, filling that southeast power generation load, etcetera. So I think to Mike's point earlier, it just depends on the competition of needs seasonally and monthly. If global spreads and global pricing are spiking, then you would assume that the competition will increase. There is a finite amount of gas that can get into those areas. Speaker 400:42:58So Antero, when we started picking up that capacity years ago or at least putting the contracts together prior to in service date, we knew at the time that to get physical gas on the 500 leg, it is a challenge to get volume over there just with the market pull in the Southeast. So then you add the new liquefaction facility of potentially 3.4 Bcf, 3.8 Bcf a day, it just leads to that competition that we expect and volatility and then price premiums. Speaker 700:43:40Okay, got it. Okay, thank you. Operator00:43:45There are no further questions in the queue. I'd like to hand it back to management for closing remarks. Speaker 100:43:52Thank you for joining us on today's call. Please reach out with any further questions. Thanks. Operator00:43:58Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's teleconference. Thank you for your participation. You may disconnect your lines at this time and have a wonderful day.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by