NASDAQ:USEG U.S. Energy Q2 2024 Earnings Report $1.15 +0.02 (+1.77%) Closing price 04/17/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$1.14 0.00 (-0.43%) As of 04/17/2025 06:11 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast U.S. Energy EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.08Consensus EPS -$0.09Beat/MissBeat by +$0.01One Year Ago EPSN/AU.S. Energy Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$6.05 millionExpected RevenueN/ABeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/AU.S. Energy Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date8/7/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, August 8, 2024Conference Call Time11:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsU.S. Energy's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, May 8, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Friday, May 9, 2025 at 9:00 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 U.S. Energy Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrAugust 8, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 6 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Greetings. Welcome to the U. S. Energy Corporation's 2nd Quarter 2024 Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in listen only mode. Operator00:00:07A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. Please note this conference is being recorded. At this time, I'll hand the conference over to Mason Maguire. Mason, you may now begin. Speaker 100:00:25Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. Welcome to U. S. Energy Corp's Q2 2024 results conference call. Brian Smith, our Chief Executive Officer, will provide an overview of our operating results and discuss the company's strategic outlook. Speaker 100:00:38And our Chief Financial Officer, Mark Zajac, will have a more detailed review of our financial results. After the market closed yesterday, U. S. Energy issued a press release summarizing operating and financial results for the quarter ended June 30, 2024. This press release together with the company's presentation materials are available in the Investor Relations section of our website at www.usnrg.com. Speaker 100:01:03Today's discussion may contain forward looking statements about future business and financial expectations. Actual results may differ significantly from those projected in today's forward looking statements due to various risks and uncertainties included in the risks described in our periodic reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to update our forward looking statements. Further, please note that the non GAAP financial measures may be disclosed during this call. A full reconciliation of GAAP to non GAAP are available in our latest quarterly earnings release and conference call presentation. Speaker 100:01:38With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Ryan Smith. Speaker 200:01:42Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I'm pleased to share with you our results from this quarter as well as provide an update on our strategic outlook. Our quarter end results reflect the hard work and resiliency of our operational team as well as the results of the company's business development efforts. To begin, we closed our initial transaction targeting helium and other industrial gases in late June as well as entered into a letter of intent for a complementary and contiguous acreage position to the transaction that is already closed. The assets are located across the Keyman Dome structure in Montana, an area with an extensive presence of vast CO2, nitrogen and helium resources. Speaker 200:02:21These new assets, which we have closed on one and expect to close on the other during the Q4 of 2024 represent a tremendous development opportunity for U. S. Energy and immediately moved to the front of our corporate line and competing and ultimately demanding capital allocation. As we undertake our near term drilling activity of which we have 2 initial wells being drilled in September with potential further development in the late fall, we have many data points on productive zones while still believing the helium dominant pay zones have largely virgin reservoir pressure, resulting in what we expect to be highly productive wells with minimal declines at modest capital costs of $1,200,000 to $1,800,000 due to their relative shallow and conventional nature. The expected size and minimal decline rates of the newly drilled wells are expected to support highly economic development of the asset base, both at the field and associated infrastructure level without the need to undertake an unrealistic and unfundable capital spending plan. Speaker 200:03:17This is advantageous for numerous obvious reasons and the effects will ultimately show up in our realized economics. Additionally, our wells in the initial period will target our areas of high confidence, while also bringing additional clarity to the productive parameters of the asset base. We plan to have results from the first two wells during the Q4 and plan on sharing these results on our Q4 earnings release. My final point on our recent transactions and a very critical aspect on the background summary of the Kievan Dome Montana assets is the vast majority of helium production in the United States is hydrocarbon based driven by being a byproduct of natural gas. The helium and industrial gas sources across U. Speaker 200:03:58S. Energy's new assets are non hydrocarbon based and part of industrial gas streams, making this project as low of an environmental footprint as any of its type in the United States. Turning to our legacy oil and gas assets, we achieved net daily production of approximately 1221 barrels of oil equivalent per day, an increase over the Q1 of 2024 with oil production representing approximately 62% of our total production, with the remainder consisting of an approximately even split of natural gas and NGLs. As explained in our release yesterday, our operations were heavily impacted by severe flooding that made national news throughout East Texas and the Gulf Coast during the quarter. While this is the 2nd large weather system to hit the Gulf Coast year and nearly identical effects were felt during the Q1, primarily all the effective production is located on our lesser producing areas and has been brought back online. Speaker 200:04:53There are no long term issues expected by the weather and the company's core asset focus areas were unaffected and continue to perform to our expectations. I'm particularly proud to highlight our substantial achievements in cost management in the face of adverse weather conditions. Our lease operating expense came in at $3,100,000 representing a decrease in total expense to the prior quarter. A majority of our LOE is fixed at this point and our per barrel metric is highly sensitive to any variations in production. Our per barrel cost for the Q2 was $27.69 per BOE, a 5% decrease from the Q1. Speaker 200:05:29The weather driven loss production combined with additional expenses on the same areas combined for the elevated metric. We believe our per barrel LOE will revert back to the low $20 per barrel range or significantly lower than what was realized. As we continue moving through 2024, majority of our capital will be spent efficiently on developing our recent transactions and highest return projects, combined with supporting the production profile of our legacy asset base, continuing the company's share repurchase plan, maintaining balance sheet integrity and being advantageous of organically generated M and A opportunities. U. S. Speaker 200:06:08Energy has historically targeted being a growth platform that aggregated oil and gas assets. While oil prices have been more supportive over the last couple of years than were previously experienced, the challenges facing public small and mid cap E and Ps are real, specifically when managing current cost of capital and executing on meaningful transactions that are truly accretive to existing shareholders. We have grown the platform here at the company when applicable. We have also targeted asset sales when we felt the market was tilted in the seller's favor as shown by our last two asset sales, the most recent representing our exit from our South Texas properties. These transactions have left us with an ideal balance sheet, extremely low levels of simple bank debt and a clean cap structure that is able to support development. Speaker 200:06:51While any development projects will of course need development capital, U. S. Energy sits in a highly enviable position relative to any perceived peer of having significant sources of internally generated non dilutive capital. Whether it's cash flow from existing operations or more meaningfully opportunistic asset sales, having that lever to pull forward significant cash value is a huge advantage, particularly with a highly desirable and immediate use of proceeds. We believe that U. Speaker 200:07:19S. Energy stands out from other energy companies of our size in this backdrop of current energy industry dynamics. We now have a highly economic and scalable development project and our remaining E and P assets require minimal capital to maintain a steady production profile, leading to predictable cash flow and allowing us to effectively allocate dollars to maximize our returns on capital. Our approach positions and allows us to weather market fluctuations and capitalize on opportunities, making us well prepared to navigate the always evolving energy landscape. Our focus at U. Speaker 200:07:52S. Energy remains on operational efficiency, balance sheet discipline, responsible resource management, underscoring our commitment to driving sustainable value Speaker 300:08:02creation. Speaker 200:08:02As we move forward, we remain dedicated to capitalizing on current market conditions and leveraging our strengths to deliver continued growth and shareholder returns. To that end, during the Q2, we continue to accelerate our previously announced share repurchase program. During the quarter, the company approximately 200,000 shares, bringing our year to date repurchase total to approximately more than greater than 2% of the company's outstanding shares. We continue to believe that repurchasing our equity at current valuation levels is prudent and one of, if not the best, allocations of free cash flow along with as high of a return opportunity as we see in the marketplace. We expect to continue this activity going forward. Speaker 200:08:45In conclusion, U. S. Energy sits at the beginning of what I believe is a true first mover advantage in this space, which I define as a growth focused, non hydrocarbon, industrial gas focused company in the United States. The existing small scale companies in the space are hindered by burdensome and convoluted equity structures, ugly balance sheets and listed on exchanges that are avoided by most institutional investors. U. Speaker 200:09:09S. Energy faces none of these hurdles and we believe further corporate opportunities will present themselves as this becomes apparent in the marketplace. Now I would like to introduce Mark Zajac, our CFO, who will provide a detailed update on the financial results for the Q2. Speaker 300:09:24Thank you, Ryan. Hello, everyone. Let's delve into the financial details for the Q2 of 2024. Total oil and gas sales for the quarter amounted to approximately $6,000,000 reflecting a decrease from $8,000,000 in the same period last year. This decline was attributed to a 38% reduction in volumes and partially offset by a 22% increase in realized prices. Speaker 300:09:48It is important to note that this quarter's production was significantly impacted by severe weather events in several of our key operating areas. Sales from oil production contributed 91% of our total revenue for the quarter, demonstrating our continued focus on optimizing our oil assets. Our lease operating expense for the 2nd quarter was approximately 3,100,000 dollars equivalent to $27.69 per BOE, indicating impressive 18% reduction in total lease operating expense compared to the Q2 of 2023. This reduction can be attributed to asset sales, fewer one time workovers and our continued effort to increase operating efficiency. Severance and ad valorem taxes for the Q2 of 2024 totaled approximately $400,000 reflecting a decline from $500,000 in the same period last year. Speaker 300:10:39As a percentage of total oil and gas sales revenue, these taxes account for approximately 6.1% during the quarter. Cash, general and administrative expenses was $1,600,000 for the Q2 of 2024, a reduction of 43% when compared to the same period of 2023. The 2nd quarter saw a significant reduction in accounting and professional fees and compensation and benefits when compared to the same period a year ago. Turning to our net financial performance. The company reported a net loss of $2,000,000 in the Q2 of 2024, an improvement of $500,000 when compared to the Q2 of 2023. Speaker 300:11:18Our adjusted EBITDA stood at $1,100,000 in the Q2 of 2024 compared to $900,000 in the same period last year, influenced most notably by the reduction in total cash operating expenses from the prior period. Let's briefly touch upon our balance sheet. As of June 30, 2024, the company held outstanding debt of $7,000,000 on our $20,000,000 revolving credit facility. Our cash position stood at $2,200,000 Subsequent to the quarter end, we paid down $5,000,000 of our credit facility, leaving $2,000,000 of debt outstanding as of today. In conclusion, we are pleased with our operating performance and financial results that we are able to support the company's initiatives in a way that maintain a full that maintain full balance integrity. Speaker 300:12:01My objective is to ensure that the company's reporting process maintains a high standard of excellence and we feel confident in our ability to support any growth initiative we may entertain going forward. Thank you for your participation this morning. We are now ready to take your questions. Operator00:12:15Thank you. We'll now be conducting a question and answer Our first question comes from the line of Jesse Solvenson with E. F. Hutton. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 400:12:49Hi, everyone. Thanks for taking my question today. I was just curious, I heard the commentary on LOE per BOE moderating looking forward here as operations are more normalized. I'm curious though when it comes to the acquisition of these additional assets in Montana and noticed in the press release the commentary on the wells being spud in the Q3 here. How should we look at G and A going forward? Speaker 400:13:20Thank you. Speaker 200:13:22Hi, Jesse, it's Ryan. Good morning. Thanks for the question. Good question. So I guess two parts on our legacy oil and gas assets as we kind of explained yesterday in the release, but just verbalizing, I think most people are aware at least, heavy, heavy weather in the Q2, Hurricane Beryl came through and took a lot of our Gulf Coast production offline, most of that being in Liberty, which is just east of Houston. Speaker 200:13:54So obvious comment, but removing producing barrels and then adding the expenses to handle the weather related events, etcetera, kind of inflated that per barrel metric in the Q2, it's the same even though it was a little bit less than the Q1, it's the same reason going forward on an LOE basis in our oil and gas assets, right, outside of another I would love to say we'll never expect another weather event on the Gulf Coast. That's probably not accurate. But where we stand right here right now going forward over the next couple of quarters, we're confident that we'll get that per barrel metric back to the numbers that we saw kind of late last year. From a what to expect on our upcoming drilling, we're not ready to give out specific guidance on those wells yet. I think that's coming in the intermediate term on our next quarterly earnings just because it's our first well to drill up there. Speaker 200:15:01Of course, we have some thoughts. We believe these wells are going to come in around $1,500,000 $1,600,000 $1,400,000 of capital costs. First well is probably going to be a little bit more than that just while we really make sure that everything we want to do is going on. But on a metric basis, on the new development, I don't think we're ready to give those numbers out yet until we have our first well drilled and producing. From a G and A perspective, I do think our G and A is going to continue to trend down. Speaker 200:15:44As we look at our portfolio here of our legacy oil and gas assets, I think we have multiple opportunities in the current price environment, even lower prices than now to really pull forward some value with those assets. And pulling forward value on assets, obvious comment, isn't just the cash we receive now. It's that use of proceeds, what's the corporate overhead synergies we can realize with doing that. And ultimately, I believe that we can optimize our platform here to where the G and A and the professionals that we bring on with the new development is more than offset by the G and A optimization efficiently running our legacy assets. So I don't believe that we will see any inflated G and A numbers. Speaker 200:16:41And at the point, if there is an absolute G and A increase, I think it would be on a per metric basis, significantly less than what we realize now. Speaker 400:16:52Thanks for the details on the financial operations there on both these line items. And then I'll ask this last question, then leave it to the rest of the call. But in terms of looking at legacy asset sales, are we still expecting to potentially line up some future sales of some of these assets to fund maybe this build out or are we comfortable with our liquidity position today and looking elsewhere and just more so focusing on the operations of the business? Thank you. Speaker 200:17:24Yes, of course, great question. And I'll kind of start at the end of the question and work my way through it. I'm perfectly comfortable with our liquidity position today to develop, call it, the first phase of our new project With our asset sale that we completed in July, paid down another significant portion of our debt. I think we have $2,000,000 outstanding today, a little more than $2,000,000 cash on the balance sheet with $18,000,000 available on our revolver. So with all the normal premises of keeping our cash structure clean, keeping our leverage profile down, I'm very comfortable with where we are from a liquidity perspective. Speaker 200:18:06That being said and just kind of diving back into my previous answer, like the vast majority of companies, there is no doubt optimization we can do on our legacy assets. When U. S. Energy came together over the last couple of years, we had an asset base. We have an asset base that is geographically diverse. Speaker 200:18:27Not all of those assets are equal. And as I look at them going forward, if we can pull forward 4 or 5 years of projected cash flow at current commodity prices opportunistically in a process that gets 4, 5, 6 bids, that's always something that we're going to look at. It's just where we trade at right now, the equity valuations, if we can monetize that cash at a very significant increase from where we trade and allocate that capital to what we believe is an extremely high rate of return project with our new acquisitions and development, it's kind of a no brainer. So it's definitely on the radar. It's definitely something we're focused on. Speaker 200:19:14We'll be opportunistic about it. It's not something that's necessary to fund things going forward though. Speaker 100:19:24Okay, great. Thank you very much. Operator00:19:29Our next question is from the line of Charles Meade with Johnson Rice. Speaker 500:19:36I want to say I appreciate the midyear oil and gas PDP update there, of I think it was just under $51,000,000 It really highlights your value. But I want to go back to I think you discussed this on the last on your last or really the last call discussing the acquisition. What is the timing to get a similar kind of PDP or 3rd party resource estimate on your helium assets. I know or at least I believe you said you're going to have one after you drill these 2 wells, but are you going to have one before on the existing wells? Speaker 200:20:20Yes. Great question, Charles, and good morning. So where we stand right now on the acreage that we've closed, we have our internal data. We have a large resource report from a very well known third party engineering firm. Again, in the world of SEC reporting and 1P reporting, resource reports aren't usually filed. Speaker 200:20:44They're kind of investor presentation materials. I think once we drill this first well coming up, I think we I believe we spud it on September 9. We'll have our data on that well, let's call it, by October 1. And then I think in the Q4, we have both of those items. We have our larger kind of resource overview reserve report. Speaker 200:21:09And then once we have a well drilled and operating out of the assumption that we close our transaction that we're under LOI on and the producing well that they have, I believe that we'll have our, let's call it, 1P reserves, just processing, etcetera, kind of makes PDP and PDNP very similar by the end of the year, hopefully by Q4 earnings. I know that's kind of a 6 week window there, Q4 earnings and end of the year. But that's my expectation. We're working with 2 of the largest reserve engineering firms in the world right now on getting this done. So it's something on our plate and we'll be here by the end of the year. Speaker 500:22:00Got it. And so if I'm understanding you correctly, Ryan, we're kind of going to get we're going to get 2 reports or two numbers. 1, on the total resource and then the second on here's what's proved developed with these wellbores. Is that the right understanding? Speaker 200:22:17Absolutely. And then I mean just another way to say it, just the a 1P, 2P, 3P resource report and then the SEC report that shows up on our 10 ks. Speaker 500:22:26Got it. Got it. Okay. And then secondly, you've covered this, I think, a bit on your last call, you said that you'd be able to fund any development internally, whether it's asset sales or cash flow. But can you give us a sense, you've given us an estimate for what these each of these first two wells cost. Speaker 500:22:49I think your number is 1,400,000 dollars But what is the follow on CapEx in the success case? And over what time frame does it play out? Speaker 200:23:00Yes. No, that's a great question. And I could go through this for an hour, but I'll try to keep it concise and not look like 5 years out. And I'll also preface this by saying, we look at this right now as phases, right, Phase 1, Phase 2, Phase 3. Speaker 500:23:15Right. Speaker 200:23:17Phase 2 gets bigger as Phase 1 gets successful and Phase 3 gets bigger as Phase 1 and 2 gets successful. So I'm not going to sit here and say from here to eternity, like you don't ever need outside capital. But as we look at, I'll call it the next 12 to 18 months, what do we need to start, I'll call it selling our industrial gas. We need to drill 2 or 3 wells, and we need to put in a processing plan. Right now, we think these wells, I'm going to call them 1.5. Speaker 200:23:45I think the first one comes in a little bit higher. I think the next one is coming a little bit lower just as we continue to learn what we're doing. It's very easy for me to say in my seat, but it's very simple drilling compared to I think what most folks are historically familiar with in terms of like horizontal shale drilling, shallow conventional wells. So we look at it at at that 2 or 3 excuse me, at that 2 or 3 well number $3,000,000 to $4,500,000 of drilling capital over the next we're drilling 2 now. We'll probably have 1 at some point in time before the next summer. Speaker 200:24:25And then the processing plant for these wells, we're forecasting it around $8,000,000 to $9,000,000 I think from a perfect corporate finance perspective and how do you come up with a cap structure on that type of infrastructure, it's very simple. I think it's half equity, half debt. And so you start looking at what are the equity needs for U. S. Energy over the next 12 months to where we are processing and selling meaningful amounts of industrial gases out of Montana. Speaker 200:25:05It's a $8,000,000 to $10,000,000 kind of equity capital need from U. S. Energy. Another way to put equity capital need would just be a cash need. And whether that comes from cash on hand, cash from our operations, a bit of credit facility debt, asset sale pull forwards, I think right now, at least from everything that we've seen and the processes that we've run on the divestiture side, that's a number that I'm not overly concerned about right now being able to fund. Speaker 200:25:40The legacy piggybacking on your comment a second ago, like our legacy balance sheet, which still has $50,000,000 or so approved oil and gas reserves really gives us that flexibility to where we're not going out to the market hat in hand willing to take any kind of transaction. We don't need to do that, again for this initial get off the ground phase of proving our concept. Operator00:26:07So I think it's Speaker 200:26:08a mixture of that. I mean, I don't have the exact answer right now. It's we're in a flexible position to be opportunistic on these type of assets and these type of transactions. Our main assets remaining right now on the oil and gas side are in Montana and in East Texas. But if you look at our map, we have a lot of straggler stuff in between those two areas. Speaker 200:26:31And in situations where hypothetically, we can clear $2,000,000 on a small asset sale, take off 2x that of ARO on our balance sheet and combine another $300,000 to $500,000 annually on, I'll call it, corporate overhead synergies ranging from insurance, G and A, etcetera, those dollars go straight to our new project. And that's how I look at the funding. And so far, the deals we've done, the capital has been highly accessible. Speaker 500:27:12Got it. Thanks for all that elaboration of your thinking, Ryan. It's helpful. Speaker 200:27:17Absolutely. Thanks, Charles. Operator00:27:20Thank you. At this time, we've reached the end of the question and answer session. And I'll turn the call over to Ryan Smith for closing remarks. Speaker 200:27:30Yes. I thank everybody for calling in this morning. Thank you for your time. We're very excited about the transactions that we're undertaking and we're developing right now. And we look forward to rejoining you on our next call and giving market updates on the activity in the interim. Operator00:27:49This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time and thank you for your participation. Have a wonderful day.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallU.S. Energy Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) U.S. Energy Earnings HeadlinesU.S. Energy Corp. 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It holds interests in various oil and gas properties located in the Rockies region, including Montana, Wyoming, and North Dakota; the Mid-Continent region comprising Oklahoma, Kansas, and North and East Texas; West Texas; South Texas; and the Gulf Coast regions. The company was incorporated in 1966 and is headquartered in Houston, Texas.View U.S. Energy 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 Archer Aviation Unveils NYC Network Ahead of Key Earnings Report3 Reasons to Like the Look of Amazon Ahead of EarningsTesla Stock Eyes Breakout With Earnings on DeckJohnson & Johnson Earnings Were More Good Than Bad—Time to Buy? 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There are 6 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Greetings. Welcome to the U. S. Energy Corporation's 2nd Quarter 2024 Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in listen only mode. Operator00:00:07A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. Please note this conference is being recorded. At this time, I'll hand the conference over to Mason Maguire. Mason, you may now begin. Speaker 100:00:25Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. Welcome to U. S. Energy Corp's Q2 2024 results conference call. Brian Smith, our Chief Executive Officer, will provide an overview of our operating results and discuss the company's strategic outlook. Speaker 100:00:38And our Chief Financial Officer, Mark Zajac, will have a more detailed review of our financial results. After the market closed yesterday, U. S. Energy issued a press release summarizing operating and financial results for the quarter ended June 30, 2024. This press release together with the company's presentation materials are available in the Investor Relations section of our website at www.usnrg.com. Speaker 100:01:03Today's discussion may contain forward looking statements about future business and financial expectations. Actual results may differ significantly from those projected in today's forward looking statements due to various risks and uncertainties included in the risks described in our periodic reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to update our forward looking statements. Further, please note that the non GAAP financial measures may be disclosed during this call. A full reconciliation of GAAP to non GAAP are available in our latest quarterly earnings release and conference call presentation. Speaker 100:01:38With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Ryan Smith. Speaker 200:01:42Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I'm pleased to share with you our results from this quarter as well as provide an update on our strategic outlook. Our quarter end results reflect the hard work and resiliency of our operational team as well as the results of the company's business development efforts. To begin, we closed our initial transaction targeting helium and other industrial gases in late June as well as entered into a letter of intent for a complementary and contiguous acreage position to the transaction that is already closed. The assets are located across the Keyman Dome structure in Montana, an area with an extensive presence of vast CO2, nitrogen and helium resources. Speaker 200:02:21These new assets, which we have closed on one and expect to close on the other during the Q4 of 2024 represent a tremendous development opportunity for U. S. Energy and immediately moved to the front of our corporate line and competing and ultimately demanding capital allocation. As we undertake our near term drilling activity of which we have 2 initial wells being drilled in September with potential further development in the late fall, we have many data points on productive zones while still believing the helium dominant pay zones have largely virgin reservoir pressure, resulting in what we expect to be highly productive wells with minimal declines at modest capital costs of $1,200,000 to $1,800,000 due to their relative shallow and conventional nature. The expected size and minimal decline rates of the newly drilled wells are expected to support highly economic development of the asset base, both at the field and associated infrastructure level without the need to undertake an unrealistic and unfundable capital spending plan. Speaker 200:03:17This is advantageous for numerous obvious reasons and the effects will ultimately show up in our realized economics. Additionally, our wells in the initial period will target our areas of high confidence, while also bringing additional clarity to the productive parameters of the asset base. We plan to have results from the first two wells during the Q4 and plan on sharing these results on our Q4 earnings release. My final point on our recent transactions and a very critical aspect on the background summary of the Kievan Dome Montana assets is the vast majority of helium production in the United States is hydrocarbon based driven by being a byproduct of natural gas. The helium and industrial gas sources across U. Speaker 200:03:58S. Energy's new assets are non hydrocarbon based and part of industrial gas streams, making this project as low of an environmental footprint as any of its type in the United States. Turning to our legacy oil and gas assets, we achieved net daily production of approximately 1221 barrels of oil equivalent per day, an increase over the Q1 of 2024 with oil production representing approximately 62% of our total production, with the remainder consisting of an approximately even split of natural gas and NGLs. As explained in our release yesterday, our operations were heavily impacted by severe flooding that made national news throughout East Texas and the Gulf Coast during the quarter. While this is the 2nd large weather system to hit the Gulf Coast year and nearly identical effects were felt during the Q1, primarily all the effective production is located on our lesser producing areas and has been brought back online. Speaker 200:04:53There are no long term issues expected by the weather and the company's core asset focus areas were unaffected and continue to perform to our expectations. I'm particularly proud to highlight our substantial achievements in cost management in the face of adverse weather conditions. Our lease operating expense came in at $3,100,000 representing a decrease in total expense to the prior quarter. A majority of our LOE is fixed at this point and our per barrel metric is highly sensitive to any variations in production. Our per barrel cost for the Q2 was $27.69 per BOE, a 5% decrease from the Q1. Speaker 200:05:29The weather driven loss production combined with additional expenses on the same areas combined for the elevated metric. We believe our per barrel LOE will revert back to the low $20 per barrel range or significantly lower than what was realized. As we continue moving through 2024, majority of our capital will be spent efficiently on developing our recent transactions and highest return projects, combined with supporting the production profile of our legacy asset base, continuing the company's share repurchase plan, maintaining balance sheet integrity and being advantageous of organically generated M and A opportunities. U. S. Speaker 200:06:08Energy has historically targeted being a growth platform that aggregated oil and gas assets. While oil prices have been more supportive over the last couple of years than were previously experienced, the challenges facing public small and mid cap E and Ps are real, specifically when managing current cost of capital and executing on meaningful transactions that are truly accretive to existing shareholders. We have grown the platform here at the company when applicable. We have also targeted asset sales when we felt the market was tilted in the seller's favor as shown by our last two asset sales, the most recent representing our exit from our South Texas properties. These transactions have left us with an ideal balance sheet, extremely low levels of simple bank debt and a clean cap structure that is able to support development. Speaker 200:06:51While any development projects will of course need development capital, U. S. Energy sits in a highly enviable position relative to any perceived peer of having significant sources of internally generated non dilutive capital. Whether it's cash flow from existing operations or more meaningfully opportunistic asset sales, having that lever to pull forward significant cash value is a huge advantage, particularly with a highly desirable and immediate use of proceeds. We believe that U. Speaker 200:07:19S. Energy stands out from other energy companies of our size in this backdrop of current energy industry dynamics. We now have a highly economic and scalable development project and our remaining E and P assets require minimal capital to maintain a steady production profile, leading to predictable cash flow and allowing us to effectively allocate dollars to maximize our returns on capital. Our approach positions and allows us to weather market fluctuations and capitalize on opportunities, making us well prepared to navigate the always evolving energy landscape. Our focus at U. Speaker 200:07:52S. Energy remains on operational efficiency, balance sheet discipline, responsible resource management, underscoring our commitment to driving sustainable value Speaker 300:08:02creation. Speaker 200:08:02As we move forward, we remain dedicated to capitalizing on current market conditions and leveraging our strengths to deliver continued growth and shareholder returns. To that end, during the Q2, we continue to accelerate our previously announced share repurchase program. During the quarter, the company approximately 200,000 shares, bringing our year to date repurchase total to approximately more than greater than 2% of the company's outstanding shares. We continue to believe that repurchasing our equity at current valuation levels is prudent and one of, if not the best, allocations of free cash flow along with as high of a return opportunity as we see in the marketplace. We expect to continue this activity going forward. Speaker 200:08:45In conclusion, U. S. Energy sits at the beginning of what I believe is a true first mover advantage in this space, which I define as a growth focused, non hydrocarbon, industrial gas focused company in the United States. The existing small scale companies in the space are hindered by burdensome and convoluted equity structures, ugly balance sheets and listed on exchanges that are avoided by most institutional investors. U. Speaker 200:09:09S. Energy faces none of these hurdles and we believe further corporate opportunities will present themselves as this becomes apparent in the marketplace. Now I would like to introduce Mark Zajac, our CFO, who will provide a detailed update on the financial results for the Q2. Speaker 300:09:24Thank you, Ryan. Hello, everyone. Let's delve into the financial details for the Q2 of 2024. Total oil and gas sales for the quarter amounted to approximately $6,000,000 reflecting a decrease from $8,000,000 in the same period last year. This decline was attributed to a 38% reduction in volumes and partially offset by a 22% increase in realized prices. Speaker 300:09:48It is important to note that this quarter's production was significantly impacted by severe weather events in several of our key operating areas. Sales from oil production contributed 91% of our total revenue for the quarter, demonstrating our continued focus on optimizing our oil assets. Our lease operating expense for the 2nd quarter was approximately 3,100,000 dollars equivalent to $27.69 per BOE, indicating impressive 18% reduction in total lease operating expense compared to the Q2 of 2023. This reduction can be attributed to asset sales, fewer one time workovers and our continued effort to increase operating efficiency. Severance and ad valorem taxes for the Q2 of 2024 totaled approximately $400,000 reflecting a decline from $500,000 in the same period last year. Speaker 300:10:39As a percentage of total oil and gas sales revenue, these taxes account for approximately 6.1% during the quarter. Cash, general and administrative expenses was $1,600,000 for the Q2 of 2024, a reduction of 43% when compared to the same period of 2023. The 2nd quarter saw a significant reduction in accounting and professional fees and compensation and benefits when compared to the same period a year ago. Turning to our net financial performance. The company reported a net loss of $2,000,000 in the Q2 of 2024, an improvement of $500,000 when compared to the Q2 of 2023. Speaker 300:11:18Our adjusted EBITDA stood at $1,100,000 in the Q2 of 2024 compared to $900,000 in the same period last year, influenced most notably by the reduction in total cash operating expenses from the prior period. Let's briefly touch upon our balance sheet. As of June 30, 2024, the company held outstanding debt of $7,000,000 on our $20,000,000 revolving credit facility. Our cash position stood at $2,200,000 Subsequent to the quarter end, we paid down $5,000,000 of our credit facility, leaving $2,000,000 of debt outstanding as of today. In conclusion, we are pleased with our operating performance and financial results that we are able to support the company's initiatives in a way that maintain a full that maintain full balance integrity. Speaker 300:12:01My objective is to ensure that the company's reporting process maintains a high standard of excellence and we feel confident in our ability to support any growth initiative we may entertain going forward. Thank you for your participation this morning. We are now ready to take your questions. Operator00:12:15Thank you. We'll now be conducting a question and answer Our first question comes from the line of Jesse Solvenson with E. F. Hutton. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 400:12:49Hi, everyone. Thanks for taking my question today. I was just curious, I heard the commentary on LOE per BOE moderating looking forward here as operations are more normalized. I'm curious though when it comes to the acquisition of these additional assets in Montana and noticed in the press release the commentary on the wells being spud in the Q3 here. How should we look at G and A going forward? Speaker 400:13:20Thank you. Speaker 200:13:22Hi, Jesse, it's Ryan. Good morning. Thanks for the question. Good question. So I guess two parts on our legacy oil and gas assets as we kind of explained yesterday in the release, but just verbalizing, I think most people are aware at least, heavy, heavy weather in the Q2, Hurricane Beryl came through and took a lot of our Gulf Coast production offline, most of that being in Liberty, which is just east of Houston. Speaker 200:13:54So obvious comment, but removing producing barrels and then adding the expenses to handle the weather related events, etcetera, kind of inflated that per barrel metric in the Q2, it's the same even though it was a little bit less than the Q1, it's the same reason going forward on an LOE basis in our oil and gas assets, right, outside of another I would love to say we'll never expect another weather event on the Gulf Coast. That's probably not accurate. But where we stand right here right now going forward over the next couple of quarters, we're confident that we'll get that per barrel metric back to the numbers that we saw kind of late last year. From a what to expect on our upcoming drilling, we're not ready to give out specific guidance on those wells yet. I think that's coming in the intermediate term on our next quarterly earnings just because it's our first well to drill up there. Speaker 200:15:01Of course, we have some thoughts. We believe these wells are going to come in around $1,500,000 $1,600,000 $1,400,000 of capital costs. First well is probably going to be a little bit more than that just while we really make sure that everything we want to do is going on. But on a metric basis, on the new development, I don't think we're ready to give those numbers out yet until we have our first well drilled and producing. From a G and A perspective, I do think our G and A is going to continue to trend down. Speaker 200:15:44As we look at our portfolio here of our legacy oil and gas assets, I think we have multiple opportunities in the current price environment, even lower prices than now to really pull forward some value with those assets. And pulling forward value on assets, obvious comment, isn't just the cash we receive now. It's that use of proceeds, what's the corporate overhead synergies we can realize with doing that. And ultimately, I believe that we can optimize our platform here to where the G and A and the professionals that we bring on with the new development is more than offset by the G and A optimization efficiently running our legacy assets. So I don't believe that we will see any inflated G and A numbers. Speaker 200:16:41And at the point, if there is an absolute G and A increase, I think it would be on a per metric basis, significantly less than what we realize now. Speaker 400:16:52Thanks for the details on the financial operations there on both these line items. And then I'll ask this last question, then leave it to the rest of the call. But in terms of looking at legacy asset sales, are we still expecting to potentially line up some future sales of some of these assets to fund maybe this build out or are we comfortable with our liquidity position today and looking elsewhere and just more so focusing on the operations of the business? Thank you. Speaker 200:17:24Yes, of course, great question. And I'll kind of start at the end of the question and work my way through it. I'm perfectly comfortable with our liquidity position today to develop, call it, the first phase of our new project With our asset sale that we completed in July, paid down another significant portion of our debt. I think we have $2,000,000 outstanding today, a little more than $2,000,000 cash on the balance sheet with $18,000,000 available on our revolver. So with all the normal premises of keeping our cash structure clean, keeping our leverage profile down, I'm very comfortable with where we are from a liquidity perspective. Speaker 200:18:06That being said and just kind of diving back into my previous answer, like the vast majority of companies, there is no doubt optimization we can do on our legacy assets. When U. S. Energy came together over the last couple of years, we had an asset base. We have an asset base that is geographically diverse. Speaker 200:18:27Not all of those assets are equal. And as I look at them going forward, if we can pull forward 4 or 5 years of projected cash flow at current commodity prices opportunistically in a process that gets 4, 5, 6 bids, that's always something that we're going to look at. It's just where we trade at right now, the equity valuations, if we can monetize that cash at a very significant increase from where we trade and allocate that capital to what we believe is an extremely high rate of return project with our new acquisitions and development, it's kind of a no brainer. So it's definitely on the radar. It's definitely something we're focused on. Speaker 200:19:14We'll be opportunistic about it. It's not something that's necessary to fund things going forward though. Speaker 100:19:24Okay, great. Thank you very much. Operator00:19:29Our next question is from the line of Charles Meade with Johnson Rice. Speaker 500:19:36I want to say I appreciate the midyear oil and gas PDP update there, of I think it was just under $51,000,000 It really highlights your value. But I want to go back to I think you discussed this on the last on your last or really the last call discussing the acquisition. What is the timing to get a similar kind of PDP or 3rd party resource estimate on your helium assets. I know or at least I believe you said you're going to have one after you drill these 2 wells, but are you going to have one before on the existing wells? Speaker 200:20:20Yes. Great question, Charles, and good morning. So where we stand right now on the acreage that we've closed, we have our internal data. We have a large resource report from a very well known third party engineering firm. Again, in the world of SEC reporting and 1P reporting, resource reports aren't usually filed. Speaker 200:20:44They're kind of investor presentation materials. I think once we drill this first well coming up, I think we I believe we spud it on September 9. We'll have our data on that well, let's call it, by October 1. And then I think in the Q4, we have both of those items. We have our larger kind of resource overview reserve report. Speaker 200:21:09And then once we have a well drilled and operating out of the assumption that we close our transaction that we're under LOI on and the producing well that they have, I believe that we'll have our, let's call it, 1P reserves, just processing, etcetera, kind of makes PDP and PDNP very similar by the end of the year, hopefully by Q4 earnings. I know that's kind of a 6 week window there, Q4 earnings and end of the year. But that's my expectation. We're working with 2 of the largest reserve engineering firms in the world right now on getting this done. So it's something on our plate and we'll be here by the end of the year. Speaker 500:22:00Got it. And so if I'm understanding you correctly, Ryan, we're kind of going to get we're going to get 2 reports or two numbers. 1, on the total resource and then the second on here's what's proved developed with these wellbores. Is that the right understanding? Speaker 200:22:17Absolutely. And then I mean just another way to say it, just the a 1P, 2P, 3P resource report and then the SEC report that shows up on our 10 ks. Speaker 500:22:26Got it. Got it. Okay. And then secondly, you've covered this, I think, a bit on your last call, you said that you'd be able to fund any development internally, whether it's asset sales or cash flow. But can you give us a sense, you've given us an estimate for what these each of these first two wells cost. Speaker 500:22:49I think your number is 1,400,000 dollars But what is the follow on CapEx in the success case? And over what time frame does it play out? Speaker 200:23:00Yes. No, that's a great question. And I could go through this for an hour, but I'll try to keep it concise and not look like 5 years out. And I'll also preface this by saying, we look at this right now as phases, right, Phase 1, Phase 2, Phase 3. Speaker 500:23:15Right. Speaker 200:23:17Phase 2 gets bigger as Phase 1 gets successful and Phase 3 gets bigger as Phase 1 and 2 gets successful. So I'm not going to sit here and say from here to eternity, like you don't ever need outside capital. But as we look at, I'll call it the next 12 to 18 months, what do we need to start, I'll call it selling our industrial gas. We need to drill 2 or 3 wells, and we need to put in a processing plan. Right now, we think these wells, I'm going to call them 1.5. Speaker 200:23:45I think the first one comes in a little bit higher. I think the next one is coming a little bit lower just as we continue to learn what we're doing. It's very easy for me to say in my seat, but it's very simple drilling compared to I think what most folks are historically familiar with in terms of like horizontal shale drilling, shallow conventional wells. So we look at it at at that 2 or 3 excuse me, at that 2 or 3 well number $3,000,000 to $4,500,000 of drilling capital over the next we're drilling 2 now. We'll probably have 1 at some point in time before the next summer. Speaker 200:24:25And then the processing plant for these wells, we're forecasting it around $8,000,000 to $9,000,000 I think from a perfect corporate finance perspective and how do you come up with a cap structure on that type of infrastructure, it's very simple. I think it's half equity, half debt. And so you start looking at what are the equity needs for U. S. Energy over the next 12 months to where we are processing and selling meaningful amounts of industrial gases out of Montana. Speaker 200:25:05It's a $8,000,000 to $10,000,000 kind of equity capital need from U. S. Energy. Another way to put equity capital need would just be a cash need. And whether that comes from cash on hand, cash from our operations, a bit of credit facility debt, asset sale pull forwards, I think right now, at least from everything that we've seen and the processes that we've run on the divestiture side, that's a number that I'm not overly concerned about right now being able to fund. Speaker 200:25:40The legacy piggybacking on your comment a second ago, like our legacy balance sheet, which still has $50,000,000 or so approved oil and gas reserves really gives us that flexibility to where we're not going out to the market hat in hand willing to take any kind of transaction. We don't need to do that, again for this initial get off the ground phase of proving our concept. Operator00:26:07So I think it's Speaker 200:26:08a mixture of that. I mean, I don't have the exact answer right now. It's we're in a flexible position to be opportunistic on these type of assets and these type of transactions. Our main assets remaining right now on the oil and gas side are in Montana and in East Texas. But if you look at our map, we have a lot of straggler stuff in between those two areas. Speaker 200:26:31And in situations where hypothetically, we can clear $2,000,000 on a small asset sale, take off 2x that of ARO on our balance sheet and combine another $300,000 to $500,000 annually on, I'll call it, corporate overhead synergies ranging from insurance, G and A, etcetera, those dollars go straight to our new project. And that's how I look at the funding. And so far, the deals we've done, the capital has been highly accessible. Speaker 500:27:12Got it. Thanks for all that elaboration of your thinking, Ryan. It's helpful. Speaker 200:27:17Absolutely. Thanks, Charles. Operator00:27:20Thank you. At this time, we've reached the end of the question and answer session. And I'll turn the call over to Ryan Smith for closing remarks. Speaker 200:27:30Yes. I thank everybody for calling in this morning. Thank you for your time. We're very excited about the transactions that we're undertaking and we're developing right now. And we look forward to rejoining you on our next call and giving market updates on the activity in the interim. Operator00:27:49This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time and thank you for your participation. Have a wonderful day.Read morePowered by