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(Idea) Spartan Delta: One Of Our Favorite Natural Gas-Weighted E&Ps
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(Idea) Spartan Delta: One Of Our Favorite Natural Gas-Weighted E&Ps

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HFI Research
Jan 12, 2024
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(Idea) Spartan Delta: One Of Our Favorite Natural Gas-Weighted E&Ps
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Note: Dollar figures refer to Canadian dollars unless otherwise specified.

Spartan Delta (SDE:CA) is a natural gas-weighted Canadian E&P with assets in the Deep Basin in Alberta. The company’s assets reside in the Cardium, Spirit River, and Duvernay formations. It produces approximately 39,500 boe/d and has 45,000 boe/d of infrastructure capacity.

Management estimates that SDE has nearly 800 drilling locations, enough to last nearly four decades at current drilling rates. At the end of the third quarter, the company had $65 million in net debt. It has an enterprise value of $590 million.

We consider SDE to be one of the most attractive equity investments among North American natural gas-weighted E&Ps. The company maintains significant liquids exposure, which provides upside amid higher oil prices. Its production mix ensures cash flow generation at low commodity prices and high capital efficiency among gas-weighted E&Ps. We rate the shares as a Buy and initiate a $4.00 price target.

Spartan Delta's Background

SDE was formed in 2019 by Richard McHardy and his team. Before Spartan Delta, McHardy led three previous Spartan entities, including Spartan Exploration in 2011, Spartan Oil in 2011-2013, and Spartan Energy in 2013-2018.

McHenry grew SDE from 250 boe/d in 2019 to 80,000 boe/d in 2023. Most of the growth came from acquisitions when assets and businesses were priced at a discount due to low prevailing commodity prices.

SDE’s first major acquisition was Bellatrix, which it acquired in April 2020 in the depths of the pandemic-related downturn for $102.2 million. The acquisition increased SDE’s production to 25,000 boe/d, 30% of which was oil.

In March 2021, SDE acquired three private companies that were producing a combined 9,700 boe/d for $147.9 million. These acquisitions increased the company’s scale in the Montney, namely in the Gold Creek, Simonette, and Willesden Green sub-basins. Then in August, it acquired privately-held Velvet Energy for $751.5 million. Velvet was producing 20,600 boe/d in the Montney, consisting of 42% oil, 42% NGLs, and 44% natural gas. Velvet had a multi-decade reserve life, which allowed SDE to use its technical expertise to build value organically.

SDE paused its acquisition spree in 2022. It focused instead on integrating its assets and used the cash flow from high commodity prices to pay down debt. By September, it had fully repaid its revolving credit facility.

In November, SDE’s board of directors announced it was evaluating strategic repositioning alternatives to enhance shareholder value. The company possessed multiple decades of drilling inventory and more than $2 billion of tax pools. It forecasted 80,000 boe/d of production in 2023 and planned to grow production by 10% annually over the coming years. Given SDE’s prospects, management believed its $2.5 billion market cap undervalued the company’s equity. It sought a catalyst to unlock shareholder value.

That catalyst arrived in March 2023 in the form of SDE’s sale its Gold Creek and Karr Montney assets to Crescent Point Energy (CPG) for $1.7 billion. The deal’s proceeds were distributed as a $9.50 per share dividend to SDE shareholders.

In conjunction with the CPG asset sale, SDE announced that it would also transfer 4,000 boe/d of production to a newly created entity that would develop its Montney assets. The entity was called Logan Energy (LGN:CA) and was to be spun off as a standalone public company. SDE shareholders would receive one share of Logan Energy and one non-transferable purchase warrant for one Logan Energy share. Management estimated Logan’s net asset value at the time to be $0.35 per share. Richard McHardy, then SDE’s Executive Chairman, joined Logan as President and CEO. We profiled the company here.

Since its founding in 2019, SDE has distinguished itself through its technical expertise. After making an acquisition, drilling results would consistently exceed management’s expectations. SDE’s production results routinely outpaced management’s guidance. Over its short life, SDE generated ample cash flow and used free cash flow to pay down the debt taken on to fund acquisitions.

Since 2019, share-price appreciation and distributions of cash and equity have resulted in a more than 300% total return for the company’s public shareholders.

Today’s Remade SDE

After SDE’s strategic repositioning, the remaining entity was left with Deep Basin assets that produced approximately 71% natural gas, 23% NGLs, and 6% crude oil and condensate. The company planned to continue its development of these assets with a focus on returning capital to shareholders. Its operations are shown in the map below.

Source: Spartan Delta January 2024 Investor Presentation.

Management released its 2024 guidance on November 28. SDE’s capital budget calls for $130 million of investment. Production is expected to be in the range of 38,500 to 40,500 boe/d, comprised of 69% natural gas, less than its current weighting of 71%. The lower gas weighting is due to plans to target the Cardium, Spirit River, and other oilier plays. Management expects oil production to increase by 17% and total production by 7%. The higher oil weighting is expected to boost capital efficiency by 20%.

In 2024, we expect SDE to pay out 70% to 75% of free cash flow to shareholders, with the remainder of free cash flow allocated to paying down long-term debt. Net debt stood at $65 million at the end of the third quarter. By year-end, SDE should be nearly net debt-free at current commodity prices. At that point, the percentage of capital distributed to shareholders is likely to increase further.

Given management’s stellar track record of delivering results for shareholders over the past few years, we’re confident SDE will meet guidance in 2024.

New Development Focus Area

SDE’s first big move after completing its strategic repositioning was to acquire prospective undeveloped assets in the West Shale sub-basin of the Duvernay for $25 million. The acreage included 400 boe/d of production that resides in some of the least-developed regions of the Duvernay.

The new acreage includes 130,000 acres concentrated in the Duvernay’s oil and condensate window that lies directly west of SDE’s existing Deep Basin. Management has remained largely mum on its development plans for the asset, as it is attempting to consolidate an area characterized by fractured ownership. The footprint of the recently acquired acreage relative to SDE’s existing Deep Basin acreage is shown below.

Source: Spartan Delta January 2024 Investor Presentation.

The land acquisition came at an attractive price, amounting to $192 per acre assigning no value to the 400 boe/d of production. Recent transactions of producing acreage in the Deep Basin are made for more than $1,000 per acre, so the purchase price is very attractive if its production prospects pan out as management expects. The acreage lies in proximity to underutilized infrastructure, which will reduce investment requirements. Management is guiding to $25 million of capex on the assets in 2024.

New play development is something we look for in our E&P investments. While exploration is a risky undertaking because it involves significant upfront costs and no guarantee of success, it offers the greatest upside for shareholders if the cost of entry to a newly discovered region is low. Shareholders also benefit when E&Ps build their assets from the ground up, as they can design infrastructure to better suit their long-term needs.

The challenge with SDE’s new acreage is that Duvernay geology tends to be more complicated than Montney and Cardium acreage. We suspect this is one of the reasons why the stock market essentially ignores the new asset in SDE’s market valuation. If the acreage can be successfully developed and is economic at current commodity prices, it can represent considerable upside value for SDE shareholders. In fact, over the long term, if development pans out favorably, the new assets could be large enough to earn SDE shares a premium valuation multiple.

Valuation

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