Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Crescent Point Energy says no major sales or purchases for now

CEO of Calgary-based oil, gas company is happy with its current portfolio

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After a recent spree of large-scale transactio­ns cementing it as the dominant player in two major North American petroleum plays, Crescent Point Energy Corp. says it is done with buying and selling assets for the near future.

On a conference call with analysts to discuss the company's first-quarter financial results Friday, CEO Craig Bryksa said the Calgary-based oil and gas company is happy with its current portfolio.

“We're going to take a good long pause as far as the acquisitio­ns. We're happy with how things have come together here,” Bryksa said.

“I wouldn't look for any nearterm dispositio­ns, further upstream dispositio­ns, either.”

Crescent Point has been one of the most active Canadian oil and gas companies in recent years on the mergers and acquisitio­ns front, as it sought to restructur­e its portfolio of assets to focus on the Montney region of northwest Alberta and the adjacent Kaybob Duvernay shale gas play.

Among its acquisitio­ns were the 2021 purchase of Shell Canada's Kaybob Duvernay assets for $900 million, the 2023 purchase of Spartan Delta Corp.'s Montney assets for $1.7 billion and the purchase of Hammerhead Energy Corp.'s Montney assets for $2.55 billion shortly after that.

Crescent Point has been selling off assets in North Dakota, Saskatchew­an and other parts of Alberta to support its new geographic strategy. Earlier this week, the company announced it had signed a $600-million deal to sell some of its oil-producing properties in Saskatchew­an to Saturn Oil & Gas.

The Montney and Kaybob Duvernay are where Crescent Point sees its greatest opportunit­y, and Bryksa said he is pleased with the progress in those regions.

Year to date, he said Crescent Point has brought 18 Montney wells on stream, and is working to optimize drilling and completion­s techniques to enhance returns from the newly acquired assets.

In the Kaybob Duvernay, Bryksa said Crescent Point recently drilled what he said is the longest on-shore well ever drilled in Canada, at 9,017 metres including 5,400 metres of lateral length.

The record-breaking well will allow Crescent Point to reach portions of the reservoir that weren't otherwise accessible, he said.

For the first quarter of 2024, Crescent Point reported a financial loss Friday due to a non-cash impairment charge related to its sale of assets in Saskatchew­an.

The company said it lost $411.7 million (66 cents per share) for the quarter ended March 31, compared with a profit of $216.7 million (39 cents) per share a year earlier.

Crescent Point's oil and gas sales

We're going to take a good long pause as far as the acquisitio­ns. We're happy with how things have come together here.

for the quarter totalled $1.11 billion, up from $762.0 million in the first quarter of 2023.

Its total first-quarter production was 198,551 barrels of oil equivalent per day, compared with 139,280 in the prior year's quarter.

On an adjusted basis, the company says its net earnings from operations amounted to 30 cents per share, down from 40 cents per share in the same quarter last year.

RBC Capital Markets analyst Michael Harvey said in a note that while Crescent Point's quarterly results were better than expected, a higher valuation for the stock will depend on the company achieving “drama-free execution through 2024” as well as paying down debt.

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