3 Things to Watch When Devon Energy Corp Reports Fourth-Quarter Results

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Like many rivals, Devon Energy (NYSE: DVN) ran into an unexpected headwind in the third quarter after Hurricane Harvey pounded the Gulf Coast, which forced the industry to shut-in wells and tap the brakes on their drilling activities. However, the company said its operations bounced back quickly, which kept it on pace to hit its full-year production target. Hitting that goal is one of three things investors should check out when the company reports its fourth-quarter results next Tuesday evening.

See if production met expectations

Devon Energy expected to end last year producing between 551,000 to 571,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (BOE/D). Of that amount, it thought oil production in the U.S. would be between 120,000 to 125,000 barrels per day. That rate would put its U.S. crude output from retained assets up 20% since the beginning of the year.

A group of oil pumps with the sun behind them.
A group of oil pumps with the sun behind them.

Image source: Getty Images.

Hitting that target is important for the company because its U.S. oil production earns the highest margins, and therefore helps drive profitability. There's reason to be optimistic that the company can hit its production target because it drilled another gusher in the STACK Shale play during the quarter. Devon noted in mid-November that the Faith Marie 1-H well delivered a peak 24-hour rate of 5,100 BOE and was on pace to produce an average of 4,600 BOE/D during its first month in operation. Further, the company pointed out that this well had the highest oil productivity of any STACK well it had drilled. That well was just one of 25 in the region that the company expected to bring online during the quarter, which put it on pace to boost output from 111,000 BOE/D in the third quarter to more than 120,000 BOE/D by the end of 2017.

Look for an update on assets sales

The STACK has become one of Devon Energy's core areas of focus over the past year due to the high returns it can earn from drilling gushers like Faith Marie. Because Devon is shifting most of its attention to that play as well as the Delaware Basin, it has has been selling off other assets to strengthen its balance sheet. The company unloaded $3.2 billion of properties in 2016 and announced last May that it would jettison another $1 billion of assets over the next 12 to 18 months.

The company has already made excellent progress on that latest sale plan, sealing deals to sell $420 million of properties through the third quarter. However, it still had one large asset left to unload, which was a portion of its land in the Barnett Shale. Devon expected to receive bids for that asset during the quarter, which is why investors should see if it has an update on this sale. If Devon can find a buyer willing to meet its price, it would push the company closer to its debt reduction target while also improving companywide margins and profitability.