Shares of DJ Basin-focused driller Bill Barrett Corporation (NYSE: BBG) got pummeled this week, plunging more than 19% after the company announced a merger agreement and a stock sale. However, these moves will strengthen its position in the promising DJ Basin and its balance sheet, which should enable it to drill high-return wells and grow production even if oil remains low. That returns-driven growth positions it for success in the coming years, which is why oil investors might want to think about scooping up shares after this week's drubbing.
Drilling down into what pulled the stock down this week
On Tuesday Bill Barrett Corporation unveiled a series of moves that sent shares tanking. The headliner was the announcement of a strategic business combination with private-equity-backed Fifth Creek Energy. Under the terms of the $649 million deal, Bill Barrett investors will exchange their stock on a 1-for-1 basis for shares of a newly formed holding company, and Fifth Creek's owner will receive 100 million shares of the new company.
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In addition, Bill Barrett agreed to exchange newly issued shares for $50 million of its 7% notes due in 2022. It also completed the sale of another 21 million shares, raising $102 million in cash, which it plans to use to drill more wells. Those newly minted shares significantly dilute the value of existing investors' holdings -- Bill Barrett had roughly 75 million shares outstanding at the end of last quarter -- which is why the stock got walloped this week.
That said, the combined company promises to be a much stronger entity. For starters, it will hold a large-scale acreage position in the core of the oil-rich DJ Basin. The company will have decades of drilling inventory, including an estimated 2,865 undeveloped locations that can earn an average return of 65% at current oil prices. Meanwhile, it will sport a significantly improved balance sheet since Fifth Creek has minimal debt and Bill Barrett's debt level will be 62% below end-of-2015 levels, as a result of the debt exchange and stock offering. That sets the combined company up to excel in the coming years.
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An emerging oil ATM
The company's increased focus on the DJ Basin of northern Colorado and southern Wyoming is worth noting. While it isn't as widely known as the Eagle Ford shale and the Permian Basin, it is quietly developing into an excellent location for oil companies that control land in the heart of the play. One of those companies is shale giant EOG Resources (NYSE: EOG). It currently holds about 81,000 net acres in Laramie County, Wyoming. EOG's land is just to the northwest of Fifth Creek's property in Weld County, Colorado, and some of Bill Barrett's legacy acreage in Laramie County. That position is turning out to be a prime spot for EOG Resources, which has identified 200 drilling locations that can earn it a premium return of at least 30%, after tax, at $40 oil. While that's a much-smaller inventory than the company's assets in the Eagle Ford and Permian Basin, the returns are lucrative enough that EOG continues allocating capital to the region to keep drilling.