Gulfport Energy Corp (GPOR) 2025 Q4 法說會逐字稿

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  • Operator

  • Greetings, and welcome to the Gulfport Energy Corporation fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings call. (Operator Instructions).

  • As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Jessica Antle, Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin.

  • Jessica Wills - Director Investor Relations

  • Thank you, Melissa, and good morning. Welcome to Gulfport Energy's fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings conference call. Speakers on today's call include John Reinhart, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Michael Hodges, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.

  • In addition, Matthew Rucker, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, will be available for the Q&A portion of today's call. I would like to remind everybody that during this conference call, the participants may make certain forward-looking statements.

  • Actual results and future events could differ materially from those that are indicated in these forward-looking statements due to a variety of factors. Information concerning these factors can be found in the company's filings with the SEC. In addition, we may reference non-GAAP measures.

  • Please refer to our most recent earnings release and our investor presentation for important disclosures regarding such measures, including reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP financial measures.

  • An updated Gulfport presentation was posted yesterday evening to our website in conjunction with the earnings announcement. Please review at your leisure. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to John Reinhart, President and CEO.

  • John Reinhart - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Thank you, Jessica, and thank you for joining our call today. I'll begin my comments with a discussion of the 2026 development program we announced yesterday with our earnings release, followed by an overview of the 2025 results. Building on our consistent operational execution, successful discretionary acreage acquisition programs and strong financial performance, our 2026 outlook is centered on prioritizing our most attractive opportunities and allocating capital to maximize value.

  • This year's development program is focused on sustaining the company's exposure to a constructive natural gas environment. And as such, we plan to center the majority of our development efforts in the dry gas and wet gas windows of the Utica.

  • These development areas represent our highest return wells at today's commodity prices and we forecast more than 75% of our 2026 turn-in-line program to be weighted to these two areas. As a reminder, the Utica wet gas which ranks as the most economic development area in the company's portfolio has been a key focus of our inventory adds over the past few years, and this planned development activity reinforces our success of adding high quality, high-return inventory that supports near-term development.

  • We remain consistent in our capital allocation framework and continue to believe the most attractive uses of our available free cash flow our discretionary acreage acquisitions, highlighted by today's announcement of the expected successful results of our existing program and the continued repurchase of our undervalued equity.

  • We expect to maintain an active repurchase program through 2026, and our strong financial position provides maximum flexibility as we intend to utilize both our adjusted free cash flow generation and available capacity on our revolving credit facility to opportunistically repurchase our equity while maintaining an attractive leverage ratio of approximately 1 times or below.

  • This includes our announced plan to deploy more than $140 million towards repurchases in the first quarter of 2022.

  • And reflecting our confidence in the value of our business and the upside we see in our equity today. Total capital spend for the year is projected to be in the range of $400 million to $430 million which includes $35 million to $40 million of maintenance land and seismic investment.

  • Embedded in this program is approximately $15 million targeting base production improvements across both basins, which includes highly accretive workovers aimed at enhancing long-term well performance and reducing natural production declines. In addition, we plan to invest an incremental $10 million in the Marcellus North development area when compared to our 2025, full year spend directed at drilling two wells in Jefferson County, Ohio during the second half of 2026, and then to be carried as DUCs into 2027.

  • This activity is aimed at confirming phase window and production mix, which will support future development planning and midstream evaluation across our substantial inventory positions in both Jefferson and Belmont Counties.

  • With respect to our maintenance land and seismic investments, this spend includes approximately $5 million directed towards acquiring proprietary 3D seismic in 2026 and that will facilitate improved well planning in our targeted Monroe County discretionary by area.

  • The company currently forecast approximately 60% of our drilling and completion capital will be deployed in the first half of 2026, with the activity trending slightly lower in the third and fourth quarters. We will continue to execute on our current discretionary acreage acquisition program, primarily in Belmont and Monroe Counties.

  • Driven by our recent success, we now expect to achieve the high end of the previously provided range, investing approximately $100 million in total, of which $62.9 million was deployed at year-end 2025.

  • We plan to conclude this program during the first quarter of 2026 and upon successful completion, we expect to add over two years of core drilling inventory at our current development pace.

  • These acquisitions are being made at approximately $2 million per net location well below recent valuation metrics implied in larger inorganic transactions in the immediate area and reinforces the significant value uplift we are capturing through these attractive organic leasing efforts.

  • Since 2022, our targeted discretionary acreage acquisitions, successful execution of new development on our excuse me, Utica position and delineation and development efforts in the Marcellus have collectively unlocked substantial value across our core assets.

  • The discretionary acreage acquisition and new development initiatives by the end of the first quarter of will have added over 5.5 years of high-quality net locations in addition to the four years of delineated net Marcellus locations. In total, the company will have expanded our gross inventory by more than 40%, and we'll continue to monitor opportunities to further expand our resource depth. Turning to production.

  • We forecast our development program will deliver 1.03 million to 1.055 billion cubic feet equivalent per day in 2026.

  • And relatively flat over our full year 2025 average. This outlook incorporates several temporary factors, including known production downtime associated with simultaneous operations of an offsetting operator as well as planned third-party midstream maintenance in the first quarter of 2026.

  • In addition, winter storm created weather-related downtime that modestly impacted full year volumes and is incorporated in our full year production guidance. Importantly, these impacts are short lived.

  • And as we move through 2026 we expect production levels to strengthen as new wells come online and these production impacts abate, which positions the company attractively for an improving commodity environment. Reflecting this momentum, we forecast fourth quarter 2026 production will increase approximately 5% compared to the fourth quarter of 2025.

  • In our investor deck on Slide 11, we include a more detailed outlook on our expected 2020 capital and production cadence Shifting to the company's 2025 performance, Gulfport delivered another year of strong operational and financial performance, strategically expanding our high-quality resource base and remain consistent in our commitment to returning capital to shareholders.

  • After adjusting for free cash flow utilized for discretionary acreage acquisitions, the company returned more than 100% of our adjusted free cash flow to shareholders through common stock repurchases during the year, all while maintaining a solid financial position with leverage below 1 times at year-end.

  • Full year 2025, capital expenditures excluding discretionary acreage acquisitions, totaled approximately $463 million, including $354 million of base operated D&C capital expenditures and $35 million of maintenance land spending with production for the full year, averaging 1.04 billion cubic feet equivalent per day.

  • In the fourth quarter, we completed the drilling and completion of our first development well in the Utica. These wells were successfully drilled, fracked and recently brought online during the first quarter. Early results are encouraging with the performance tracking in line with expectations and consistent with recent traditionally developed dry gas offsets.

  • In closing, 2025 represented a solid year of execution for Gulfport with operational performance supporting attractive adjusted free cash flow generation, inventory expansion and consistent capital return through equity repurchases.

  • As we move into 2026, our story remains the same, prioritize our highest return opportunities, deepen our high-quality resource base and grow sustainable free cash flow that can be used to continue delivering meaningful returns to our shareholders. Now I'll turn the call over to Michael to discuss our financial results.

  • Michael Hodges - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President

  • Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. I'll start this morning by summarizing the key components of our fourth quarter financial results, which highlight the company's strong financial position as we close out 2025 and began 2026, with considerable momentum that has translated to an excellent start to the year. Net cash provided by operating activities before changes in working capital totaled approximately $222 million in the fourth quarter more than double our capital expenditures for the quarter.

  • We reported adjusted EBITDA of $235 million and generated $120 million of adjusted free cash flow during the quarter. With this strong cash flow generation supporting our significant common share repurchases and active discretionary acreage acquisition program, all while maintaining the strength of our balance sheet at year-end leverage of 0.9 times.

  • Total cash operating cost for the fourth quarter totaled $1.25 per Mcfe in line with our full year 2025 guidance range and supporting our outstanding margins for the quarter. As John mentioned, we continue to prioritize development of our high-return Utica wet gas assets, which resulted in a higher weighting of NGLs in our production mix in the last half of 2025 that we expect to continue into 2026.

  • As a result, we are forecasting a slight increase to our 2026 per unit LOE and midstream expenses, including gathering, processing, transportation and compression costs over the full year of 2025, from the continued development of our high-margin liquids-rich assets. We currently forecast per unit operating costs to be in the range of $1.23 to $1.34 per Mcf in 2026 and with the top line value contribution from increased NGL production and our improving gas price differentials, which I'll highlight shortly, more than offsetting the slight change in operating costs and ultimately leading to rising cash flows.

  • Our all-in realized price for the fourth quarter was $3.65 per Mcfe, including the impact of cash-settled derivatives and a $0.10 premium to the NYMEX Henry Hub index price.

  • While we have experienced significant volatility over the past several months, we continue to believe we are entering an exciting period for the natural gas market, supported by LNG export growth and increasing natural gas-fired power generation driven by rising power demand from the build-out of new data centers. These more permanent structural shifts, along with the recent price strength following Winter Storm Fern, are expected to derive meaningful improvements in our natural gas price realizations going forward.

  • As such, based on our marketing portfolio for our natural gas and current forward markets, we have tightened our forecasted natural gas differential for full year 2026 by 25% compared to 2025 and we currently forecast to realize $0.15 to $0.30 per Mcf below NYMEX Henry Hub for the full year 2026, further bolstering our free cash flow outlook for 2026.

  • With respect to EBITDA and adjusted free cash flow generation, the rise in expected natural gas prices and our improving outlook for realizations, when combined with our returns-focused capital allocation, position 2026 to provide incremental growth for Gulfport from a cash flow perspective.

  • Based on current strip pricing, we forecast our adjusted free cash flow has the potential to grow significantly when compared to 2025, providing substantial financial optionality and allowing us to allocate additional free cash flow to the most accretive opportunities and further strengthen our already top-tier free cash flow yield relative to our natural gas peers.

  • Turning to the balance sheet. Our financial position remains strong with trailing 12-month net leverage ending the year at below 1 times. As of December 31, 2025, our liquidity totaled $806 million comprised of $1.8 million of cash plus $804.3 million of borrowing base availability.

  • The strength of our balance sheet and our strong financial position today provide tremendous flexibility as we are positioned to be opportunistic should situations arise that allow us to capture value for our stakeholders.

  • When coupled with the meaningful growth in our expected free cash flow generation in 2026, we are well positioned to continue our track record of returning capital to shareholders through our equity repurchase program and investing in highly accretive discretionary acreage acquisition opportunities.

  • During the fourth quarter, we repurchased 665,000 shares of common stock for approximately $135 million, ahead of our previously announced plans in November and inclusive of a direct repurchase of common stock from our largest shareholder, totaling approximately 46,000 shares, which allowed us to capture a larger block of unrecognized equity value at a discount to market prices without impacting our public float.

  • As of December 31, and since the inception of the program, we have repurchased approximately 7.4 million shares of common stock, including the preferred redemption in September of 2025, at an average share price of $125.19, nearly 35% below our current share price.

  • We believe our consistent and disciplined approach to repurchases has created substantial value for our shareholders, and we will continue to evaluate opportunities where the return profile is clearly compelling. Given our current valuation and the strength of our underlying fundamentals, we see continued share repurchases as an attractive allocation of capital.

  • Accordingly, and despite our normal front-weighted capital cadence, we announced our plans to allocate more than $140 million to repurchases in the first quarter of 2026.

  • And to be funded from adjusted free cash flow and available revolver capacity, all while maintaining leverage at or below approximately 1 times.

  • Assuming successful repurchases during the first quarter, we will have repurchased approximately 7% of our current market capitalization in just the fourth and first quarters alone. In summary, Gulfport exited 2025 with strong operational momentum a resilient balance sheet and an asset portfolio that continues to improve in both quality and depth.

  • Our disciplined approach to capital allocation combined with an increasingly constructive natural gas backdrop, position us to deliver meaningful adjusted free cash flow growth in 2026.

  • This financial strength provides a significant flexibility to continue returning capital to shareholders and to invest in highly accretive opportunities and enhance long-term shareholder value. With that, I will turn the call back over to the operator to open up the line for questions.

  • Operator

  • (Operator Instructions).

  • Neal Dingmann, William Blair.

  • Neal Dingmann - Equity Analyst

  • Morning guys. Thanks for the time. Michael, maybe just something on you hit you first just on the question on the forecasted improved forecasted price realization. Is this you just were talking about and was very positive. Are you locking in now some basis hedges are you doing other things now to capture these improved realizations? I guess that's kind of my first point. And then remind me again, make sure I understand what is giving you all the confidence for these improved realizations or these improved price realizations.

  • John Reinhart - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Yeah, hey, Neil, Thanks for the question. I'll hit the first part. Certainly, we are active with our basis hedging program. I think we've got some disclosures out in our release that will indicate, yes, we've been doing some basis hedging. I think that's been a part of our program over the last few years, and we have an idea of where we think there's value to capture there.

  • And tend to be opportunistic around those moves and certainly have seen some improving opportunities. I think that really leads into the second part of your question is, what gives us the confidence? I mean it's a few things, right? I mean I think we have seen rising demand in those kinds of local Northeastern basis markets. I think that's starting to flow through to some of the indexes.

  • So if you think about where some of the most liquid Northeast indexes trade. We've seen those come in. And I'm talking about kind of in the out years, we've seen those come in $0.15 or $0.20 over the last 30 to 60 days. I think that's an indication of that rising demand.

  • So that's giving us additional confidence I think the winter storm that we saw in the first quarter, I think a number of operators realized some benefit from that.

  • I mean I do think sometimes that we forget that those periods of volatility provide a lot of value when they occur, they're certainly unpredictable. But so I think you'll see that flowing through into our realizations. And then I think we're always on the lookout for ways to maximize value through our marketing team and there have been some opportunities to do some smaller deals.

  • I know some of our peers sometimes look for the big wins, but we've had some opportunities to do some smaller deals with some folks that aggregate gas in order to provide supply, and those typically provide an uplift to the index price as well.

  • So I'd say it's a combined effort from those things, but we do feel good that going into this year, we should see a meaningful improvement in our realizations.

  • Neal Dingmann - Equity Analyst

  • Great details. And then Secondly, John, maybe for you or Matt, just a question on sort of infrastructure and things you were talking about today, you mentioned, I guess, even again today, some potential downtime. And I know you've talked about sort of some third-party issues in the past. What could you talk about I forget did you say today, you'll have some near-term production impact?

  • And then again, it seems like you guys have been addressing a lot of these internally things that you've been addressing sort of what gives you the confidence that a lot of these issues will just be near term or what should we think about sort of that third-party issues?

  • John Reinhart - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Yes, Neil, thanks for the question. I guess, first of all, I'll set out -- it was discussed in the last quarter, how are we going to plan to mitigate this these kind of occurrences that have happened really last year was initial meaningful one that happened. What I'll say is outside of just closer coordination with our contractors and vendors, we're really focused on just creating optionality within our development program in various areas in the dry gas areas and the wet gas areas, we cover a lot of ground over these areas.

  • And I think just building in some flexibility with how you develop these wells considering how the offset operators develop. I mean it also helps the midstream partners kind of plan around a flatter type growth profile, more manageable.

  • So how you mitigate it long term is really just create more optionality, and we do that through planning and through our discretionary acreage program. I think overall, whenever we talk about the impacts to 2026, they are short term and they were planned. We forecasted those out.

  • We poised what those generally would be in the first quarter. And that's just generally around midstream downtime maintenance, compression maintenance.

  • It's substantial whenever you think about the duration of five to six, seven days at a time, and then you have to bring on wells the volumes are pretty impactful, but it's only for a week or so, given a couple of different maintenance items the winter storm warning in combination with these planned maintenance and SIMOPS downtime, Neil, it's around approximately 10 million cubic feet impact for the day for '26.

  • That's built into the budget. So it was a more meaningful impact in certainly late Q1 and into early Q2. But that's represented in our slides in our public deck when you look at the production cadence. We certainly, as you look out through the year, expect those to abate.

  • And then with additional turn-in lines, you see a significant improvement in our production cadence from Q4 to Q4, about 5%, which really positions us well for winter pricing and what we feel like is going to be a constructive 2027.

  • Operator

  • Carlos Escalante, Wolf Research.

  • Carlos Escalante - Equity Analyst

  • Hey, good morning team.

  • Thank you for having me on. I wonder if I could take Neil's question a step further because obviously, we all realize and comment for your efforts on improving your differentials year-on-year.

  • But it's been clear after a few weeks of listening to your peers that there's an overall willing unwillingness from them to take an improving basis at the back of growing local demand it seems like most of them are positioning to grow with proactive discretionary capital ready to be deployed.

  • So I was wondering if you can perhaps elaborate on your game plan on that context and maybe in the basis of do you consider growing at some point in the future? Thank you.

  • Michael Hodges - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President

  • Yeah, Carlos, this is Michael. I'll take the first part and John can certainly jump in. But I mean, I think it's a good question, right? I think when we look at pricing and think about the right development cases for Gulfport, we're thinking about to your point, not just index pricing, but also differentials. And so the move that I've described this morning on the differential side, is meaningful for us.

  • On the other hand, I mean, for us to consider significant changes to our development cadence, we'd be looking out the curve and probably for a more significant change that would incentivize some kind of growth.

  • So if you look back at our history, we've traditionally been, call it, a flattish, low single-digit type company that maximizes free cash flow. And I think that's played out really well for us. I think that it helps us to kind of be consistent in our messaging.

  • And I think that a lot of our investors like what they get from Gulfport I think if you saw a structural shift that was, again, longer term and that was more meaningful, maybe you see some index price change beyond just what the strip shows out the curve.

  • I think that's always an option to the company. But I think maybe why you're not seeing that from some other peers is that it's been a pretty subtle change to this point. I do feel bullish about it going forward. But I think we need to see more of that before we would likely adjust our strategy in the future.

  • Carlos Escalante - Equity Analyst

  • Thank you,I appreciate the color, Mike. And then for my follow-up, a quick one. housekeeping item. Can you perhaps list for you, I think, Matt, give us an update on what you're seeing on the tail end of the type curve for the Henderson and the Yankee patch. Just wondering how those are developing now a few months out of their first production.

  • And maybe if you can provide any color on if you've seen any kind of similarities in your Northern Marcellus position relative to these. Thank you.

  • Neal Dingmann - Equity Analyst

  • Sure, Yes, Carlos, happy to take that. I think last quarter, we showed kind of the 60, 90-day plus on those. Obviously, the cumulative plots look very strong and attractive and similar to the Hendershot, if not slightly better on initial cume for us, it's really just confirming the type curve. These are both pads are on decline to their international decline state. They mirror kind of the type curve that we've built for that area as part of our development planning.

  • And so no significant upside changes, obviously, in a decline environment, but also for us, they're holding in very strong. And so they support the long-term type curve on our well spacing and our development plan for that area. As you think about the Marcellus North, we think it's approximate.

  • We think that acreage is on par, obviously, with our south position and has been delineated by some other operators a little bit further to the north. And so leading into this kind of discretionary area spend this year will really just be to John's point earlier, more for us to get a better handle on the liquid mix which will enable us to then look at our midstream contracts and negotiations where we can then deploy full-scale development there like we did in the South.

  • Operator

  • Zach Parham, JPMorgan.

  • Zach Parham - Analyst

  • Thanks for taking my question. You mentioned buyback more than $140 million in shares during 1Q that comes on the back of buy back a lot of shares can you just unpack that decision a little bit more? How did you decide on the malnostock demand during 1Q?

  • And could you just comment on how much of that you've bought already quarter to date or have you been active in the market? Just trying to get a sense of how aggressive that buyback is going to be over the next month?

  • Michael Hodges - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President

  • Yeah. Zach, this is Michael. Happy to dive into that a little bit more. It's a great question. So I think from our perspective, we've been consistent buyers of the equity over a long period of time.

  • I think -- we do have a bit of a, I'll call it, a change in cadence in our free cash flow, and we've not been formulaic in our repurchase activity.

  • So I think when we got to fourth quarter of last year and then again here in the first quarter of this year, we wanted to give a little bit more color around what our intentions might be given that first quarter for us sometimes with our capital cadence is a little bit less free cash flow.

  • And I think we want people to understand that we're not married to just that quarter's cash flow and that we're going to be opportunistic when we see the ability to buy the equity at an attractive value. So winding back to last year, we announced that we would target around $125 million. We actually were able to do a little bit more than that, which was great.

  • I mean we saw an opportunity there to surpass that number slightly. And that's why we've done that again this quarter. Again, that's just a way to be a little bit more transparent about our intentions there.

  • As far as what we've done so far in the quarter, I'll probably defer that question just given that we didn't announce that yesterday, and it's probably something that we'll keep close to the best, but do feel really confident that we'll succeed with the repurchases that we announced. And as we go forward, we're going to keep the balance sheet healthy to certainly, we'll continue to monitor what the right way to think about it is and try and be clear when we communicate with the investment community.

  • Neal Dingmann - Equity Analyst

  • Thanks, Michael. My follow-up is just on the production cadence. Based on your updated slides, your production is going to bottom in 2Q and then peak in 4Q of that's a bit of a different trajectory than you've had in the last few years. Can you just talk about that shift and give a little color on how your volumes could trend headed into early 2027, given that you'll exit 2026 at the highest for the year.

  • Michael Hodges - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President

  • Yeah, Zach, this is Matt. I can take that and let Michael and John hop in. That dip in 2Q, you're right, a little bit different than historical Primary driver there is we've got the four-well Marcellus pad coming online in that quarter as part of our development cadence.

  • And so if you think about that, that's lower IP on a relative basis than what a dry gas or wet gas would be and then we kind of pick up towards the back end of 2Q into 3Q with more of our wet gas, dry gas turning lines. So that's really what's driving that it's really just the development cadence side of things with our Marcellus.

  • Neal Dingmann - Equity Analyst

  • Any comment on what that can do as you enter into 2027, in the winter, can you sustain that level of production or anything you could add there?

  • John Reinhart - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Yeah. Zack, I'm glad you followed up there because I think it's an important point. I think when you're leaving this '26 with, call it, 5% more production based on our expectations than you had in '25, I think it sets you up really well for 2017.

  • I mean, obviously, it's a little bit early to comment on what the well mix will be next year, which pads will come on early in the year, later in the year. I think it is to our advantage exiting into what's typically a higher price season with a really strong quarter.

  • So you can see on the slides that we put out, we fourth quarter is going to be pretty strong for us. And yes, I think maybe where you're going with that is I think we feel really good with that momentum that will carry us forward. And then obviously, I have to come back later with some more details around what '27 really looks like.

  • Operator

  • Noah Hungness, Bank of America.

  • Noah Hungness - Analyst

  • Good Morning. For my first question here, you guys are increasing your drill lateral lengths this year to 1,900 feet from last year, that was 13,500 feet. That's a pretty significant increase. Could you maybe talk about what's driving that, what that means for D&C efficiencies. Costs? And then how can we think about average lateral light development in future years?

  • Michael Hodges - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President

  • No. This is Matt. You're right, yes, an increase year-over-year around that. I think primarily speaking, as we think about lateral lengths for us, we try to optimize in that 15,000 to 18,000 foot lateral length as we plan out future development in areas where we have more of a blank canvas.

  • As you know, Ohio starts to get more developed. We have existing PDP wellbores in and around us. And so a little bit of the decrease last year, the lower lateral length was just in regard to the land position and some of the wells that we drilled in and around existing areas, again, really highly economic wells just a little bit shorter in lateral.

  • This year, we're getting into some more of our discretionary acreage programs in the wet gas area that kind of gives us that runway to optimize development. And so we've got some longer lateral lengths in the program to be more efficient on the D&C side on $1 per foot and realize those gains. So I think for us, that 15% to 18% is a good spot to be.

  • In some cases, we may be longer than that. We've certainly drilled 20,000 footers in a little past and sometimes we may be shorter just depending on the land position down in that 12,000 foot range. So really a mixed bag there from last year, a little bit more on the longer side this year, but that 15% to 18% range is kind of where we target.

  • Noah Hungness - Analyst

  • Great, thanks. And then for my second question here is just on the reserves, your guys, your guys' year-end proved reserves PV10 that you give the, pricing sensitivity as well, it seems to be up year over year from, 25 versus 24. Could you maybe talk about some of the moving parts there and what's driving the, PV10 increase?

  • John Reinhart - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Yeah. No, it's a good question. So I mean if you think about the way the reserves are put together, you've got a component of PDP and some PUDs as well. And so as we're as we're out converting PUDs into PDP and spending the capital to do that, you're certainly removing that cost out of the reserve base and converting those PUDs into PDP.

  • So you'll see that you've added value there even at the same deck as you pointed out, just because of that conversion.

  • So there's always been other inputs in there. And keep in mind, that's an SEC reserve base. So we certainly have reserves that go well beyond that five-year rule that the SEC limits you to. But I think you picked up on something important there that is we are adding value, we feel like year-over-year, even at a consistent price deck. So I appreciate you pointing that out.

  • Noah Hungness - Analyst

  • Well, I guess also the question is, it seems like your PDP number is increasing even though even though your production year-over-year hearing is flat, does that mean that you're turning in line more productive wells and were turned in line before?

  • John Reinhart - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Yeah. I think that you can read through to that. I mean as you convert wells, you produce some of the reserves, you're certainly converting more reserves than just what you're producing. So that PDP volume does go up as you convert wells from PUD to PDP. But yes, I think to your point, we are continuing to improve with what we're developing, and I think you're seeing that flow through to the numbers.

  • Operator

  • [May Dorn, UBS].

  • Unidentified Participant

  • Hey, good morning, everybody. Thanks for having me on. On the operating side, it looked like you had made some pretty solid gains on your drilling efficiency. I wonder if you could just maybe touch on what some of the drivers of those gains were. And on the completion side, it looked like maybe 2025, took a slight step back are there any changes you have in store for '26, to maybe get that metric back up a bit.

  • John Reinhart - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Yeah, sure, Peyton on the drilling side, we continue to get incrementally better, to your point. I think where we made the most progress in 2025 was more on our top hole drilling efficiencies and some slight improvement on our carbon laterals.

  • So the team was able to shave down really a couple of days per well on our top hole design our vertical section of the well and then some incremental gains on just curband-lateral, higher on the wells that we drilled. So great job by the team there on delivering and continuing to find ways to eke out some more days of reduction. On the frac side, we did have a dip this year.

  • A lot of things playing into that for us. I think just to keep in mind, we averaged around 18 hours pumping per day, which is pretty impressive and quite frankly, comparable to a lot of our the best peers we have in the basin.

  • The year prior, we were averaging 21 hours a day, and that was an incrementally great year for the company and a really hard bar to consistently achieve I would tell you, but we're always striving to get there and maintain.

  • So a little bit in the last year, started the year a little bit slow with a drought in Ohio that caused some water sourcing issues for us in kind of the first quarter and the second quarter that was relevant to everybody in the basin as well.

  • And then throughout the just utilizing more spot crew work, got off to a little bit of a slow start on some spot crews to help kind of keep our production cadence in line and take advantage of the short cycle time opportunities that we saw in our development program last year. So this year, we expect that to be at or above that 18 hours, and the team is already off to a good start in achieving that.

  • Unidentified Participant

  • Great. Appreciate all that color. And then I just wondered if you could touch on some of that base improvement spending that you have budgeted for 2026.

  • I know it's a smaller amount of CapEx. But I wonder just how this was different from normal workover spending and kind of how you see the base decline rate shaping up for Gulfport in 2026?

  • John Reinhart - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Yeah. So on the workover side, good point. We did start that program last year. So not as much kind of more in the back end of the year. As a company, we've seen the opportunity set here just with increasing commodity prices to take advantage of really strong near-term economic attractiveness.

  • And so identifying those with the production teams and the operation teams to then go deploy that capital for the incremental flattening of the base production is a huge win for us. These projects are targeting kind of less than 12 months payout if you can think about that.

  • So they're really highly economic. They do help us support the base decline and increase that over time, which inevitably kind of flows through our flat to then kind of quarter-over-quarter exit growth throughout the year. And so it's a good program for us.

  • It's $15 million in the total year. So not crazy high, but incrementally has been more than 2025, and we'll look to continue to find more of those projects kind of throughout '26, and into '27.

  • Unidentified Participant

  • Great, thank you very much.

  • Operator

  • Nicholas Pope, Roth Capital Partners.

  • Nicholas Pope - Senior Research Analyst

  • Good morning, everyone. Morning. Good morning. Hoping you could talk a little bit on the acreage acquisitions. I think the discretionary acreage acquisitions, the program that was put in place that $100 million, the big push to kind of build inventory there. It sounds like the expectation is that's going to run through first quarter. And as you complete kind of this portion of the program.

  • Curious how you're thinking about acreage going forward and kind of what what go forward is thinking about kind of the lay of the land and the potential of kind of re-upping a program or continuing acreage acquisitions beyond kind of 1Q once you kind of finish this big push?

  • John Reinhart - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Yeah. So Nick, I appreciate the question. I think this is a part of the program over the past three years is what we're really, really proud of. I mean we've seen a substantial growth in our inventory gross locations since 2023. This has been a mainstay every year because just inventory improvements have in a durable runway that we can call on, has a lot of optionalities.

  • But even what's more important outside of the 4.5 years of discretionary picks up, this is really high-quality acreage. And the fact that we're drilling in this wet gas area that we just bought a few years ago, this is our third pad this year.

  • So it's very good to add that inventory, but just the low breakeven, the high quality, we're picking it up in bulk where we can go out and develop and drill and we can do it very quickly. And so this is a really high value use of our free cash flow so we really like it.

  • So leading into that, we've had a lot of success with this program that's ended up in Q1. Clearly, we have a lot of confidence that, that number is going to hit at the high end. Again, this is a continuation in Belmont roots really good quality acreage.

  • As we complete this program and look forward, I'll tell you that we view this as a very favorable again investment for the company. So we're not certainly ready to guide to that, but I will tell you that as the land teams wrap up Q1 when we get line of sight on what's next in that particular realm for spend will come to the market and kind of roll it out.

  • But we like the spend. We think the investors like it and we like the optionality that the inventory brings and especially the inventory that we can jump on really quick from a development standpoint. So I appreciate the question.

  • Nicholas Pope - Senior Research Analyst

  • Yeah, I appreciate it. That's great. Kind of shifting a little bit towards the North you highlighted that there's some data collection that you are going to be working on kind of ahead of anticipated second half kind of drilling further north in the Marcellus. Just I'd love to hear which, I guess, kind of what data is needed, where maybe you guys are? And I guess, kind of what information is already kind of in hand as you kind of move and try to kind of derisk some of that potential further up north in all's acreage position?

  • Unidentified Company Representative

  • Sure. Yes. If you're talking about the Marcellus North, we will be drilling those wells. There will be some science collected during that process with some sidewall cores and some additional logging and some tests. Really, that's just geared around us ensuring that we have all the data necessary for us to properly design our fracs we don't anticipate it being much different than the Southern Marcellus but while we're there and have the opportunity, it's a cheap way to gather that data and make sure we're looking at it the right way as we go to complete those wells in kind of the first part of '27. So that's really the work that's going on there. It's data that we've taken before, but more in our Southern core area and just an opportunity here to take some more while we're drilling this year in the Marcellus North.

  • John Reinhart - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Yeah. Nick, and I'll add on to that, too. This drilling isn't a delineation effort. I mean there's a lot of wells just to the east of us across the state. There are wells to the north, and we've got our own development down donation and is the southern area, what we call Southern so for us, this isn't a delineation effort.

  • But what we do want to do before we go wholesale development is really get a handle on the production mix a little bit more data on the production profile, what it might look like, what the pressures look like. So we'll be blending this first pad into a dry gas line to be able to assess that.

  • And that really helps us design and come up with our plans with regards to midstream infrastructure, processing agreements, what we need, what kind of capacity we need.

  • So I would think about it more in the line of a production mix test and less so on a delineation effort because we have all the confidence in the world that, that 50 wells that's real. And we just need to set it up for full development. So this is the first step in that process

  • Nicholas Pope - Senior Research Analyst

  • Yeah, that's very helpful. I appreciate it. Thanks guys.

  • Operator

  • Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes our question-and-answer session. I'll turn the floor back to Mr. Reinhart for any final comments.

  • John Reinhart - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Thank you for taking the time to join our call today. Should you have any questions, please don't hesitate to reach out to our Investor Relations team. Have a great day.

  • Operator

  • Thank you. This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time.

  • Thank you for your participation.