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Operator
Hello, and thank you for standing by. My name is Regina, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Riley Exploration Permian Inc.'s second-quarter 2024 earnings conference call. (Operator Instructions)
I would now like to turn the conference over to Philip Riley, CFO. Please go ahead.
Philip Riley - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President - Strategy
Good morning. Welcome to our conference call covering the second-quarter 2024 results. I'm Philip Riley, CFO. Joining me today is Bobby Riley, Chairman and CEO; and John Suter, COO. Yesterday, we published a variety of materials, which can be found on our website under the Investors section.
These materials in today's conference call contain certain projections and other forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in these statements. We'll also reference certain non-GAAP measures. The reconciliations to the appropriate GAAP measures can be found in our supplemental disclosure on our website.
I'll now turn the call over to Bobby.
Bobby Riley - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Philip. Good morning, and welcome to our Q2 2024 earnings call. Today, we will highlight several updates and key changes since Q1 2024, including meeting or exceeding key metrics on planned guidance resulting in improving capital efficiency and significant free cash flow.
Closing an asset acquisition in Eddy County, New Mexico for $18.1 million, which added producing properties and development locations within our existing operating footprint. Expanding the scope of our Power joint venture with plans to generate and sell electricity and ancillary services to ERCOT as well as increasing our ownership in the joint venture to 50%. Raising $25 million of net proceeds through the issuance of 1.015 million shares of common stock, which was used to primarily fund the acquisition and the Power JV investment.
We continue to execute our annual plan with overall positive results. It's still early in the year to report on medium-term to longer-term results for the 2024 vintage wells. But thus far, we are generally seeing outperformance on this year's production results relative to forecast and as compared to prior year results.
We continue to experience favorable efficiencies and cost savings on our drilling and completion activity. Well cost savings represent our largest driver of free cash flow improvement this year. Free cash flow generation was a primary objective for us this year as both a measure of performance and of shareholder return. We generated $38 million of free cash flow in the second quarter and $62 million year to date.
Over the last 12 months, we generated $126 million, which facilitated debt reduction of $75 million or 18% year over year, dividends of over $28 million with the balance contributing to new investments and an acquisition. Today, we're paying our 22nd consecutive quarterly dividend, our 14th consecutive dividend as a public company with $91 million returned to public shareholders since 2021.
Additionally, we welcome two new additions to our executive team in the second quarter. Jeff Gutman joined us as Chief Accounting Officer with 35 years of public and private company experience as the Principal Financial Officer, all within the industry. And John Suter joined us as Chief Operating Officer, bringing 38 years of experience in various executive management roles across public and private companies within the industry. These additions will enhance our leadership team and strengthen our ability to deliver on strategic growth initiatives, improve operational efficiency, return capital to shareholders, and reduce debt.
Now I will turn the call over to John Suter, our COO, to discuss the operational results for the quarter, followed by Philip Riley, our CFO, who will discuss financial results and guidance.
John Suter - Chief Operating Officer
Thank you, Bobby, and good morning. I'd first like to say Riley strives for excellence in operations through safe operating practices and continual performance improvement that is evidenced by our results shared here today. The team successfully implemented our plan in the second quarter, including the closing and integration of the bolt-on acquisition in Eddy County, New Mexico. The results of the quarter reflect performance from both our legacy assets and from newly acquired assets.
The bolt-on acquisition closed in early May and contributed for two months during the second quarter. Total equivalent production was 21.3 MBoe per day, a quarter-over-quarter increase of 5%. Oil production was 14.75 M barrels per day, a quarter over quarter increase of 4%. Lease operating expenses were $8.50 per Boe, about $0.50 lower than during the first quarter and from the average of the prior four quarters.
Since closing our bigger New Mexico acquisition in late spring of 2023, we embarked on a workover campaign for many of the vertical wells that we inherited with that package as well as efforts to optimize artificial lift. We're seeing the benefits of that effort with overall vertical production volumes up 40% to 50% from levels at closing from last year. That workover activity drove some of the higher LOE over the past year, which may be lessening at this point.
As for Power, we supported approximately 50% of our electrical load in Texas with self-generated power in the second quarter. We'll continue to transition to a larger majority of our self-generated power following the balance of our units coming online in the third quarter.
And then finally, I'd like to highlight our team's performance and development activity. As Bobby mentioned, well cost savings represent our largest driver of free cash flow improvement this year. With $100 million-plus capital budget, that leads to some very meaningful savings. We believe well costs are, on average, down by more than 20% year over year or down by more than 25% as compared to 2022.
Drilling efficiencies and completion redesigns account for just over half of these gains with better market pricing representing the balance. Drilling times are down by 20% year over year or 40% as compared to 2022. We're generally completing wells now in pairs or more using a zipper frac design, which we believe leads to both cost savings and better production.
As you can see, we are vigilant about capturing cost savings as we gain technical improvements in our drilling and completion programs. As we further integrate last year's foothold New Mexico acquisition and this year's bolt-on, we are focused on taking best practices from our legacy Texas asset and incorporating them for production optimization and cost improvement in New Mexico.
With that, I'll turn the call over to Philip. Thank you.
Philip Riley - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President - Strategy
Thank you, John. Second-quarter operating cash flow was $51.6 million or $57.6 million before changes in working capital, declining very modestly by 1% quarter over quarter. Second-quarter adjusted EBITDAX was $73 million, higher by $3 million quarter over quarter, with the EBITDAX margin improving from 67% to 70% in the first to second quarter.
Year-to-date, total oil and gas hedge negative settlements improved by 77% or $6 million versus the six months of 2023 despite higher oil prices, representing another driver of cash flow improvement year over year.
Natural gas and NGL realized prices turned slightly negative for the quarter, driven by weaker market fundamentals, both domestically, generally and more specifically in the West Texas region, leading to wider differentials relative to the Henry Hub index. Midstream counterparty fees are then allocated to this pre-fee revenue, which is how we arrive at slightly negative revenue.
While disappointing, there are a few ways we think about this and how we're working to manage the exposure. First, on an absolute basis, the negative $1 million of combined gas and NGL revenue in the second quarter is dwarfed by our $106 million of oil revenue, which was up $9 million quarter over quarter.
Second, the negative gas revenue was more than offset by $1.2 million of positive gas hedge settlements during the quarter. And third, big picture, this is one of the reasons we're pursuing the natural gas power generation project. Low or negative cost feedstock gas can lead to very attractive power economics, which can ultimately work as an additional hedge for us.
Moving on, reinvestment rate of operating cash flow into upstream CapEx was 37% on an accrual basis and 34% on a cash CapEx basis. Hence, we converted 66% of operating cash flow to $38 million of free cash flow in the second quarter. That's a single quarter record for us and is very exciting. Year-to-date, we've converted 53% of operating cash flow to $62 million of free cash flow or $126 million for the last 12 months, reinforcing this excellent capital efficiency.
In the second quarter, we allocated 20% of free cash flow to dividends and 52% to debt paydown with the balance allocated to partially fund the Power JV and the asset acquisition. Beyond free cash flow, we benefited from $25 million of net proceeds from the equity raise. Total use of funds for the quarter included $4 million to build cash, $20 million to reduce debt, $7.5 million for the dividend, $18 million for the acquisition, $10 million in contribution to the Power joint venture.
The credit facility utilization is now at 43%, down from 66% a year ago, representing a significant increase in liquidity. We paid down our senior notes by $25 million or 12.5% since issuance. Debt to TEV at quarter end was 39%, 1.2 times debt to LTM adjusted EBITDAX. We will continue to pay down debt, not because we believe we're overlevered but rather because we prefer the flexibility and optionality that the extra liquidity affords.
Looking ahead, we updated guidance in the written materials provided. I'll offer just a few comments to provide a recap from the prior guidance. At the beginning of the year, we announced our annual plan, which called for 10% year over year oil volume growth, while cutting spending by 10%. The current midpoint guidance calls for increasing oil production by 13%, while reducing spending by more than 20% year over year. Admittedly, volumes benefit modestly from the small acquisition, which wasn't in the original plan.
That will contribute to two-thirds of the year, which equates to only 200 to 300 barrels per day on average when viewed on an annual basis. And adjusting to exclude for that, we're still at about 11% annual oil growth.
Meanwhile, the CapEx reduction continues to improve. So essentially, we're forecasting that we'll achieve the planned volumes with less activity and less spending. We believe this will continue to translate to meaningful free cash flow.
At $75 WTI for the balance of the year, we currently forecast full year 2024 free cash flow in the area of approximately $115 million, corresponding to year-over-year growth of approximately 65% and corresponding to about 22% yield on the market value of our equity as of yesterday.
By comparison, the median of E&Ps across all sizes and excluding the gassier companies, has consensus free cash flow growth of approximately 10% year over year and a current yield on equity value of approximately 12% based on estimates using public data. The average across the S&P 500 company is 5% year over year free cash flow growth and 5% yield on equity value. We consider these some of the more distinguishing metrics for our company as compared to the wider market.
I'll turn it back to Bobby for closing. Thank you.
Bobby Riley - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Thank you. Once again, we appreciate your time and interest in our company. We're pleased with our recent results. And while we believe these quarterly results are strong, we remind investors that we are primarily focused on long-term results and value creation. We remain confident that our strategic focus and operational excellence will continue to drive growth and profitability for our shareholders over the long term.
Operator, you may now open up the call for questions.
Operator
(Operator Instructions)
Neal Dingmann, Truist Securities.
Julian Broche - Analyst
This is Julian Broche on for Neal. How should we think about the incremental volumes throughout the year given the recent acquisition in May? And then any consequential potential impacts there on go-forward guidance?
And then as like a follow-up, maybe give us a little bit more color on the revised Power JV? And then kind of how -- I know you said it acts like a hedge, so I just want to understand the dynamic there. Thanks.
Philip Riley - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President - Strategy
Sure. Good morning, Julian. This is Philip. I can cover that since I mentioned it in my prior remarks. So the acquisition is really only about 400 to 500 barrels a day production. We closed on that April 7.
And so when you do the math on an annual basis, what you see that contributing is about 200 to 300 barrels a day when you divide them by a 366-day year. So that was the logic there. We are forecasting growth for the year of -- I think the midpoint shows about 13%. So you exclude that and you're still at 11%. We're doing slightly less activity.
You can see that in the well counts we're showing there. We've got reductions in the CapEx there reflecting that as well as some additional cost savings.
That's the first part of your question. Anything you want to clarify there before I move on to Power?
Julian Broche - Analyst
No, that's helpful.
Philip Riley - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President - Strategy
On power, as Bobby mentioned, we increased our ownership in the JV to 50%. That was planned all along from the beginning. We had that right in there that we established in February 23 when we set this up. What we've done at this point is expand the scope of the JV to have the ability to sell Power energy, effectively selling generation energy into ERCOT as well as the ancillary services. And ancillary services is a fancy word for basically standby power. ERCOT is not a capacity market like you have in other ISOs in the US.
But with the various challenges that Texas has had with cold and hot and everything in between, they're adding more and more of the service to the grid to make it more resilient. So they're paying people to be ready and stand by.
What we're planning is a mix of thermal and battery. We're still planning on what the optimal mix could be. Thermal being in other words for natural gas fire generation. These would be recent generators like we've got in Texas, doing our self-generated power. And then some batteries can help with the ancillary.
You can do both for ancillary; this isn't a peaker play. This is something that we think will dispatch most of the time based on where we see prices clearing these days with increased power demand with the load growth as well as, frankly, highly variable grid, especially out in West Texas. In the area that we're talking, about approximately two-thirds of the generation stack is wind. And wind is highly variable, much more so than solar actually.
And so you've got periods where we believe that nat gas generators are going to dispatch quite often. So we're going to continue to update you on that. That's something that we hope to have coming online next year. Our guess is it's a second quarter or third quarter type of thing. That is significantly faster than some of the bigger projects, even solar and wind take for the interconnection queue, so it's an expedited plan that we're excited about, and we're hopeful to hit.
Operator
John White, ROTH Capital.
John White - Analyst
Good morning and congratulations on a strong quarter. In your press release and prepared remarks, you highlighted savings on drilling and completion activities, and you provided some additional detail on that. Do you want to give us an idea from a geographic standpoint, where you're experiencing that?
John Suter - Chief Operating Officer
Yes. Thank you, John. This is John Suter. Really, we are experiencing that in our champions play in Texas. We think as we keep modifying this as we move over into New Mexico, we'll carry some of these same savings over there with us. They're a little bit different well to well as far as the completions go. But still, we anticipate having those good savings.
John White - Analyst
Okay. And on the New Mexico bolt-on acquisition, do you plan to embark on a well workover program there in the second half?
John Suter - Chief Operating Officer
Yes. We continue to -- we have a larger workover program in New Mexico; that's just one part of it. But certainly, we have escalated that a little bit. We also have gained a lot of value there by taking those wells and connecting them to the power system. We've taken a number of wells off generators and probably saved $35,000 a month on the number of wells we've done there.
So we're doing all the usual work at getting them integrated. But certainly, we're including that in our workover program.
Operator
Jeff Robertson, Water Tower Research.
Jeffrey Robertson - Analyst
John, when you -- on the workover program in New Mexico, is that adding barrels that would not have been factored into the acquisition economics for either the 2023 acquisition or the bolt-on?
John Suter - Chief Operating Officer
Yes, I think it's really a small segment of our production, but still an important one. I think like I said in our opening remarks, I think we've increased those volumes probably 50% with pump-off controllers, with the various workovers we've been doing, improving the artificial lift. But certainly, it's a smaller impact of our production compared to horizontal wells.
Jeffrey Robertson - Analyst
I know it's way too early for 2024 guidance. But can you all talk at all about how you think about putting together a capital program next year with the current asset base?
Philip Riley - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President - Strategy
I'll take it, Jeff. I think you meant 2025 -- if we're talking '25, yes, it is a little early. It's -- every time we think we're done with volatility, we get something new in the Middle East a political backdrop or such. So we got a busy and noisy few months ahead of us here in the fall. We'll watch that.
But in general, our business model and strategy is to grow free cash flow, minimizing the amount we have to reinvest and really focusing on that capital efficiency. So we'll see where prices are bouncing around and what that affords us frankly, between a $70 and $80 WTI level is fantastic. We're not holding out for $90 or $100. This is a great level for us.
Our wells are economic far, far below that, but we want to be mindful of it. It's a balance of managing inventory, maintaining a good amount where you all appropriately award us a sufficient going concern value. But that's kind of how we're looking at it is to hopefully have some continued modest growth there. Hoping to grow that free cash flow still, super excited about that. Kind of 60% to 70% level year-over-year growth we're seeing this year.
Hoping John's team can continue to push the envelope on well cost savings. So we'll continue to collect bids on AFEs to see how that's coming out that may shape our thinking.
And then finally, I just want to say this is a bit of a segue, but it's tied to how we think about capital allocation is. And we see a lot of opportunities out there right now on the inorganic front. And so we're being a little bit measured just to keep a little bit of powder dry as we see a lot of exciting things out there that will have a better idea of where those will have landed later in the fall.
Operator
Noel Parks, Tuohy Brothers.
Noel Parks - Analyst
Just had a couple. You actually just sort of touched on the AFE process getting rolling. And just as far as overall service capacity for your needs and your part of the basin, do you see the market as pretty well balanced at this point? Or do you think maybe you're looking at, well, either inflationary or deflationary trends as you look ahead into next year?
John Suter - Chief Operating Officer
Yes. No, I think that our -- what we're seeing is that we're able to get rig services as we need them at reasonable prices. The stimulation market is kind of a mixture of both large and there's a number of small companies that have moved out there that are really doing an excellent job for that area as well.
So really think that certainly in the last, I don't know, six months, as we said, about half of our savings have come from market pricing, but I think it's stabilized. We're getting a good value and a good quality of service for what's out there right now.
Philip Riley - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President - Strategy
Maybe I'll just add something from a macro point of view, Noel, is you watch all the corporate deals happening, all this consolidation. And every time one of these faster growers, smaller companies gets gobbled up by a bigger guy, more often than not, that's pulling demand out of the system for these services.
We've obviously had a tremendous amount of consolidation. Look at the year-over-year rig count. I mean it's down by 90 or 100. Look what Diamondback just announced, now they're saying, oh, we thought we could do that, we're actually going to reduce it by even six more rigs. All of that -- we're not necessarily competing with those guys for the same rig, but it generally pulls pressure out of the system. Same thing with fracking. It's just -- it's a pretty favorable environment for us, so we're excited about that.
Noel Parks - Analyst
Great. Thanks for the observation. I think it's really timely. And just some thought about or just looking for some thoughts on the outperformance relative to expectations that you've seen in your acquired areas. And just in retrospect benefit of hindsight, do you think you just were overly conservative in your original take on what the assets could do?
Or is it more just that there's just a lot of stuff that the old owners weren't able to get to, they just didn't have the capital or maybe the technical resources to get at some of the low-hanging fruit that you're now benefiting from?
John Suter - Chief Operating Officer
Yes, I wasn't here at the time. But I can tell you from what I've learned so far, it's really down to a number of things. We do have a number of wells that are outperforming their type curves that are really what I believe, from a little bit of a stimulation recipe change that I think is still under review, but giving us some very positive results.
I also think that -- I don't know, it's just from a number of things, primarily the stimulation change, but also just a number of wells coming on. We're certainly -- we had the four wells we turned in this quarter were really solid, but it's not one thing. I don't think it's a neglect of the previous people. We're just doing a really good job on homing in on kind of what the optimal stimulation is for these wells.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, that will conclude our question-and-answer session and today's conference call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.