Following the announcement that SM Energy and Civitas Resources will merge into a company valued at $12.8 billion, including net debt and based on prior-day closing prices, Andrew Dittmar, principal analyst at Enverus Intelligence® Research, shared insights on the deal’s significance:
With crude persistently below $65/bbl, a second set of public E&Ps have decided the best route forward is corporate consolidation. SM and Civitas are combining to form a public company with an enterprise value approaching $13 billion based on the pre-deal share prices and operations across five basins. The deal follows the August combination of Crescent Energy and Vital Energy, which valued the latter at just over $3 billion. Corporate M&A likely screens more attractive for buyers given a lack of private equity positions to pursue and higher asking prices in asset M&A markets versus where equity markets are currently valuing public companies.
Unlike acquisitions from private equity largely geared towards expanding or high grading inventory, these public mergers look focused on achieving synergies to operate more efficiently and deleveraging a company with higher debt. With synergies key to success in E&P corporate mergers, investors will closely scrutinize that potential. A lack of operational overlap is a possible point of concern with just the Midland Basin sharing assets between the two companies and those largely positioned in different parts of the play. Instead the company will use its improved scale to leverage cost savings in materials and services.
The second component of the deal will be deleveraging towards a target of 1.0x net debt. Although not necessary to achieve its debt target the company could accelerate deleveraging by divesting assets that are less competitive for capital. A bolder move would be to exit the Delaware Basin, using M&A markets to unlock value not currently ascribed in its share price. A strong appetite for assets from multiple refunded private equity teams looking to build new positions amid limited opportunities would likely aid asset sales, particularly if the company chose to monetize portions of its expanded Midland Basin position. However, public companies are also understandably reluctant to part with hard-won operated inventory amid concerns about inventory duration and
The merger moves 4Q25 deal activity to just under $10 billion, tying third quarter value with two months left to go. Moving forward, corporate consolidation among smaller sized oil-focused companies and gas M&A remain the best opportunities for deals. There could also be an uptick in public company non-core asset sales to accelerate deleveraging and navigate lower crude, both from companies that have participated in corporate deals and companies that remain standalone operations. Market participants seem more comfortable with the outlook for commodity prices and are turning to M&A to position themselves for success, whether that is securing gas supply as prices strengthen or merging oil companies to be better positioned to navigate low crude with synergies and deleveraging.
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