Hi all,
I'm looking for some expert opinions. I have a producing well (Chesapeake) on 80 acres in Caddo Parish/Haynesville. It's been producing for about 5 years, but as expected, our monthly checks have declined and I anticipate they will continue to do so. I've been offered more than 300 times our current payment for our mineral rights. I've always thought selling was a bad idea, but by my economics, it would take more than 33 years to make the $ this company offering at today's monthly rates (no decline) -- that's a long time. So here are my questions:
1. Does this company know something about the future of Haynesville that I don't know, like significant oil production? I've never been contacted about oil exploration or heard anything about this.
2. What's the valuation model these companies use to provide a landowner with a mineral rights value? I have no idea if this offer is on or totally off base.
3. Does anyone have a success or disaster story relating to selling rights?
4. Anything else I should know as I consider our next step?
I'm appreciative of your feedback, thanks.
Tags:
Katie, your 80 acres are part of a 640 acre drilling unit which qualifies for 8 total horizontal Haynesville wells.. All mineral owners within the unit boundary, usually a section, receive royalty on any and all wells (in your case alternate wells) drilled within the unit. It doesn't matter whether it is on your 80 acres or not. Think about it, no one in their right mind would make you an offer for the unit well (first well drilled in the unit) which has largely depleted. The offer is based on the company's opinion that CHK will drill those other wells and the timing of the drilling of those wells. The normal development scenario in the Haynesville at this time is to drill multiple wells in succession. In some cases, as many wells up to the maximum as the gathering system capacity will allow. If you know how to look up alternate unit orders and well permits you can get an idea of what the company is thinking.
Aha. Thank you very much. This is the topic on which I've received much conflicting information. I've got it now. I'll see what I can dig up on plans for alternate wells and will do so before we make any decisions that are final.
Thank you, Skip.
If the offer to buy at 400 X - is for real - would you mind sharing the name of the purchaser?
HI Dion,
I did this analysis and the offer was almost exactly 50x our fourth month of production value. So, 400 x what we're making now is the same as 50X what we made in our fourth month. So seems like the offer was fair enough. I'm going to hold off on selling mineral rights for now. I appreciate the info very much!
Katie Waterson,
If I were you, I would check with a reputable landman like Skip or Dion, to see if they have buyers interested in your area too, before you proceed with just one offer.
I personally think at some point in the not too distant future, (completion of the gassification plants in South Louisiana) drilling in the Haynesville Shale area will pick back up. The potential for profits for the companies will be there and they already have the lands leased just sitting there waiting for the market to improve. The last figures I read, and it has been a while now, was that gas was around $14.00 a thousand in the Far East. And those plants in South LA will open up that market for U. S. gas over there. Regardless, my instincts just tell me that when there are offers to purchase my mineral rights and those offers seem to be very good it makes me think somebody does know something I don't. They have far more information about what the future looks like than I do.
Ms. Waterson,
You might get some idea of mineral rights value from this story about Devon buying a position in the Eagleford Shale:
http://fuelfix.com/blog/2013/11/20/devon-scooping-up-6-billion-in-e...
Good points. I usually advise a mineral owner to "hedge their bets" with a good offer. That would be: sell half and take the profits, then keep the other half as a bet on future production. But you really should be selling only your mineral interest in the certain zone of production (Haynesville Shale zone), not all of your right, title and interest in everything you own.
Your buyer would get what they want and you would still benefit from future wells drilled in your scope of influence that are not Haynesville Shale wells. (Consult an Attorney)
Consider that "a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush"
Right -- mineral interest, definitely not all rights and title. I think you're right, I'm considering it.
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