U.S. oil and gas M&A activity in third quarter pulls back from 2-yr peak

Reuters

Published Oct 12, 2021 04:26PM ET

(Reuters) - Dealmaking in the U.S. oil and gas industry in the third quarter of 2021 fell from a two-year high in the previous quarter, according to data analytics firm Enverus on Tuesday, as the industry cools from post-pandemic consolidations and focuses on selling off non-core assets.

Mergers and acquisitions (M&A) activity in the July-September quarter totaled $18.5 billion, down 44% from the second quarter, even as it beat the five-year quarterly average M&A value.

"The sense of urgency seems to have left the deal market," Enverus director Andrew Dittmar said.

"Through the end of the year, we are likely to see mostly smaller-sized asset deals as companies trim their portfolios with the chance of an occasional larger public company merger or private E&P sale."

Oil producer Conocophillips (NYSE:COP) led the quarterly ranks, the Enverus report showed, after it bought oil giant Royal Dutch Shell (LON:RDSa) Plc's assets in the Delaware Basin for $9.5 billion in September.

Deals by private equity firms saw an uptick as they bought assets that oil companies deemed as non-core to their development plans, the report said, adding that such privately funded buyers increased their share of acquisitions to about one-fifth by value.