NYSE:TPL Texas Pacific Land Q3 2024 Earnings Report $385.55 +0.38 (+0.10%) Closing price 05/15/2026 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$385.75 +0.20 (+0.05%) As of 05:26 AM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Texas Pacific Land EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.54Consensus EPS N/ABeat/MissN/AOne Year Ago EPS$1.53Texas Pacific Land Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$173.56 millionExpected RevenueN/ABeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/ATexas Pacific Land Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2024Date11/6/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, November 7, 2024Conference Call Time8:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsTexas Pacific Land's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Wednesday, August 5, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled on Thursday, August 6, 2026 at 10:30 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Texas Pacific Land Q3 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrNovember 7, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Texas Pacific Land achieved a corporate record of 28,300 barrels of oil equivalent per day in oil and gas royalty production, up 13% sequentially, driven by its Central Midland and Northern Delaware assets. Water sales revenues rose 37% year-over-year, supported by extensive brackish and treated water infrastructure that meets high-volume frac demands and offers delivery assurance to operators. The produced water royalty business, built from virtually zero in 2016, is on track to generate ~$100 million in 2024 revenue on over 1 billion barrels of water with zero incremental capex or opex, yielding near-pure margin. In Q3 and October the company closed ~$500 million of acquisitions in the Permian, adding ~3,000 boe/day (a >10% uplift) and expected to deliver double-digit cash flow yield at $70 oil, enabling a 37% dividend increase to $1.60/share. TPL is advancing its 10,000 bbl/day produced water desalination test facility (Phase 2b) with a $25 million project capex, targeting mid-2025 completion to enhance sustainable water reuse solutions. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallTexas Pacific Land Q3 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, good morning and welcome to the Texas Pacific Land Corporation third quarter 2024 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star and zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Shawn Amini, VP Finance and Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir. Shawn AminiVP Finance and Investor Relations at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:00:37Thank you for joining us today for Texas Pacific Land Corporation's third quarter 2024 earnings conference call. Yesterday afternoon, the company released its financial results and filed its Form 10-Q with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which is available on the investor section of the company's website at www.texaspacific.com. As a reminder, remarks made on today's conference call may include forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are subject to risk uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed today. We do not undertake any obligation to update our forward-looking statements in light of new information or future events. For more detailed discussion of the factors that may affect the company's results, please refer to our earnings release for this quarter and to our recent SEC filings. During this call, we will also be discussing certain non-GAAP financial measures. Shawn AminiVP Finance and Investor Relations at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:01:22More information and reconciliations about these non-GAAP financial measures are contained in our earnings release and SEC filings. Please also note we may at times refer to our company by its stock ticker, TPL. This morning's conference call is hosted by TPL Chief Executive Officer Ty Glover and TPL Chief Financial Officer Chris Steddum. Management will make some prepared comments, after which we will open the call for questions. Now, I will turn the call over to Ty. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:01:49Thanks Shawn. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Our strong third quarter 2024 performance underscores the success of our active management strategy focused on maximizing oil and gas royalties, surface, and water assets, with acquisition activity over the last couple of years set to provide incremental growth tailwinds. In addition, TPL continues to benefit from activity levels in the Permian Basin, which remain resilient despite fluctuations in oil and natural gas prices. To start, TPL's oil and gas royalty production of approximately 28,300 barrels of oil equivalent per day represents a corporate record driven by our central Midland and oil-loving subregions. For water sales, revenues were up 37% year-over-year as the size and scale of our operations provide a meaningful competitive advantage as operator customers look for delivery assurance. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:02:46Continued deployment of co-completions and simul-frac and trimul-frac fracking placed tremendous volume demands for water delivered over a relatively short period, and our substantial investment in brackish and treated water infrastructure has established one of the few systems in the Permian capable of this type of volume intensity. This was also another record quarter for our produced water royalty revenues, with produced water royalty volumes up 46% year-over-year as our expanding set of commercial arrangements with third-party customers continues to drive increased market capture. In our conversations with investors, our produced water royalties is by far the most misunderstood aspect of our business. Today, I'd like to spend some time elaborating on this topic, especially given the growth we've seen to date and also given the robust outlook over the near term and long term underpinned by acquisitions we made last year. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:03:43Our produced water royalties business is often conflated with traditional saltwater midstream and disposal operations. In traditional saltwater disposal operations, otherwise known by its acronym, SWD, an operator will collect water produced via an oil and gas well at a centralized storage facility, transport it typically via pipeline to an SWD facility where it is then injected thousands of feet below the surface. From a high level, TPL's role in the disposal of produced water is providing SWD operators access to our surface and our pore space, and in return, we charge a produced water royalty. TPL does not currently operate SWD infrastructure. To receive these produced water royalties, we have negotiated separate, individualized commercial agreements with each operator that wants to operate SWD infrastructure on our land. These agreements often cover massive acreage extents and can take months or even years to negotiate. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:04:45Since we started in 2017, the team has easily spent more hours negotiating, structuring, and executing produced water royalty agreements than any other part of the business. The effort was well worth it as these produced water royalties provide TPL with a commercially unique, extremely high-quality cash flow stream. In 2016, before active management, TPL generated virtually zero produced water royalties. Fast forward to today, and TPL is positioned to collect royalties on well over 1 billion barrels of produced water for the full year 2024, which will in turn generate around $100 million of royalty revenues, and because of how we've structured these agreements, this revenue stream incurs zero capital expenditures and zero operating expense burden outside of personnel salaries and legal expenses that go into negotiating the agreements. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:05:38In effect, the hundreds of millions, or likely billions of dollars, this business will cumulatively generate in the years to come flows directly to TPL's bottom line, representing nearly pure margin. By applying our historical earnings trading multiple to the current produced water royalties' annualized run rate cash flow, it's easy to see the immense value this business has created for shareholders. It's also worth noting that our agreements provide TPL with extremely robust indemnification against spills, accidents, injuries, or other types of liabilities. In addition to benefiting from the significant financial upside, we've also been very intentional in protecting TPL interests from potential risk. Furthermore, these produced water royalty agreements enhance our water sales business. Many of our contracts include provisions providing TPL the exclusive right to offtake produced water barrels within an area of mutual interest for treatment and resale. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:06:36This allows TPL to procure produced water from an operator's system, treat it to a customer's specifications, and sell the recycled water for well completions. In such circumstances, TPL is paid twice on a single barrel, once through a produced water royalty and again through a treated water sale. This feature has been especially critical for TPL as operators have been increasingly using raw or treated produced water for well development over the last few years. Looking ahead, recent strategic acquisitions will provide incremental produced water growth opportunities. Last year, we spent nearly $40 million across multiple transactions to acquire over 50,000 acres of surface acreage and pore space. These acquisitions were strategically targeted given their location along the East State Line of Texas and New Mexico in Andrews and Winkler counties. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:07:29This location is significant as this acreage is outside the core oil and gas development areas of the Permian Basin, where produced water disposal zones will not interfere with drilling and completion operations. Over the last year, our business development teams have been working diligently to commercialize this otherwise raw land. We have since signed an agreement with one of the largest midstream operators serving the broader Delaware market to bring produced water into these new tracts, with initial volumes expected in fourth quarter 2024. We are also in advanced discussions with other parties for additional access, and we expect that the aggregate contribution for current and future agreements will support multiple hundreds of thousands of produced water barrels per day. These strategic surface acquisitions play a critical role for TPL as we look to deliver produced water solutions for the broader oil and gas industry. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:08:23At the same time, they generate substantial incremental cash flows for TPL and help ensure that our oil and gas royalty interests remain undeterred by development constraints. Next, I'd like to spend some time discussing our most recent acquisition activity that we announced this past August and October. In total, we closed on three separate transactions totaling nearly $500,000,000. The first asset was over 4,000 surface acres in Martin County, which is strategically located in the core of the Midland Basin. These surface assets provide numerous revenue streams across brackish water, produced water, and other surface-related activities. The next asset we closed on was over 4,000 net royalty acres standardized to a 1/8 located in Culberson County. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:09:14This acquired acreage was especially attractive given the royalty acreage overlap drilling spacing units where we already have an interest in with our legacy royalties, meaning we essentially acquired a higher net revenue interest in current and future well locations we already owned. The third asset we closed on was over 7,000 net royalty acres located primarily in the Midland Basin in Martin, Midland, and other counties. These assets represent some of the best geology for oil development found anywhere in the Lower 48, and it significantly expands our net royalty acreage on the Midland side of the Permian Basin. All of these assets, both individually and on an aggregate basis, high-grade TPL's asset portfolio. These newly acquired assets are on par with or even exceed the quality of our legacy portfolio. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:10:05They are expected to be highly accretive to our near-term financial and operating metrics on a per-share basis, while also enhancing and extending our growth runway given the remaining undeveloped inventory on the royalty acreage and the untapped commercial potential on the surface acreage. We expect the two royalty acquisitions to add upwards of approximately 3,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in the near term, which represents an over 10% increase to our current oil and gas royalty production. Aggregating all three deals, we expect them to generate double-digit cash flow yield and a flat $70 oil price. As a result of the overall business performance and the additional free cash flow per share accretion these acquisitions provide, we announced yesterday that the board has approved a 37% increase of our regular quarterly dividend to $1.60 per share. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:10:58We continue to identify acquisition opportunities that could be excellent additions to the TPL portfolio. Our team brings exceptional technical, financial, and operating capabilities across land, water, and royalties, and with a fortress balance sheet and a net cash position coupled with our free cash flow proficiency, we are well positioned to evaluate, execute, and consolidate high-quality assets. As always, we remain intently focused on maximizing intrinsic value per share with a disciplined capital allocation approach aimed on maximizing returns over the long term. Next, I want to provide an update on our desalination efforts. We are making progress with equipment procurement, manufacturing, and testing as we work towards our 10,000 barrel per day test facility, which we refer to as phase ll-B. We still expect completion of this facility in the middle of next year. We have also advanced various operating optimizations, cost efficiencies, and economic analysis. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:12:01Currently, we expect the total cost of phase ll-B to be approximately $25 million, with $10 million incurred in 2024 and the remaining balance in 2025. As an alternative to a direct grid connection, we are also evaluating a direct natural gas power generation option with a tie-in to a nearby natural gas pipeline, which would require additional capital investment of approximately $10 million. Negotiations are ongoing with third-party partners and customers as we evaluate various commercial structures. As we've discussed in the past, we believe produced water desalination and beneficial reuse will potentially play a critical role in providing sustainable produced water solutions that will allow the Permian to maintain robust development activity. Finally, I want to remind TPL shareholders that we will be having our annual meeting tomorrow in Dallas. If you haven't already, I would encourage shareholders to submit their proxy votes soon. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:12:59You can find a generic proxy statement posted on the TPL website or via the SEC website. If you have any questions, please contact investor relations. With that, I'll hand the call over to Chris. Thanks Ty. Consolidated revenues during the third quarter 2024 were approximately $174 million. Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA was $144 million, and Adjusted EBITDA margin was 83%. Diluted earnings per share was $4.63, which was up slightly versus the same period last year. Performance year-over-year benefited from higher oil and gas royalty production, which increased 29%, higher water sales volumes, which increased 32%, and higher produced water royalty volumes, which increased 46%. Results were offset by lower realized oil and natural gas prices, which declined by 8% and 65%, respectively. Royalty production of approximately 28,300 barrels of oil equivalent per day represents 13% growth on a sequential quarter-over-quarter basis. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:14:11Production continues to benefit from strong activity levels across our Northern Delaware and Midland Basin footprint, with strong contributions from Exxon, Occidental, Coterra, BP, and Diamondback. Our recent M&A activity that closed during the third quarter 2024 added approximately 900 barrels of oil equivalent per day and $3 million of cash flow. As Ty mentioned earlier, on a full quarterly run rate basis, we expect our recent royalty and minerals acquisitions to add over 3,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, with an approximate 50% oil cut, and the rest split relatively evenly between gas and NGLs. As of quarter end, we had 6.9 net permitted wells, 11.8 net drilled but uncompleted wells, and 3.4 net completed but not producing wells. That amounts to 22.1 net line-of-sight inventory, which is the highest ever for TPL. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:15:09The recent minerals and royalties acquisitions that closed in October are not reflected in the well statistics. We anticipate this acquisition to add approximately 1.5 net wells to our line-of-sight inventory. While we continue to monitor activity on our acreage and in the broader Permian amid recent commodity price volatility, current activity levels remain robust from our vantage point. Finally, our balance sheet remains incredibly strong with zero debt and in a net cash position. While commodity prices are beyond our control, we remain focused on maximizing value where we can. The business has been set up to thrive in virtually any commodity price environment, and regardless of which way the macroeconomic environment unfolds, TPL will be operating from a position of strength and will look to be opportunistic. And with that, operator, we will now take questions. Thank you. Operator00:16:06Ladies and gentlemen, we will now be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star and one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star and two if you'd like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while we poll for questions. The first question comes from the line of Derek Whitfield from Texas Pacific Land Corporation. Please go ahead. Derrick WhitfieldManaging Director at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:16:45Congrats on your quarter and recent acquisitions. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:16:50Thanks Derek. Derrick WhitfieldManaging Director at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:16:53Sir. Starting on M&A, could you help frame what's led you to be more active as of recent and your view on the opportunity set that meets your checklist? Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:17:03Yeah, sure. You know, I think we've talked about it for the last couple of years. We have a lot of interest in owning more assets that look just like what we own today. I mean, we love surface minerals, water. The overall environment has been pretty good for M&A lately, where commodity prices are, sellers are willing to sell, and it's an attractive time to buy. So those deals were directly sourced, not marketed deals, but just really attractive asset classes, high-quality, long-duration cash flows, very similar to what we own today. I mean, a lot of the interest we bought was actually in DSUs that we already owned. So some intelligence there on development timing and pretty easy to manage when you're just going in and changing decimal places in the database that we already have. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:18:09So again, just really high-quality, very attractive assets that are really easy to integrate into our management system. Terrific. And then maybe shifting over to the surface side of the business. I mean, there's been a tremendous uptick in interest in surface rights since the LandBridge IPO. Given that you guys own one of the largest surface acre spreads in Texas, could you speak to the level of non-oil and gas revenue you're generating today and the potential you see and opportunities surrounding AI data centers, renewable energy, crypto mining, etc.? Yeah. I mean, surface is a fantastic asset. I think the thing we like about it the most is just the optionality that you have. Minerals are a great asset as well, but you don't have as much control over the actual development. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:19:08Whereas surface, you can be more proactive and kind of have more control over how and when that asset is developed, so as far as non-oil and gas revenue, it's pretty immaterial today, but we've signed a lot of contracts in the last couple of years. I think we've got over 700 megawatts of solar that we've contracted in the last 24 months that's in development phases. I think we've got seven utility-scale battery projects going. I think we've got four Bitcoin mines, like 78 megawatts, that are active today with another 50 in development stages, so I think there's a lot of opportunity outside of oil and gas. We've seen an increase in wind power interest lately, and then there's been a lot of talk about data centers, as you know. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:20:08I think Diamondback and Permian Resources have mentioned that lately, but that's something that we've been working on for some time now, and if you think about data centers as compute centers, then we've actually got a couple of small compute centers in the form of Bitcoin mining, like I mentioned, that are up and running with a couple more in negotiation, so we know what it takes to negotiate these things, and every deal is unique, but if you think about the large data center you might see for hyperscalers, those are still in the early days of development for the Permian, and I would just say that there's a lot of conversations taking place within the industry and definitely within TPL, and we feel that we're positioned as well as anyone in West Texas to provide land and water solutions as those opportunities unfold. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:21:02And so we've got a lot of experience negotiating and contracting compute facilities, but also all the things that might be ancillary to a data center, things like solar, wind, gas generation, pipeline and electric easements, water, grid-scale batteries, like I mentioned, and carbon capture. So we've signed contracts. We're cash flowing along a lot of those items already today. So again, TPL just has a lot of positive attributes for data centers, and nobody has more land than us in West Texas. So another thing, too, is if we need to buy more land to accommodate a data center, then we've proven that that's not hard for us to do. So I think there's also a lot of other parts of the country that are also attractive for data centers. So we're working hard to make TPL as attractive as possible. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:22:02But again, we're having a lot of good discussions, and we'll definitely update you guys along the way. Terrific. And maybe just staying on water, a few of your midstream peers are pursuing mineral extraction opportunities with iodine and lithium. Is there a royalty opportunity for you guys on that front? Robert, you want to take that one? Yeah, sure. When we talk about beneficial extraction of the produced water, a lot of folks are chasing it. I think those conversations are very similar to the very early stages of large data centers, judging that opportunity. What we've done, I'll say from a long time out, is to start identifying and cataloging by strata and by spatial area, what those concentrations are, and then compound it in a raw and then in a compounded environment. Is that marketable? Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:23:09I think we have a good line of sight internally on what are those analytes that can be compounded and are commercial at scale, and we continue to evaluate it. And then conversations regarding that, whatever beneficial use comes of that water and how that goes into play, I think is still developing in the regulatory world on ownership of produced water and is going to kind of to be determined on the ownership of produced water and any downstream revenues that are associated with it. And finally, if I could, just referencing the new midstream agreement you mentioned and you prepared in March that will bring additional produced water in Q4, how material of a step up in SWD volumes is that? I think that contract is a couple hundred thousand barrels a day. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:24:07And if you look at our run rate, we're just under four million barrels a day on average today. Derrick WhitfieldManaging Director at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:24:13All right. Terrific. Thanks for your time and comments, guys. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:24:18Thanks, Derek. Operator00:24:20Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes our question and answer session. The conference of Texas Pacific Land Corporation has now concluded. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect your lines.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesShawn AminiVP Finance and Investor RelationsTy GloverCEODerrick WhitfieldManaging DirectorPowered by Earnings DocumentsEarnings Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Texas Pacific Land Earnings HeadlinesHead to Head Survey: Texas Pacific Land (NYSE:TPL) vs. Meren Energy (OTCMKTS:AOIFF)2 hours ago | americanbankingnews.comTexas Pacific Land Corporation 2026 Q1 - Results - Earnings Call PresentationMay 15 at 2:50 AM | seekingalpha.comYour book attachedBill Poulos is giving away his 'Safe Trade Options Formula' book for free - but only for a limited time through a temporary download link. He plans to charge for it soon. Download your copy now and lock it in at no cost, regardless of future pricing. | Profits Run (Ad)Texas Pacific Land's (NYSE:TPL) Solid Earnings May Rest On Weak FoundationsMay 14, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comAnalyzing Brenmiller Energy (NASDAQ:BNRG) and Texas Pacific Land (NYSE:TPL)May 13, 2026 | americanbankingnews.comHead to Head Analysis: Gevo (NASDAQ:GEVO) & Texas Pacific Land (NYSE:TPL)May 13, 2026 | americanbankingnews.comSee More Texas Pacific Land Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Texas Pacific Land? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Texas Pacific Land and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Texas Pacific LandTexas Pacific Land (NYSE:TPL) (NYSE: TPL) is a Texas-based land management company that derives revenue from the ownership and stewardship of large tracts of land and associated mineral rights in West Texas. The company’s origins trace to 19th century land grants associated with the Texas and Pacific Railway; over time those grant holdings have been retained and managed as a standalone corporate asset base. Texas Pacific Land is publicly listed and operates as a landowner and resource manager rather than as a traditional oil and gas producer. The company’s primary activities include management of surface rights and leasing of land for energy and other commercial uses, administration of mineral royalty interests, and provision of water and related services to industrial customers. Additional revenue streams come from grazing and agricultural leases, conservation and recreational agreements, and selective real estate dispositions and easements. A central focus of the business is protecting and enhancing the long-term value of its land and mineral estate through permitting, lease administration and land stewardship. Texas Pacific Land’s operations are concentrated in West Texas, notably in areas of significant oil and gas activity such as the Permian Basin, where it serves energy companies, agricultural tenants and other commercial users of surface and subsurface resources. The company is run by a corporate management team and governed by a board of directors and publishes periodic reports as a publicly traded entity; further details on executive leadership and governance are available in its regulatory filings and investor materials. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, good morning and welcome to the Texas Pacific Land Corporation third quarter 2024 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star and zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Shawn Amini, VP Finance and Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir. Shawn AminiVP Finance and Investor Relations at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:00:37Thank you for joining us today for Texas Pacific Land Corporation's third quarter 2024 earnings conference call. Yesterday afternoon, the company released its financial results and filed its Form 10-Q with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which is available on the investor section of the company's website at www.texaspacific.com. As a reminder, remarks made on today's conference call may include forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are subject to risk uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed today. We do not undertake any obligation to update our forward-looking statements in light of new information or future events. For more detailed discussion of the factors that may affect the company's results, please refer to our earnings release for this quarter and to our recent SEC filings. During this call, we will also be discussing certain non-GAAP financial measures. Shawn AminiVP Finance and Investor Relations at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:01:22More information and reconciliations about these non-GAAP financial measures are contained in our earnings release and SEC filings. Please also note we may at times refer to our company by its stock ticker, TPL. This morning's conference call is hosted by TPL Chief Executive Officer Ty Glover and TPL Chief Financial Officer Chris Steddum. Management will make some prepared comments, after which we will open the call for questions. Now, I will turn the call over to Ty. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:01:49Thanks Shawn. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Our strong third quarter 2024 performance underscores the success of our active management strategy focused on maximizing oil and gas royalties, surface, and water assets, with acquisition activity over the last couple of years set to provide incremental growth tailwinds. In addition, TPL continues to benefit from activity levels in the Permian Basin, which remain resilient despite fluctuations in oil and natural gas prices. To start, TPL's oil and gas royalty production of approximately 28,300 barrels of oil equivalent per day represents a corporate record driven by our central Midland and oil-loving subregions. For water sales, revenues were up 37% year-over-year as the size and scale of our operations provide a meaningful competitive advantage as operator customers look for delivery assurance. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:02:46Continued deployment of co-completions and simul-frac and trimul-frac fracking placed tremendous volume demands for water delivered over a relatively short period, and our substantial investment in brackish and treated water infrastructure has established one of the few systems in the Permian capable of this type of volume intensity. This was also another record quarter for our produced water royalty revenues, with produced water royalty volumes up 46% year-over-year as our expanding set of commercial arrangements with third-party customers continues to drive increased market capture. In our conversations with investors, our produced water royalties is by far the most misunderstood aspect of our business. Today, I'd like to spend some time elaborating on this topic, especially given the growth we've seen to date and also given the robust outlook over the near term and long term underpinned by acquisitions we made last year. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:03:43Our produced water royalties business is often conflated with traditional saltwater midstream and disposal operations. In traditional saltwater disposal operations, otherwise known by its acronym, SWD, an operator will collect water produced via an oil and gas well at a centralized storage facility, transport it typically via pipeline to an SWD facility where it is then injected thousands of feet below the surface. From a high level, TPL's role in the disposal of produced water is providing SWD operators access to our surface and our pore space, and in return, we charge a produced water royalty. TPL does not currently operate SWD infrastructure. To receive these produced water royalties, we have negotiated separate, individualized commercial agreements with each operator that wants to operate SWD infrastructure on our land. These agreements often cover massive acreage extents and can take months or even years to negotiate. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:04:45Since we started in 2017, the team has easily spent more hours negotiating, structuring, and executing produced water royalty agreements than any other part of the business. The effort was well worth it as these produced water royalties provide TPL with a commercially unique, extremely high-quality cash flow stream. In 2016, before active management, TPL generated virtually zero produced water royalties. Fast forward to today, and TPL is positioned to collect royalties on well over 1 billion barrels of produced water for the full year 2024, which will in turn generate around $100 million of royalty revenues, and because of how we've structured these agreements, this revenue stream incurs zero capital expenditures and zero operating expense burden outside of personnel salaries and legal expenses that go into negotiating the agreements. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:05:38In effect, the hundreds of millions, or likely billions of dollars, this business will cumulatively generate in the years to come flows directly to TPL's bottom line, representing nearly pure margin. By applying our historical earnings trading multiple to the current produced water royalties' annualized run rate cash flow, it's easy to see the immense value this business has created for shareholders. It's also worth noting that our agreements provide TPL with extremely robust indemnification against spills, accidents, injuries, or other types of liabilities. In addition to benefiting from the significant financial upside, we've also been very intentional in protecting TPL interests from potential risk. Furthermore, these produced water royalty agreements enhance our water sales business. Many of our contracts include provisions providing TPL the exclusive right to offtake produced water barrels within an area of mutual interest for treatment and resale. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:06:36This allows TPL to procure produced water from an operator's system, treat it to a customer's specifications, and sell the recycled water for well completions. In such circumstances, TPL is paid twice on a single barrel, once through a produced water royalty and again through a treated water sale. This feature has been especially critical for TPL as operators have been increasingly using raw or treated produced water for well development over the last few years. Looking ahead, recent strategic acquisitions will provide incremental produced water growth opportunities. Last year, we spent nearly $40 million across multiple transactions to acquire over 50,000 acres of surface acreage and pore space. These acquisitions were strategically targeted given their location along the East State Line of Texas and New Mexico in Andrews and Winkler counties. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:07:29This location is significant as this acreage is outside the core oil and gas development areas of the Permian Basin, where produced water disposal zones will not interfere with drilling and completion operations. Over the last year, our business development teams have been working diligently to commercialize this otherwise raw land. We have since signed an agreement with one of the largest midstream operators serving the broader Delaware market to bring produced water into these new tracts, with initial volumes expected in fourth quarter 2024. We are also in advanced discussions with other parties for additional access, and we expect that the aggregate contribution for current and future agreements will support multiple hundreds of thousands of produced water barrels per day. These strategic surface acquisitions play a critical role for TPL as we look to deliver produced water solutions for the broader oil and gas industry. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:08:23At the same time, they generate substantial incremental cash flows for TPL and help ensure that our oil and gas royalty interests remain undeterred by development constraints. Next, I'd like to spend some time discussing our most recent acquisition activity that we announced this past August and October. In total, we closed on three separate transactions totaling nearly $500,000,000. The first asset was over 4,000 surface acres in Martin County, which is strategically located in the core of the Midland Basin. These surface assets provide numerous revenue streams across brackish water, produced water, and other surface-related activities. The next asset we closed on was over 4,000 net royalty acres standardized to a 1/8 located in Culberson County. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:09:14This acquired acreage was especially attractive given the royalty acreage overlap drilling spacing units where we already have an interest in with our legacy royalties, meaning we essentially acquired a higher net revenue interest in current and future well locations we already owned. The third asset we closed on was over 7,000 net royalty acres located primarily in the Midland Basin in Martin, Midland, and other counties. These assets represent some of the best geology for oil development found anywhere in the Lower 48, and it significantly expands our net royalty acreage on the Midland side of the Permian Basin. All of these assets, both individually and on an aggregate basis, high-grade TPL's asset portfolio. These newly acquired assets are on par with or even exceed the quality of our legacy portfolio. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:10:05They are expected to be highly accretive to our near-term financial and operating metrics on a per-share basis, while also enhancing and extending our growth runway given the remaining undeveloped inventory on the royalty acreage and the untapped commercial potential on the surface acreage. We expect the two royalty acquisitions to add upwards of approximately 3,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in the near term, which represents an over 10% increase to our current oil and gas royalty production. Aggregating all three deals, we expect them to generate double-digit cash flow yield and a flat $70 oil price. As a result of the overall business performance and the additional free cash flow per share accretion these acquisitions provide, we announced yesterday that the board has approved a 37% increase of our regular quarterly dividend to $1.60 per share. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:10:58We continue to identify acquisition opportunities that could be excellent additions to the TPL portfolio. Our team brings exceptional technical, financial, and operating capabilities across land, water, and royalties, and with a fortress balance sheet and a net cash position coupled with our free cash flow proficiency, we are well positioned to evaluate, execute, and consolidate high-quality assets. As always, we remain intently focused on maximizing intrinsic value per share with a disciplined capital allocation approach aimed on maximizing returns over the long term. Next, I want to provide an update on our desalination efforts. We are making progress with equipment procurement, manufacturing, and testing as we work towards our 10,000 barrel per day test facility, which we refer to as phase ll-B. We still expect completion of this facility in the middle of next year. We have also advanced various operating optimizations, cost efficiencies, and economic analysis. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:12:01Currently, we expect the total cost of phase ll-B to be approximately $25 million, with $10 million incurred in 2024 and the remaining balance in 2025. As an alternative to a direct grid connection, we are also evaluating a direct natural gas power generation option with a tie-in to a nearby natural gas pipeline, which would require additional capital investment of approximately $10 million. Negotiations are ongoing with third-party partners and customers as we evaluate various commercial structures. As we've discussed in the past, we believe produced water desalination and beneficial reuse will potentially play a critical role in providing sustainable produced water solutions that will allow the Permian to maintain robust development activity. Finally, I want to remind TPL shareholders that we will be having our annual meeting tomorrow in Dallas. If you haven't already, I would encourage shareholders to submit their proxy votes soon. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:12:59You can find a generic proxy statement posted on the TPL website or via the SEC website. If you have any questions, please contact investor relations. With that, I'll hand the call over to Chris. Thanks Ty. Consolidated revenues during the third quarter 2024 were approximately $174 million. Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA was $144 million, and Adjusted EBITDA margin was 83%. Diluted earnings per share was $4.63, which was up slightly versus the same period last year. Performance year-over-year benefited from higher oil and gas royalty production, which increased 29%, higher water sales volumes, which increased 32%, and higher produced water royalty volumes, which increased 46%. Results were offset by lower realized oil and natural gas prices, which declined by 8% and 65%, respectively. Royalty production of approximately 28,300 barrels of oil equivalent per day represents 13% growth on a sequential quarter-over-quarter basis. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:14:11Production continues to benefit from strong activity levels across our Northern Delaware and Midland Basin footprint, with strong contributions from Exxon, Occidental, Coterra, BP, and Diamondback. Our recent M&A activity that closed during the third quarter 2024 added approximately 900 barrels of oil equivalent per day and $3 million of cash flow. As Ty mentioned earlier, on a full quarterly run rate basis, we expect our recent royalty and minerals acquisitions to add over 3,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, with an approximate 50% oil cut, and the rest split relatively evenly between gas and NGLs. As of quarter end, we had 6.9 net permitted wells, 11.8 net drilled but uncompleted wells, and 3.4 net completed but not producing wells. That amounts to 22.1 net line-of-sight inventory, which is the highest ever for TPL. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:15:09The recent minerals and royalties acquisitions that closed in October are not reflected in the well statistics. We anticipate this acquisition to add approximately 1.5 net wells to our line-of-sight inventory. While we continue to monitor activity on our acreage and in the broader Permian amid recent commodity price volatility, current activity levels remain robust from our vantage point. Finally, our balance sheet remains incredibly strong with zero debt and in a net cash position. While commodity prices are beyond our control, we remain focused on maximizing value where we can. The business has been set up to thrive in virtually any commodity price environment, and regardless of which way the macroeconomic environment unfolds, TPL will be operating from a position of strength and will look to be opportunistic. And with that, operator, we will now take questions. Thank you. Operator00:16:06Ladies and gentlemen, we will now be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star and one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star and two if you'd like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while we poll for questions. The first question comes from the line of Derek Whitfield from Texas Pacific Land Corporation. Please go ahead. Derrick WhitfieldManaging Director at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:16:45Congrats on your quarter and recent acquisitions. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:16:50Thanks Derek. Derrick WhitfieldManaging Director at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:16:53Sir. Starting on M&A, could you help frame what's led you to be more active as of recent and your view on the opportunity set that meets your checklist? Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:17:03Yeah, sure. You know, I think we've talked about it for the last couple of years. We have a lot of interest in owning more assets that look just like what we own today. I mean, we love surface minerals, water. The overall environment has been pretty good for M&A lately, where commodity prices are, sellers are willing to sell, and it's an attractive time to buy. So those deals were directly sourced, not marketed deals, but just really attractive asset classes, high-quality, long-duration cash flows, very similar to what we own today. I mean, a lot of the interest we bought was actually in DSUs that we already owned. So some intelligence there on development timing and pretty easy to manage when you're just going in and changing decimal places in the database that we already have. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:18:09So again, just really high-quality, very attractive assets that are really easy to integrate into our management system. Terrific. And then maybe shifting over to the surface side of the business. I mean, there's been a tremendous uptick in interest in surface rights since the LandBridge IPO. Given that you guys own one of the largest surface acre spreads in Texas, could you speak to the level of non-oil and gas revenue you're generating today and the potential you see and opportunities surrounding AI data centers, renewable energy, crypto mining, etc.? Yeah. I mean, surface is a fantastic asset. I think the thing we like about it the most is just the optionality that you have. Minerals are a great asset as well, but you don't have as much control over the actual development. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:19:08Whereas surface, you can be more proactive and kind of have more control over how and when that asset is developed, so as far as non-oil and gas revenue, it's pretty immaterial today, but we've signed a lot of contracts in the last couple of years. I think we've got over 700 megawatts of solar that we've contracted in the last 24 months that's in development phases. I think we've got seven utility-scale battery projects going. I think we've got four Bitcoin mines, like 78 megawatts, that are active today with another 50 in development stages, so I think there's a lot of opportunity outside of oil and gas. We've seen an increase in wind power interest lately, and then there's been a lot of talk about data centers, as you know. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:20:08I think Diamondback and Permian Resources have mentioned that lately, but that's something that we've been working on for some time now, and if you think about data centers as compute centers, then we've actually got a couple of small compute centers in the form of Bitcoin mining, like I mentioned, that are up and running with a couple more in negotiation, so we know what it takes to negotiate these things, and every deal is unique, but if you think about the large data center you might see for hyperscalers, those are still in the early days of development for the Permian, and I would just say that there's a lot of conversations taking place within the industry and definitely within TPL, and we feel that we're positioned as well as anyone in West Texas to provide land and water solutions as those opportunities unfold. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:21:02And so we've got a lot of experience negotiating and contracting compute facilities, but also all the things that might be ancillary to a data center, things like solar, wind, gas generation, pipeline and electric easements, water, grid-scale batteries, like I mentioned, and carbon capture. So we've signed contracts. We're cash flowing along a lot of those items already today. So again, TPL just has a lot of positive attributes for data centers, and nobody has more land than us in West Texas. So another thing, too, is if we need to buy more land to accommodate a data center, then we've proven that that's not hard for us to do. So I think there's also a lot of other parts of the country that are also attractive for data centers. So we're working hard to make TPL as attractive as possible. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:22:02But again, we're having a lot of good discussions, and we'll definitely update you guys along the way. Terrific. And maybe just staying on water, a few of your midstream peers are pursuing mineral extraction opportunities with iodine and lithium. Is there a royalty opportunity for you guys on that front? Robert, you want to take that one? Yeah, sure. When we talk about beneficial extraction of the produced water, a lot of folks are chasing it. I think those conversations are very similar to the very early stages of large data centers, judging that opportunity. What we've done, I'll say from a long time out, is to start identifying and cataloging by strata and by spatial area, what those concentrations are, and then compound it in a raw and then in a compounded environment. Is that marketable? Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:23:09I think we have a good line of sight internally on what are those analytes that can be compounded and are commercial at scale, and we continue to evaluate it. And then conversations regarding that, whatever beneficial use comes of that water and how that goes into play, I think is still developing in the regulatory world on ownership of produced water and is going to kind of to be determined on the ownership of produced water and any downstream revenues that are associated with it. And finally, if I could, just referencing the new midstream agreement you mentioned and you prepared in March that will bring additional produced water in Q4, how material of a step up in SWD volumes is that? I think that contract is a couple hundred thousand barrels a day. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:24:07And if you look at our run rate, we're just under four million barrels a day on average today. Derrick WhitfieldManaging Director at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:24:13All right. Terrific. Thanks for your time and comments, guys. Ty GloverCEO at Texas Pacific Land Corporation00:24:18Thanks, Derek. Operator00:24:20Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes our question and answer session. The conference of Texas Pacific Land Corporation has now concluded. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect your lines.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesShawn AminiVP Finance and Investor RelationsTy GloverCEODerrick WhitfieldManaging DirectorPowered by