NYSE:WTI W&T Offshore Q2 2025 Earnings Report $4.22 -0.17 (-3.77%) Closing price 05/5/2026 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$3.85 -0.37 (-8.66%) As of 08:08 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 W&T Offshore EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.08Consensus EPS -$0.14Beat/MissBeat by +$0.06One Year Ago EPSN/AW&T Offshore Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$122.37 millionExpected Revenue$131.30 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$8.93 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AW&T Offshore Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2025Date8/4/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, August 5, 2025Conference Call Time10:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsW&T Offshore's Q1 2026 earnings is estimated for Thursday, May 7, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled on Friday, May 8, 2026 at 10:00 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 W&T Offshore Q2 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrAugust 5, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: 10% production growth quarter-over-quarter to 33,500 BOE/d and Q3 guidance of ~35,000 BOE/d signals strong operational momentum. Positive Sentiment: Adjusted EBITDA grew by 9% to $35 million while unrestricted cash climbed above $120 million and net debt fell under $230 million. Positive Sentiment: Midyear reserve report showed 1.8 million Boe of net positive revisions without new drilling, underscoring asset strength and long-life reserves. Positive Sentiment: Balance sheet enhanced by a $350 million second-lien note offering, new $50 million undrawn revolver, a $12 million non-core asset sale, and $58 million insurance settlement. Positive Sentiment: Settlement and court rulings resolved surety disputes, dismissing demands for over $100 million in collateral and securing stable premium rates through 2026. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallW&T Offshore Q2 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xThere are 5 speakers on the call. Speaker 400:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the W&T Offshore second quarter 2025 conference call. During today's call, all parties will be in listen-only mode. Following the company's prepared comments, the call will be open for questions and answers. During the question and answer session, we ask that you limit your questions to one and a follow-up. You can always rejoin the queue. This conference call is being recorded, and a replay will be available on the company's website following the call. I would now like to turn the conference over to Al Petrie, Investor Relations Coordinator. Speaker 200:00:39Thank you, Gaylene. On behalf of the management team, I would like to welcome all of you to today's conference call to review W&T Offshore's second quarter 2025 financial and operational results. Before we begin, I would like to remind you that our comments may include forward-looking statements. It should be noted that a variety of factors could cause W&T's actual results to differ materially from the anticipated results or expectations expressed in these forward-looking statements. Today's call may also contain certain non-GAAP financial measures. Please refer to the earnings release that we issued yesterday for disclosures on forward-looking statements and reconciliations of non-GAAP measures. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Tracy Krohn, our Chairman and CEO. Speaker 300:01:26Thanks, Al. Morning, everyone. Welcome to our second quarter conference call for 2025. With me today are William Williford, our Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer; Sameer Parasnis, our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; and Trey Hartman, our Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer. They're all available to answer questions later during the call. Before we discuss the second quarter results, I would like to say how proud I am of all the people who've helped make W&T Offshore a success since we founded the company in 1983. We've been an active operator in the Gulf of Mexico and a staunch advocate for the offshore industry for over 40 years. Yesterday, I was honored to celebrate the 20th anniversary of W&T Offshore going public by ringing the closing bell at the New York Stock Exchange. Speaker 300:02:19We're conducting today's earnings call from the New York Stock Exchange, where I have several media interviews scheduled that will give us the chance to discuss the company. As you will hear throughout the call today, we're continuing to enhance shareholder value through operational excellence and maximizing production across our impressive portfolio of assets. Across the first half of 2025, we've delivered strong operational and financial results. Quite simply, we're executing on our proven and successful strategy that's committed to profitability, operational execution, returning value to our stockholders, and ensuring the safety of our employees and contractors. Our ability to deliver production and EBITDA growth while seamlessly integrating accretive producing property acquisitions has helped W&T Offshore grow during our 40-year history. Some of our second quarter highlights include we increased production by 10% quarter over quarter to 33,500 barrels of oil equivalent per day. That's within our guidance range. Speaker 300:03:29We performed nine low-cost, low-risk workovers that exceeded expectations and positively impacted production and revenue for the quarter. I'd like to point out that five of the workovers were performed in Mobile Bay, helping to increase production at this low-decline, long-life asset, which is also our largest natural gas field and the largest natural gas field in the Gulf of Mexico. Total lease operating expenses were $77 million, again within guidance. We grew adjusted EBITDA by 9% to $35 million compared to the first quarter of 2025. We've also grown our unrestricted cash to over $120 million while lowering our net debt by about $15 million to under $230 million. Speaker 300:04:20Our 2025 mid-year reserve report generated by Netherland, Sewell & Associates showed net positive revisions of 1.8 million barrels of oil equivalent, which continues to demonstrate the strength of our asset base and our ability to maximize value from our fields. None of this included any drilling activity. We accomplished all of this while also returning value to our shareholders through our quarterly dividend. We've paid seven quarterly cash dividends since initiating the dividend policy in late 2023 and announced the third quarter 2025 payment that will occur later this month. Additionally, in the first quarter of this year, we had several transactions that strengthened and simplified our balance sheet, adding material cash to the bottom line and improving our credit ratings from S&P and Moody's. Speaker 300:05:12In January, we successfully closed a $350 million offering of new second lien notes that increased our interest rate by 100 basis points, excuse me, decreased our interest rate by 100 basis points, and together with other transactions, reduced our total debt by $39 million. We also entered into a new credit agreement for a $50 million revolving credit facility, which matures in July of 2028. That's undrawn and replaces the previous $50 million credit facility provided by Calculus Lending. We also sold a non-core interest at Garden Banks, which included about 200 barrels of oil equivalent per day for $12 million, and we've received $58 million in cash for an insurance settlement related to the Mobile Bay 78-1 well. All of these actions have allowed us to enhance liquidity and improve our financial flexibility. Speaker 300:06:10Lastly, in the first half of 2025, we've opportunistically taken advantage of commodity price volatility to increase our hedge position. We added costless collars for both oil and natural gas, including 2,000 barrels per day of oil for July through December 2025, with a floor price of $63 per barrel and a ceiling price of $77.25 per barrel. For natural gas, we have costless collars for 70 million cubic feet per day from July to December 2025. This has helped lock in a very favorable price range for a portion of our oil and natural gas for the remainder of 2025. Our ability to execute our strategy has delivered very positive results thus far in 2025, including an improved balance sheet, enhanced liquidity, growing production, and EBITDA, all of which has positioned us for success in the second half of 2025 and beyond. Speaker 300:07:12At year-end 2024, the company had a total debt of $393 million and a net debt of $284 million. At the end of the second quarter of 2025, our total debt and net debt were significantly reduced to $350 million and $229 million, respectively. Our liquidity at June 30, 2025, increased to $171 million. CapEx in the second quarter of 2025 was $10 million, and asset retirement settlement costs totaled $12 million. For the first half of 2025, our CapEx has totaled $19 million, and asset retirement costs were $16 million. We continue to expect our full-year capital expenses to be between $34 million and $42 million. This does not include potential acquisition opportunities. We will remain focused on accredited low-risk acquisitions of producing properties rather than high-risk drilling in the current uncertain commodity price environment. Speaker 300:08:19These acquisitions must meet our stringent criteria of generating free cash flow, providing a solid base of free reserves with upside potential, and offer the ability for our experienced team to reduce costs. Over the years, we've consistently created significant value by methodically integrating producing property acquisitions. The assets we acquired last year added meaningful reserves at an attractive price, and we are now seeing additional production from two fields that were previously shut in. The West Delta 73 and Main Pass 108/98 fields were placed into production towards the end of March and into early April. The fields began ramping up production over the course of the second quarter of 2025, and we expect production to continue to increase in the second half of this year on these fields. That will be seen in our third quarter guidance as well. Speaker 300:09:14There was a temporary shutdown of production in Mobile Bay during the second quarter due to a pipeline issue that was resolved by June 30 that reduced second quarter production by about 1,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day. Yesterday, we provided our detailed guidance for third quarter 2025 and reiterated our full-year guidance. In the third quarter of 2025, with new fields continuing to ramp up, coupled with the strong workover and recompletion program performance, we are predicting the midpoint of Q3 2025 production to be around 35,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day. This is an increase of almost 5% compared to the second quarter of 2025. This is quite remarkable considering that we currently do not have any drilling operations. Thus, we are spending minimal capital, and our LOE costs are remaining flat. Speaker 300:10:06The third quarter guidance for our cash operating costs, which includes LOE, gathering, transportation, and production taxes, and cash G&A costs, is in line with the second quarter of 2025. With absolute costs remaining flat and production expected to increase, we believe that on a per BOE basis, we will see decreases. We also believe that there are more opportunities to reduce our operating costs and find synergies to drive costs lower in the long term. We are always working hard to reduce costs without impacting safety or deferring asset integrity work. I would now like to talk to you about our mid-year 2025 reserve report. In our release yesterday, we reported SEC proved reserves of 123 million barrels of oil equivalent, which was slightly lower than the 127 million barrels of oil equivalent at year-end 2024. Speaker 300:11:02This reduction was primarily driven by production of 5.8 million barrels of oil equivalent in the first half of 2025, which was partially offset by 1.8 million barrels of net positive revisions. We are pleased with another report that has positive revisions despite drilling no new wells and spending minimal capital in 2025. This highlights the strength of our prolific asset base and our operational capabilities to economically extract reserves from long-life assets. We operate about 94% of our mid-year proved reserves, which gives us maximum flexibility in controlling our operations during periods of volatile commodity prices. Approximately 44% of mid-year 2025 SEC proved reserves were liquids with 34% crude oil and 10% NGLs, and we had 56% natural gas. Speaker 300:11:58With the continued strengthening of natural gas pricing and the recent European LNG deals, we believe having a strong natural gas position located in close proximity to LNG facilities will position W&T Offshore very well in the future. We have long enjoyed a premium over Henry Hub pricing and see that continuing in the future with the increased demand in our operating region. The pre-tax PV-10 of the mid-year 2025 proved reserves using SEC pricing was flat at $1.2 billion compared with year-end 2024. Mid-year 2025 proved reserves and PV-10 were based on average SEC 12-month crude oil and natural gas prices of $71.20 per barrel and $2.86 per MMBTU, while year-end 2024 prices were $76.32 per barrel of oil and $2.13 per MMBTU of natural gas. Speaker 300:12:59We believe we've built a sustainable group of high-performing Gulf of Mexico assets that will continue to provide meaningful cash flow to our shareholders for many years. Before closing, I'd like to address surety and regulatory updates. In June 2025, we were pleased with the settlement agreement that we reached with two of our largest surety providers, which called for the dismissal of a previously filed lawsuit. This outcome is very positive for W&T Offshore overall, as we will not acquiesce to unjustified collateral demands made by the applicable sureties, and we've locked in our historical premium rates through the end of 2026. We believe the entry into this settlement agreement vindicates our resolve to stand up to our surety providers' unjustified demands on independent oil and gas operators such as W&T Offshore. Additionally, at the end of June 2025, U.S. Speaker 300:13:58Magistrate Judge Dina Palermo recommended denying two other surety companies' motions for preliminary injunction, through which they were collectively asking for full cash collateralization of over $100 million. We couldn't be more pleased with the court's decision to prevent unnecessary and unjustified collateral demands by surety providers. For the past 40-plus years, W&T Offshore has met its plugging and abandonment obligations, paid its negotiated premiums, and operated responsibly in the Gulf of Mexico. In fact, we've done more plugging and abandonment work than anybody in the Gulf of Mexico. We demand fairness and transparency for all oil and natural gas producers in the Gulf of Mexico, and we'll continue to pursue the pending litigation against our other surety providers that have decided not to deal fairly with W&T Offshore and other independent oil and gas producers. Speaker 300:14:59We have done well over a billion dollars of decommissioning work in the Gulf of Mexico, again, more than any other operator who's done on his own nickel, and we've done so safely and reliably. These are very positive results for W&T Offshore and should alleviate some of the uncertainty that has negatively impacted our stock price, despite some positive operational and financial results in 2025. As we mentioned during our last call in early 2025, pursuant to directives from the Trump administration, the Department of Interior indicated it will not seek supplemental financial assurance in the Gulf of Mexico, except in the case of sole liability properties and certain non-sole liability properties that do not have a financially strong co-owner or predecessor entitlement. Speaker 300:15:46Since his inauguration, President Trump has issued a number of executive orders aimed at streamlining regulations and reducing the regulatory burden on oil and natural gas companies, increasing federal oil and natural gas leasing, including in the Gulf of Mexico, and expediting U.S. natural gas resource development. We're very pleased with these actions. We expect these will positively impact W&T Offshore and the offshore energy industry. In closing, I'd like to again thank our team at W&T Offshore. For 20 years as an NYSE-listed company, as the largest shareholder, I believe we are well positioned to continue to grow and add value in the second half of 2025. We generated solid EBITDA and raised our cash position to over $120 million. This allows us to continue to evaluate growth opportunities, both organically and inorganically. Speaker 300:16:43We have a long track record of successfully integrating assets into our portfolio, and we continue to believe that the Gulf of Mexico is a world-class basin that supports value creation. We will maintain our focus on operational excellence and maximizing the cash flow potential of our asset base. With that, operator, we can now open the lines for questions. Speaker 400:17:06Thank you. We'll now begin the question and answer session. To join the question queue, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. You'll hear a tone acknowledging your request. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing any keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. Our first question is from Nate Henderson with Techlist Capitals. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:17:33Good morning. For my first question, I wanted to start on policy. With the administration looking for ways to support the industry further, can you share your thoughts on what actions the administration may be looking at in order to incentivize production in the Gulf of Mexico? Speaker 300:17:49Thanks, Nate, and good morning. Yeah, there's a lot of things that the Department of Interior is looking at there. They've already weighed in with regard to lower royalties, and I expect, and I hope that they will weigh in on further reductions on those royalties. There's the so-called Idle Iron Act, which is kind of nonsensical to me and our company. Why do you need to prematurely abandon these wells when none of the rest of the wells on the platform had been abandoned? This was a policy brought on by the Obama administration to create havoc and essentially make it cost more deliberately. The idea was, of course, to get rid of oil and gas companies in the Gulf of Mexico. We've looked at some other things that we discussed with them. Speaker 300:18:48I think it's important to recognize that this administration has taken a very strong position in the fact that, yeah, we want to maximize and utilize our abilities to conserve the natural resource in the Gulf of Mexico. President Trump and the Department of Interior have made that pledge that they're going to do it. We're already seeing some of the regulations getting rolled back. There will hopefully be another decision with regard to surety here. Put Solivay into writing, and we're looking forward to that. Of course, you're aware that we're suing surety providers. Those are just a few. We're very hopeful that this administration gets back to the idea that oil and gas from this very important basin, by the way, the second largest producing basin and the largest by area in the United States. Speaker 100:20:00Thanks, Tracy. That's really encouraging. I'm shifting over to your operations. Implied 4Q production guidance seems very strong at the midpoint. In your prepared remarks, you talked about the increase you expected in Q3. Can you share maybe what's driving that further production ramp that you're expecting at the back half of the year? Speaker 300:20:20Yeah, I'm going to turn that over to our Chief Operating Officer, William Williford. He's got responsibility for that basin. Good morning, Nate. As Tracy mentioned in the call this morning, we have a lot of low-cost workovers that we're continually doing in the third quarter, as well as a couple of recompletions to add to that production. We also plan on ramping up one of the Cox fields we acquired last year as well to see significant production through the last part of the year. Speaker 100:20:56Got it. Thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 300:20:59Thanks, Nate. You're welcome. Speaker 400:21:03If you have a question, please press star then one. The next question is from Jeff Robertson with Water Tower Research. Please go ahead. Operator00:21:14Thank you. Good morning. Tracy, does resolution of some of these surety and bonding issues for W&T Offshore have an impact on how you approach acquisitions? Do they have an impact anywhere on the balance sheet with respect to liquidity? Speaker 300:21:34Oh, absolutely. Jeff, I mean, the sureties were in collusion with one another to artificially suppress the company by virtue of demanding full collateral. It's kind of like your car insurance. If you have a car, your agent calls you up and says, "Gee, Jeff, you have a $50,000 insurance policy on your car. Would you please send me $15,000? In fact, I demand that you send me $50,000 so we can cash collateralize your account. And by the way, I'm going to increase your premiums as a result." That was the alternative that was given to us, except it was a lot better, a lot bigger nominal dollars. For us, it was around $250 million of collateral demands. We had to sign this indemnity agreement with these companies. Speaker 300:22:36They all read virtually identically that you had to provide cash demand within a very, very short period of time, maybe 10 days to two weeks, and that if you didn't do so, that you were in violation of their policy. Several of them got together and they all called it about the same time for $250 million, which, by the way, just happened to be the market cap of the company at the time. I thought that that was pretty unfair. Obviously, they were all doing it at the same time. Seemed collusional to me, so we sued them. As a result, you know it threw the surety market into quite a bit of disarray. The idea, the very idea that you need surety is kind of preposterous to us. Speaker 300:23:30The government, in spite of all the bankruptcies that have taken place in the Gulf of Mexico, the government has never, ever called a bond, even though they demand it. They demand that surety, but they've never called it. The reason that they've never called it is because the lease form itself calls for joint and several liability. That means that anybody that was ever on the, that ever held a record title interest is jointly and severally liable up to 100% of the obligations. The government never had that situation. They would just go back to the predecessor title and demand that they take care of those obligations. We've had to do that ourselves. Others have had to do that. It's always been the case. That is what the lease form says. Speaker 300:24:24The government's idea that we need more surety is obviously preposterous because they've never called one single damn surety demand. Not once. It's got to be a farce. It was put in by the Obama administration, further exasperated by the Biden administration. It was wholly designed to put oil and gas companies out of business. Operator00:24:52Tracy, do you think that resolving those issues will have an impact on M&A activity in the Gulf? Speaker 300:25:00Oh, you bet. Yeah. People will have to figure out a different way to do that assurance for other companies. That'll be part of the sales price. People aren't going, companies aren't going to stop selling properties. They use those proceeds to put into different projects that will, in fact, create more value for them. We will take those properties, the ones that we get, and make them more valuable because we'll lightning focus on that. Yeah, the surety part of it will definitely undergo a great deal of change. I think it's for the better. The obligation, the joint and several obligations, are never going to go away. Even though there's been a lot of talk about that, that needs to be the case. The reality is that the government has no obligation to do that, and it's highly unlikely that they would ever change that. Why should they? Speaker 300:26:02There's no reason to change it. It will have an effect on companies like W&T Offshore and others, and we'll just have to figure out different ways to do things. Operator00:26:14Excuse me, a question on your reserves of the 1.8 million BOE of positive revisions. Can you provide some color as to which properties contributed there, and was any of that related to performance on the Cox acquisitions versus how those properties had originally been booked? Speaker 300:26:33Yeah, go ahead, Wade. Yeah. Thanks, Tracy. It was some of the additional increase in the reserves was based on better performance of some of the Cox assets as well as some of our own assets. We did some optimization projects to further increase the life of our Mobile Bay asset as well. They added significant value as far as from a reserve standpoint. Jeff, I'll add to that a little bit. I mean, we're still working some of these properties and finding different things that we can do with them, not only with the facilities themselves. Young Mr. Cox left them in terrible shape when we acquired them. They weren't doing the maintenance. They weren't maintaining properties in what we would have considered to be a safe manner. We've had to spend a bit more money to bring them up to our standards. Speaker 300:27:28I think that's certainly affected some of the cash flow in the near term. Long term, I have a lot of high expectations of these properties, and we're getting there. Production at West Delta 73 and Main Pass 108, they're all coming up as we speak. Operator00:27:51Thanks, Tracy. Speaker 300:27:54Thank you, sir. Speaker 400:27:58As there are no more questions, this concludes the question and answer session. I'd like to turn the conference back over to Tracy Krohn, Chairman and CEO, for any closing remarks. Speaker 300:28:09Thanks, Operator. Again, we celebrated 20 years as a New York Stock Exchange-listed company yesterday. I'm expecting another 20 years. I would certainly like to be around for that. To all of our shareholders, watch what happens next. It's going to be fun, exciting, and profitable. Thanks so much. Speaker 400:28:39This concludes today's conference call. You may disconnect your line. Thank you for participating and have a pleasant day.Read morePowered by Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) W&T Offshore Earnings HeadlinesW&T Offshore Announces Timing of First Quarter 2026 Earnings Release and Conference CallApril 24, 2026 | globenewswire.comWTI Stock Just Got A Fresh Outperform Call — Here’s What Stands OutApril 22, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comLouis Navellier: My #1 AI stock for 2026 (name & ticker inside)Louis Navellier's Stock Grader system helped him flag Nvidia before its 82,000% run and has identified the top S&P 500 stock for 12 years running—and today, he's giving away his #1 AI stock pick for 2026, free. This company's sales are up 28% year over year, it holds over 30,000 patents in wireless and video technology, and it just earned an A-rating in his proprietary Stock Grader system that has cost him $9 million to build and maintain.May 6 at 1:00 AM | InvestorPlace (Ad)W&T Offshore (WTI) price target increased by 77.78% to 4.08April 9, 2026 | msn.comThis Gulf oil stock is more about cash than crudeMarch 19, 2026 | sg.finance.yahoo.comW&T Offshore, Inc. (NYSE:WTI) Q4 2025 earnings call transcriptMarch 19, 2026 | msn.comSee More W&T Offshore Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like W&T Offshore? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on W&T Offshore and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About W&T OffshoreW&T Offshore (NYSE:WTI) is an independent oil and gas exploration and production company focused primarily on offshore operations in the Gulf of Mexico. The company acquires, develops and produces crude oil and natural gas reserves, operating a portfolio of producing properties that encompasses both shallow-water and deepwater assets. W&T Offshore leverages its technical expertise and asset management capabilities to optimize field development and production efficiency across its portfolio. Founded in 1983 and headquartered in Covington, Louisiana, W&T Offshore has built a track record of disciplined growth through strategic acquisitions and targeted exploration activities. Over the years, the company has expanded its footprint to include numerous leaseholds and platforms within the central and western Gulf of Mexico. Its operations encompass all phases of offshore production, from well planning and drilling to facilities operations and maintenance, supported by a network of third-party service providers and drilling contractors. Under the leadership of Karl F. Cahill, who has served as Chief Executive Officer since the early 2000s, W&T Offshore has navigated the cyclical nature of the energy industry by emphasizing cost control, cash flow generation and selective investment in high-return opportunities. The company maintains a lean organizational structure, with senior management teams based in offices near its principal operating areas. Through a combination of enhanced recovery techniques, reservoir optimization and disciplined capital allocation, W&T Offshore strives to deliver stable production and long-term reserve replacement for its shareholders.View W&T Offshore ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles BlackBerry Rewrites Its Own Operating SystemGrab Holdings Faces Hurdles, But Upside Potential Is Hard to IgnorePalantir Drops After a Blowout Q1—What Investors Should KnowShopify’s Valuation Crisis Creates Opportunity in 2026onsemi Stock Dips After Earnings: Why the Dip Is BuyableTSLA: 3 Reasons the Stock Could Hit $400 in MayNebius Breaks Out to All-Time Highs—Here's What's Driving It. 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There are 5 speakers on the call. Speaker 400:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the W&T Offshore second quarter 2025 conference call. During today's call, all parties will be in listen-only mode. Following the company's prepared comments, the call will be open for questions and answers. During the question and answer session, we ask that you limit your questions to one and a follow-up. You can always rejoin the queue. This conference call is being recorded, and a replay will be available on the company's website following the call. I would now like to turn the conference over to Al Petrie, Investor Relations Coordinator. Speaker 200:00:39Thank you, Gaylene. On behalf of the management team, I would like to welcome all of you to today's conference call to review W&T Offshore's second quarter 2025 financial and operational results. Before we begin, I would like to remind you that our comments may include forward-looking statements. It should be noted that a variety of factors could cause W&T's actual results to differ materially from the anticipated results or expectations expressed in these forward-looking statements. Today's call may also contain certain non-GAAP financial measures. Please refer to the earnings release that we issued yesterday for disclosures on forward-looking statements and reconciliations of non-GAAP measures. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Tracy Krohn, our Chairman and CEO. Speaker 300:01:26Thanks, Al. Morning, everyone. Welcome to our second quarter conference call for 2025. With me today are William Williford, our Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer; Sameer Parasnis, our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; and Trey Hartman, our Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer. They're all available to answer questions later during the call. Before we discuss the second quarter results, I would like to say how proud I am of all the people who've helped make W&T Offshore a success since we founded the company in 1983. We've been an active operator in the Gulf of Mexico and a staunch advocate for the offshore industry for over 40 years. Yesterday, I was honored to celebrate the 20th anniversary of W&T Offshore going public by ringing the closing bell at the New York Stock Exchange. Speaker 300:02:19We're conducting today's earnings call from the New York Stock Exchange, where I have several media interviews scheduled that will give us the chance to discuss the company. As you will hear throughout the call today, we're continuing to enhance shareholder value through operational excellence and maximizing production across our impressive portfolio of assets. Across the first half of 2025, we've delivered strong operational and financial results. Quite simply, we're executing on our proven and successful strategy that's committed to profitability, operational execution, returning value to our stockholders, and ensuring the safety of our employees and contractors. Our ability to deliver production and EBITDA growth while seamlessly integrating accretive producing property acquisitions has helped W&T Offshore grow during our 40-year history. Some of our second quarter highlights include we increased production by 10% quarter over quarter to 33,500 barrels of oil equivalent per day. That's within our guidance range. Speaker 300:03:29We performed nine low-cost, low-risk workovers that exceeded expectations and positively impacted production and revenue for the quarter. I'd like to point out that five of the workovers were performed in Mobile Bay, helping to increase production at this low-decline, long-life asset, which is also our largest natural gas field and the largest natural gas field in the Gulf of Mexico. Total lease operating expenses were $77 million, again within guidance. We grew adjusted EBITDA by 9% to $35 million compared to the first quarter of 2025. We've also grown our unrestricted cash to over $120 million while lowering our net debt by about $15 million to under $230 million. Speaker 300:04:20Our 2025 mid-year reserve report generated by Netherland, Sewell & Associates showed net positive revisions of 1.8 million barrels of oil equivalent, which continues to demonstrate the strength of our asset base and our ability to maximize value from our fields. None of this included any drilling activity. We accomplished all of this while also returning value to our shareholders through our quarterly dividend. We've paid seven quarterly cash dividends since initiating the dividend policy in late 2023 and announced the third quarter 2025 payment that will occur later this month. Additionally, in the first quarter of this year, we had several transactions that strengthened and simplified our balance sheet, adding material cash to the bottom line and improving our credit ratings from S&P and Moody's. Speaker 300:05:12In January, we successfully closed a $350 million offering of new second lien notes that increased our interest rate by 100 basis points, excuse me, decreased our interest rate by 100 basis points, and together with other transactions, reduced our total debt by $39 million. We also entered into a new credit agreement for a $50 million revolving credit facility, which matures in July of 2028. That's undrawn and replaces the previous $50 million credit facility provided by Calculus Lending. We also sold a non-core interest at Garden Banks, which included about 200 barrels of oil equivalent per day for $12 million, and we've received $58 million in cash for an insurance settlement related to the Mobile Bay 78-1 well. All of these actions have allowed us to enhance liquidity and improve our financial flexibility. Speaker 300:06:10Lastly, in the first half of 2025, we've opportunistically taken advantage of commodity price volatility to increase our hedge position. We added costless collars for both oil and natural gas, including 2,000 barrels per day of oil for July through December 2025, with a floor price of $63 per barrel and a ceiling price of $77.25 per barrel. For natural gas, we have costless collars for 70 million cubic feet per day from July to December 2025. This has helped lock in a very favorable price range for a portion of our oil and natural gas for the remainder of 2025. Our ability to execute our strategy has delivered very positive results thus far in 2025, including an improved balance sheet, enhanced liquidity, growing production, and EBITDA, all of which has positioned us for success in the second half of 2025 and beyond. Speaker 300:07:12At year-end 2024, the company had a total debt of $393 million and a net debt of $284 million. At the end of the second quarter of 2025, our total debt and net debt were significantly reduced to $350 million and $229 million, respectively. Our liquidity at June 30, 2025, increased to $171 million. CapEx in the second quarter of 2025 was $10 million, and asset retirement settlement costs totaled $12 million. For the first half of 2025, our CapEx has totaled $19 million, and asset retirement costs were $16 million. We continue to expect our full-year capital expenses to be between $34 million and $42 million. This does not include potential acquisition opportunities. We will remain focused on accredited low-risk acquisitions of producing properties rather than high-risk drilling in the current uncertain commodity price environment. Speaker 300:08:19These acquisitions must meet our stringent criteria of generating free cash flow, providing a solid base of free reserves with upside potential, and offer the ability for our experienced team to reduce costs. Over the years, we've consistently created significant value by methodically integrating producing property acquisitions. The assets we acquired last year added meaningful reserves at an attractive price, and we are now seeing additional production from two fields that were previously shut in. The West Delta 73 and Main Pass 108/98 fields were placed into production towards the end of March and into early April. The fields began ramping up production over the course of the second quarter of 2025, and we expect production to continue to increase in the second half of this year on these fields. That will be seen in our third quarter guidance as well. Speaker 300:09:14There was a temporary shutdown of production in Mobile Bay during the second quarter due to a pipeline issue that was resolved by June 30 that reduced second quarter production by about 1,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day. Yesterday, we provided our detailed guidance for third quarter 2025 and reiterated our full-year guidance. In the third quarter of 2025, with new fields continuing to ramp up, coupled with the strong workover and recompletion program performance, we are predicting the midpoint of Q3 2025 production to be around 35,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day. This is an increase of almost 5% compared to the second quarter of 2025. This is quite remarkable considering that we currently do not have any drilling operations. Thus, we are spending minimal capital, and our LOE costs are remaining flat. Speaker 300:10:06The third quarter guidance for our cash operating costs, which includes LOE, gathering, transportation, and production taxes, and cash G&A costs, is in line with the second quarter of 2025. With absolute costs remaining flat and production expected to increase, we believe that on a per BOE basis, we will see decreases. We also believe that there are more opportunities to reduce our operating costs and find synergies to drive costs lower in the long term. We are always working hard to reduce costs without impacting safety or deferring asset integrity work. I would now like to talk to you about our mid-year 2025 reserve report. In our release yesterday, we reported SEC proved reserves of 123 million barrels of oil equivalent, which was slightly lower than the 127 million barrels of oil equivalent at year-end 2024. Speaker 300:11:02This reduction was primarily driven by production of 5.8 million barrels of oil equivalent in the first half of 2025, which was partially offset by 1.8 million barrels of net positive revisions. We are pleased with another report that has positive revisions despite drilling no new wells and spending minimal capital in 2025. This highlights the strength of our prolific asset base and our operational capabilities to economically extract reserves from long-life assets. We operate about 94% of our mid-year proved reserves, which gives us maximum flexibility in controlling our operations during periods of volatile commodity prices. Approximately 44% of mid-year 2025 SEC proved reserves were liquids with 34% crude oil and 10% NGLs, and we had 56% natural gas. Speaker 300:11:58With the continued strengthening of natural gas pricing and the recent European LNG deals, we believe having a strong natural gas position located in close proximity to LNG facilities will position W&T Offshore very well in the future. We have long enjoyed a premium over Henry Hub pricing and see that continuing in the future with the increased demand in our operating region. The pre-tax PV-10 of the mid-year 2025 proved reserves using SEC pricing was flat at $1.2 billion compared with year-end 2024. Mid-year 2025 proved reserves and PV-10 were based on average SEC 12-month crude oil and natural gas prices of $71.20 per barrel and $2.86 per MMBTU, while year-end 2024 prices were $76.32 per barrel of oil and $2.13 per MMBTU of natural gas. Speaker 300:12:59We believe we've built a sustainable group of high-performing Gulf of Mexico assets that will continue to provide meaningful cash flow to our shareholders for many years. Before closing, I'd like to address surety and regulatory updates. In June 2025, we were pleased with the settlement agreement that we reached with two of our largest surety providers, which called for the dismissal of a previously filed lawsuit. This outcome is very positive for W&T Offshore overall, as we will not acquiesce to unjustified collateral demands made by the applicable sureties, and we've locked in our historical premium rates through the end of 2026. We believe the entry into this settlement agreement vindicates our resolve to stand up to our surety providers' unjustified demands on independent oil and gas operators such as W&T Offshore. Additionally, at the end of June 2025, U.S. Speaker 300:13:58Magistrate Judge Dina Palermo recommended denying two other surety companies' motions for preliminary injunction, through which they were collectively asking for full cash collateralization of over $100 million. We couldn't be more pleased with the court's decision to prevent unnecessary and unjustified collateral demands by surety providers. For the past 40-plus years, W&T Offshore has met its plugging and abandonment obligations, paid its negotiated premiums, and operated responsibly in the Gulf of Mexico. In fact, we've done more plugging and abandonment work than anybody in the Gulf of Mexico. We demand fairness and transparency for all oil and natural gas producers in the Gulf of Mexico, and we'll continue to pursue the pending litigation against our other surety providers that have decided not to deal fairly with W&T Offshore and other independent oil and gas producers. Speaker 300:14:59We have done well over a billion dollars of decommissioning work in the Gulf of Mexico, again, more than any other operator who's done on his own nickel, and we've done so safely and reliably. These are very positive results for W&T Offshore and should alleviate some of the uncertainty that has negatively impacted our stock price, despite some positive operational and financial results in 2025. As we mentioned during our last call in early 2025, pursuant to directives from the Trump administration, the Department of Interior indicated it will not seek supplemental financial assurance in the Gulf of Mexico, except in the case of sole liability properties and certain non-sole liability properties that do not have a financially strong co-owner or predecessor entitlement. Speaker 300:15:46Since his inauguration, President Trump has issued a number of executive orders aimed at streamlining regulations and reducing the regulatory burden on oil and natural gas companies, increasing federal oil and natural gas leasing, including in the Gulf of Mexico, and expediting U.S. natural gas resource development. We're very pleased with these actions. We expect these will positively impact W&T Offshore and the offshore energy industry. In closing, I'd like to again thank our team at W&T Offshore. For 20 years as an NYSE-listed company, as the largest shareholder, I believe we are well positioned to continue to grow and add value in the second half of 2025. We generated solid EBITDA and raised our cash position to over $120 million. This allows us to continue to evaluate growth opportunities, both organically and inorganically. Speaker 300:16:43We have a long track record of successfully integrating assets into our portfolio, and we continue to believe that the Gulf of Mexico is a world-class basin that supports value creation. We will maintain our focus on operational excellence and maximizing the cash flow potential of our asset base. With that, operator, we can now open the lines for questions. Speaker 400:17:06Thank you. We'll now begin the question and answer session. To join the question queue, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. You'll hear a tone acknowledging your request. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing any keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. Our first question is from Nate Henderson with Techlist Capitals. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:17:33Good morning. For my first question, I wanted to start on policy. With the administration looking for ways to support the industry further, can you share your thoughts on what actions the administration may be looking at in order to incentivize production in the Gulf of Mexico? Speaker 300:17:49Thanks, Nate, and good morning. Yeah, there's a lot of things that the Department of Interior is looking at there. They've already weighed in with regard to lower royalties, and I expect, and I hope that they will weigh in on further reductions on those royalties. There's the so-called Idle Iron Act, which is kind of nonsensical to me and our company. Why do you need to prematurely abandon these wells when none of the rest of the wells on the platform had been abandoned? This was a policy brought on by the Obama administration to create havoc and essentially make it cost more deliberately. The idea was, of course, to get rid of oil and gas companies in the Gulf of Mexico. We've looked at some other things that we discussed with them. Speaker 300:18:48I think it's important to recognize that this administration has taken a very strong position in the fact that, yeah, we want to maximize and utilize our abilities to conserve the natural resource in the Gulf of Mexico. President Trump and the Department of Interior have made that pledge that they're going to do it. We're already seeing some of the regulations getting rolled back. There will hopefully be another decision with regard to surety here. Put Solivay into writing, and we're looking forward to that. Of course, you're aware that we're suing surety providers. Those are just a few. We're very hopeful that this administration gets back to the idea that oil and gas from this very important basin, by the way, the second largest producing basin and the largest by area in the United States. Speaker 100:20:00Thanks, Tracy. That's really encouraging. I'm shifting over to your operations. Implied 4Q production guidance seems very strong at the midpoint. In your prepared remarks, you talked about the increase you expected in Q3. Can you share maybe what's driving that further production ramp that you're expecting at the back half of the year? Speaker 300:20:20Yeah, I'm going to turn that over to our Chief Operating Officer, William Williford. He's got responsibility for that basin. Good morning, Nate. As Tracy mentioned in the call this morning, we have a lot of low-cost workovers that we're continually doing in the third quarter, as well as a couple of recompletions to add to that production. We also plan on ramping up one of the Cox fields we acquired last year as well to see significant production through the last part of the year. Speaker 100:20:56Got it. Thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 300:20:59Thanks, Nate. You're welcome. Speaker 400:21:03If you have a question, please press star then one. The next question is from Jeff Robertson with Water Tower Research. Please go ahead. Operator00:21:14Thank you. Good morning. Tracy, does resolution of some of these surety and bonding issues for W&T Offshore have an impact on how you approach acquisitions? Do they have an impact anywhere on the balance sheet with respect to liquidity? Speaker 300:21:34Oh, absolutely. Jeff, I mean, the sureties were in collusion with one another to artificially suppress the company by virtue of demanding full collateral. It's kind of like your car insurance. If you have a car, your agent calls you up and says, "Gee, Jeff, you have a $50,000 insurance policy on your car. Would you please send me $15,000? In fact, I demand that you send me $50,000 so we can cash collateralize your account. And by the way, I'm going to increase your premiums as a result." That was the alternative that was given to us, except it was a lot better, a lot bigger nominal dollars. For us, it was around $250 million of collateral demands. We had to sign this indemnity agreement with these companies. Speaker 300:22:36They all read virtually identically that you had to provide cash demand within a very, very short period of time, maybe 10 days to two weeks, and that if you didn't do so, that you were in violation of their policy. Several of them got together and they all called it about the same time for $250 million, which, by the way, just happened to be the market cap of the company at the time. I thought that that was pretty unfair. Obviously, they were all doing it at the same time. Seemed collusional to me, so we sued them. As a result, you know it threw the surety market into quite a bit of disarray. The idea, the very idea that you need surety is kind of preposterous to us. Speaker 300:23:30The government, in spite of all the bankruptcies that have taken place in the Gulf of Mexico, the government has never, ever called a bond, even though they demand it. They demand that surety, but they've never called it. The reason that they've never called it is because the lease form itself calls for joint and several liability. That means that anybody that was ever on the, that ever held a record title interest is jointly and severally liable up to 100% of the obligations. The government never had that situation. They would just go back to the predecessor title and demand that they take care of those obligations. We've had to do that ourselves. Others have had to do that. It's always been the case. That is what the lease form says. Speaker 300:24:24The government's idea that we need more surety is obviously preposterous because they've never called one single damn surety demand. Not once. It's got to be a farce. It was put in by the Obama administration, further exasperated by the Biden administration. It was wholly designed to put oil and gas companies out of business. Operator00:24:52Tracy, do you think that resolving those issues will have an impact on M&A activity in the Gulf? Speaker 300:25:00Oh, you bet. Yeah. People will have to figure out a different way to do that assurance for other companies. That'll be part of the sales price. People aren't going, companies aren't going to stop selling properties. They use those proceeds to put into different projects that will, in fact, create more value for them. We will take those properties, the ones that we get, and make them more valuable because we'll lightning focus on that. Yeah, the surety part of it will definitely undergo a great deal of change. I think it's for the better. The obligation, the joint and several obligations, are never going to go away. Even though there's been a lot of talk about that, that needs to be the case. The reality is that the government has no obligation to do that, and it's highly unlikely that they would ever change that. Why should they? Speaker 300:26:02There's no reason to change it. It will have an effect on companies like W&T Offshore and others, and we'll just have to figure out different ways to do things. Operator00:26:14Excuse me, a question on your reserves of the 1.8 million BOE of positive revisions. Can you provide some color as to which properties contributed there, and was any of that related to performance on the Cox acquisitions versus how those properties had originally been booked? Speaker 300:26:33Yeah, go ahead, Wade. Yeah. Thanks, Tracy. It was some of the additional increase in the reserves was based on better performance of some of the Cox assets as well as some of our own assets. We did some optimization projects to further increase the life of our Mobile Bay asset as well. They added significant value as far as from a reserve standpoint. Jeff, I'll add to that a little bit. I mean, we're still working some of these properties and finding different things that we can do with them, not only with the facilities themselves. Young Mr. Cox left them in terrible shape when we acquired them. They weren't doing the maintenance. They weren't maintaining properties in what we would have considered to be a safe manner. We've had to spend a bit more money to bring them up to our standards. Speaker 300:27:28I think that's certainly affected some of the cash flow in the near term. Long term, I have a lot of high expectations of these properties, and we're getting there. Production at West Delta 73 and Main Pass 108, they're all coming up as we speak. Operator00:27:51Thanks, Tracy. Speaker 300:27:54Thank you, sir. Speaker 400:27:58As there are no more questions, this concludes the question and answer session. I'd like to turn the conference back over to Tracy Krohn, Chairman and CEO, for any closing remarks. Speaker 300:28:09Thanks, Operator. Again, we celebrated 20 years as a New York Stock Exchange-listed company yesterday. I'm expecting another 20 years. I would certainly like to be around for that. To all of our shareholders, watch what happens next. It's going to be fun, exciting, and profitable. Thanks so much. Speaker 400:28:39This concludes today's conference call. You may disconnect your line. 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