Sign Up for FREE Daily Energy News
Canadian Flag CDN NEWS  |  US Flag US NEWS  | TIMELY. FOCUSED. RELEVANT. FREE
  • Stay Connected
  • linkedin
  • twitter
  • facebook
  • youtube2
BREAKING NEWS:

Copper Tip Energy Services
Vista Projects
Copper Tip Energy
Vista Projects


The First Shale IPO Since 2017 Fails to Impress Wall Street


These translations are done via Google Translate
(Bloomberg)If the first initial public offering of a U.S. shale driller in four years is any indication, Wall Street is still souring on the U.S. oil and gas patch.Even a natural gas explorer backed by private-equity giant Blackstone Group Inc. couldn’t raise the capital it had expected. Vine Energy Inc. issued stock for a total of $301 million, according to a filing. It had planned to raise as much as $361 million.The shares were sold at $14 apiece, below the planned price range of $16 to $19. They fell as much as 5.2% in their trading debut on Thursday.The IPO miss underscores how much investor appetite for the cash-intensive shale industry has waned after years of poor returns and a pandemic-driven market crash in 2020. While oil and gas prices have rebounded since last year, Wall Street has little interest in seeing a shale boom once again. The chiefs of America’s shale giants have been exercising caution and preaching self-control in calls with analysts over the past several weeks.

“Vine being able to complete the IPO, that in itself is a victory,” said Ed Hirs, an economics professor and energy industry expert with the University of Houston. “The U.S. shale plays have not had any returns over the past 10 years. Vine was swimming upstream.”

Vine has certainly had better luck than several shale explorers that went bankrupt or have been completely shut out of equity markets, while banks cut their credit lines.

GLJ
ROO.AI Oil and Gas Field Service Software

But to get the deal done, Vine had to take a lower price than sought, while Blackstone and its affiliates stepped in with a $60 million purchase. Vine ended up selling 21.5 million shares versus the 19 million it had originally intended to offer.

The shares were 4.3% lower at $13.40 as of 10:53 a.m. in New York.

The Plano, Texas-based driller focused on the gas-rich Haynesville formation of northern Louisiana said it plans to use part of its roughly $281 million of net proceeds to pay down debt, according to the filing.



Share This:



More News Articles


GET ENERGYNOW’S DAILY EMAIL FOR FREE