Vitesse Energy boosts 2025 production guidance amid disciplined capital strategy
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Vitesse Energy increases production and capital expenditures guidance for 2025, driven by successful well completions and disciplined capital allocation strategy.


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Summary

  • Vitesse Energy reported a third-quarter production average of 18,163 barrels of oil equivalent per day, with an increase in guidance for 2025 due to completed wells and new well proposals.
  • The company successfully completed two operated wells and reported significant advancements in technology, leading to lower drilling costs and increased economic returns.
  • Financial metrics included an adjusted EBITDA of $41.6 million and an adjusted net income of $3.8 million, while GAAP net income was a loss of $1.3 million.
  • Vitesse Energy declared a fourth-quarter dividend at an annual rate of $2.25 per share, highlighting its disciplined capital allocation strategy.
  • Future outlook includes maintaining hedging positions with approximately 60% of 2025 oil production hedged at about $70 per barrel and plans for a 2026 operated program dependent on market conditions.

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OPERATOR - (00:01:11)

Greetings. Welcome to the Vitesse Energy third quarter 2025 earnings call. @ this time all participants are in listen only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. Please note this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to the Director Investor Relations and Business Development at Vitesse, Ben Messier. Thank you. You may begin.

Ben Messier - Director Investor Relations and Business Development - (00:01:35)

Good morning everyone and thanks for joining. Today we will be discussing our financial and operating results for the third quarter of 2025 and increased production and capital expenditures guidance. Our 10Q and earnings were released yesterday after market close and an updated investor presentation can be found on the Vitesse Energy website. I'm joined this morning by our Chairman and CEO Bob Geraghty, our President Brian Cree and our CFO Jimmy Henderson. Before we begin, please be reminded that this call may contain estimates, projections and other forward looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Forward looking statements are subject to several risks and uncertainties many of which are beyond our control. These risks and uncertainties can cause actual results to differ materially from our current expectations. Please review our earnings release and risk factors discussed in our filings with the SEC for additional information. In addition, today's discussion may reference non GAAP financial measures. For reconciliation of historical non GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measure. Please reference our 10Q and earnings release. Now I will turn the call over to Vitesse's Chairman and CEO Bob Geraghty.

Bob Geraghty - Chairman and CEO - (00:02:48)

Thank you Ben and good morning everybody. Thanks for joining. In the third quarter we stuck to our strategy of disciplined capital allocation. We participated in an increasing number of 3 and 4 mile laterals drilled by our operating partners. And significantly, we successfully completed two Vitesse operated wells as Brian will discuss. As a result, we increased our production and capital expenditure guidance for 2025. Advancements in technology continue to enhance the value of our assets. Extended laterals are delivering strong economic results through lower drilling and completion costs per lateral foot. Drilling activity continues to progress as further into the areas where Vitesse holds concentrated positions. Our original strategy of acquiring acreage outside the core of the Bakken is paying off as activity now moves into these areas generating returns comparable to historically those seen in the core. We estimate that we have over 2 million net lateral feet of development remaining on our asset which translates to more than 200 net 2 mile equivalent wells. The oil industry is highly cyclical. Our long duration asset, low leverage and disciplined hedging positions us not only to withstand but to be opportunistic during market disruptions. We are capital allocators and will continue to make the best decisions with our capital each quarter based on the opportunity set available. As a testament to our allocation decisions, last week our board declared our fourth quarter dividend at an annual rate of $2.25 per share. I will now hand the call over to our president Brian Cree to provide more detail on our operations.

Brian Cree - President - (00:05:09)

Thanks, Bob Good morning everyone and thanks for joining today's call. In late September, Vitesse's operating team turned to production two gross 1.9 net drilled but uncompleted wells acquired through the Lucero acquisition earlier this year. The wells are exceeding our initial oil and natural gas production expectations and were completed approximately 2 million or 15% under budget. We continue to contemplate the best time to advance a broader operated drilling plan, but we will only implement a development plan at a cadence and return thresholds that strengthen our dividend Production for The quarter averaged 18,163 barrels of oil equivalent per day. This brings our year to date production to 17,373 barrels of oil equivalent per day. As of September 30, 2025, we had 20.8 net wells in our development pipeline, including 5.6 net wells that were either drilling or completing, and another 15.2 net locations that had been permitted for development. For 2025, we have approximately 60% of our remaining oil production hedged at nearly $70 per and just under half of remaining 2025 natural gas production hedged with attractively priced collars at a weighted average floor of $3.73 and ceiling of $5.85 per MMBtu, both percentages based on the midpoint of our revised guidance. Additionally, we have over 3,300 barrels per day and 12,700 MMBtu per day of our 2026 oil and natural gas production hedged at $66.43 per barrel and through a costless collar of $3.72 by $4.99 per MMBtu. Thanks for your time. Now I'll turn the call over to our CFO Jimmy Henderson.

Jimmy Henderson - Chief Financial Officer - (00:07:13)

Good morning everyone. Just wanted to highlight a few items from our financial results for the third quarter of 2025. Please refer to our earnings release and 10Q, which were filed last night for any further details. Production for the quarter was 18,163 boe per day with a 65% oil cut for the quarter. Adjusted EBITDA was 41.6 million and adjusted net income was 3.8 million. GAAP net income was a loss of 1.3 million and you can see that reconciliation in our press release. Cash CapEx, including acquisition costs for the quarter were 31.8 million. These costs were funded within our operating cash flows. At the end of the third quarter we had total debt of 114 million and net debt of 108 million, giving us net debt to adjusted annualized EBITDA of 0.65 times. We increased our annual guidance for 2025 due to the completion of our 2 DUCs as Brian discussed. And incremental organic well proposals primarily focused on 3 and 4 mile development. We now anticipate production in the range of 17,000 to 17,500 boe per day for the full year of 2025 with an anticipated oil cut of 65 to 67%. Cash capex for the year is now anticipated to be between 110 and 125 million. With that, let me turn the call over to the operator and open for Q and A.

OPERATOR - (00:09:02)

Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two to remove yourself from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up the handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please. While we poll for questions. Our first. Question comes from the line of Jeff Grant with Northland Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

Jeff Grant - Equity Analyst - (00:09:34)

Good morning, guys.

UNKNOWN - (00:09:36)

Hey Jeff.

Jeff Grant - Equity Analyst - (00:09:38)

I was curious to start off on these longer laterals. I know that's something that you guys have indicated is directionally happening a bit more for a bit, but it seems like maybe a bit of a step change in terms of the proportion there. So I was just hoping to dive into that a bit more. Do you guys have any numbers on, I don't know, what percent of the program are these three and four mile laterals now? And can you remind us how that maybe compares to, I don't know, earlier this year or this time last year?

Ben Messier - Director Investor Relations and Business Development - (00:10:06)

Hi Jeff, it's Ben. I would say approximately over the course of the year, about half of our AFEs that we've received have been extended laterals. We don't see one mile laterals anymore. @ least we haven't this year. So the remaining half has been 2 mile laterals.

Jeff Grant - Equity Analyst - (00:10:26)

Got it. Perfect. Excuse me. On the acquisition side, it looked like you guys were a bit more active there. It looked like perhaps maybe even the most active quarter since maybe a year or so ago is that right?. Can you guys just refresh us? What are you seeing on the acquisition market? Was this expected? Was this surprising? And what's kind of the outlook on the acquisition side? Is this a sign of more things to come? Thanks. Yeah.

Brian Cree - President - (00:10:57)

Jeff, this is Brian. Obviously, as you know, we are always looking at near term development opportunities, buying AFVs from those that are looking to divest. And you know, over the course of about the last year, it's just been a very competitive market. We've continued to be very disciplined with our rate of return approach on how we look at those. And you just keep banging away. And we've looked at hundreds and hundreds of opportunities. We continue to bid them as we have in the past, and we were fortunate to be able to close a couple of deals in the third quarter. And we'll continue to look at deals. The market is very strong. We're seeing lots of AFV opportunities, but again, we're being very disciplined with our approach in terms of how we're looking at making those acquisitions.

Jeff Grant - Equity Analyst - (00:11:51)

Thanks, Brian. Just to clarify, I guess there's nothing, I guess, dramatically different that you guys saw either from a competitiveness standpoint or your underwriting practices. It's just a function of, you know, some days you win the lottery, some days you don't kind of thing.

Brian Cree - President - (00:12:08)

Yeah, I think there's, you know, I think we are seeing more activity out there in terms of at least on our acreage, which is helpful because as we look at, as we analyze those AFEs that are coming into our acreage position, it gives us an opportunity to be a bit more I don't want to use the word aggressive, but it gives us a little bit of a leg up when we're looking at buying in AFV opportunities on our existing acreage from others that are looking to sell them. Because we've done a ton of work on that and it just gives us. A little bit of a leg up.

Jeff Grant - Equity Analyst - (00:12:46)

That makes sense. Okay, I'll turn it back. I appreciate the time. Thank you, guys.

OPERATOR - (00:12:53)

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of PO frat with Alliance Global Partners. Please proceed with your question.

PO frat - (00:13:01)

Yeah, just to follow up on Capex, can you just highlight what acquisitions might be built into the fourth quarter CapEx range?

Ben Messier - Director Investor Relations and Business Development - (00:13:17)

Hi, Po, it's Ben here. We tend to budget conservatively on acquisitions. We don't know exactly when. You know, as Jeff said, we're going to hit the lottery and win acquisitions in any given quarter. Currently, we have a few hundred grand budgeted for acquisitions in the fourth. We Hope that we come across economic opportunities that allow us to deploy more capital there, which is part of the reason you see a $15 million range for the fourth quarter, which is pretty wide range, but we leave some wiggle room to make attractive acquisitions if they present themselves.

PO frat - (00:13:55)

Sounds good. And then on the operated inventory, you finished the two DUCs that were, that you talked about previously. What's sort of the line of sight on, on any of the operated inventory opportunities that you have, you know, looking out into 2026?

Brian Cree - President - (00:14:17)

Well, you know, as we've said previously, we've, we've got somewhere around 15 net undeveloped locations that we picked up through the acquisition of Lucent. We continue to look at those, look at the best ways to drill those, look at the option to trade with other partners to improve the economics in those. And that's, you know, as Bob stated, and we've said we're definitely looking at, you know, a 2026 plan, but a lot of that's going to depend on where oil prices are and what else we're seeing in terms of CapEx from our, from our partners. So it's something that we're continuing to evaluate. We're kind of planning out a 2026 and 2027 operated program. But a lot of that will depend as we, as we finalize our models and budgets for 2026.

PO frat - (00:15:09)

That's helpful. And then when I look at the cost structure for the third quarter, you know, the second quarter had a lot of noise, just positive noise because of the settlement. Can you look at the third quarter cost structure run rate and is that normal? Is that more normalized compared to the, the second quarter?

Jimmy Henderson - Chief Financial Officer - (00:15:35)

Yeah, definitely. Po, this is Jimmy, definitely. Exactly. As you constructed, that third quarter is a much better indicator of run rate for G&A, particularly LOE, slightly higher than we expected. But we've had some workovers as we've talked before, and I think that's kind of coming to an end. So it should be slightly lower there. And on say, gas prices, we're probably in the range that we expect. Hopefully we'll see a little bit better results going forward as oil prices and NGL prices have a little bit of life in the future. So hopefully that helps you in your modeling.

PO frat - (00:16:21)

Yeah.

Brian Cree - President - (00:16:22)

Let me just add this is Brian out. Let me add to that. I mean, the LOE in the third quarter look, I mean, we continue to look at all of the new wells that we acquired from Lucero and I think we're making the right decisions in terms of when to spend money on those wells. And as Jimmy said, I think we've seen a lot less activity in the fourth quarter than we did in the third quarter. So I agree with Jimmy's comment there. And then obviously with the gas price differential, when you've got oil at $60 and NGLs where they are, that third quarter looks pretty tough from a gas price standpoint. But we typically see that improve quite a bit in the fourth quarter and first quarters as we're in those winter months.

PO frat - (00:17:03)

Great, thank you.

OPERATOR - (00:17:07)

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Noel Parks with Tuohy Brothers. Please proceed with your question.

Noel Parks - (00:17:16)

Hi, good morning. Just a couple. One thing I was thinking about is, you know, we're still seeing a fair amount of uncertainty in the credit environment just as far as sort of the yield curve and so forth. I just wonder, do you sort of see any signs of that being on producers minds as they look at their say 2026 budgets as far as just how inclined they are to be sort of either aggressive or hold back again because of the funding environment?

Jimmy Henderson - Chief Financial Officer - (00:17:57)

Hey Noel, it's Jimmy. You know, there are a lot of factors play into what operators plans are. Most notably of course, is oil prices and consolidation is a big part of that. As many of our operators have continued to consolidate the basin and they're working on their plans to how they're going to allocate capital and move rigs in or out. We're still, we feel like things are going our way. As Bob mentioned before, we're starting to see much more of our acreage get developed where we have a more concentrated position. So that probably plays more into the plans for next year than the interest rate environment that we're in. But yeah, it certainly helps that that's a positive move. But we're still hopeful to see operators put their budgets together for next year and then we can have a better idea, better, more line of sight to what our plans are going to be.

Noel Parks - (00:19:02)

Great, thanks. I'm just wondering if you have any updated thoughts as far as, as you look at different opportunities and potentially different basins, about the gas opportunities out there these days.

Bob Geraghty - Chairman and CEO - (00:19:18)

Yeah, Noel, this is Bob. We're looking a lot. So I can't speak to any specific asset that we're looking for other than, you know, our lens is pretty wide at this point and we would love to buy gas assets at the right price. Look, the M&A market now is pretty frenetic, but if you take a look at the Bakken, it's pretty quiet. So, you know, we're going to be looking at the Bakken first. And you know the fun part about the operators in the Bakken, they are very well funded. They're not stressed. And other than the Hess Chevron transaction, which we think is certainly a net positive, and the Chord Energy and Enerplus, which is also a net positive, you know, there's, you know, we're looking at the Bakken first. Of the billion dollars of deals that we have in our pipeline right now, probably a third of them are gas oriented. But it's, you know, it's a very frenetic market. Noel and I can't handicap what's going to be the next deal. We do.

Noel Parks - (00:20:34)

Great. Fair enough. Thanks a lot.

Bob Geraghty - Chairman and CEO - (00:20:37)

Thanks, Noel.

OPERATOR - (00:20:41)

Thank you. We have reached the end of the question and answer session. I would like to turn the floor back to Bob Garrity for closing remarks. Thanks.

Bob Geraghty - Chairman and CEO - (00:20:50)

And thanks for everybody for joining in. If you've got any follow up questions, Ben Messier does a great job in answering those. So thanks everybody. See you in a couple of months. Bye bye.

OPERATOR - (00:21:04)

Thank you. And this concludes today's conference and you may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation. .

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