SM Energy and Civitas Resources announced an all-stock merger valued at about $2.8 billion in equity, or $12.8 billion including debt, creating one of the largest independent U.S. shale producers by output and acreage.
Bloomberg reported that under the agreement, Civitas shareholders will receive 1.45 shares of SM Energy for each share of Civitas they own, giving Civitas investors about 52% of the combined company and SM shareholders 48%.
According to Reuters, the combined firm will operate under the SM Energy name and be headquartered in Denver, overseeing roughly 823,000 net acres across the Midland, Delaware, and DJ basins. Management projects more than $1.4 billion in 2025 free cash flow and up to $300 million in annual cost synergies through consolidated drilling programs, logistics, and overhead savings.
SM Energy CEO Herb Vogel will lead the merged company, with an 11-member board composed of six SM directors and five from Civitas. The companies expect the transaction to close in the first quarter of next year, pending shareholder and regulatory approvals. Additional merger details and capital-return guidance were outlined in the joint company statement.
The combination marks one of the year’s largest shale-sector consolidations, following a slowdown in 2024 M&A activity.
Analysts note that mid-cap producers are again turning to scale-driven mergers to strengthen balance sheets, improve capital efficiency, and secure longer-life drilling inventories across U.S. basins. Financial Times coverage places the deal among a new wave of upstream consolidations seeking to stabilize production costs under volatile oil-price conditions.
Prior to the announcement, merger discussions between the two shale operators had been circulating for several weeks, with Civitas reportedly exploring strategic options to expand its Permian footprint. In late October, reports noted that the company was assessing potential tie-ups with regional peers to enhance drilling inventory and scale in the basin, including the prospect of an all-stock structure to align shareholder interests.
By Michael Kern for Oilprice.com
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