(WO) – Devon Energy and Coterra Energy have agreed to merge in an all-stock transaction that will create one of the largest and most scaled shale producers in the United States, underscoring a renewed wave of consolidation across the U.S. unconventional sector.
Image: Devon Energy
The transaction implies a combined enterprise value of approximately $58 billion, based on Devon’s Jan. 30 closing share price. Under the terms of the agreement, Coterra shareholders will receive 0.70 share of Devon common stock for each Coterra share. Upon closing, Devon shareholders will own about 54% of the combined company, with Coterra shareholders owning 46% on a fully diluted basis.
The combined company, which will retain the Devon Energy name and be headquartered in Houston, is expected to generate $1 billion in annual pre-tax synergies by year-end 2027. Management said those gains will come from capital optimization, operating efficiencies, and reduced corporate costs—key drivers of free cash flow growth in a capital-disciplined shale environment.
Strategically, the deal significantly strengthens Devon’s position in the Delaware basin, consolidating nearly 750,000 net acres in the core of the play. Pro forma third-quarter 2025 production would exceed 1.6 MMboe/d, including more than 550,000 bpd of oil, making the combined company one of the dominant producers in the basin with more than 10 years of high-quality drilling inventory, much of it below $40 breakeven levels.
“This transformative merger creates a premier shale operator with long-duration inventory and resilient free cash flow through cycles,” said Devon President and CEO Clay Gaspar, citing the scale benefits and synergy potential of combining the two portfolios.
Beyond asset scale, the transaction reflects broader shale-industry trends: operators prioritizing inventory depth, balance-sheet strength and technology-driven efficiency over growth. The combined company expects to maintain an investment-grade balance sheet, with pro forma net debt-to-EBITDAX of about 0.9x and liquidity of $4.4 billion.
The merger was unanimously approved by both boards and is expected to close in second-quarter 2026, subject to regulatory and shareholder approvals. Upon closing, the company plans to pay a quarterly dividend of $0.315 per share and authorize more than $5 billion in share repurchases, reinforcing its emphasis on shareholder returns.
The Devon-Coterra deal ranks among the largest U.S. upstream combinations in recent years and signals that scale and consolidation remain central strategies for shale operators navigating lower prices, rising costs and intensifying competition for top-tier inventory.
