UNIT CORP - Quarter Report: 2006 June (Form 10-Q)
SECURITIES
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington,
D.C. 20549
Form
10-Q
[x]
QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d)
OF
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For
the quarterly period ended June 30, 2006
OR
[
] TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d)
OF
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For
the
transition period from _________ to _________
[Commission
File Number 1-9260]
UNIT
CORPORATION
(Exact
name of registrant as specified in its charter)
|
Delaware
|
73-1283193
|
|
(State
or other jurisdiction of incorporation)
|
(I.R.S.
Employer Identification No.)
|
7130
South Lewis, Suite 1000, Tulsa, Oklahoma
|
74136
|
|
|
(Address
of principal executive offices)
|
(Zip
Code)
|
(918)
493-7700
|
|
(Registrant’s
telephone number, including area
code)
|
None
|
|
(Former
name, former address and former fiscal year,
|
|
if
changed since last report)
|
Indicate
by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required
to be
filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
during the
preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant
was required
to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements
for
the past 90 days.
Yes
[x]
|
No
[ ]
|
Indicate
by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer,
an
accelerated filer, or a non-accelerated filer.
Large
accelerated filer [x]
|
Accelerated
filer [ ]
|
Non-accelerated
filer [ ]
|
Indicate
by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined
in Rule
12b-2 of the Exchange Act).
Yes
[ ]
|
No
[x]
|
As
of
August 1, 2006, 46,278,590 shares of the issuer's common stock were
outstanding.
FORM
10-Q
UNIT
CORPORATION
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
Page
|
|||
Number
|
|||
PART
I. Financial Information
|
|||
Item
1.
|
Financial
Statements (Unaudited)
|
||
Consolidated
Condensed Balance Sheets
|
|||
June
30, 2006 and December 31, 2005
|
2
|
||
Consolidated
Condensed Statements of Income
|
|||
Three
and Six Months Ended June 30, 2006 and 2005
|
4
|
||
Consolidated
Condensed Statements of Cash Flows
|
|||
Six
Months Ended June 30, 2006 and 2005
|
5
|
||
Consolidated
Condensed Statements of Comprehensive Income
|
|||
Three
and Six Months Ended June 30, 2006 and 2005
|
6
|
||
Notes
to Consolidated Condensed Financial Statements
|
7
|
||
Report
of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
|
21
|
||
Item
2.
|
Management’s
Discussion and Analysis of Financial
|
||
Condition
and Results of Operations
|
22
|
||
Item
3.
|
Quantitative
and Qualitative Disclosure about Market Risk
|
41
|
|
Item
4.
|
Controls
and Procedures
|
41
|
|
PART
II. Other Information
|
|||
Item
1.
|
Legal
Proceedings
|
42
|
|
Item
1A.
|
Risk
Factors
|
42
|
|
Item
2.
|
Unregistered
Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
|
42
|
|
Item
3.
|
Defaults
Upon Senior Securities
|
42
|
|
Item
4.
|
Submission
of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders
|
42
|
|
Item
5.
|
Other
Information
|
43
|
|
Item
6.
|
Exhibits
|
43
|
|
Signatures
|
44
|
1
PART
I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Item
1. Financial Statements
UNIT
CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED
CONDENSED BALANCE SHEETS (UNAUDITED)
June
30,
|
December
31,
|
||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||
(In
thousands)
|
|||||||||
ASSETS
|
|||||||||
Current
Assets:
|
|||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents
|
$
|
801
|
$
|
947
|
|||||
Restricted cash
|
18
|
268
|
|||||||
Accounts receivable
|
191,045
|
199,765
|
|||||||
Materials and supplies
|
14,777
|
14,108
|
|||||||
Other
|
7,687
|
8,597
|
|||||||
Total
current assets
|
214,328
|
223,685
|
|||||||
Property
and Equipment:
|
|||||||||
Drilling equipment
|
709,185
|
626,913
|
|||||||
Oil and natural gas properties, on the full cost
|
|||||||||
method:
|
|||||||||
Proved properties
|
1,126,521
|
995,119
|
|||||||
Undeveloped leasehold not being amortized
|
42,520
|
38,421
|
|||||||
Gas gathering and processing equipment
|
70,159
|
60,354
|
|||||||
Transportation equipment
|
19,141
|
17,338
|
|||||||
Other
|
15,137
|
12,935
|
|||||||
1,982,663
|
1,751,080
|
||||||||
Less
accumulated depreciation, depletion, amortization
|
|
||||||||
and impairment
|
650,562
|
575,410
|
|||||||
Net property and equipment
|
1,332,101
|
1,175,670
|
|||||||
Goodwill
|
39,659
|
39,659
|
|||||||
Other
Assets
|
12,844
|
17,181
|
|||||||
Total
Assets
|
$
|
1,598,932
|
$
|
1,456,195
|
The
accompanying notes are an integral part of the
consolidated
condensed financial statements.
2
UNIT
CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED
CONDENSED BALANCE SHEETS (UNAUDITED) - CONTINUED
June
30,
|
December
31,
|
||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||
(In
thousands)
|
|||||||||
LIABILITIES
AND SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY
|
|||||||||
Current
Liabilities:
|
|||||||||
Accounts payable
|
$
|
87,509
|
$
|
109,621
|
|||||
Accrued liabilities
|
28,328
|
32,819
|
|||||||
Income taxes payable
|
4,952
|
16,941
|
|||||||
Contract advances
|
10,852
|
5,548
|
|||||||
Current portion of other liabilities
|
7,028
|
7,583
|
|||||||
Total current liabilities
|
138,669
|
172,512
|
|||||||
Long-Term
Debt
|
129,700
|
145,000
|
|||||||
Other
Long-Term Liabilities
|
53,480
|
41,981
|
|||||||
Deferred
Income Taxes
|
284,982
|
259,740
|
|||||||
Shareholders’
Equity:
|
|||||||||
Preferred stock, $1.00 par value, 5,000,000 shares
|
|||||||||
authorized,
none issued
|
---
|
---
|
|||||||
Common stock, $.20 par value, 175,000,000 shares
|
|||||||||
authorized, 46,275,670 and 46,178,162 shares
|
|||||||||
issued, respectively
|
9,255
|
9,236
|
|||||||
Capital in excess of par value
|
330,941
|
328,037
|
|||||||
Accumulated other comprehensive income
|
745
|
|
485
|
||||||
Unearned compensation - restricted stock
|
---
|
(2,226
|
)
|
||||||
Retained earnings
|
651,160
|
501,430
|
|||||||
Total shareholders’ equity
|
992,101
|
836,962
|
|||||||
Total
Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity
|
$
|
1,598,932
|
$
|
1,456,195
|
The
accompanying notes are an integral part of the
consolidated
condensed financial statements.
3
UNIT
CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED
CONDENSED STATEMENTS OF INCOME (UNAUDITED)
Three
Months Ended
|
Six
Months Ended
|
|||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
2006
|
2005
|
|||||||||
(In
thousands except per share amounts)
|
||||||||||||
Revenues:
|
||||||||||||
Contract
drilling
|
$
|
175,908
|
$
|
105,825
|
$
|
337,338
|
$
|
202,506
|
||||
Oil
and natural gas
|
81,954
|
61,976
|
176,280
|
118,840
|
||||||||
Gas
gathering and processing
|
21,720
|
21,104
|
47,202
|
39,334
|
||||||||
Other
|
767
|
962
|
2,337
|
767
|
||||||||
Total
revenues
|
280,349
|
189,867
|
563,157
|
361,447
|
||||||||
Expenses:
|
||||||||||||
Contract
drilling:
|
||||||||||||
Operating
costs
|
79,117
|
64,298
|
159,426
|
127,729
|
||||||||
Depreciation
|
12,845
|
10,381
|
24,686
|
19,991
|
||||||||
Oil
and natural gas:
|
||||||||||||
Operating
costs
|
18,988
|
12,590
|
37,294
|
25,003
|
||||||||
Depreciation,
depletion and
|
||||||||||||
amortization
|
25,041
|
14,845
|
49,223
|
29,277
|
||||||||
Gas
gathering and processing:
|
||||||||||||
Operating
costs
|
18,717
|
19,387
|
41,518
|
36,221
|
||||||||
Depreciation
|
1,232
|
727
|
2,382
|
1,365
|
||||||||
General
and administrative
|
4,402
|
3,160
|
8,368
|
7,131
|
||||||||
Interest
|
1,017
|
585
|
2,007
|
1,272
|
||||||||
Total
expenses
|
161,359
|
125,973
|
324,904
|
247,989
|
||||||||
Income
Before Income Taxes
|
118,990
|
63,894
|
238,253
|
113,458
|
||||||||
Income
Tax Expense:
|
||||||||||||
Current
|
33,141
|
12,140
|
63,299
|
21,557
|
||||||||
Deferred
|
11,032
|
12,140
|
25,224
|
21,557
|
||||||||
Total
income taxes
|
44,173
|
24,280
|
88,523
|
43,114
|
||||||||
Net
Income
|
$
|
74,817
|
$
|
39,614
|
$
|
149,730
|
$
|
70,344
|
||||
Net
Income per Common Share:
|
||||||||||||
Basic
|
$
|
1.62
|
$
|
0.86
|
$
|
3.24
|
$
|
1.53
|
||||
Diluted
|
$
|
1.61
|
$
|
0.86
|
$
|
3.23
|
$
|
1.53
|
The
accompanying notes are an integral part of the
consolidated
condensed financial statements.
4
UNIT
CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED
CONDENSED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS (UNAUDITED)
Six
Months Ended
|
|||||||||
June
30,
|
|||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||
(In
thousands)
|
|||||||||
Cash
Flows From Operating Activities:
|
|||||||||
Net income
|
$
|
149,730
|
$
|
70,344
|
|||||
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash
|
|||||||||
provided (used) by operating activities:
|
|||||||||
Depreciation, depletion and amortization
|
76,640
|
51,025
|
|||||||
Deferred tax expense
|
25,224
|
21,557
|
|||||||
Other
|
3,566
|
1,803
|
|||||||
Changes in operating assets and liabilities
|
|||||||||
increasing (decreasing) cash:
|
|||||||||
Accounts receivable
|
7,650
|
(12,885
|
)
|
||||||
Accounts payable
|
(30,993
|
)
|
(37,082
|
)
|
|||||
Material and supplies inventory
|
(669
|
)
|
(1,536
|
)
|
|||||
Accrued liabilities
|
(14,114
|
)
|
6,803
|
||||||
Contract advances
|
5,304
|
457
|
|||||||
Other - net
|
1,147
|
881
|
|||||||
Net cash provided by operating activities
|
223,485
|
101,367
|
|||||||
Cash
Flows From (Used In) Investing Activities:
|
|||||||||
Capital expenditures (including producing property,
|
|||||||||
drilling rig and other acquisitions)
|
(214,452
|
)
|
(113,481
|
)
|
|||||
Proceeds from disposition of assets
|
3,795
|
3,563
|
|||||||
Other-net
|
250
|
(43
|
)
|
||||||
Net cash used in investing activities
|
(210,407
|
)
|
(109,961
|
)
|
|||||
|
|||||||||
Cash
Flows From (Used In) Financing Activities:
|
|||||||||
Borrowings under line of credit
|
(130,900
|
)
|
(93,300
|
)
|
|||||
Payments under line of credit
|
115,600
|
92,700
|
|
||||||
Net change in other long-term
|
|||||||||
liabilities
|
---
|
180
|
|||||||
Proceeds from exercise of stock options
|
654
|
559
|
|||||||
Book overdrafts
|
1,422
|
9,406
|
|||||||
Net cash from (used in) financing activities
|
(13,224
|
)
|
9,545
|
||||||
Net
Increase (Decrease) in Cash and Cash Equivalents
|
(146
|
)
|
951
|
||||||
Cash
and Cash Equivalents, Beginning of Year
|
947
|
665
|
|||||||
Cash
and Cash Equivalents, End of Period
|
$
|
801
|
$
|
1,616
|
The
accompanying notes are an integral part of the
consolidated
condensed financial statements.
5
UNIT
CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED
CONDENSED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (UNAUDITED)
Three
Months Ended
|
Six
Months Ended
|
||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
||||||||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||||
(In
thousands)
|
|||||||||||||||
Net
Income
|
$
|
74,817
|
$
|
39,614
|
$
|
149,730
|
$
|
70,344
|
|||||||
Other
Comprehensive Income,
|
|||||||||||||||
Net of Taxes:
|
|||||||||||||||
Change in value of cash
|
|||||||||||||||
flow derivative
|
|||||||||||||||
instruments used as
|
|||||||||||||||
cash flow hedges
|
155
|
1,012
|
379
|
(452
|
)
|
||||||||||
Reclassification -
|
|||||||||||||||
derivative settlements
|
(69
|
)
|
74
|
(119
|
)
|
102
|
|||||||||
Comprehensive
Income
|
$
|
74,903
|
$
|
40,700
|
$
|
149,990
|
$
|
69,994
|
The
accompanying notes are an integral part of the
consolidated
condensed financial statements.
6
UNIT
CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED CONDENSED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
NOTE
1 - BASIS OF PREPARATION AND PRESENTATION
The
accompanying unaudited consolidated condensed financial statements
include the
accounts of Unit Corporation and its directly or indirectly wholly
owned
subsidiaries (company) and have been prepared under the rules and regulations
of
the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). As applicable under these
regulations, certain information and footnote disclosures have been
condensed or
omitted and the consolidated condensed financial statements do not
include all
disclosures required by accounting principles generally accepted in
the United
States of America. In the opinion of the company, the unaudited consolidated
condensed financial statements contain all adjustments necessary (all
adjustments are of a normal recurring nature) to state fairly the interim
financial information.
Results
for the three months and six months ended June 30, 2006 are not necessarily
indicative of the results to be realized during the full year. The
consolidated
condensed financial statements should be read with the company’s Annual Report
on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2005. With respect to
the unaudited
financial information of Unit Corporation for the three and six month
periods
ended June 30, 2006 and 2005, included in this Form 10-Q, PricewaterhouseCoopers
LLP reported that they have applied limited procedures in accordance
with
professional standards for a review of such information. However, their
separate report dated August 8, 2006 appearing herein, states that
they did not
audit and they do not express an opinion on that unaudited financial
information. Accordingly, the degree of reliance on their report on that
information should be restricted in light of the limited review procedures
applied. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP is not subject to the liability
provisions of Section 11 of the Securities Act of 1933 for their report
on the
unaudited financial information because that report is not a "report"
or a
"part" of the registration statement prepared or certified by
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP within the meaning of Sections 7 and 11
of the
Act.
Before
January 1, 2006, the company accounted for its stock-based compensation
plans
under the recognition and measurement principles of APB 25, “Accounting for
Stock Issued to Employees,” and related Interpretations. Under APB 25, no
stock-based employee compensation cost related to stock options was
reflected in
net income, since all options granted under the plans had an exercise
price
equal to the market value of the underlying common stock on the date
of grant.
On
January 1, 2006, the company adopted Statement of Financial Accounting
Standards
No. 123 (revised 2004), Share-Based
Payment,
(FAS
123(R)) to account for stock-based employee compensation. Among other
items, FAS
123(R) eliminates the use of APB Opinion No. 25 and the intrinsic value
method
of accounting for equity compensation and requires companies to recognize
the
cost of employee services received in exchange for awards of equity
instruments
based on the grant date fair value of those awards in their financial
statements. The company elected to use the modified prospective method
for
adoption, which requires compensation expense to be recorded for all
unvested
stock options and other equity-based compensation beginning in the
first quarter
of adoption. For all unvested options outstanding as of January 1,
2006, the
previously measured but unrecognized compensation expense, based on
the fair
value at the original grant date, will be recognized in the company's
financial
statements over the remaining vesting period. For equity-based compensation
awards granted or modified after December 31, 2005, compensation expense,
based
on the fair value on the date of grant or modification, will be recognized
in
our financial statements over the vesting period. To the extent compensation
cost relates to employees directly involved in oil and natural gas
acquisition,
exploration and development activities, these amounts are capitalized
to oil and
natural gas properties. Amounts not capitalized to oil and natural
gas
properties are recognized in general and administrative expense and
operating
costs of the company's business segments. The company utilizes the
Black-Scholes
option pricing model to measure the fair value of stock options. Before
the
adoption of FAS 123(R), the company followed the intrinsic value method
in
accordance with APB 25 to account for employee stock-based compensation.
Prior
period financial statements have not been restated.
Any
unearned compensation recorded under APB 25 related to stock-based
compensation
awards is required to be eliminated against the appropriate equity
accounts. As
a result, with the adoption of FAS 123(R) we eliminated $2.2 million
of unearned
compensation cost and reduced additional paid-in capital by the same
amount on
our condensed consolidated balance sheet.
7
The
following table illustrates, for the three month and six month periods
ending
June 30, 2005, the effect on net income and earnings per share if the
company
had applied the fair value recognition provisions of FAS 123 to stock-based
employee compensation. Compensation expense included in reported net
income
before January 1, 2006 is the company’s matching 401(k)
contribution.
Three
|
Six
|
|||||||
Months
Ended
|
Months
Ended
|
|||||||
June
30, 2005
|
June
30, 2005
|
|||||||
(In
thousands except
|
||||||||
per
share amounts)
|
||||||||
Net
Income, as Reported
|
$
|
39,614
|
$
|
70,344
|
||||
Add
Stock-Based Employee Compensation
|
||||||||
Expense Included in Reported Net
|
||||||||
Income, Net of Tax
|
397
|
946
|
||||||
Less
Total Stock-Based
|
||||||||
Employee Compensation Expense
|
||||||||
Determined Under Fair Value Based
|
|
|||||||
Method For All Awards
|
(890
|
)
|
(1,920
|
)
|
||||
Pro
Forma Net Income
|
$
|
39,121
|
$
|
69,370
|
||||
Basic
Earnings per Share:
|
||||||||
As reported
|
$
|
0.86
|
$
|
1.53
|
||||
Pro forma
|
$
|
0.85
|
$
|
1.51
|
||||
Diluted
Earnings per Share:
|
||||||||
As reported
|
$
|
0.86
|
$
|
1.53
|
||||
Pro forma
|
$
|
0.85
|
$
|
1.51
|
In
the
second quarter and first six months of 2006, the company recognized
stock
compensation cost of $0.6 million and $1.3 million, respectively and
capitalized
stock compensation cost for oil and natural gas properties of $0.2
million and
$0.4 million, respectively. The remaining unrecognized compensation
cost related
to unvested awards at June 30, 2006 is approximately $3.7 million with
$0.9
million of this amount to be capitalized. The weighted average period
of time
over which this cost will be recognized is 0.8 years.
8
The
following table estimates the fair value of each option granted during
the three
and six month periods ending June 30, 2006 and 2005 using the Black-Scholes
model applying the estimated values presented in the table:
Three
Months Ended
|
|
Six
Months Ended
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
June
30,
|
|
June
30,
|
|
||||||||
|
|
2006
|
|
2005
|
|
2006
|
|
2005
|
|||||
Options
Granted
|
33,000
|
54,500
|
33,000
|
58,500
|
|||||||||
Estimated
Fair Value (In Millions)
|
$
|
0.8
|
$
|
1.2
|
$
|
0.8
|
$
|
1.3
|
|||||
Estimate
of Stock Volatility
|
0.38
|
0.51
|
0.38
|
0.51
to 0.55
|
|||||||||
Estimated
Dividend Yield
|
0
|
%
|
0
|
%
|
0
|
%
|
0
|
%
|
|||||
|
|||||||||||||
Risk
Free Interest Rate
|
5.00
|
%
|
4.35
|
%
|
5.00
|
%
|
4.35
to 4.42
|
%
|
|||||
Expected
Life Range Based on
|
|||||||||||||
Prior Experience (In Years)
|
3
to 7
|
3
to 10
|
3
to 7
|
3
to 10
|
Expected
volatilities are based on the historical volatility of the company's
stock. The
company uses historical data to estimate option exercise and employee
termination rates within the model and aggregates groups of employees
that have
similar historical exercise behavior for valuation purposes. The company
has
historically not paid dividends on its stock. The risk free interest
rate is
computed from the United States Treasury Strips rate using the term over which
it is anticipated the grant will be exercised.
At
the
company's annual meeting on May 3, 2006, the company's shareholders
approved the
Unit Corporation Stock and Incentive Compensation Plan. This plan allows
for the
issuance of 2.5 million shares of common stock with 2.0 million shares
being the
maximum number of shares that can be issued as "incentive stock options."
Awards
under the Plan may be granted in any one or a combination of the following
forms:
. incentive
stock options under Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code;
. non-qualified
stock options;
. performance
shares;
. performance
units;
. restricted
stock;
. restricted
stock units;
. stock
appreciation rights;
. cash
based awards; and
. other
stock-based awards.
The
plan
also contains various limits as to the amount of awards that can be
given to an
employee in any fiscal year. All awards shall be subject to the minimum
vesting
periods, as determined by the company's Compensation Committee and
included in
the award agreement. At June 30, 2006 no award had been granted under
this
plan.
In
December 1984, the Board of Directors approved the adoption of an Employee
Stock
Bonus Plan (“the Plan”). Under the Plan 330,950 shares of common stock were
reserved for issuance. On May 3, 1995, the company's shareholders approved
and
amended the Plan to increase by 250,000 shares the aggregate number
of shares of
common stock that could be issued under the Plan. Under the terms of
the Plan,
awards were granted to employees in either cash or stock or a combination
thereof, and are payable in a lump sum or in installments subject to
certain
restrictions. As a result of the approval of the adoption of the Unit
Corporation Stock and Incentive Compensation Plan at the company's
annual
meeting on May 3, 2006, no further grants will be made under the
plan. No
shares
were issued under the Plan in 2003 and 2004. On December 13, 2005,
38,190 shares
(in the form of restricted stock awards) were granted under the Plan
9
The
company also has a Stock Option Plan (the “Option Plan”), which provided for the
granting of options for up to 2,700,000 shares of common stock to officers
and
employees. The Option Plan permitted the issuance of qualified or nonqualified
stock options. Options granted typically become exercisable at the
rate of 20%
per year one year after being granted and expire after 10 years from
the
original grant date. The exercise price for options granted under the
Option
Plan is the fair market value of the common stock on the date of the
grant. As a
result of the approval of the adoption of the Unit Corporation Stock
and
Incentive Compensation Plan at the company's annual meeting on May
3, 2006, no
further grants will be made under the Option Plan.
Activity
pertaining to the Option Plan is as follows:
Three
Months Ended
|
Six
Months Ended
|
|||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
2006
|
2005
|
|||||||||
Number
of Shares:
|
||||||||||||
Outstanding
at Beginning of
|
||||||||||||
Period
|
405,670
|
488,173
|
434,713
|
553,750
|
||||||||
Granted
|
5,000
|
30,000
|
5,000
|
34,000
|
||||||||
Exercised
|
(20,200
|
)
|
(1,860
|
)
|
(49,243
|
)
|
(69,437
|
)
|
||||
Forfeited
|
---
|
(48,400
|
)
|
---
|
(50,400
|
)
|
||||||
Outstanding
at End of Period
|
390,470
|
467,913
|
390,470
|
467,913
|
||||||||
Weighted
Average Exercise Price:
|
||||||||||||
Outstanding
at Beginning of
|
||||||||||||
Period
|
$
|
24.50
|
$
|
23.10
|
$
|
24.14
|
$
|
22.11
|
||||
Granted
|
55.83
|
37.48
|
55.83
|
37.16
|
||||||||
Exercised
|
9.62
|
22.40
|
15.21
|
15.45
|
||||||||
Forfeited
|
---
|
23.13
|
---
|
23.71
|
||||||||
Outstanding
at End of Period
|
$
|
25.67
|
$
|
23.98
|
$
|
25.67
|
$
|
23.98
|
The intrinsic value of options exercised in the second quarter and first six months of 2006 was $1.0 million and $2.1 million, respectively. Shares totaling 5,800 and 6,600 vested during the second quarter and first six months of 2006, respectively. Total cash received from the option shares exercised in the second quarter and first six months of 2006 was $0.03 million and $0.6 million, respectively.
Outstanding Options Under
The
|
||||||||||
|
|
Option
Plan At June 30, 2006
|
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Average
|
|
|
Weighted
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Remaining
|
|
|
Average
|
|
|
|
|
Number
of
|
|
|
Contractual
|
|
|
Exercise
|
|
Exercise
Prices
|
|
|
Shares
|
|
|
Life
|
|
|
Price
|
|
$3.75
|
|
|
34,000
|
|
|
2.5
years
|
|
$
|
3.75
|
|
$8.75
|
|
|
2,500
|
|
|
0.5
years
|
|
$
|
8.75
|
|
$16.69
- $19.04
|
|
|
114,600
|
|
|
5.9
years
|
|
$
|
18.34
|
|
$21.50
- $26.28
|
|
|
90,930
|
|
|
7.5
years
|
|
$
|
22.97
|
|
$34.75
- $37.83
|
|
|
143,440
|
|
|
8.5
years
|
|
$
|
37.68
|
|
$53.90
- $60.32
|
5,000
|
9.7
years
|
|
$
|
55.83
|
10
The
aggregate intrinsic value of the 390,470 shares outstanding at June
30, 2006 was
$12.2 million with a weighted average remaining contractual term of
6.9
years.
Exercisable
Options Under The
|
|||||||
|
|
Option
Plan At June 30, 2006
|
|
||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Average
|
|
|
|
|
Number
of
|
|
|
Exercise
|
|
Exercise
Prices
|
|
|
Shares
|
|
|
Price
|
|
$3.75
|
|
|
34,000
|
|
$
|
3.75
|
|
$8.75
|
|
|
2,500
|
|
$
|
8.75
|
|
$16.69
- $19.04
|
|
|
75,800
|
|
$
|
17.98
|
|
$21.50
- $26.28
|
|
|
32,820
|
|
$
|
22.90
|
|
$34.75
- $37.83
|
|
|
27,040
|
|
$
|
37.67
|
|
$53.90
- $60.32
|
---
|
---
|
Options
for 172,160 and 159,333 shares were exercisable with weighted average
exercise
prices of $19.06 and $14.12 at June 30, 2006 and 2005, respectively.
The
aggregate intrinsic value of shares exercisable at June 30, 2006 was
$6.5
million with a weighted average remaining contractual term of 5.7 years.
In
February and May 1992, the Board of Directors and shareholders, respectively,
approved the Unit Corporation Non-Employee Directors’ Stock Option Plan (the
“Old Plan”) and in February and May 2000, the Board of Directors and
shareholders, respectively, approved the Unit Corporation 2000 Non-Employee
Directors’ Stock Option Plan (the “Directors’ Plan”). Under the Directors’ Plan,
which replaced the Old Plan, an aggregate of 300,000 shares of common
stock may
be issued on exercise of the stock options. Under the Old Plan, on
the first
business day following each annual meeting of stockholders of Unit,
each person
who was then a member of the Board of Directors of Unit and who was
not then an
employee of the company or any of its subsidiaries was granted an option
to
purchase 2,500 shares of common stock. Under the Directors’ Plan, commencing
with the year 2000 annual meeting, the amount granted has been increased
to
3,500 shares of common stock. The option price for each stock option
is the fair
market value of the common stock on the date the stock options are
granted. No
stock options may be exercised during the first six months of its term
except in
case of death and no stock options are exercisable after 10 years from
the date
of grant.
Activity
pertaining to the Old Plan and the 'Directors’ Plan is as follows:
Three
Months Ended
|
Six
Months Ended
|
|||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
2006
|
2005
|
|||||||||
Number
of Shares:
|
||||||||||||
Outstanding
at Beginning of
|
||||||||||||
Period
|
92,500
|
88,000
|
96,000
|
94,000
|
||||||||
Granted
|
28,000
|
24,500
|
28,000
|
24,500
|
||||||||
Exercised
|
---
|
---
|
(3,500
|
)
|
(6,000
|
)
|
||||||
Forfeited
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
||||||||
Outstanding
at End of Period
|
120,500
|
112,500
|
120,500
|
112,500
|
||||||||
Weighted
Average Exercise Price:
|
||||||||||||
Outstanding
at Beginning of
|
||||||||||||
Period
|
$
|
25.11
|
$
|
20.76
|
$
|
24.93
|
$
|
20.27
|
||||
Granted
|
62.40
|
39.50
|
62.40
|
39.50
|
||||||||
Exercised
|
---
|
---
|
20.10
|
13.10
|
||||||||
Forfeited
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
||||||||
Outstanding
at End of Period
|
$
|
33.78
|
$
|
24.84
|
$
|
33.78
|
$
|
24.84
|
11
The
intrinsic value of options exercised in the first six months of 2006
was $0.1
million. No shares were exercised in the second quarter of 2006 and
no shares
vested during the second quarter and first six months of 2006. Total
cash
received from option shares exercised in the first six months of 2006
was $0.1
million.
Outstanding
Options Under The Old Plan
|
||||||||||
|
|
And
The 'Directors' Plan At June 30, 2006
|
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Average
|
|
|
Weighted
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Remaining
|
|
|
Average
|
|
|
|
|
Number
of
|
|
|
Contractual
|
|
|
Exercise
|
|
Exercise
Prices
|
|
|
Shares
|
|
|
Life
|
|
|
Price
|
|
$6.90
|
|
|
5,000
|
|
|
2.8
years
|
|
$
|
6.90
|
|
$12.19
- $17.54
|
|
|
14,000
|
|
|
4.6
years
|
|
$
|
16.20
|
|
$20.10
- $20.46
|
|
|
31,500
|
|
|
6.4
years
|
|
$
|
20.30
|
|
$28.23
- $39.50
|
|
|
42,000
|
|
|
8.3
years
|
|
$
|
33.87
|
|
$62.40
|
28,000
|
9.8
years
|
$
|
62.40
|
The
aggregate intrinsic value of the 120,500 shares outstanding at June
30, 2006 was
$2.8 million with a weighted average remaining contractual term of
7.5 years.
Exercisable
Options Under The Old Plan
|
|||||||
|
|
And
The 'Directors' Plan At June 30, 2006
|
|
||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Average
|
|
|
|
|
Number
of
|
|
|
Exercise
|
|
Exercise
Prices
|
|
|
Shares
|
|
|
Price
|
|
$6.90
|
|
|
5,000
|
|
$
|
6.90
|
|
$12.19
- $17.54
|
|
|
14,000
|
|
$
|
16.20
|
|
$20.10
- $20.46
|
|
|
31,500
|
|
$
|
20.30
|
|
$28.23
- $39.50
|
|
|
42,000
|
|
$
|
33.87
|
|
$62.40
|
---
|
$
|
---
|
Options
for 92,500 and 88,000 shares were exercisable with weighted average
exercise
prices of $25.11 and $20.76 at June 30, 2006 and 2005, respectively.
The
aggregate intrinsic value of shares exercisable at June 30, 2006 was
$2.9
million with a weighted average remaining term of 6.8 years.
12
NOTE
2 - EARNINGS PER SHARE
Basic
and
diluted earnings per share for the three month periods indicated was
computed as
follows:
|
|
Weighted
|
|
|
|
|||||
|
|
Income
|
|
Shares
|
|
Per-Share
|
|
|||
|
|
(Numerator)
|
|
(Denominator)
|
|
Amount
|
||||
(In
thousands except per share amounts)
|
||||||||||
For
the Three Months Ended
|
||||||||||
June 30, 2006:
|
||||||||||
Basic earnings per common share
|
$
|
74,817
|
46,228
|
$
|
1.62
|
|||||
Effect of dilutive stock options
|
||||||||||
and restricted stock bonus shares
|
--
|
215
|
(0.01
|
)
|
||||||
Diluted earnings per common share
|
$
|
74,817
|
46,443
|
$
|
1.61
|
|||||
For
the Three Months Ended
|
||||||||||
June 30, 2005:
|
||||||||||
Basic earnings per common share
|
$
|
39,614
|
45,859
|
$
|
0.86
|
|||||
Effect of dilutive stock options
|
--
|
235
|
--
|
|||||||
Diluted earnings per common share
|
$
|
39,614
|
46,094
|
$
|
0.86
|
The following options and their average exercise prices were not included in the computation of diluted earnings per share for the three months ended June 30, 2006 and 2005 because the option exercise prices were greater than the average market price of the common stock:
2006
|
2005
|
|||||||
Options
|
29,500
|
---
|
||||||
Average
Exercise Price
|
$
|
62.29
|
$
|
---
|
13
Basic
and
diluted earnings per share for the six month periods indicated was
computed as
follows:
Weighted
|
||||||||||
Income
|
Shares
|
Per-Share
|
||||||||
(Numerator)
|
(Denominator)
|
Amount
|
||||||||
(In
thousands except per share amounts)
|
||||||||||
For
the Six Months Ended
|
||||||||||
June 30, 2006:
|
||||||||||
Basic earnings per common share
|
$
|
149,730
|
46,214
|
$
|
3.24
|
|||||
Effect of dilutive stock options
|
||||||||||
and restricted stock bonus shares
|
--
|
204
|
(0.01
|
)
|
||||||
Diluted earnings per common share
|
$
|
149,730
|
46,418
|
$
|
3.23
|
|||||
For
the Six Months Ended
|
||||||||||
June 30, 2005:
|
||||||||||
Basic earnings per common share
|
$
|
70,344
|
45,829
|
$
|
1.53
|
|||||
Effect of dilutive stock options
|
--
|
234
|
--
|
|||||||
Diluted earnings per common share
|
$
|
70,344
|
46,063
|
$
|
1.53
|
The following options and their average exercise prices were not included in the computation of diluted earnings per share for the six months ended June 30, 2006 and 2005 because the option exercise prices were greater than the average market price of the common stock:
2006
|
2005
|
|||||||
Options
|
29,500
|
---
|
||||||
Average
Exercise Price
|
$
|
62.29
|
$
|
---
|
14
NOTE
3 - ACQUISITIONS
On
May 16, 2006, the company’s wholly owned subsidiary, Unit Petroleum Company,
announced it had closed the acquisition of certain oil and natural
gas
properties from a group of private entities for approximately $32.4
million in
cash. Proved oil and natural gas reserves involved in this acquisition
consisted
of approximately 14.2 Bcfe. This acquisition has an effective date
of April 1,
2006 and the $32.4 million paid in this acquisition increased our basis
in oil
and natural gas properties held under the full cost method.
NOTE
4 - CREDIT AGREEMENT
As
of
June 30, 2006 and December 31, 2005, long-term debt consisted of the
following:
June
30,
|
December
31,
|
||||||
2006
|
2005
|
||||||
(In
thousands)
|
|||||||
Revolving
Credit Loan,
|
|||||||
with Interest at June 30, 2006 and
|
|||||||
December 31, 2005 of 5.6% and 4.9%,
|
|||||||
respectively
|
$
|
129,700
|
$
|
145,000
|
|||
|
|||||||
Less
Current Portion
|
--
|
--
|
|||||
Total
Long-Term Debt
|
$
|
129,700
|
$
|
145,000
|
|||
The
company has a revolving $235.0 million credit facility maturing on
January 30,
2008. Borrowings under the credit facility are limited to a commitment
amount.
Effective June 1, 2006, the company elected to reduce the commitment
amount
available from the full $235.0 million to $175.0 million.
The
company is charged a commitment fee of .375 of 1% on the amount available
but
not borrowed. The company incurred origination, agency and syndication
fees of
$515,000 at the inception of the credit agreement. During 2005, in
connection
with its amendment of the credit agreement, the company incurred additional
origination, agency and syndication fees of $187,500 and these fees
are being
amortized over the remaining life of the agreement. The average interest
rate
for the second quarter and first six months of 2006 was 5.8% and 5.6%,
respectively. At June 30, 2006 and July 26, 2006, borrowings were $129.7
million
and $129.5 million, respectively.
The
borrowing base under the current credit facility is subject to re-determination
on May 10 and November 10 of each year. The latest redetermination
supported the
full $235.0 million. Each re-determination is based primarily on a
percentage of
the discounted future value of the company’s oil and natural gas reserves, as
determined by the banks. The determination of the company's borrowing
base also
includes an amount representing a small part of the value of the company's
drilling rig fleet (limited to $20 million) as well as such loan value
as the
lenders reasonably attribute to Superior Pipeline Company's cash flow
as defined
in the credit agreement. The credit agreement allows for one requested
special
re-determination of the borrowing base by either the banks or the company
between each scheduled re-determination date.
At
the
company’s election, any part of the outstanding debt may be fixed at a London
Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) Rate for a 30, 60, 90 or 180 day term.
During any
LIBOR Rate funding period the outstanding principal balance of the
note to which
the LIBOR Rate option applies may be repaid on three days prior notice
to the
administrative agent and subject to the payment of any applicable funding
indemnification amounts. Interest on the LIBOR Rate is computed at
the LIBOR
Base Rate applicable for the interest period plus 1.00% to 1.50% depending
on
the level of debt as a percentage of the total loan value and payable
at the end
of each term or every 90 days whichever is less. Borrowings not under
the LIBOR
Rate bear interest at the JPMorgan Chase Prime Rate payable at the
end of each
month and the
15
The credit agreement includes prohibitions against:
.
|
the
payment of dividends (other than stock dividends) during
any fiscal year
in excess of 25% of the company’s consolidated net income for the
preceding fiscal year,
|
.
|
the
incurrence of additional debt with certain limited exceptions,
and
|
.
|
the
creation or existence of mortgages or liens, other than those
in the
ordinary course of business, on any of the company’s property, except in
favor of the company’s banks.
|
The credit agreement also requires that the company have at the end
of each
quarter:
.
|
consolidated
net worth of at least $350 million,
|
.
|
a
current ratio (as defined in the loan agreement) of not less
than 1 to 1,
and
|
.
|
a
leverage ratio of long-term debt to consolidated EBITDA (as
defined in the
credit agreement) for the most recently ended rolling four
fiscal quarters
of no greater than 3.25 to 1.0.
|
On
June
30, 2006, the company was in compliance with the credit agreement
covenants.
Other
long-term liabilities consisted of the following:
June
30,
|
December
31,
|
||||||
|
|
|
2006
|
|
|
2005
|
|
|
|
(In
thousands)
|
|||||
Separation
Benefit Plan
|
|
$
|
2,909
|
|
$
|
2,788
|
|
Deferred
Compensation Plan
|
|
|
2,676
|
|
|
2,611
|
|
Retirement
Agreement
|
|
|
1,549
|
|
|
1,676
|
|
Workers’
Compensation
|
|
|
20,833
|
|
|
19,394
|
|
Gas
Balancing Liability
|
|
|
1,080
|
|
|
1,080
|
|
Plugging
Liability
|
|
|
31,461
|
|
|
22,015
|
|
|
|
|
60,508
|
|
|
49,564
|
|
Less
Current Portion
|
|
|
7,028
|
|
|
7,583
|
|
Total
Other Long-Term Liabilities
|
|
$
|
53,480
|
|
$
|
41,981
|
|
Estimated annual principle payments under the terms of long-term debt
and other
long-term liabilities for the twelve month periods beginning July 1,
2006
through 2010 are $7.0 million, $135.0 million, $1.8 million, $1.4 million
and
$1.9 million. Based on the borrowing rates currently available to Unit
for debt
with similar terms and maturities, long-term debt at June 30, 2006
approximates
its fair value.
NOTE
5 - ASSET RETIREMENT OBLIGATIONS
Under
Financial Accounting Standards No. 143, “Accounting for Asset Retirement
Obligations” (FAS
143)
the company must record the fair value of liabilities associated with
the
retirement of long-lived assets. The company owns oil and natural gas
properties
which require cash to plug and abandon the wells when the oil and natural
gas
reserves in the wells are depleted or the wells are no longer able
to produce.
These expenditures under FAS 143 are recorded in the period in which
the
liability is incurred (at the time the wells are drilled or acquired). The
company does not have any assets restricted for the purpose of settling
these
plugging liabilities.
16
The
following table shows the activity for the six months ending June 30,
2006 and
2005 relating to the company’s retirement obligation for plugging
liability:
Six
Months Ended
|
|||||||
2006
|
2005
|
||||||
(In
Thousands)
|
|||||||
Short-Term
Plugging Liability:
|
|||||||
Liability at beginning of period
|
$
|
366
|
$
|
226
|
|||
Accretion of discount
|
3
|
12
|
|
||||
Liability settled in the period
|
(101
|
)
|
(103
|
)
|
|||
Reclassification of liability from long-term
|
|||||||
to short-term
|
293
|
204
|
|||||
Revision of estimates
|
46
|
--
|
|||||
Plugging liability at end of period
|
$
|
607
|
$
|
339
|
|||
Long-Term
Plugging Liability:
|
|||||||
Liability at beginning of period
|
$
|
21,649
|
$
|
18,909
|
|||
Accretion of discount
|
693
|
447
|
|||||
Liability incurred or assumed in the period
|
1,867
|
338
|
|||||
Reclassification of liability from long-term
|
|||||||
to short-term
|
(293
|
)
|
(204
|
)
|
|||
Revision of estimates
|
6,938
|
(856
|
)
|
||||
Plugging liability at end of period
|
$
|
30,854
|
$
|
18,634
|
NOTE
6 - NEW ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS
In September 2005, the Emerging Issues Task Force issued Issue No.
04-13 (EITF
04-13), "Accounting for Purchases and Sales of Inventory with the Same
Counterparty." The EITF concluded that inventory purchases and sales
transactions with the same counterparty should be combined for accounting
purposes if they were entered into in contemplation of each other.
The EITF
provided indicators to be considered for purposes of determining whether
such
transactions are entered into in contemplation of each other. Guidance
was also
provided on the circumstances under which nonmonetary exchanges of
inventory
within the same line of business should be recognized at fair value.
EITF 04-13
is effective in reporting periods beginning after March 15, 2006. We
have not
entered into the type of transactions covered under EITF 04-13, so
we do not
expect EITF 04-13 to have a material impact on our results of operations,
financial condition or cash flows.
In
June
2005, the FASB issued Financial Accounting Standards No. 154, “Accounting
Changes and Error Corrections,” which establishes new standards on accounting
for changes in accounting principles. Under this new rule, all such
changes must
be accounted for by retrospective application to the financial statements
of
prior periods unless it is impracticable to do so. FAS 154 completely
replaces
APB 20 and FAS 3, though it carries forward the guidance in those pronouncements
with respect to accounting for changes in estimates, changes in the
reporting
entity, and the correction of errors. FAS 154 is effective for accounting
changes and error corrections made in fiscal years beginning after
December 15,
2005, with early adoption permitted for changes and corrections made
in years
beginning after May 2005. The application of FAS 154 does not affect
the
transition provisions of any existing pronouncements,
17
In
June
2005, the Emerging Issues Task Force issued EITF Issue No. 04-05,
Determining Whether a General Partner, or the General Partners as a
Group,
Controls a Limited Partnership or Similar Entity When the Limited Partners
Have
Certain Rights (“EITF 04-05”). EITF 04-05 provides guidance in determining
whether a general partner controls a limited partnership by determining
the
limited partners’ substantive ability to dissolve (liquidate) the limited
partnership as well as assessing the substantive participating rights
of the
limited partners within the limited partnership. EITF 04-05 states
that if the
limited partners do not have substantive ability to dissolve (liquidate)
or have
substantive participating rights, then the general partner is presumed
to
control that partnership and would be required to consolidate the limited
partnership. This EITF is effective in fiscal periods beginning after
December 15, 2005. Implementation of this statement did not have a material
impact on the company's results of operations, financial condition
or cash
flows.
In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB“) issued FASB
Interpretation No. 48, Accounting
for Uncertainty in Income Taxes, an Interpretation of FASB Statement
No. 109
(FIN 48).
FIN 48
clarifies the accounting for uncertainty in income taxes recognized
in an
enterprise’s financial statements in accordance with SFAS No. 109, Accounting
for Income Taxes.
FIN 48
prescribes a recognition threshold and measurement attribute for the
financial
statement recognition and measurement of a tax position taken or expected
to be
taken in a tax return. The interpretation also provides guidance on
derecognition, classification, interest and penalties, accounting in
interim
periods, disclosure, and transition. FIN 48 is effective for fiscal
years
beginning after December 15, 2006. The company is currently reviewing
the
effects of this interpretation and the company does not expect the
implementation of this statement to have a material impact on the company's
results of operations, financial condition or cash flows.
In June 2006, the FASB ratified the consensuses reached by the Emerging
Issues
Task Force on EITF 06-3, How
Taxes Collected from Customers and Remitted to Governmental Authorities
Should
Be Presented in the Income Statement (That is, Gross versus Net
Presentation).
According to the provisions of EITF 06-3:
·
taxes assessed by a governmental authority that are directly imposed
on a
revenue-producing transaction between a seller and a customer may include,
but
are not limited to, sales, use, value added, and some excise taxes;
and
·
that the presentation of such taxes on either a gross (included in
revenues and
costs) or a net (excluded from revenues) basis is an accounting policy
decision
that should be disclosed pursuant to Accounting Principles Board Opinion
No. 22
(as amended), Disclosure
of Accounting Policies.
In
addition, for any such taxes that are reported on a gross basis, a
company
should disclose the amounts of those taxes in interim and annual financial
statements for each period for which an income statement is presented
if those
amounts are significant. The disclosure of those taxes can be made
on an
aggregate basis.
EITF 06-3 should be applied to financial reports for interim and annual
reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2006. Because the provisions
of
EITF 06-3 require only the presentation of additional disclosures,
we do not
expect the adoption of EITF 06-3 to have an effect on the company's
results of
operations, financial condition or cash flows.
NOTE
7 - GOODWILL
Goodwill
represents the excess of the cost of the acquisition of Hickman Drilling
Company, CREC Rig Equipment Company, CDC Drilling Company, SerDrilco
Incorporated, Sauer Drilling Company and Strata Drilling, L.L.C. over
the fair
value of the net assets acquired. An impairment test is performed at
least
annually to determine whether the fair value has decreased. Goodwill
is all
related to the company’s drilling segment.
18
NOTE
8 - HEDGING ACTIVITY
The
company periodically enters into derivative commodity instruments to
hedge its
exposure to the fluctuations in the prices it receives for its oil
and natural
gas production. Such instruments include regulated natural gas and
crude oil
futures contracts traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX)
and
over-the-counter swaps and basic hedges with major energy derivative
product
specialists.
In
January 2005, the company entered into the following two natural gas
collar
contracts:
First
Contract:
|
||||
Production
volume covered
|
10,000
MMBtus/day
|
|||
Period
covered
|
April
through October of 2005
|
|||
Prices
|
Floor
of $5.50 and a ceiling of $7.19
|
|||
Second
Contract:
|
||||
Production
volume covered
|
10,000
MMBtus/day
|
|||
Period
covered
|
April
through October of 2005
|
|||
Prices
|
Floor
of $5.50 and a ceiling of $7.30
|
In
March
2005, the company also entered into an oil collar contract:
Oil
Collar Contract:
|
||||
Production
volume covered
|
1,000
Barrels/day
|
|||
Period
covered
|
April
through December of 2005
|
|||
Prices
|
Floor
of $45.00 and a ceiling of $69.25
|
All
of
these hedges were cash flow hedges and there is no material amount
of
ineffectiveness. The fair value of the collar contracts was recognized
on the
June 30, 2005 balance sheet as a derivative liability of $0.5 million
and at a
loss of $0.3 million, net of tax, in accumulated other comprehensive
income.
In
February 2005, the company entered into an interest rate swap to help
manage its
exposure to possible future interest rate increases. The contract swaps
$50.0
million of variable rate debt to fixed and covers the period from March
1, 2005
through January 30, 2008. This period coincides with the remaining
length of the
company’s current credit facility. The fixed rate is based on three-month LIBOR
and is at 3.99%. The swap is a cash flow hedge. As a result of this
interest
rate swap, in the second quarter and first six months of 2006 the company's
interest expense was decreased by $0.1 million and $0.2 million, respectively.
The company’s interest expense was increased by $0.1 million in the second
quarter of 2005 and $0.2 million for the six months ended June 30,
2005. The
fair value of the swap was recognized on the June 30, 2006 balance
sheet as
current and non-current derivative assets totaling $1.2 million and
a gain of
$0.7 million, net of tax, in accumulated other comprehensive
income.
NOTE
9 - INDUSTRY SEGMENT INFORMATION
The company has three business segments:
. Contract
Drilling,
. Oil
and
Natural Gas Exploration and Production and
. Gas
Gathering and Processing
These
three segments represent the company's three main business units offering
different products and services. The Contract Drilling segment is engaged
in the
land contract drilling of oil and natural gas wells. The Oil and Natural
Gas
Exploration and Production segment is engaged in the development, acquisition
and production of oil and natural gas properties and the Gas Gathering
and
Processing segment is engaged in the buying, selling, gathering, processing
and
treating of natural gas.
19
The company evaluates the performance of these operating segments based
on
operating income, which is defined as operating revenues less operating
expenses
and depreciation, depletion and amortization. The company has natural
gas
production in Canada, which is not significant. Information regarding
the
company’s operations by segment for the three and six month periods ended June
30, 2006 and 2005 is as follows:
Three
Months Ended
|
Six
Months Ended
|
||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
||||||||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||||
(In
thousands)
|
|||||||||||||||
Revenues:
|
|||||||||||||||
Contract drilling
|
$
|
185,793
|
$
|
110,098
|
$
|
353,475
|
$
|
209,418
|
|||||||
Elimination of inter-segment
|
|||||||||||||||
revenue
|
9,885
|
4,273
|
16,137
|
6,912
|
|||||||||||
Contract drilling net of
|
|||||||||||||||
inter-segment revenue
|
175,908
|
105,825
|
337,338
|
202,506
|
|||||||||||
Oil and natural gas
|
81,954
|
61,976
|
176,280
|
118,840
|
|||||||||||
Gas gathering and processing
|
25,020
|
23,038
|
54,258
|
43,126
|
|||||||||||
Elimination of inter-segment
|
|||||||||||||||
revenue
|
3,300
|
1,934
|
7,056
|
3,792
|
|||||||||||
Gas gathering and processing
|
|||||||||||||||
net of inter-segment revenue
|
21,720
|
21,104
|
47,202
|
39,334
|
|||||||||||
Other (1)
|
767
|
962
|
2,337
|
767
|
|||||||||||
Total revenues
|
$
|
280,349
|
$
|
189,867
|
$
|
563,157
|
$
|
361,447
|
|||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||
Operating
Income (2):
|
|||||||||||||||
Contract drilling
|
$
|
83,946
|
$
|
31,146
|
$
|
153,226
|
$
|
54,786
|
|||||||
Oil and natural gas
|
37,925
|
34,541
|
89,763
|
64,560
|
|||||||||||
Gas gathering and processing
|
1,771
|
990
|
3,302
|
1,748
|
|||||||||||
Total operating income
|
123,642
|
66,677
|
246,291
|
121,094
|
|||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||
General and administrative
|
|||||||||||||||
expense
|
(4,402
|
)
|
(3,160
|
)
|
(8,368
|
)
|
(7,131
|
)
|
|||||||
Interest expense
|
(1,017
|
)
|
(585
|
)
|
(2,007
|
)
|
(1,272
|
)
|
|||||||
Other income - net
|
767
|
962
|
2,337
|
767
|
|||||||||||
Income before income
|
|||||||||||||||
taxes
|
$
|
118,990
|
$
|
63,894
|
$
|
238,253
|
$
|
113,458
|
(1) Includes
a $1.0 million gain from insurance proceeds on the loss of a drilling
rig from a
blow out and fire in January 2006.
(2) Operating
income is total operating revenues less operating expenses, depreciation,
depletion and amortization and does not include non-operating revenues,
general
corporate expenses, interest expense or income taxes.
20
REPORT
OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
To
the
Board of Directors and Shareholders
Unit
Corporation
We
have
reviewed the accompanying consolidated condensed balance sheet of Unit
Corporation and its subsidiaries as of June 30, 2006, and the related
consolidated condensed statements of income and comprehensive income
for each of
the three and six month periods ended June 30, 2006 and 2005 and the
consolidated condensed statements of cash flows for the six month periods
ended
June 30, 2006 and 2005. These interim financial statements are the
responsibility of the company’s management.
We
conducted our review in accordance with standards of the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). A review of interim financial
information consists principally of applying analytical procedures
and making
inquiries of persons responsible for financial and accounting matters.
It is
substantially less in scope than an audit conducted in accordance with
the
standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United
States), the
objective of which is the expression of an opinion regarding the financial
statements taken as a whole. Accordingly, we do not express such an
opinion.
Based
on
our review, we are not aware of any material modifications that should
be made
to the accompanying consolidated condensed interim financial statements
for them
to be in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in
the United
States of America.
We
previously audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public
Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the consolidated balance
sheet as of
December 31, 2005, and the related consolidated statements of income,
shareholders’ equity and of cash flows for the year then ended (not presented
herein), management’s assessment of the effectiveness of the company’s internal
control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2005 and the effectiveness
of the company’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31,
2005; and in our report dated March 13, 2006, we expressed unqualified
opinions
thereon. The consolidated financial statements and management’s assessment of
the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting referred
to above
are not presented herein. In our opinion, the information set forth
in the
accompanying consolidated condensed balance sheet as of December 31,
2005, is
fairly stated in all material respects in relation to the consolidated
balance
sheet from which it has been derived.
PricewaterhouseCoopers
LLP
Tulsa,
Oklahoma
August
8,
2006
21
Item
2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of
Operations
This
Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q is for the three and six months ended
June 30, 2006. This Quarterly Report modifies and supersedes documents
filed before this Quarterly Report. The SEC allows us to “incorporate by
reference” information that we file with them, which means that we can disclose
important information to you by referring you directly to those documents.
Information incorporated by reference is considered to be part of this
Quarterly
Report. In addition, certain information that we file with the SEC
in the future
will automatically update and supersede information contained in this
Quarterly
Report.
You
should carefully review the information contained in this Quarterly
Report and
particularly consider any risk factors that we set forth in this Quarterly
Report and in other reports or documents that we file from time to
time with the
SEC. In this Quarterly Report, we state our beliefs of future events
and of our
future financial performance. In some cases, you can identify these
so-called
“forward-looking statements” by words such as “may,” “will,” “should,”
“expects,” “plans,” “anticipates,” “believes,” “estimates,” “predicts,”
“potential,” or “continue,” or the negative of those words, and other comparable
words. You should be aware that those statements are only our predictions.
In
evaluating those statements, you should specifically consider various
factors,
including the risks outlined below. Actual events or our actual results
may
differ materially from any of our forward-looking statements.
You
should read the following Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial
Condition and Results of Operations in conjunction with the unaudited
condensed
consolidated financial statements and the related notes that appear
elsewhere in
this report
FINANCIAL
CONDITION
Summary.
Our
financial condition and liquidity depends on the cash flow from our
three
principal business segments
(and our subsidiaries that carry out those operations) and borrowings
under our
bank credit agreement.
Our three principal business segments are:
•
contract drilling carried out by our subsidiaries Unit Drilling
Company,
Unit Texas Drilling,
|
L.L.C.and
Service Drilling Southwest, L.L.C.;
|
•
oil and natural gas exploration, carried out by our subsidiary
Unit
Petroleum Company; and
|
•
natural gas buying, selling, gathering and processing carried
out by our
subsidiary Superior
|
Pipeline
Company, L.L.C.
|
Our cash flow is influenced mainly by:
•
the prices we receive for our natural gas production and,
to a lesser
extent, the prices we
|
receive for our oil production;
|
•
the quantity of natural gas and oil we produce;
|
•
the demand for and the dayrates we receive for our drilling
rigs; and
|
•
the margins we obtain from our natural gas gathering and
processing
contracts.
|
22
The
following is a summary of certain financial information as of June
30, 2006 and
2005 and for the six months ended June 30, 2006 and 2005:
|
|
|
June
30,
|
|
|
June
30,
|
|
|
Percent
|
|
|
|
|
2006
|
|
|
2005
|
|
|
Change
|
|
|
(In
thousands except percent amounts)
|
|||||||||
Working
Capital
|
|
$
|
75,659
|
|
$
|
30,971
|
|
|
144
|
%
|
Long-Term
Debt
|
$
|
129,700
|
$
|
94,900
|
37
|
%
|
||||
Shareholders’
Equity
|
|
$
|
992,101
|
|
$
|
680,710
|
|
|
46
|
%
|
Ratio of Long-Term Debt to Total | ||||||||||
Capitalization
|
|
|
12
|
%
|
|
12
|
%
|
|
---
|
%
|
Net
Income
|
|
$
|
149,730
|
|
$
|
70,344
|
|
|
113
|
%
|
Net
Cash Provided by Operating Activities
|
|
$
|
223,485
|
|
$
|
101,367
|
|
|
120
|
%
|
Net
Cash Used in Investing Activities
|
|
$
|
(210,407
|
)
|
$
|
(109,961
|
)
|
|
91
|
%
|
Net
Cash Provided by (Used in) Financing
|
||||||||||
Activities | $ | (13,224 | ) | $ | 9,545 | (239 | )% |
The
following table summarizes certain operating information for the six
months
ended June 30, 2006 and 2005:
|
|
June
30,
|
|
June
30,
|
|
|
Percent
|
|
||
|
|
2006
|
|
2005
|
|
|
Change
|
|
||
Oil
Production (MBbls)
|
|
|
685
|
|
|
537
|
|
|
28
|
%
|
Natural
Gas Production (MMcf)
|
|
|
21,150
|
|
|
15,514
|
|
|
36
|
%
|
Average
Oil Price Received
|
|
$
|
55.88
|
|
$
|
45.15
|
|
|
24
|
%
|
Average
Oil Price Received Excluding Hedges
|
|
$
|
55.88
|
|
$
|
45.15
|
|
|
24
|
%
|
Average
Natural Gas Price Received
|
|
$
|
6.41
|
|
$
|
5.98
|
|
|
7
|
%
|
Average
Natural Gas Price Received Excluding Hedges
|
|
$
|
6.41
|
|
$
|
5.98
|
|
|
7
|
%
|
Average
Number of Our Drilling Rigs in Use During
|
||||||||||
the
Period
|
|
|
109.5
|
|
|
99.8
|
|
|
10
|
%
|
Total
Number of Drilling Rigs Available at the End
|
||||||||||
of
the Period
|
|
|
115
|
|
|
103
|
|
|
12
|
%
|
Average
Dayrate
|
$
|
17,870
|
$
|
10,782
|
66
|
%
|
||||
Gas
Gathered—MMBtu/day
|
|
|
229,448
|
|
|
114,472
|
|
|
100
|
%
|
Gas
Processed—MMBtu/day
|
|
|
23,212
|
|
|
31,005
|
|
|
(25
|
)%
|
Number
of Active Natural Gas Gathering Systems
|
|
|
37
|
|
|
35
|
|
|
6
|
%
|
At
June
30, 2006, we had unrestricted cash totaling $0.8 million and we had
borrowed
$129.7 million of the $175.0 million we have elected to have available
under our
credit agreement.
Our
Bank Credit Agreement. At
June
30, 2006, we had a $235.0 million revolving credit facility maturing
on January
30, 2008. Borrowings under the credit facility are limited to a commitment
amount and effective June 1, 2006, the company elected to reduce the
commitment
amount available from the full $235.0 million to $175.0 million.
We
are
charged a commitment fee of .375 of 1% on the amount available but
not borrowed.
We incurred origination, agency and syndication fees of $515,000 at
the
inception of the agreement. During 2005, we incurred additional origination,
agency and syndication fees of $187,500 while amending the credit agreement
and
these fees are being amortized over the remaining life of the agreement.
The
average interest rate for the first six months of 2006 was 5.6%. At
June 30,
2006 and July 26, 2006, our borrowings were $129.7 million and $129.5
million,
respectively.
The
borrowing base under the current credit facility is subject to re-determination
on May 10 and November 10 of each year. The latest redetermination
supported the
full $235.0 million. Each re-determination is based primarily on a
percentage of
the discounted future value of our oil and natural gas reserves, as
determined
by the banks. The determination of our borrowing base also includes
an amount
representing a small part of the value of our drilling rig fleet (limited
to $20
million) as well as such loan value as the lenders reasonably attribute
to
Superior Pipeline Company's cash flow as defined in the credit agreement.
The
credit agreement allows for one requested special re-determination
of the
borrowing base by either the banks or us between each scheduled re-determination
date.
23
At
our
election, any part of the outstanding debt may be fixed at a London
Interbank
Offered Rate (LIBOR) Rate for a 30, 60, 90 or 180 day term. During
any LIBOR
Rate funding period the outstanding principal balance of the note to
which such
LIBOR Rate option applies may be repaid on three days prior notice
to the
administrative agent and subject to the payment of any applicable funding
indemnification amounts. Interest on the LIBOR Rate is computed at
the LIBOR
Base Rate applicable for the interest period plus 1.00% to 1.50% depending
on
the level of debt as a percentage of the total loan value and payable
at the end
of each term or every 90 days whichever is less. Borrowings not under
the LIBOR
Rate bear interest at the JPMorgan Chase Prime Rate payable at the
end of each
month and the principal borrowed may be paid anytime in part or in
whole without
premium or penalty. At June 30, 2006, $112.5 million of the $129.7
million we
had borrowed was subject to the LIBOR rate.
The
credit agreement includes prohibitions against:
.
the payment of dividends (other than stock dividends) during
any fiscal
year in excess of 25% of our
|
consolidated
net income for the preceding fiscal year,
|
.
the
incurrence of additional debt with certain limited exceptions,
and
|
. the
creation or existence of mortgages or liens, other than
those in the
ordinary course of business, on
|
.
any
of our property, except in favor of our
banks.
|
The
credit agreement also requires that we have at the end of each
quarter:
.
consolidated
net worth of at least $350 million,
|
.
a
current ratio (as defined in the loan agreement) of not
less than 1 to 1,
and
|
. a
leverage ratio of long-term debt to consolidated EBITDA
(as defined in the
loan agreement) for the
|
most
recently ended rolling four fiscal quarters of no greater
than 3.25 to
1.0.
|
On
June
30, 2006, we were in compliance with these covenants.
In
February 2005, we entered into an interest rate swap to help manage
our exposure
to possible future interest rate increases. The contract swaps $50.0
million of
variable rate debt to fixed and covers the period from March 1, 2005
through
January 30, 2008. This period coincides with the remaining length of
our current
credit agreement. The fixed rate is 3.99%. The swap is a cash flow
hedge. As a
result of this interest rate swap, our interest expense was decreased
by $0.2
million in the first six months of 2006. The fair value of the swap
was
recognized on the June 30, 2006 balance sheet as current and non-current
derivative assets totaling $1.2 million and a gain of $0.7 million,
net of tax,
in accumulated other comprehensive income.
Contractual Commitments.
At June
30, 2006 we have the following contractual obligations:
Payments
Due by Period
|
||||||||||||||||||
Less
|
||||||||||||||||||
Contractual
|
Than
1
|
2-3
|
4-5
|
After
5
|
||||||||||||||
Obligations
|
Total
|
Year
|
Years
|
Years
|
Years
|
|||||||||||||
(In
thousands)
|
||||||||||||||||||
Bank
Debt (1)
|
$
|
139,890
|
$
|
6,424
|
$
|
133,466
|
$
|
---
|
$
|
---
|
||||||||
Retirement
Agreements (2)
|
1,549
|
600
|
949
|
---
|
---
|
|||||||||||||
Operating
Leases (3)
|
3,046
|
1,101
|
1,503
|
442
|
|
---
|
||||||||||||
Drill
Pipe, Drilling Rigs and
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
Equipment Purchases (4)
|
24,318
|
24,318
|
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
||||||||||||
Total
Contractual
|
||||||||||||||||||
Obligations
|
$
|
168,803
|
$
|
32,443
|
$
|
135,918
|
$
|
442
|
$
|
---
|
24
(1)
|
See
the previous discussion in Management Discussion and Analysis
regarding
bank debt. This obligation is presented in accordance with
the terms of
the credit agreement and includes interest calculated at
the June 30, 2006
interest rate of 5.6% including the effect of the interest
rate swap
related to $50.0 million of the outstanding
debt.
|
(2)
|
In
the second quarter of 2001, we recorded $1.3 million in additional
employee benefit expense for the present value of a separation
agreement
made in connection with the retirement of King Kirchner from
his position
as Chief Executive Officer. The liability associated with
this expense,
including accrued interest, will be paid in monthly payments
of $25,000
starting in July 2003 and continuing through June 2009. In
the first
quarter of 2004, we acquired a liability for the present
value of a
separation agreement between PetroCorp Incorporated and one
of its
previous officers. The liability associated with this agreement
will be
paid in quarterly payments of $12,500 through December 31,
2007. In the
first quarter of 2005, we recorded $0.7 million in additional
employee
benefit expense for the present value of a separation agreement
made in
connection with the retirement of John Nikkel from his position
as Chief
Executive Officer. The liability associated with this expense,
including
accrued interest, will be paid in monthly payments of $31,250
starting in
November 2006 and continuing through October 2008. These
liabilities as
presented above are undiscounted.
|
(3)
|
We
lease office space in Tulsa and Woodward, Oklahoma; Houston,
Midland, and
Weatherford, Texas; Pinedale, Wyoming and Denver, Colorado
under the terms
of operating leases expiring through January 31, 2010. Additionally,
we
have several equipment leases and lease space on short-term
commitments to
stack excess rig equipment and production inventory.
|
(4)
|
Due
to the potential for limited availability of new drill pipe
within the
industry, we have committed to purchase approximately $14.4
million of
drill pipe and drill collars and we have also committed to
purchase $4.9
million of additional rig components. In April 2006, we committed
$6.2
million for the purchase of major components to construct
two drilling
rigs with $1.2 million or 20% paid at the time of commitment.
An
additional 30% will be paid at the anticipated inspection
date in August
with the remainder due at delivery late in the third quarter.
The first of
these new drilling rigs should be placed into service in
the first part on
November 2006 and the second drilling rig is expected to
be placed into
service in the first part of December 2006.
|
On
December 8, 2003, the company acquired SerDrilco Incorporated and its
subsidiary, Service Drilling Southwest, L.L.C., for $35.0 million in
cash. The
terms of the acquisition include an earn-out provision allowing the
sellers to
receive one-half of the cash flow in excess of $10.0 million for each
of the
three years following the acquisition. For the year ending December
31, 2006,
the third year of the earn-out period, the drilling rigs included in
the
earn-out provision had cash flow during the first six months of $22.4
million.
25
At
June 30, 2006, we also had the following commitments and contingencies
that
could create, increase or accelerate
our liabilities:
Amount
of Commitment Expiration
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Per
Period
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Total
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Amount
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Committed
|
Less
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Other
|
Or
|
Than
1
|
2-3
|
4-5
|
After
5
|
|||||||||||||||
Commitments
|
Accrued
|
Year
|
Years
|
Years
|
Years
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
thousands)
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Deferred
Compensation
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Agreement (1)
|
$
|
2,676
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
||||||||||||||
Separation
Benefit
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Agreement (2)
|
$
|
2,909
|
$
|
386
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
|||||||||||||
Plugging
Liability (3)
|
$
|
31,461
|
$
|
607
|
$
|
2,225
|
$
|
2,029
|
$
|
26,600
|
||||||||||
Gas
Balancing
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Liability (4)
|
$
|
1,080
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
||||||||||||||
Repurchase
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Obligations (5)
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
|||||||||||||||
Workers’
Compensation
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Liability (6)
|
$
|
20,833
|
$
|
5,435
|
$
|
3,958
|
$
|
1,353
|
$
|
10,087
|
(1)
|
We
provide a salary deferral plan which allows participants
to defer the
recognition of salary for income tax purposes until actual
distribution of
benefits, which occurs at either termination of employment,
death or
certain defined unforeseeable emergency hardships. We recognize
payroll
expense and record a liability, included in other long-term
liabilities in
our consolidated condensed balance sheet, at the time of
deferral.
|
(2)
|
Effective
January 1, 1997, we adopted a separation benefit plan (“Separation Plan”).
The Separation Plan allows eligible employees whose employment
with us is
involuntarily terminated or, in the case of an employee who
has completed
20 years of service, voluntarily or involuntarily terminated,
to receive
benefits equivalent to 4 weeks salary for every whole year
of service
completed with the company up to a maximum of 104 weeks.
To receive
payments the recipient must waive any claims against us in
exchange for
receiving the separation benefits. On October 28, 1997, we
adopted a
Separation Benefit Plan for Senior Management (“Senior Plan”). The Senior
Plan provides certain officers and key executives of the
company with
benefits generally equivalent to the Separation Plan. The
Compensation
Committee of the Board of Directors has absolute discretion
in the
selection of the individuals covered in this plan. On May
5, 2004 we also
adopted the Special Separation Benefit Plan (“Special Plan”). This plan is
identical to the Separation Benefit Plan with the exception
that the
benefits under the plan vest on the earliest of a participant’s reaching
the age of 65 or serving 20 years with the company. In January
2006, the
compensation committee elected to allow 33 employees to participate
in the
plan.
|
(3)
|
On
January 1, 2003 we adopted Financial Accounting Standards
No. 143,
“Accounting for Asset Retirement Obligations” (FAS
143). FAS 143 establishes an accounting standard requiring the
recording of the fair value of liabilities associated with
the retirement
of long-lived assets (mainly plugging and abandonment costs
for our
depleted wells) in the period in which the liability is
incurred (at the
time the wells are drilled or
acquired).
|
(4) | We have recorded a liability for certain properties where we believe there are insufficient oil and natural gas reserves available to allow the under-produced owners to recover their under-production from future production volumes. |
(5)
|
We
formed The Unit 1984 Oil and Gas Limited Partnership and
the 1986 Energy
Income Limited Partnership along with private limited partnerships
(the
“Partnerships”) with certain qualified employees, officers and directors
from 1984 through 2006, with a subsidiary of ours serving
as general
|
26
partner. The Partnerships were formed for the purpose of conducting oil and natural gas acquisition, drilling and development operations and serving as co-general partner with us in any additional limited partnerships formed during that year. The Partnerships participated on a proportionate basis with us in most drilling operations and most producing property acquisitions commenced by us for our own account during the period from the formation of the Partnership through December 31 of that year. These partnership agreements require, on the election of a limited partner, that we repurchase the limited partner’s interest at amounts to be determined by appraisal in the future. Such repurchases in any one year are limited to 20% of the units outstanding. We made repurchases of $7,000, $4,000 and $14,000 in 2006, 2005 and 2004, respectively. |
(6)
|
We
have recorded a liability for future estimated payments related
to
workers’ compensation claims primarily associated with our contract
drilling segment.
|
Hedging.
Periodically
we hedge the prices we will receive for a portion of our future natural
gas and
oil production. We do so in an attempt to reduce the impact and uncertainty
that
price variations have on our cash flow.
In
January 2005, we entered into the following two natural gas collar
contracts:
First
Contract:
|
||||
Production
volume covered
|
10,000
MMBtus/day
|
|||
Period
covered
|
April
through October of 2005
|
|||
Prices
|
Floor
of $5.50 and a ceiling of $7.19
|
|||
Second
Contract:
|
||||
Production
volume covered
|
10,000
MMBtus/day
|
|||
Period
covered
|
April
through October of 2005
|
|||
Prices
|
Floor
of $5.50 and a ceiling of $7.30
|
In
March
2005, we also entered into an oil collar contract:
Oil
Collar Contract:
|
||||
Production
volume covered
|
1,000
Barrels/day
|
|||
Period
covered
|
April
through December of 2005
|
|||
Prices
|
Floor
of $45.00 and a ceiling of $69.25
|
All of these hedges are cash flow hedges and there is no material amount of ineffectiveness. The fair value of the collar contracts was recognized on the June 30, 2005 balance sheet as a derivative liability of $0.5 million and at a loss of $0.3 million, net of tax, in accumulated other comprehensive income.
We
did
not have any oil and natural gas hedges outstanding at June 30,
2006.
In
February 2005, we entered into an interest rate swap to help manage
our exposure
to possible future interest rate increases. The contract swaps $50.0
million of
variable rate debt to fixed and covers the period from March 1, 2005
through
January 30, 2008. This period coincides with the remaining length of
our current
credit facility. The fixed rate is based on three-month LIBOR and is
at 3.99%.
The swap is a cash flow hedge. As a result of this interest rate swap,
our
interest expense was decreased by $0.1 million in the second quarter
of 2006 and
$0.2 million for the six months ended June 30, 2006. In the second
quarter and
first six months of 2005, our interest expense was increased by $0.1
million and
$0.2 million, respectively, as a result of the interest rate swap.
The fair
value of the swap was recognized on the June 30, 2006 balance sheet
as current
and non-current derivative assets totaling $1.2 million and a gain
of $0.7
million, net of tax, in accumulated other comprehensive income.
Self-Insurance
or Retentions.
We
are
self-insured for certain losses relating to workers’ compensation, general
liability, property damage, control of well and employee medical benefits.
In
addition, our insurance policies contain deductibles or retentions
per
occurrence that range from $0.5 million for Oklahoma workers' compensation
to
$1.0 million for general liability and drilling rig physical damage.
We have
purchased stop-loss coverage in order to limit, to the extent feasible,
our per
occurrence and aggregate exposure to certain types of claims. However,
there is
no assurance
27
Impact of Prices for Our Oil and Natural Gas.
Natural
gas comprises 85% of our total oil and natural gas reserves. Any significant
change in natural gas prices has a material effect on our revenues,
cash flow
and the value of our oil and natural gas reserves. Generally, prices
and demand
for domestic natural gas are influenced by weather conditions, supply
imbalances
and by world wide oil price levels. Domestic oil prices are primarily
influenced
by world oil market developments. All of these factors are beyond our
control
and we can not predict nor measure their future influence on the prices
we will
receive.
Based
on
our first six months 2006 production, a $.10 per Mcf change in what
we are paid
for our natural gas production would result in a corresponding $333,000
per
month ($4.0 million annualized) change in our pre-tax operating cash
flow. Our
six month 2006 average natural gas price was $6.41 compared to an average
natural gas price of $5.98 for the first six months of 2005. A $1.00
per barrel
change in our oil price would have a $107,000 per month ($1.3 million
annualized) change in our pre-tax operating cash flow based on our
production in
the first six months of 2006. Our first six month 2006 average oil
price was
$55.88 compared with an average oil price of $45.15 received in the
first six
months of 2005.
Because
oil and natural gas prices have such a significant affect on the value
of our
oil and natural gas reserves, declines in these prices can result in
a decline
in the carrying value of our oil and natural gas properties. Price
declines can
also adversely effect the semi-annual determination of the amount available
for
us to borrow under our bank credit agreement since that determination
is based
mainly on the value of our oil and natural gas reserves. Such a reduction
could
limit our ability to carry out our planned capital projects.
Most
of
our natural gas production is sold to third parties under month-to-month
contracts. Presently we believe that our buyers will be able to perform
their
commitments to us.
Oil and Natural Gas Acquisitions and Capital Expenditures.
Most
of
our capital expenditures are discretionary and directed toward future
growth.
Our decision to increase our oil and natural gas reserves through acquisitions
or through drilling depends on the prevailing or expected market conditions,
potential return on investment, future drilling potential and opportunities
to
obtain financing under the circumstances involved, all of which provide
us with
a large degree of flexibility in deciding when and if to incur these
costs. We
drilled 103 wells (38.65 net wells) in the first six months of 2006
compared to
83 wells (28.61 net wells) in the first six months of 2005. Our total
capital
expenditures for oil and natural gas exploration and acquisitions in
the first
six months of 2006 totaled $135.5 million. Based on current prices,
we plan to
drill an estimated 235 wells in 2006 and estimate our total capital
expenditures
for oil and natural gas exploration and acquisitions to be approximately
$240.0
million excluding the $32.4 million paid in the acquisition of certain
oil and
natural gas properties from a group of private entities in the second
quarter of
2006. Whether we are able to drill the full number of wells we are
planning on
drilling is dependent on a number of factors, many of which are beyond
our
control and include the availability of drilling rigs, the cost to
drill wells,
the weather and the efforts of outside industry partners.
On June 15, 2005, we completed the acquisition of certain oil and natural
gas
properties from a private company for an adjusted purchase price of
$23.1
million in cash. The acquisition consisted of approximately 14.0 Bcfe
of proved
oil and natural gas reserves and several probable locations. The properties
are
located in Oklahoma and produced 2.5 MMcfe per day at the time of acquisition.
The effective date of this acquisition was April 1, 2005. The results
of
operations for these acquired properties are included in the statement
of income
beginning June 1, 2005 with the results for the period from April 1,
2005
through May 31, 2005 included as part of the adjusted purchase
price.
On November 16, 2005, we completed the acquisition of certain oil and
natural
gas properties from a group of private entities for approximately $82.0
million
in cash. The acquisition consisted of approximately 42.5 Bcfe of proved
oil and
natural gas reserves. The properties are located in Oklahoma, Arkansas
and Texas
and at the time of the acquisition produced 6.5 MMcfe per day. The
effective
date of this acquisition was July 1, 2005. The results of operations
for the
acquired properties are included in the statement of income beginning
November
1, 2005, with the results for the period from July 1, 2005 through
October 31,
2005 included as part of the adjusted purchase price.
28
Contract Drilling.
Our
drilling work is subject to many factors that influence the number
of drilling
rigs we have working as well as the costs and revenues associated with
that
work. These factors include the demand for drilling rigs, competition
from other
drilling contractors, the prevailing prices for natural gas and oil,
availability and cost of labor to run our rigs and our ability to supply
the
equipment needed.
Because
of the current high demand for drilling rigs we are experiencing some
difficulty
in hiring and retaining all of the rig crews we need. In response to
our labor
difficulties, we implemented longevity pay incentives in 2004 and increased
wages in some of our drilling areas that had not already received pay
increases
in 2004, at the end of the second quarter of 2005. We also increased
wages in
one of our divisions starting in the second quarter of 2006 and again,
at the
end of the second quarter for all but two of our divisions. To date,
these
efforts have allowed us to meet our labor requirements. However, if
current
demand for drilling rigs continues, shortages of experienced personnel
may limit
our ability to operate our drilling rigs at or above the 98% utilization
rate we
achieved in the first six months of 2006.
We
currently do not have any shortages of drill pipe and drilling equipment.
Because of the potential for shortages in the availability of new drill
pipe, at
June 30, 2006 we have commitments to purchase approximately $14.4 million
of
drill pipe and drill collars in 2006 and we have also committed to
purchase $4.9
million of additional rig components. We are also constructing another
drilling
rig which should be place in service in the third quarter of 2006.
In
April
2006, we committed to purchase major components to construct two drilling
rigs
for a total of $6.2 million. The first rig should be placed into service
in the
first part of November 2006 and the second rig should be placed into
service in
the first part of December 2006. We paid $1.2 million or 20% at the
time of the
commitment and have agreed to pay an additional 30% at the anticipated
inspection date in August with the remainder payable at delivery late
in the
third quarter.
Most
of
our contract drilling fleet is targeted to the drilling of natural
gas wells so
changes in natural gas prices have a disproportionate influence on
the demand
for our drilling rigs as well as the prices we can charge for our contract
drilling services. In June 2006, our average dayrate for the 115 drilling
rigs
that we owned was $18,904 with a 98% utilization rate. In the first
six months
of 2006 our average dayrate was $17,870 per day compared to $10,782
in the first
six months of 2005. The average number of drilling rigs used was 109.5
(98%) in
the first six months of 2006 compared to 99.8 (98%) in the first six
months of
2005. Based on the average utilization of our drilling rigs during
the first six
months of 2006, a $100 per day change in dayrates has a $10,950 per
day ($4.0
million annualized) change in our pre-tax operating cash flow. We expect
that
utilization and dayrates for our drilling rigs will continue to depend
mainly on
the price of natural gas and the availability of drilling rigs to meet
the
demands of the industry.
In
January 2006, one of our drilling rigs was destroyed by a fire. Drilling
rig No.
31, a 600 horsepower drilling rig, one of our smaller drilling rigs,
experienced
a blow out during initial drilling operations at an approximate depth
of 800
feet. No personnel were injured although the drilling rig was a total
loss.
Insurance proceeds for the loss exceeded our net book value and provided
a gain
of approximately $1.0 million which is recorded in other revenues.
The proceeds
however will not cover the replacement cost of a new rig to replace
the one
destroyed.
Our
contract drilling subsidiaries provide drilling services for our exploration
and
production subsidiary. The contracts for these services are issued
under the
same conditions and rates as the contracts we have entered into with
unrelated
third parties for comparable type projects. During the first six months
of 2006
and 2005, we drilled 29 and 24 wells, respectively for our exploration
and
production subsidiary. The profit received by our contract drilling
segment of
$8.6 million and $2.4 million during the first six months of 2006 and
2005,
respectively, reduced the carrying value of our oil and natural gas
properties
rather than being included in our profits in current operations.
29
Drilling Acquisitions and Capital Expenditures.
On
January 5, 2005, we acquired a subsidiary of Strata Drilling, L.L.C.
for $10.5
million in cash. In this acquisition, we acquired two drilling rigs
as well as
spare parts, inventory, drill pipe, and other major rig components.
The two
drilling rigs are 1,500 horsepower, diesel electric rigs with the
capacity to
drill 12,000 to 20,000 feet. After refurbishments costing $1.0 million
and $5.2
million, respectively, the first drilling rig was placed in service
in January
2005 and the second drilling rig was placed in service in August
of 2005. Both
of these rigs are in our Rocky Mountain Division. The results of
operations for
this acquired company are included in the statement of income for
the period
after January 5, 2005.
On
August
31, 2005, we completed our acquisition of all the Texas drilling
operations of
Texas Wyoming Drilling, Inc., a Texas-based privately-owned company,
with the
exception of one rig which the company subsequently obtained on October
13,
2005. The purchase price for this acquisition was $31.6 million.
Of that amount,
$13.3 million was paid in cash and $12 million issued in stock, representing
246,053 shares, on August 31, 2005. The remaining $6.3 million was
paid in cash
on October 13, 2005. Six of the seven rigs are active in the Barnett
Shale area
of North Texas. Six of the seven drilling rigs are mechanical, with
one being a
diesel electric rig. They range from 400 to 1,700 horsepower. The
results of
operations for the first six drilling rigs are included in the statement
of
income for the period after August 31, 2005 and the results of operations
for
the seventh rig acquired is included in the statement of income for
the period
after October 12, 2005.
In
January 2005, we completed the construction of a 1,500 horsepower
diesel
electric drilling rig which began operating in the Anadarko Basin.
The drilling
rig was constructed for approximately $2.5 million with the majority
of the
expenditures occurring in 2004. In May 2005, we completed the construction
of a
1,500 horsepower diesel electric drilling rig which began operating
in the Rocky
Mountain Division. This drilling rig was constructed for $8.0 million
with $1.8
million of the parts acquired in the Strata acquisition. In December
2005, we
completed the construction of a 1,000 horsepower diesel electric
drilling rig
which began operating in the Anadarko Basin. The drilling rig was
constructed
for approximately $3.2 million.
In
January 2006, we acquired a 1,000 horsepower drilling rig for approximately
$3.9
million. This newly acquired drilling rig has been modified at one
of our
drilling yards for an additional $1.7 million and became operational
in April
2006. In May we began moving a rig to our Rocky Mountain Division
which we
completed construction of during the first quarter of 2006. In the
second
quarter of 2006, we also completed the purchase of two new drilling
rigs for
$15.2 million with $4.6 million paid prior to second quarter of 2006
and the
remaining $10.6 million paid at delivery. The first drilling rig
was placed into
service in May 2006 and the second drilling rig was placed into service
in June
2006. The addition of this rig brings our rig fleet to 115 at the
end of June
2006.
We
began
constructing another drilling rig which should be placed in service
in the third
quarter and another rig will be constructed to be placed in service
in the
fourth quarter of 2006. In April 2006, we committed to purchase major
components
to construct two drilling rigs for $6.2 million. We paid $1.2 million
or 20% at
the time of the commitment and have agreed to pay an additional 30%
at the
anticipated inspection date in August with the remainder payable
at delivery
late in the third quarter. The first of these two rigs should be
placed in
service in the first part of November 2006 and the second should
be placed in
service in the first part of December 2006.
For
our
contract drilling operations, during the first six months of 2006,
we incurred
$87.9 million in capital expenditures. For the year 2006, we have
budgeted
capital expenditures of approximately $199.0 million which includes
plans to add
the eight rigs previously discussed. We have plans to build two additional
rigs,
but due to delays with the manufacturer these rigs will not be available
for
service until the first quarter of 2007.
Acquisition
of Natural Gas Gathering and Processing Company. Our
natural gas gathering and processing operations are conducted through
Superior
Pipeline Company, L.L.C. Superior is a mid-stream company engaged
primarily in
the buying, selling, gathering, processing and treating of natural
gas and it
operates two natural gas treatment plants, owns five processing plants,
37
active gathering systems and 575 miles of pipeline. Superior operates
in
Oklahoma, Texas, Louisiana and Kansas and has been in business since
1996. This
subsidiary enhances our ability to gather and market our natural
gas and third
party natural gas and gives us additional capacity to construct or
acquire
existing natural gas gathering and processing facilities. During
the first six
months of 2006, Superior purchased $4.5 million of our natural gas
production
and natural gas liquids and provided gathering and transportation
services of
$2.6 million. Intercompany revenue from services and purchases of
production
between this business segments and our oil and natural gas operations
has been
eliminated in our consolidated condensed financial statements.
30
During
the first six months of 2006 we incurred $10.0 million in capital expenditures
for our natural gas gathering and processing segment as compared to
$11.8
million in the first six months of 2005. For all of 2006, we have budgeted
capital expenditures of approximately $29.0 million. Our focus is on
growing
this segment through the construction of new facilities or acquisitions.
Superior gathered 229,448 MMBtu per day in the first six months of
2006 compared
to 114,472 MMBtu per day in the first six months of 2005 and processed
23,212
MMBtu per day in the first six months of 2006 compared to 31,005 MMBtu per day
in the first six months of 2005. The significant increase in volumes
gathered
per day is primarily attributable to one natural gas gathering system
that
gathered 136,732 MMBtu and 43,894 MMBtu per day during the first six
months of
2006 and 2005, respectively. One of our largest gathering systems changed
pipeline outlets between the comparative periods and the new outlet
is accepting
the delivered natural gas unprocessed causing a reduction in processed
natural
gas between the quarters.
Oil and Natural Gas Limited Partnerships and Other Entity
Relationships.
We
are
the general partner for 11 oil and natural gas limited partnerships
which were
formed privately and publicly. Each partnership’s revenues and costs are shared
under formulas prescribed in its limited partnership agreement. The
partnerships
repay us for contract drilling, well supervision and general and administrative
expense. Related party transactions for contract drilling and well
supervision
fees are the related party’s share of such costs. These costs are billed on the
same basis as billings to unrelated third parties for similar services.
General
and administrative reimbursements consist of direct general and administrative
expense incurred on the related party’s behalf as well as indirect expenses
assigned to the related parties. Allocations are based on the related
party’s
level of activity and are considered by management to be reasonable.
During
2005, the total paid to us for all of these fees was $1.0 million and
we expect
the amount to approximately be the same in 2006. Our proportionate
share of
assets, liabilities and net income relating to the oil and natural
gas
partnerships is included in our consolidated condensed financial
statements.
NEW ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS
Before
January 1, 2006, we accounted for our stock-based compensation plans
under the
recognition and measurement principles of APB 25, “Accounting for Stock Issued
to Employees,” and related Interpretations. Under APB 25, no stock-based
employee compensation cost related to stock options was reflected in
net income,
since all options granted under the plans had an exercise price equal
to the
market value of the underlying common stock on the date of grant.
On
January 1, 2006, we adopted Statement of Financial Accounting Standards
No. 123
(revised 2004), Share-Based
Payment,
(FAS
123(R)) to account for stock-based employee compensation. Among other
items, FAS
123(R) eliminates the use of APB Opinion No. 25 and the intrinsic value
method
of accounting for equity compensation and requires companies to recognize
the
cost of employee services received in exchange for awards of equity
instruments
based on the grant date fair value of those awards in their financial
statements. We elected to use the modified prospective method for adoption,
which requires compensation expense to be recorded for all unvested
stock
options and other equity-based compensation beginning in the first
quarter of
adoption. For all unvested options outstanding as of January 1, 2006,
the
previously measured but unrecognized compensation expense, based on
the fair
value at the original grant date, will be recognized in our financial
statements
over the remaining vesting period. For equity-based compensation awards
granted
or modified after December 31, 2005, compensation expense, based on
the fair
value on the date of grant or modification, will be recognized in our
financial
statements over the vesting period. To the extent compensation cost
relates to
employees directly involved in oil and natural gas acquisition, exploration
and
development activities, such amounts are capitalized to oil and natural
gas
properties. Amounts not capitalized to oil and natural gas properties
are
recognized in general and administrative expense and operating costs
of our
business segments. We utilize the Black-Scholes option pricing model
to measure
the fair value of stock options. Prior to the adoption of SFAS 123(R),
we
followed the intrinsic value method in accordance with APB 25 to account
for
employee stock-based compensation. Prior period financial statements
have not
been restated. As a result of the implementation of FAS 123(R) we expensed
$0.4
million in the contract drilling segment, $0.3 million in the oil and
natural
gas segment and $0.6 million to corporate general and administrative
expense,
for a total of $1.3 million, in the first six months of 2006
and
capitalized as part of geological and geophysical cost of $0.4
million.
31
Any
unearned compensation recorded under APB 25 related to stock-based
compensation
awards is required to be eliminated against the appropriate equity
accounts. As
a result, upon adoption of FAS 123(R) we eliminated $2.2 million of
unearned
compensation cost and reduced additional paid-in capital by the same
amount on
our condensed consolidated balance sheet.
The
remaining unrecognized compensation cost related to unvested awards
at June 30,
2006 is approximately $3.7 million with $0.9 million of that amount
to be
capitalized. The weighted average period of time over which this cost
will be
recognized is 0.8 years. If we had applied the fair value provisions
of FAS
123(R) to stock-based employee compensation for the six month period
ended June
30, 2005, net income and earnings per share would have been reduced
by
approximately $1.0 million and $0.02 respectively and for the three
month period
ended June 30, 2005 by approximately $0.5 million and $0.01,
respectively.
Under
the
provision of FAS 123(R), tax deductions associated with our stock based
compensation plans in excess of the compensation cost recognized are
recorded as
an increase to additional paid in capital and reflected as a financing
cash flow
in the statement of cash flows. In the first six months of 2006, almost
all
options exercised were incentive stock options for which no tax deduction
was
immediately available. Accordingly, the adoption of FAS 123(R) did
not have a
material impact on our consolidated statements of cash flows for the
six month
period ended June 30, 2006.
In
September 2005, the Emerging Issues Task Force issued Issue No. 04-13
(EITF
04-13), "Accounting for Purchases and Sales of Inventory with the Same
Counterparty." The EITF concluded that inventory purchases and sales
transactions with the same counterparty should be combined for accounting
purposes if they were entered into in contemplation of each other.
The EITF
provided indicators to be considered for purposes of determining whether
such
transactions are entered into in contemplation of each other. Guidance
was also
provided on the circumstances under which nonmonetary exchanges of
inventory
within the same line of business should be recognized at fair value.
EITF 04-13
was effective in reporting periods beginning after March 15, 2006.
We have not
entered into the type of transactions covered under EITF 04-13, so
we do not
expect EITF 04-13 to have a material impact on our results of operations,
financial condition or cash flows.
In
June
2005, the FASB issued Financial Accounting Standards No. 154, “Accounting
Changes and Error Corrections,” which establishes new standards on accounting
for changes in accounting principles. Under this new rule, all such
changes must
be accounted for by retrospective application to the financial statements
of
prior periods unless it is impracticable to do so. FAS 154 completely
replaces
APB 20 and FAS 3, though it carries forward the guidance in those pronouncements
with respect to accounting for changes in estimates, changes in the
reporting
entity, and
the
correction of errors. FAS 154 is effective for accounting changes and
error
corrections made in fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2005,
with early
adoption permitted for changes and corrections made in years beginning
after May
2005. The application of FAS 154 does not affect the transition provisions
of
any existing pronouncements, including those that are in the transition
phase as
of the effective date of FAS 154. Implementation of this statement
did not have
a material impact on our results of operations, financial condition
or cash
flows.
In
June
2005, the Emerging Issues Task Force issued EITF Issue No. 04-05,
Determining Whether a General Partner, or the General Partners as a
Group,
Controls a Limited Partnership or Similar Entity When the Limited Partners
Have
Certain Rights (“EITF 04-05”). EITF 04-05 provides guidance in determining
whether a general partner controls a limited partnership by determining
the
limited partners’ substantive ability to dissolve (liquidate) the limited
partnership as well as assessing the substantive participating rights
of the
limited partners within the limited partnership. EITF 04-05 states
that if the
limited partners do not have substantive ability to dissolve (liquidate)
or have
substantive participating rights, then the general partner is presumed
to
control that partnership and would be required to consolidate the limited
partnership. This EITF is effective in fiscal periods beginning after
December 15, 2005. Implementation of this statement did not have a material
impact on our results of operations, financial condition or cash
flows.
In
June
2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB“) issued FASB
Interpretation No. 48, Accounting
for Uncertainty in Income Taxes, an Interpretation of FASB Statement
No. 109
(FIN 48).
FIN 48
clarifies the accounting for uncertainty in income taxes recognized
in an
enterprise’s financial statements in accordance with SFAS No. 109, Accounting
for Income Taxes.
FIN 48
prescribes a recognition threshold and measurement attribute for the
financial
statement recognition and measurement of a tax position taken or expected
to be
taken in a tax return. The
32
interpretation
also provides guidance on derecognition, classification, interest
and penalties,
accounting in interim periods, disclosure, and transition. FIN 48
is effective
for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2006. We are currently
reviewing
the effects of this interpretation and we do not expect the implementation
of
this statement to have a material impact on our results of operations,
financial
condition or cash flows.
In
June
2006, the FASB ratified the consensuses reached by the Emerging Issues
Task
Force on EITF 06-3, How
Taxes Collected from Customers and Remitted to Governmental Authorities
Should
Be Presented in the Income Statement (That is, Gross versus Net
Presentation).
According to the provisions of EITF 06-3:
·
taxes assessed by a governmental authority that are directly imposed
on a
revenue-producing transaction between a seller and a customer may include,
but
are not limited to, sales, use, value added, and some excise taxes;
and
·
that the presentation of such taxes on either a gross (included in
revenues and
costs) or a net (excluded from revenues) basis is an accounting policy
decision
that should be disclosed pursuant to Accounting Principles Board Opinion
No. 22
(as amended), Disclosure
of Accounting Policies.
In
addition, for any such taxes that are reported on a gross basis, a
company
should disclose the amounts of those taxes in interim and annual financial
statements for each period for which an income statement is presented
if those
amounts are significant. The disclosure of those taxes can be made
on an
aggregate basis.
EITF
06-3
should be applied to financial reports for interim and annual reporting
periods
beginning after December 15, 2006. Because the provisions of EITF 06-3
require
only the presentation of additional disclosures, we do not expect the
adoption
of EITF 06-3 to have an effect on our results of operations, financial
condition
or cash flows.
33
RESULTS
OF OPERATIONS
Quarter
Ended June 30, 2006 versus Quarter Ended June 30, 2005
Provided
below is a comparison of selected operating and financial data for
the second
quarter of 2006 versus the second quarter of 2005:
Quarter
Ended
|
Quarter
Ended
|
||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
Percent
|
|||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
Change
|
|||||||||
Total
Revenue
|
$
|
280,349,000
|
$
|
189,867,000
|
48
|
%
|
|||||
Net
Income
|
$
|
74,817,000
|
$
|
39,614,000
|
89
|
%
|
|||||
Drilling:
|
|
||||||||||
Revenue
|
$
|
175,908,000
|
$
|
105,825,000
|
66
|
%
|
|||||
Operating costs
|
$
|
79,117,000
|
$
|
64,298,000
|
23
|
%
|
|||||
Percentage of revenue from
|
|||||||||||
daywork contracts
|
100
|
%
|
100
|
%
|
---
|
||||||
Average number of rigs in use
|
110.3
|
100.3
|
10
|
%
|
|||||||
Average dayrate on daywork
|
|||||||||||
contracts
|
$
|
18,588
|
$
|
11,298
|
65
|
%
|
|||||
Depreciation
|
$
|
12,845,000
|
$
|
10,381,000
|
24
|
%
|
|||||
Oil
and Natural Gas:
|
|
||||||||||
Revenue
|
$
|
81,954,000
|
$
|
61,976,000
|
|
32
|
%
|
||||
Operating costs
|
$
|
18,988,000
|
$
|
12,590,000
|
51
|
%
|
|||||
Average natural gas price (Mcf)
|
$
|
5.76
|
$
|
6.27
|
(8
|
)%
|
|||||
Average oil price (Bbl)
|
$
|
57.11
|
$
|
45.79
|
25
|
%
|
|||||
Natural gas production (Mcf)
|
10,438,000
|
7,861,000
|
33
|
%
|
|||||||
Oil production (Bbl)
|
359,000
|
257,000
|
40
|
%
|
|||||||
Depreciation, depletion and
|
|||||||||||
amortization rate (Mcfe)
|
$
|
1.98
|
$
|
1.57
|
26
|
%
|
|||||
Depreciation, depletion and
|
|||||||||||
amortization
|
$
|
25,041,000
|
$
|
14,845,000
|
69
|
%
|
|||||
Gas
Gathering and Processing:
|
|||||||||||
Revenue
|
$
|
21,720,000
|
$
|
21,104,000
|
3
|
%
|
|||||
Operating costs
|
$
|
18,717,000
|
$
|
19,387,000
|
(3
|
)%
|
|||||
Depreciation
|
$
|
1,232,000
|
$
|
727,000
|
69
|
%
|
|||||
Gas gathered - MMbtu/day
|
243,399
|
121,611
|
100
|
%
|
|||||||
Gas processed - MMbtu/day
|
22,812
|
31,670
|
(28
|
)%
|
|||||||
General
and Administrative Expense
|
$
|
4,402,000
|
$
|
3,160,000
|
39
|
%
|
|||||
Interest
Expense
|
$
|
1,017,000
|
$
|
585,000
|
74
|
%
|
|||||
Income
Tax Expense
|
$
|
44,173,000
|
$
|
24,280,000
|
82
|
%
|
|||||
Average
Interest Rate
|
5.78
|
%
|
4.64
|
%
|
25
|
%
|
|||||
Average
Long-Term Debt Outstanding
|
$
|
118,220,000
|
$
|
84,267,000
|
40
|
%
|
Industry demand for our drilling rigs increased throughout 2005 and remained strong in the first six months of 2006. Drilling revenues increased $70.1 million or 66% in the second quarter of 2006 versus the second quarter of 2005. Since the first quarter of 2005, we have placed 14 additional drilling rigs into service. Six of the drilling rigs were newly constructed drilling rigs, one was a refurbished rig acquired in the first quarter on 2005 and seven were drilling rigs acquired in the acquisition of Texas Wyoming Drilling, Inc. We lost one of our older drilling rigs to a blow out and subsequent fire early in the first quarter of 2006. The net 13 additional drilling rigs increased our second quarter 2006
34
drilling
revenues by approximately 16%. The increase in revenue from these
additional
drilling rigs and the increase in utilization of our previously owned
drilling
rigs represented 15% of the total increase in revenues. Increases
in dayrates
and mobilization fees accounted for 85% of the increase in total
drilling
revenues. Our average dayrate in the second quarter of 2006 was 65%
higher than
in the second quarter of 2005. Demand for our drilling rigs is anticipated
to be
strong throughout 2006 and into 2007, but we do not expect the dramatic
increases in daywork revenue per day as was experienced throughout
2005 and into
the second quarter of 2006. Opportunities to increase rig revenues
through
economical acquisition of existing drilling rigs is expected to be
limited in
2006, due to the high demand for drilling rigs and the resulting
sales prices
being at very high levels.
Drilling
operating costs increased $14.8 million or 23% between the comparative
quarters.
The increase in operating costs from the net 13 additional drilling
rigs placed
in service since the first quarter of 2005 and increased utilization
of our
previously owned drilling rigs represented 43% of the total increase
in
operating cost. Increases in operating cost per day accounted for
57% of the
increase in total operating costs. Operating cost per day increased
$835 in the
second quarter of 2006 when compared with the second quarter of 2005.
The
majority of the increase was attributable to costs directly associated
with
increases in labor cost. We expect the demand for drilling rigs to
remain high
throughout 2006 and into 2007, resulting in continued increases in
our drilling
rig expenses. We did not drill any turnkey or footage wells in second
quarter of
2006 or 2005. Contract drilling depreciation increased $2.5 million
or 24%. The
addition of the net 13 drilling rigs placed in service since the
first quarter
of 2005 increased depreciation $1.2 million or 12% with the remainder
of the
increase attributable to the increase in utilization of previously
owned
drilling rigs.
Oil
and
natural gas revenues increased $20.0 million or 32% in the second
quarter of
2006 as compared to the second quarter of 2005. A 34% increased in
equivalent
production volumes, increases in average oil prices and a 40% increase
in
overhead fees charged to outside interest owners accounted for the
increase
which was partially offset by decreased natural gas prices. Average
oil prices
between the comparative quarters increased 25% to $57.11 per barrel
while
natural gas prices declined 8% to $5.76 per Mcf. In the second quarter
of 2006,
natural gas production increased by 33% while oil production increased
40%.
Increased natural gas production came primarily from our ongoing
development
drilling activity, from two acquisitions completed in 2005 and from
an
acquisition completed in the second quarter of 2006. With the continuation
of
our internal drilling program and our previous acquisitions, we believe
our
total production for 2006 compared to 2005 will increase 25% to 30%.
Actual
increases in revenues, however, will also be driven by commodity
prices received
for our production.
Oil
and natural gas operating costs increased $6.4 million or 51% in the
second
quarter of 2006 as compared to 2005. An increase in the average cost
per
equivalent Mcf produced represented 39% of the increase in production
costs with
the remaining 61% of the increase attributable to the increase in volumes
produced from both development drilling and producing property acquisitions.
Lease operating expenses represented 64% of the increase, gross production
taxes
20%, general and administrative cost directly related to oil and natural
gas
production 14% and increased accretion on plugging liability 2%. Lease
operating
expenses per Mcfe increased 24% between the comparative quarters. The
increase
is primarily due to increases in the cost of goods and services. Total
workover
expense between the comparative quarters increased 3%. Gross production
taxes
increased due to the increase in natural gas volumes produced between
the
comparative quarters. General and administrative expenses increased
as labor
costs increased primarily due to a 18% increase in the average number
of
employees working in the exploration and production area. Total depreciation,
depletion and amortization (“DD&A”) increased $10.2 million or 69%. Higher
production volumes accounted for 49% of the increase while increases
in our
DD&A rate represented 51% of the increase. The increase in our DD&A rate
in the second quarter of 2006 compared to the second quarter of 2005
resulted
primarily from a 14% increase in our finding cost in 2005 and continued
increases in our finding cost into the first six months of 2006. Demand
for
drilling rigs throughout our areas of exploration have increased the
dayrates we
pay to drill wells in our developmental program and the increase in
natural gas
and oil prices has caused increased sales prices for producing property
acquisitions. We do believe there continues to be economical opportunities
for
acquisitions.
Our
natural gas gathering and processing segment is engaged primarily in
the
mid-stream buying and selling, gathering, processing and treating of
natural
gas. We operate two natural gas treatment plants and own five processing
plants,
37 active gathering systems and 575 miles of pipeline. These operations
are
conducted in Oklahoma, Texas, Louisiana and Kansas. Intercompany revenue
from
services and purchases of production between our natural gas gathering
and
processing segment and our oil and natural gas segments has been eliminated.
Our
natural gas gathering and processing revenues and depreciation were
$0.6 million
and $0.5 million higher in the second quarter of 2006 versus 2005,
respectively.
Natural gas gathering and processing operating costs decreased $0.7
million. Gas
35
gathering
volumes per day were 100% higher in the second quarter of 2006 as
compared to
the second quarter of 2005 while gas processing volumes per day were
down 28% in
the second quarter of 2006 as compared to the second quarter of 2005.
The
significant increase in volumes gathered per day is primarily attributable
to
one natural gas gathering system that gathered 148,739 MMBtu and
50,780 MMBtu
per day during the second quarter of 2006 and 2005, respectively.
One of our
largest gathering systems changed pipeline outlets between the comparative
periods and the new outlet is accepting the delivered natural gas
unprocessed,
causing a reduction in processed natural gas between the quarters.
Our focus is
on growing this segment through the construction of new facilities
or
acquisitions. Continued growth in this segment enhances our ability
to gather
and market our natural gas and third party natural gas and gives
us additional
capacity to construct or acquire existing natural gas gathering and
processing
facilities.
General
and administrative expense increased $1.2 million in the second quarter
of 2006
compared to the second quarter of 2005. The increase in cost was
caused
primarily from increases in the number of employees and the additional
expense
incurred from the implementation of Financial Accounting Standards
(FAS) No.
123(R) “Share-Based Payment" which requires the recognition of expense related
to the value of stock options granted over their vesting period.
Total
interest expense increased 74% between the comparative quarters.
Average debt
outstanding was 40% higher in the second quarter of 2006 as compared
to the
second quarter of 2005 primarily due to the fourth quarter 2005 and
second
quarter 2006 acquisition of producing properties for $82.0 million
and $32.4
million in cash, respectively. Average debt outstanding accounted
for
approximately 54% of the interest expense increase, with the remaining
46%
resulting from an increase in average interest rates on our bank
debt. A
reduction in interest expense of $0.1 million from the settlement
of the
interest rate swap partially offset the increases. Associated with
our increased
level of development of oil and natural gas properties, the construction
of
additional drilling rigs and the construction of gas gathering systems,
we
capitalized $0.9 million of interest in the second quarter of 2006
compared with
$0.5 million in the second quarter of 2005.
Income
tax expense increased $19.9 million or 82% due primarily to the increase
in
income before income taxes. Our effective tax rate for the second
quarter of
2006 was 37.1% versus 38.0% in the second quarter of 2005. With our
increase in
income and the reduction of a majority of our net operating loss
carryforwards
in prior periods, the portion of our taxes reflected as current income
tax
expense has increased in the second quarter of 2006 when compared
with the
second quarter of 2005. Current income tax expense for the second
quarter of
2006 and 2005 was $33.1 million and $12.1 million, respectively.
Income taxes
paid in the second quarter of 2006 were $60.8 million. During the
second quarter
of 2006, the state of Texas enacted a new margin tax which will go
into effect
in 2007. Based upon the nature of this margin tax, it will be accounted
for as
income tax in our financial statements. The impact on our deferred
income tax
liabilities and our effective tax rate for 2006 was not
significant.
36
Six
Months Ended June 30, 2006 versus Six Months Ended June 30,
2005
Provided
below is a comparison of selected operating and financial data for
the first six
months of 2006 versus the first six months of 2005:
Six
Months Ended
|
Six
Months Ended
|
||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
Percent
|
|||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
Change
|
|||||||||
Total
Revenue
|
$
|
563,157,000
|
$
|
361,447,000
|
56
|
%
|
|||||
Net
Income
|
$
|
149,730,000
|
$
|
70,344,000
|
113
|
%
|
|||||
Drilling:
|
|||||||||||
Revenue
|
$
|
337,338,000
|
$
|
202,506,000
|
67
|
%
|
|||||
Operating costs
|
$
|
159,426,000
|
$
|
127,729,000
|
25
|
%
|
|||||
Percentage of revenue from
|
|||||||||||
daywork contracts
|
100
|
%
|
100
|
%
|
---
|
||||||
Average number of rigs in use
|
109.5
|
99.8
|
10
|
%
|
|||||||
Average dayrate on daywork
|
|||||||||||
contracts
|
$
|
17,870
|
$
|
10,782
|
66
|
%
|
|||||
Depreciation
|
$
|
24,686,000
|
$
|
19,991,000
|
23
|
%
|
|||||
Oil
and Natural Gas:
|
|||||||||||
Revenue
|
$
|
176,280,000
|
$
|
118,840,000
|
48
|
%
|
|||||
Operating costs
|
$
|
37,294,000
|
$
|
25,003,000
|
49
|
%
|
|||||
Average natural gas price (Mcf)
|
$
|
6.41
|
$
|
5.98
|
7
|
%
|
|||||
Average oil price (Bbl)
|
$
|
55.88
|
$
|
45.15
|
24
|
%
|
|||||
Natural gas production (Mcf)
|
21,150,000
|
15,514,000
|
36
|
%
|
|||||||
Oil production (Bbl)
|
685,000
|
537,000
|
28
|
%
|
|||||||
Depreciation, depletion and
|
|
||||||||||
amortization rate (Mcfe)
|
$
|
1.94
|
$
|
1.55
|
24
|
%
|
|||||
Depreciation, depletion and
|
|||||||||||
amortization
|
$
|
49,223,000
|
$
|
29,277,000
|
68
|
%
|
|||||
Gas
Gathering and Processing:
|
|||||||||||
Revenue
|
$
|
47,202,000
|
$
|
39,334,000
|
20
|
%
|
|||||
Operating costs
|
$
|
41,518,000
|
$
|
36,221,000
|
15
|
%
|
|||||
Depreciation
|
$
|
2,382,000
|
$
|
1,365,000
|
75
|
%
|
|||||
Gas gathered - MMbtu/day
|
229,448
|
114,472
|
100
|
%
|
|||||||
Gas processed - MMbtu/day
|
23,212
|
31,005
|
(25
|
)%
|
|||||||
General
and Administrative Expense
|
$
|
8,368,000
|
$
|
7,131,000
|
17
|
%
|
|||||
Interest
Expense
|
$
|
2,007,000
|
$
|
1,272,000
|
58
|
%
|
|||||
Income
Tax Expense
|
$
|
88,523,000
|
$
|
43,114,000
|
105
|
%
|
|||||
Average
Interest Rate
|
5.60
|
%
|
4.21
|
%
|
33
|
%
|
|||||
Average
Long-Term Debt Outstanding
|
$
|
115,922,000
|
$
|
90,537,000
|
28
|
%
|
Industry
demand for our drilling rigs increased throughout 2005 and remained
strong in
the first six
months of 2006. Drilling revenues increased $134.8 million or 67% in
the first
six months of 2006 versus the first six months of 2005. Since the first
quarter
of 2005, we have placed 14 additional drilling rigs into service. Six
of the
drilling rigs were newly constructed drilling rigs, one was a refurbished
rig
acquired in the first quarter on 2005 and seven were drilling rigs
acquired in
the acquisition of Texas Wyoming Drilling, Inc. We lost one of our
older
drilling rigs to a blow out and subsequent fire early in the first
quarter of
2006. The net 13 additional drilling rigs increased our first six months
2006
37
Drilling
operating costs increased $31.7 million or 25% between the six month
periods.
The increase in operating costs from the net 13 drilling rigs placed
in service
since the first quarter of 2005 and increased utilization of our previously
owned drilling rigs represented 39% of the total increase in operating
cost.
Increases in operating cost per day accounted for 61% of the increase
in total
operating costs. Operating cost per day increased $974 in the first
six months
of 2006 when compared with the first six months of 2005. The majority
of the
increase was attributable to costs directly associated with increases
in labor
cost. We expect the demand for drilling rigs to remain high throughout
2006 and
into 2007, resulting in continued increases in our drilling rig expenses.
We did
not drill any turnkey or footage wells in first six months of 2006
or 2005.
Contract drilling depreciation increased $4.7 million or 23%. The addition
of
the net 13 drilling rigs placed in service in 2005 increased depreciation
$ 2.0
million or 10% with the remainder of the increase attributable to the
increase
in utilization of previously owned drilling rigs.
Oil
and
natural gas revenues increased $57.4 million or 48% in the first six
months of
2006 as compared to the first six months of 2005. The increase in average
oil
and natural gas prices accounted for 29% of the increase while increased
equivalent natural gas production volumes accounted for 70% of the
increase.
Average natural gas prices between the comparative six month periods
increased
7% to $6.41 per Mcf while oil prices increased 24% to $55.88 per barrel.
In the
first six months of 2006, natural gas production increased by 36% while
oil
production increased 28%. Increased natural gas production came primarily
from
our ongoing development drilling activity, from two acquisitions completed
in
2005 and from an acquisition completed in the second quarter of 2006.
With the
continuation of our internal drilling program and our previous acquisitions,
we
believe our total production for 2006 compared to 2005 will increase
25% to 30%.
Actual increases in revenues, however, will also be driven by commodity
prices
received for our production.
Oil
and
natural gas operating costs increased $12.3 million or 49% in the first
six
months of 2006 as compared to 2005. An increase in the average cost
per
equivalent Mcf produced represented 35% of the increase in production
costs with
the remaining 65% of the increase attributable to the increase in volumes
produced from both development drilling and producing property acquisitions.
Lease operating expenses represented 59% of the increase, gross production
taxes
26%, general and administrative cost directly related to oil and natural
gas
production 14% and increased accretion on plugging liability 2%. Lease
operating
expenses per Mcfe increased 16% between the comparative six month periods.
The
increase is primarily due to increases in the cost of goods and services.
Gross
production taxes increased due to the increase in natural gas volumes
produced
and the increase in commodity prices between the comparative six month
periods.
General and administrative expenses increased as labor costs increased
primarily
due to a19% increase in the average number of employees working in
the
exploration and production area. Total depreciation, depletion and
amortization
(“DD&A”) increased $19.9 million or 68%. Higher production volumes accounted
for 51% of the increase while increases in our DD&A rate represented 49% of
the increase. The increase in our DD&A rate in the first six months of 2006
compared to the first six months of 2005 resulted primarily from a
14% increase
in our finding cost in 2005 and continued increases in our finding
cost into the
first six months of 2006. Demand for drilling rigs throughout our areas
of
exploration have increased the dayrates we pay to drill wells in our
developmental program and the increase in natural gas and oil prices
has caused
increased sales prices for producing property acquisitions. We do believe
there
continues to be economical opportunities for acquisitions.
Our
natural gas gathering and processing revenues, operating expenses and
depreciation were $7.9 million, $5.3 million and $1.0 million higher
in the
first six months of 2006 versus 2005, respectively. Gas gathering volumes
per
day were 100% higher in the first six months of 2006 as compared to
the first
six months of 2005 while gas processing volumes per day were down 25%
in the
first six months of 2006 as compared to the first six months of 2005.
The
significant increase in volumes gathered per day is primarily attributable
to
one natural gas gathering system that gathered 136,732 MMBtu and 43,894
MMBtu
per day during the first six months of 2006 and 2005, respectively.
One of our
largest gathering systems changed pipeline outlets between the comparative
periods and the new outlet is accepting the delivered natural gas unprocessed,
causing a reduction in processed natural gas between the quarters.
Our focus is
on growing this segment through the construction of new facilities
or
acquisitions.
38
General
and administrative expense increased $1.2 million in the first six
months of
2006 compared to the first six months of 2005. The increase in cost
was
primarily attributable to increases in the number of employees and
the
additional expense incurred from the implementation of Financial Accounting
Standards (FAS) No. 123(R) “Share-Based Payment" which requires the recognition
of expense related to the value of stock options granted over their
vesting
period. In the first quarter of 2005, we recognized $0.7 million in
personnel
cost from the recognition of a liability associated with the retirement
of Mr.
Nikkel from his position as Chief Executive Officer.
Total
interest expense increased 58% between the comparative six month periods.
Average debt outstanding was 28% higher in the first six months of
2006 as
compared to the six months of 2005 primarily due to the fourth quarter
2005 and
second quarter 2006 acquisition of producing properties for $82.0 million
and
$32.4 million in cash, respectively. Average debt outstanding accounted
for
approximately 40% of the interest expense increase, with the remaining
60%
resulting from an increase in average interest rates on our bank debt.
A
reduction in interest expense of $0.2 million from the settlement of
the
interest rate swap partially offset the increases. Associated with
our increased
level of development of oil and natural gas properties, the construction
of
additional drilling rigs and the construction of gas gathering systems,
we
capitalized $1.6 million of interest in the first six months of 2006
compared
with $0.8 million in the first six months of 2005.
Income
tax expense increased $45.4 million or 105% due primarily to the increase
in
income before income taxes. Our effective tax rate for the first six
months of
2006 was 37.1% versus 38.0% in the first six months of 2005. With our
increase
in income and the reduction of a majority of our net operating loss
carryforwards in prior periods, the portion of our taxes reflected
as current
income tax expense has increased in the first six months of 2006 when
compared
with the first six months of 2005. Current income tax expense for the
first six
months of 2006 and 2005 was $63.3 million and $21.6 million, respectively.
Income taxes paid in the first six months of 2006 were $75.3 million.
During the
second quarter of 2006, the state of Texas enacted a new margin tax
which will
go into effect in 2007. Based upon the nature of this margin tax, it
will be
accounted for as income tax in our financial statements. The impact
on our
deferred income tax liabilities and our effective tax rate for 2006
was not
significant.
In
January 2006, one of our drilling rigs was destroyed by a fire. No
personnel
were injured although the drilling rig was a total loss. Insurance
proceeds for
the loss exceeded our net book value and provided a gain of approximately
$1.0
million which is recorded in other revenues.
SAFE
HARBOR STATEMENT
This
report, including information included in, or incorporated by reference
from,
future filings by us with the SEC, as well as information contained
in written
material, press releases and oral statements issued by or on our behalf,
contain, or may contain, certain statements that are “forward-looking
statements” within the meaning of federal securities laws. All statements, other
than statements of historical facts, included or incorporated by reference
in
this report, which address activities, events or developments which
we expect or
anticipate will or may occur in the future are forward-looking statements.
The
words “believes,” “intends,” “expects,” “anticipates,” “projects,” “estimates,”
“predicts” and similar expressions are used to identify forward-looking
statements.
These
forward-looking statements include, among others, such things as:
|
.
|
|
the
amount and nature of our future capital expenditures;
|
|
.
|
|
wells
to be drilled or reworked;
|
|
.
|
|
prices
for oil and natural gas;
|
|
.
|
|
demand
for oil and natural gas;
|
|
.
|
|
exploitation
and exploration prospects;
|
|
.
|
|
estimates
of proved oil and natural gas reserves;
|
39
|
.
|
|
oil
and natural gas reserve potential;
|
|
.
|
|
development
and infill drilling potential;
|
|
.
|
|
drilling
prospects;
|
|
.
|
|
expansion
and other development trends of the oil and natural gas industry;
|
|
.
|
|
business
strategy;
|
|
.
|
|
production
of oil and natural gas reserves;
|
|
.
|
|
growth
potential for our gathering and processing operations;
|
|
.
|
|
gathering
systems and processing plants to be constructed or acquired;
|
|
.
|
|
volumes
and prices for natural gas gathered and processed;
|
|
.
|
|
expansion
and growth of our business and operations; and
|
|
.
|
|
demand
for our drilling rigs and drilling rig rates.
|
These
statements are based on certain assumptions and analyses made by us
in light of
our experience and our perception of historical trends, current conditions
and
expected future developments as well as other factors we believe are
appropriate
in the circumstances. However, whether actual results and developments
will
conform to our expectations and predictions is subject to a number
of risks and
uncertainties which could cause actual results to differ materially
from our
expectations, including:
|
.
|
|
the
risk factors discussed in this report and in the documents
we incorporate
by reference;
|
|
.
|
|
general
economic, market or business conditions;
|
|
.
|
|
the
nature or lack of business opportunities that we pursue;
|
|
.
|
|
demand
for our land drilling services;
|
|
.
|
|
changes
in laws or regulations; and
|
|
.
|
|
other
factors, most of which are beyond our control.
|
You
should not place undue reliance on any of these forward-looking statements.
Except as required by law, we disclaim any current intention to update
forward-looking information and to release publicly the results of
any future
revisions we may make to forward-looking statements to reflect events
or
circumstances after the date of this report to reflect the occurrence
of
unanticipated events.
A
more
thorough discussion of forward-looking statements with the possible
impact of
some of these risks and uncertainties is provided in our Annual Report
on Form
10-K filed with the SEC. We encourage you to get and read that document.
40
Item
3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosure about Market
Risk
Our
operations are exposed to market risks primarily as a result of changes
in
commodity prices and interest rates.
Commodity
Price Risk. Our
major market risk exposure is in the price we receive for our oil and
natural
gas production. These prices are primarily driven by the prevailing
worldwide
price for crude oil and market prices applicable to our natural gas
production.
Historically, the prices we received for our oil and natural gas production
have
fluctuated and we expect these prices to continue to fluctuate. The
price of oil
and natural gas also affects both the demand for our drilling rigs
and the
amount we can charge for the use of our drilling rigs. Based on our
first six
months of 2006 production, a $.10 per Mcf change in what we are paid
for our
natural gas production would result in a corresponding $333,000 per
month ($4.0
million annualized) change in our pre-tax cash flow. A $1.00 per barrel
change
in our oil price would have a $107,000 per month ($1.3 million annualized)
change in our pre-tax operating cash flow.
In
an
effort to try and reduce the impact of price fluctuations, over the
past several
years we have periodically used hedging strategies to hedge the price
we will
receive for a portion of our future oil and natural gas production.
A detailed
explanation of those transactions has been included under hedging in
the
financial condition portion of Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial
Condition and Results of Operations included above. We did not have
any oil or
natural gas hedges outstanding at June 30, 2006.
Interest
Rate Risk. Our
interest rate exposure relates to our long-term debt, all of which
bears
interest at variable rates based on the JPMorgan Chase Prime Rate or
the LIBOR
Rate. At our election, borrowings under our revolving credit facility
may be
fixed at the LIBOR Rate for periods of up to 180 days. Historically,
we have not
used any financial instruments, such as interest rate swaps, to manage
our
exposure to possible increases in interest rates. However, in February
2005, we
entered into an interest rate swap for $50.0 million of our outstanding
debt to
help manage our exposure to any future interest rate volatility. A
detailed
explanation of this transaction has been included under hedging in
the financial
condition portion of Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition
and Results of Operations included above. Based on our average outstanding
long-term debt subject to the floating rate in the first quarter of
2006, a 1%
change in the floating rate would reduce our annual pre-tax cash flow
by
approximately $0.7 million.
Item
4. Controls and Procedures
Evaluation
of Disclosure Controls and Procedures.
As of
the end of the period covered by this report, we carried out an evaluation,
under the supervision and with the participation of our management,
including
our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, of the effectiveness
of
the design and operation of our disclosure controls and procedures
under
Exchange Act Rule 13a-15. Based on that evaluation, our Chief Executive
Officer
and Chief Financial Officer concluded that the company’s disclosure controls and
procedures are effective as of June 30, 2006 in ensuring the appropriate
information is recorded, processed, summarized and reported in our
periodic SEC
filings relating to the company (including its consolidated subsidiaries)
and is
accumulated and communicated to the Chief Executive Officer, Chief
Financial
Officer and management to allow timely decisions.
Changes
in Internal Controls.
There
were no changes in the company’s internal controls over financial reporting
during the quarter ended June 30, 2006 that could significantly affect
these
internal controls.
41
PART
II. OTHER INFORMATION
Item
1. Legal Proceedings
Not
applicable
Item
1A. Risk
Factors
In
addition to the other information set forth in this report, you should
carefully
consider the factors discussed in Part I, "Item 1A. Risk Factors" in
our Annual
Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2005, which could
materially
affect our business, financial condition or future results. The risks
described
in our Annual Report on Form 10-K are not the only risks facing our
company.
Additional risks and uncertainties not currently known to us or that
we
currently deem to be immaterial also may materially adversely affect
our
business, financial condition and/or operating results.
There
have been no material changes to the risk factors disclosed in Item
1A in our
Form 10-K for the year ended Decmeber 31,2005.
Item
2. Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of
Proceeds
Not
applicable
Item
3. Defaults Upon Senior Securities
Not
applicable
Item
4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders
On
May 3,
2006 we held our Annual Meeting of Stockholders. At the meeting the
following
matters were voted on, with each receiving the votes indicated:
I. |
Election
of Director Nominees John G. Nikkel, Robert J. Sullivan,
Jr. and Gary R.
Christopher for a three-year terrn expiring in
2009.
|
Numbers
of
|
Against
or
|
|||
Nominee
|
Votes
For
|
Withheld
|
||
John
G. Nikkel
|
36,095,085
|
2,960,578
|
||
Robert
J. Sullivan, Jr.
|
37,014,730
|
2,050,933
|
||
Gary
R. Christopher
|
37,012,143
|
2,053,520
|
The
following directors, whose term of office did not expire at the annual
meeting,
continue as directors of the Company: William B. Morgan, John H. Williams,
Larry
D. Pinkston, King P. Kirchner, Don Cook and J. Michael Adcock.
II.
|
Ratification
of the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as our independent
registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year
2006.
|
For
-
|
38,051,944
|
Against
-
|
248,853
|
Abstain
-
|
764,866
|
42
III.
|
Ratification
of an amendment to the company's amended and restated certificate
of
incorporation to increase the shares of the company's authorized
common
stock.
|
For
-
|
28,020,271
|
Against
-
|
10,275,499
|
Abstain
-
|
768,092
|
IV.
|
Ratification
of an amendment to the company's amended and restated certificate
of
incorporation to increase the shares of the company's authorized
preferred
stock.
|
For
-
|
4,872,001
|
Against
-
|
26,160,495
|
Abstain
-
|
771,049
|
V.
|
Approve
the adoption of the Unit Corporation Stock and Incentive
Compensation
Plan.
|
For
-
|
28,643,782
|
Against
-
|
2,354,342
|
Abstain
-
|
803,620
|
Item
5. Other Information
Not
applicable
Item
6. Exhibits
Exhibits:
15
|
Letter
re: Unaudited Interim Financial Information.
|
|
31.1
|
Certification
of Chief Executive Officer under Rule 13a - 14(a) of the
|
|
Exchange
Act.
|
||
31.2
|
Certification
of Chief Financial Officer under Rule 13a - 14(a) of
the
|
|
Exchange
Act.
|
||
32
|
Certification
of Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer
under
|
|
Rule
13a - 14(a) of the Exchange Act and 18 U.S.C. Section 1350,
as
adopted
|
||
under
Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
2002.
|
43
SIGNATURES
Pursuant
to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant
has
duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned
thereunto
duly authorized.
|
Unit
Corporation
|
|
Date:
August 8, 2006
|
By:/s/
Larry D. Pinkston
|
|
LARRY
D. PINKSTON
|
||
Chief
Executive Officer and Director
|
||
Date:
August 8, 2006
|
By:/s/
David T. Merrill
|
|
DAVID
T. MERRILL
|
||
Chief
Financial Officer and
|
||
Treasurer
|
44