EON Resources (AMEX:EONR) released fourth-quarter financial results and hosted an earnings call on Tuesday. Read the complete transcript below.

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The full earnings call is available at https://www.webcaster5.com/Webcast/Page/2999/53913

Summary

EON Resources reported an outstanding financial year in 2025, with a significant improvement in the balance sheet, raising $45 million, paying off $68 million in debt, and realizing a $14 million gain.

The company entered a farm-out agreement adding 92 horizontal wells to its inventory, expecting a net present value of $100 million and planning substantial drilling through 2026 and beyond.

Operational highlights include stable production, successful completion of a major injection line replacement, and ongoing analysis for further drilling potential in newly acquired fields.

Future guidance suggests strong growth with elevated oil prices contributing to a higher net income, and strategic plans to double EBITDA through expanded drilling and acquisitions.

Management emphasized a conservative approach to stock dilution, focusing on debt financing for future acquisitions and drilling programs, while maintaining a positive outlook on oil price trends.

Full Transcript

Michael Porter (Moderator)

Thank you, Matthew. Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen and welcome to the EON Resources Incorporated Year End Earnings call. This press release that we put out in the last day includes forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform act of 1995 that involves risks and uncertainty that could cause actual results to differ materially from what is expected. Words such as expect, believe, anticipate, intend, should and variations and similar words and expressions are intended to identify such forward looking statements, but the similar expressions are intended to identify such forward looking statements, but the absence of these words does not mean that a statement is not forward looking. Such forward looking statements relate to future events or future results based on current available information and reflected in the company's management and current beliefs. All actual results may differ materially from the company's expectations as disclosed in the company's documents filed from time to time on Edgar and with the securities and Exchange Commission. I'd now like to turn the call over to Dante. Dante, you may go ahead.

Dante

Thank you Michael. Thank you Matt. And thank you for the audience that we have out there. Last count it sounded like we got close to 50 participants on. So thank you all for joining us. The outline of today's call is really going to be the agenda. I'll cover that and the agenda will include. We're going to start with the status of the 10-K which you don't have. So I'll divert to. our CFO. My goodness, how can I not remember Mitchell. So Mitchell and then I'll get the overview, then the financials by Mitchell, then operations by Jesse, then I'll give the summary, then we'll go to Q and A. So I'm going to start this off by first calling on our cfo Mitch Trotter. To explain where what status is of our 10-K, please.

Mitch Trotter (Chief Financial Officer)

Sure. Thanks, Dante. And I wasn't going to start with a joke, but I'll start with I'm Mitch Trotter, the cfo. Just so Dante knows. Anyway, I want to take a minute on the 10-Ks. The 2024 and the 2025 10-Ks. They have taken a little extra time because of the complexities of various instruments that resulted from eons most two significant events in time. The November 23rd acquisition of the Greater Jackson Field and the September 9th recapitalization farm out agreement funding. Both of those were transformational days, but they came with a lot of complex instruments and very complicated GAAP treatments. And sometimes they each one had multiple possible GAAP treatments. So first the 2024 10K has been refiled. It was done last Friday. It's all done. The 2025 K is nearly ready to file and you know, but we're finalizing the review of the GAAP treatments and the very complicated tax treatments as well. So. But do note operational results cash. They weren't impacted by all this. So later when it gets to the financials, I'll talk about the underlying numbers but not which tell a good story for Ian. But right now I'm going to turn it back over to Dante and I'll address those items later.

Dante

Okay. I'm going to cover the summary points. I think that everybody should be taken away from this call number one. 2025 was an outstanding year for us. The balance sheet more than anything else reflects that. We raised 45 million in September. We paid off 68 million in debt and obligations and we realized a gain of 14 million. Those things alone made it an outstanding year. Couple that with we signed a farm out agreement with the Virtus guys based in Dallas and thanks to all of them, led by Lance Taylor, that added 92 horizontal wells to our drilling inventory that we have high expectations for. Among those wells, three are permitted with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to start drilling in June and we expect another 10 to be drilled in Q4 in all. To credit Eon Resources, we're counting on about 11 million barrels and about $100 million in net present value resulting from that. That growth will continue through the rest of the decade with substantial drilling in 26, 27, 28 and beyond. It was a poor year for oil prices where we were $13 a barrel below 2024. That impacted our PDP reserves, our revenues, our Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization (EBITDA), but not severely. A lot of that was mitigated our hedging position, which allowed us to hold about $70 a barrel in 26. It goes without saying prices are way up. We did hedge a lot of 26 and into 27. Some of that's not positive for us because we didn't see oil going all the way to 100. We do see that oil's going to stay up for the balance of this year and we think it'll be elevated into 27. Nobody knows what it's going to be, but the numbers are going to be up. They're going to be substantially up from 25. So with that, I'm going to flip to Page 3, the company overview and the takeaways from that slide. Really, the takeaway here is that we own two fields totaling about 1.2 billion barrels, of which we believe 25% is ultimately recoverable and of which 10% has been recovered to date. That leaves us over 150 million barrels that we could recover. A big dent is going to be taken out of those reserves in the San Andreas by the virtus drilling. Those 92 wells are really going to make more of an impact to our company than anything else we're doing. However, the south justice field that we bought looks like it's got potential to do the same thing again, to do a farm out down in the Burnberry formation. We're just now getting those numbers from our geologists and technical team and Jesse will talk a little bit about that. So, flipping on to the next slide, page 4. Celebrating our 25 successes. As mentioned, we raised 45 million from selling a pair of Orys and a $5 million leasehold to Virtus, where we retained a 35% working interest. They have the majority working interest at 65%. We retired and eliminated senior and seller debt. We also eliminated preferred shares that could have had a drastic negative impact to our common share count that's been reduced or actually eliminated completely. We had a $14 million gain in 25. Some of that's offset because you lose reserves in a year when you have lower oil prices, but then you get the reserves right back in a year like this 26 where oils shot up. So the farm out agreement. I already captured the key points. 92 horizontal wells and inventory. This 95 number was based on $60 oil. So I'm rounding up 100 million plus impact to shareholders. We purchased the south justice field, added 5,300 acres to our holdings, added 207 million barrels. Oil prices in 25. As I mentioned, you lose reserves in a year when oil prices drop. You get them back in a year when the oil prices recover. And I believe that what we did in 25 sets the stage for the rest of the decade to have a doubling and then a doubling again of our ebitda. So this year you'll hear those numbers coming out from Mitch in just a minute. Page 5. So poise for growth in 26 and beyond these elevated oil prices, they already had an impact this month. We saw $300,000 net increase to our income and that's after hedging. So in hindsight we would have said, gee, we would have done better if we didn't hedge. But still the hedging didn't affect that. We still made $300,000 more dollars horizontal drilling by the Farm out agreement. I'm proud to say that the Virtus guys are really ahead of schedule. They've submitted permits to the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and to the NMO cd. We've got the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) approvals, we've got one approval back on five vertical wells to do vertical well recompletions in the San Andreas. And that will give us some data to tell us what's the best way to recomplete these horizontal wells. So the first three horizontal wells along with the vertical well recompletions we figure will add 500 net barrels of oil per day for the year. That should be about 100,000 barrels of net sold barrels to us. And if you add that up and say, well, let's multiply that times whatever, 75, $80 a barrel, that's going to be an addition of $8 million to our bottom line. And then in fourth quarter, in talking to again the Vertes guys, we had planned on 7 to 10 horizontal wells. If oil prices kind of hang in where they're at, that number would probably be 10 instead of 7. And instead of drilling them in December, that might be in October. So all planning is going toward accelerating these numbers. Other production potential, we have water injection. Water injection. We had a water injection line down. We talked about that over the last year, a 4 inch line. It's been back in service for most of this year. We're expecting 75 to 100 barrels a day to come as a result of water injection back online. We had some water injection wells down as a result as well. We're looking to get funding for the south justice field to put some inactive wells on active production. We think we'll pick up 250 barrels a day there. So with that I'm going to turn it over to Mitch who will go into the details of the finances.

Mitch Trotter (Chief Financial Officer)

Mitch all right, thanks. Okay. As you've heard already from Dante and you'll hear throughout, September 9th was a huge event for us. And it'll drive a lot of the numbers of this year and actually years to come with the horizontal program. And I'm going to drill down into the underlying numbers, but you'll see that 24 and 25 were actually very similar. So let's go ahead to the next slide on revenues, please. So on the revenue side, overall production has been stable at 250,000 barrels per year for the last two years. Now, the dollars revenues did drop from 25 to 24, but that's because of a $13 drop in oil price. If you look at the table, you can see that I've got the average oil prices over time. And as Dante already noted, that uptick in March has already added 300,000 net revenues to us. And of course, we'll see hopefully the 96 and now 100 today oil price going forward. But our hedging program, it did soften the impact to us in 25, and that's its purpose. Okay. Accordingly, we have hedged 75% through the end of next year, through end of December 27th for the same reason. But this is just to cover. And it covers our hedging, I mean, our lease operating expenses all the way through the end of 27. That's its purpose. That's what we've done. That means all the new production is unhedged. It's naked. And we plan to take advantage of the elevated oil prices. Most oil analysts feel the forecast of elevated oil prices for a while. So we do expect to reap those benefits. So let's move on to the next slide. Please drill down a little bit into the operating expenses. You can see that the lease operating expense dropped by or was reduced by half a million over the last year over year on the great Brook Jackson Field. And that came from improved operational efficiencies by our field team and operations team. So it was a good success by then. And as Dante had noted, the oil price drop, I think he did, of $13, it impacted our reserves at the end of 25. Well, under GAAP that impact, and you'll see when we release the financials, took a $5 million hit to depletion and depreciation. That's a, that's a GAAP thing. But with oil prices higher today, we do expect those reserve reports to recover in 26 to some level, depending on the prices throughout the year. So let's move on to the next slide. So on General and Administrative (G&A), just like the lease operating expenses, we focused on reducing costs like we said we would. And you can see in the table there's a recurring General and Administrative (G&A). The ones that we can manage as we go forward, we can manage the others. But we reduced by net $1,000,000 from 24 to 25. Audit fees are down 500,000, legal is down 400,000. Consulting did go up 300K. But that had a lot to do with the fees relating to the September 9 funding, which turned out to be good insurance costs down 400,000. And that really doesn't bake in much of what we renegotiated in Q4 of 25. That will reap the benefits in 26. So I've noted every quarter since we've started the one time adjustments and non recurring items that may be up in General and Administrative (G&A) from the funding and whatnot. I'm not going to drill down at this point. You'll see them later when we release. But most of it related to the September 9th funding like everything else. So let's go ahead to the next slide. And this is the below the line stuff, as I call it. It's other income expense. It's where everything else falls. Let me hit the main point. Interest expense dropped 2.7 million from 24 to 25. And that all came from the September 9th funding when we retired all that senior debt, big impact in just in four months. So that's good for us, obviously. And as Dante noted, we had 13.5 million of gains relating to that summer September 9th funding. Then we talked about the complex instruments and all the GAAP stuff. I've lumped all that in into GAAP Fair Market value line. It's derivative, it's warrants, it's a whole bunch of things. But you can see that impact and you'll see the detail later. So let's go on to the next slide, the balance sheet. I'm not going to spend a lot of time on the balance sheet at this point. Acids are very similar to what we reported in Q3, so not dramatically different. The big cleanup as we've stated. Dante stated as well the liabilities and equity, it's what transformed our balance sheet and put us in a great position going forward. We retired the $21 million of senior debt. We retired bank debt. We retired the $20 million of the senior note which included accrued interest. We cleaned up $9.8 million of private loans and warrants that relate to 2023 pre acquisition. We did it via convertible Notes. And now at the end of 25, we're down to only 2.3 million of that trailing cost. So. And on the equity side, preferred shares, class B shares, non controlling interest, they're all gone. So with that, I'm going to stop here. Obviously take questions in the Q and A if there are any, but I want to move on to Jesse and operations. Next please.

Jesse Allen (Vice President of Operations)

Good afternoon. Yes, this is Jesse Allen, VP of Operations for EON Resources and our subsidiary, LH Operating. And so today I'll be talking about the operations at the Grayberg Jackson Field and South justice fields. So with that, I always like to start off with safety. Our operations field operating team has done an excellent job as far as safety, working safely, getting to the locations safely and then going home safely. We want everybody at the end of the day to get home safely. Production is averaged at the Grayberg Jackson and the South Justice Field. A little over 1,000 barrels of oil a day gross. So production is hanging in there. As Dante has mentioned, we did complete a two mile injection line replacement there at the Grayberg Jackson field. And we should start to see the impact of putting that line back in service with additional oil and gas production. We do. We're in the process of trying to source funding to return downed wells at the South Justice Field back to production. And hopefully we'll get that accomplished here in the not too distant future. And in addition, there at the South Justice Field area, we're analyzing the data, well logs, cores, whatever technical data we can get our hands on to evaluate the horizontal drilling potential there at the South Justice Field. And as Dante has alluded, it looks like we may be able to do the same thing we've done at the Grayberg Jackson Field as far as horizontal wells. And in coming to an agreement with a potential investor on doing horizontal wells there. Next slide please. Now let me go a little bit into the San Andres horizontal drilling program. It's part of the Farm out we did with with Virtus there in the September 9, 2025 agreement. Currently we acquired five vertical wells that we just started the recompletion of the first one. And it'll be in the intervals that we plan to go horizontal. And so this gives us a good confirmation of what to expect with our horizontal wells and to confirm our analysis, both ours in house. And then of course Virtus own analysis expect to spud the first three horizontal wells. And when I say spud, I mean start drilling should happen maybe early to mid June. And so we're really looking Forward to the start of that program. And then as I always like to say, success breeds success. So we're planning, if that is the case by the end of 2026, to drill 10 additional horizontal wells. So with that I'll turn it back over to Dante and we'll field your questions there at the end.

Dante

Yeah. Thanks, Jesse. You know, why is E on a good long term investment? First of all, we're all shareholders. So myself, other members of the management team, the board of directors, we're all concerned about the share price. So we don't like to lean on the shares to raise money. We do it when we have to. But right now where we don't have much debt, we prefer to raise money with debt. We also like, just as we did with the 45 million dollar raise, we did that almost entirely by selling an override in the field. So again, we're trying not to put pressure on the stock price by selling too many shares. However, we do want to acquire properties. We are an acquisition company. We do have an obligation to fund drilling, but so far we think the debt markets are going to cover most of what we need. So we don't expect to lean too hard on the sale of the stock to dilute the stock. So it's our intention. You know, we were at one point, when we started this thing back in 23, we were a $10 stock. So we're hell bent to get back there in 25. We cleaned up the balance sheet. We got rid of really $68 million in debt and obligations and we did that with 45 million. The override (ORI)zontal drilling program is going to pay dividends through the rest of the decade. And all of you are going to get to see that. We're going to report the results of these vertical wells. Now these vertical wells, we don't expect them to make 500 barrels a day, but we do expect them to make 50 barrels a day or better. So when we get those results, you're gonna see that certainly these three wells that we're gonna drill in June, you're gonna see that it takes us a month before we know because the wells have to produce back all that sand and frack water and then see what it does once it's all cleaned up. The south justice field, we think that's gonna be another smaller but similar approach to what we did with Graeberg Jackson. And the company likes the stock value. We all are buyers of the stock. And as an acquisition company, we are looking to raise money so we can buy another Permian Property. And I would tell shareholders, expect something this year on that one. So that's the summary for this. Again, we all apologize. The 10-K is not in your hands. It's nothing that's a big issue. It's purely mechanical. And it was a chore, one that we all underestimated. That that deal we did, it was really a five way deal in September and we sold something we had no cost basis for. So we had to have all these accounting scientists to cook up with the Monte Carlo simulation, what is the appropriate price of an override (ORI). And all that's just about done. We're hoping that imminently we'll issue that 10-K. And with that, I'm wrapping it up and I'm going to turn it back over to Mike for Q and A, please.

OPERATOR

Certainly at this time, we'll be conducting a question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star 2 if you'd like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please, while we poll for questions. Thank you. And once again, everyone, if you have any questions or comments, please press Star then 1 on your phone. Please hold while we poll for questions. Your first question is coming from Greg Weaver. Your line is live.

Greg Weaver

Hey, good afternoon, guys. Appreciate you doing the call today. Maybe if you could give me a little more color. In terms, I think we'd all like to know about the structure, the details of the volumetric funding you're looking for for self justice. And that's 100% discretionary expenditure on your part.

Dante

Yeah, this is Dante. Yeah, we have no debt on that property. And the structure that we're looking for is two and a half million dollar increments to reactivate 25 to 50 wells per tranche. So what we have is about 220 wells there. And to reactivate these wells, we've got enough pumping units to get up to 80, 80 active wells, roughly that number, and then we'll have to buy pumping units to activate the other 120. So what we did was we figured if we could raise $2.5 million, the offer that we've made to several parties is we'll pay that party a 200% return on their investment. And we think that this investment will pay out within a year. 200% return on their investment by giving them 50% of our net income until they get their money back and then that override goes away. So we call that a term override. A lot of folks in the market like a permanent override. But what we're trying to do without using stock, without using a loan, is to sell a temporary override (ORI) that generates a guaranteed 200% return on your money.

Greg Weaver

Okay, great, that's helpful. And I guess just on the OPEX front, sounds like Mitch didn't want to get into it too much. But I assume there's been kind of some one time stragglers in here. But can you give us a sense of, kind of what you foresee is the kind of base run rate, cash OPEX on a go forward basis, on a quarter on the lease, operating expenses. I'm sorry, just. I guess we should focus on. I don't want to mix it in with the other.

Mitch Trotter (Chief Financial Officer)

Yeah, I'm Sorry, you said G&A? Yeah, yeah. We run about 600,000amonth in G and A, which primarily is salaries and professional fees and insurance, but a chunk of that is also, you know, like stock options, RSUs, that's part of it. So. But you can use 600k, 500 to 600k of G and A. The pieces that I didn't drill down into were like certain legal reserves that are in one time adjustment that came to us with the September 9th recapitalization. There were a bunch of settlement of old agreements that were all equity based and that's what I didn't drill down into. And so that's, I usually do and I will lay it out there when we release the actual kids and drill down into that detail like I always do every quarter. So I'm not afraid of doing it. It just wasn't appropriate to spend all that time at this moment. Hopefully that answered your question.

Greg Weaver

Yeah, yeah, that's, that's fine, appreciate that. And just lastly, I guess kind of where do we stand today with oil at 100 here in terms of where, where you are on an operating basis even at current production with I know, 75% hedge, but the 25% tail and then whatever we get from the new recompletions and wells. Where does that put you in terms of ebitda, you know, plus or minus?

Mitch Trotter (Chief Financial Officer)

Well, going through the beginning, through the rest of the year, I would say ebitda with our current production, our current, well, our current operations, which includes the horizontal and all that, I think we're, and this is a forecast that has, you know, pure expectations. We could see in the 4 to 5 million range for the Year again, it's just a projection. It's not anything. And then as that program of those 92 wells, crank it, as Dante had noted, we can see it doubling and doubling as we go forward.

Dante

I think the 4 number was before oil prices shot up. And with the shot up, we think that number would be 6, probably 6 million. But then if you add in the 500 barrels a day that will result from the three Virtus wells drilled in June, plus the five workovers in May, you almost double that number to where you're pushing 10. And if the drilling

Greg Weaver

those already baked into the 26 numbers, that 500 and thousand.

OPERATOR

Okay, Mitch, thank you. Thank you. And once again, everyone, if you have any questions or comments, please press Star then 1 on your phone. Please hold while we poll for questions. Thank you. That concludes our verbal Q and A for those listening on the webcast. You can submit a question at this time by clicking on the Ask Question button on the left of your screen. Type your question into the box and hit the send button to submit your question. I will now turn the call over to Michael Porter for remaining questions.

Michael Porter (Moderator)

Thank you. Matthew Dante. There was two questions that came over the Internet again about what are the chances of dilution of stock in the near future. I don't know whether you want to comment on that or not, since you already addressed it.

Dante

Yeah, I mean, if we make an acquisition and we need to use the ELOC to supplement any shortfall from an rbl, we'll use it. We'll use it. So I mean, right now we have outstanding. We have outstanding 50 million shares, roughly, something like that. And we may use another 10 million shares if we have to to supplement an acquisition. That's what some of our math says. So we're again, we're not buying anything unless it's unbelievably accretive. So we don't think we do any harm to the share price so long as we use the money for something tremendously accretive. And that's the only reason we use it. Thank you. The next question is, can you clarify the exact timeline for upcoming well results, what a successful production outcome would look like from these wells, and whether any additional capital raises are expected to support this operation? Yeah, I can fire in on that. So the workovers on the five vertical wells are all pre funded as part of the Farm out agreement. So there was a $2 million set aside that the Virtus guys are managing to do those workovers. And I would say success is any of the wells over 50 barrels a day. So let's say they get the work done in May. Here we're at the end of April today. If they do the work in May, we should report it in early June. So we're hoping that those wells are all north of 50, so you should see it in June. Then if we go to the three new drill wells, new override (ORI)zontal wells, those are also pre funded. We don't need to raise any money for that. Again, it's pre funded in the farm out agreement and those wells have a wide range on it from 300 to 900 barrels a day. Now we're choosing sites, the Virtus guys are choosing sites that are better than the norm. So I think the norm, if you say that the average is going to be 400 or maybe even 450, these wells I believe are probably going to come in at 500. So again people argue with that, but I'm kind of expecting wells certainly north of 300. You know, north of 400 would be success and over 500 would be a tremendous success. And if you do better than that, of course we're quite happy. So that's debatable. But when you see it, you're going to know it in I think by mid July, certainly by the end of July you would know.

Michael Porter (Moderator)

Thank you. The next question is when will you get confirmation of regaining compliance with the New York Stock Exchange?

Mitch Trotter (Chief Financial Officer)

That's a Mitch question. Well, we have filed the 10k as for 2024 as we've stated and we will file shortly the 2025 and then after that they will give confirmation. They in fact we talked with our legal guys this morning. So we file that and we file the others. They'll clear us and then they should immediately then clear us to go forward with the S1. S1 of course needs to drop the latest K in. So we expect that shortly after the 25k is in.

Michael Porter (Moderator)

Okay, thank you, Dante. The question is, what are you doing different than other oil companies domestically?

Dante

You know, I don't think any company our size has a drilling inventory of 92 wells at $3.5 million each and at a plan of 400 to 500 barrels a day each. You know, I'll challenge companies 10 times our size that don't have that. The other thing is I think we've got a lot of reserves in place in excess of a billion to play with, stacked reservoirs to play with. And we're focused on water flooding in one zone, horizontal drilling in another zone with yet other zones to go to. And I believe we're establishing a platform, a business platform unique in the marketplace where we're going to extract the last barrel. We are not flippers. We're going to buy a property that's got these kind of opportunities with stack pay. We are focused on the Permian and the Permian will handle all the oil we can sell. And it's getting more predictable for us as we gain more experience in the two main zones, the SVR and San Andreas and now the Burnberry. So I think focusing on buying properties in the 30-40 million dollars range is unique. I think the bigger boys are looking at the half billion billion dollar things and we'll be content with doubling our EBITDA each year from right here. So we're starting in a lower number. So it's easy to go boom, boom, boom, you know. Now maybe when we get to 50 million EBITDA or 100 million EBITDA then we lose our edge. But right now we feel like we have an edge to get to 100 million EBITDA.

Michael Porter (Moderator)

Thank you. What is eons cash position at the present time?

Mitch Trotter (Chief Financial Officer)

Okay, Mitch. Yep. It's very similar to the third quarter. Again, we try to maintain about 500,000 of cash, plus or minus. We actually have an excellent setup with Chevron, our oil buyer, where on the 20th of the month they pay us. Exactly. They've never missed, they never missed at all us and our predecessor going back into almost eight or nine years. So that's kind of how we do it. So we manage our cash that way. And so any given day it goes up and down, but we try to maintain at that level. Very similar to what we.

Dante

Thank you, sir. Next question is the 500 to 1,000 barrels of oil that are coming up in the virtuous deal. How much of that is ours? Well, that I've only quoted the net to us. The net to us. So if in the math is the following. If you drill three wells at 500 barrels a day each, that's 1500 and a third of that would be ours. And then if you do the vertical wells and you say, well we'll make 50 to 75 each there I take a third of that. So I round all that to say 500 net to us. So that's the mid year, that's the mid year net barrels per day contribution to us. So now let's go to fourth quarter and let's say they drill 10 wells. Let's say the 10 wells roughly make four or 500 barrels a day each. You're talking about 5,000 barrels a day. And if we took a third of that, our net NRI actually after royalty is 27%. And I sort of rounded that down to 1,000 barrels a day. So I said if they drill 10 wells, we'll get a net of a thousand. Really? Closer to 1100 barrels a day. Net. Net. Net. So for the purposes of this call, I'm not giving the gross numbers. That would be before our take.

Michael Porter (Moderator)

Thank you, sir. The next question is, does e on plan any more hedging contracts for this year?

Dante

No. No, we don't. Unless for some reason oil drops to 60, which isn't going to happen. No, we absolutely don't. We've hedged. We've locked in our lease operating expenses for two years plus a little, even another extra million. So we're in great position there. And everything else, we're going to take advantage of the higher prices. We did what we needed to and we did. That's a prudent and feasible thing to do. Yeah. When you're building a war chest to set up for a bank loan, you have to hedge. It's required. And so we anticipated this requirement and we looked for the best opportunities we could to hedge. But the hedging is done. We'll go naked from here on. And off we go.

Michael Porter (Moderator)

Okay, the next question is what is your current ebitda?

Mitch Trotter (Chief Financial Officer)

We answered that earlier.

Dante

We debated it. So you got a lot of. You picked up a little bit of a debate. So you. Six million. Allow us to publish that. Would you allow us to publish that? And frankly, a lot of the oil price increase has not been baked into our numbers yet. When we file the 10k, we don't really make a forecast. It's all rearview mirror numbers. So I think we owe you a 26, 27 forecast. And we've been hesitant to forecast EBITDA, but I think we need to do it, Mitch. And we'll just take it offline and we. Yeah, we'll do a bigger drill down. Bigger drill down.

Michael Porter (Moderator)

Okay. What is the expected average production per horizontal well and payout period at current oil prices?

Dante

Yeah, we also don't have that. Our numbers are based on $60 oil. So it's going to be faster. But when we were doing it at $60 oil, when we had this thing, the rough numbers I had was at three and a half million. At 500 barrels a day, we could pay out that drilling cost in less than a year. And again, let's add that to the homework assignment. We owe you post call and we'll do A sensitivity curve. We'll do a sensitivity curve for you. Thank you. Are there any non operating. I'm sorry? Are there any non operated or joint venture opportunities beyond the virtuous farm out that could further de risk or accelerate the 10 to 20 well per year pace post 26? I think that what we're doing at south justice with Virtus and the drilling program there is cast in stone. I don't think there's anything there to do and I think because we sold an ORI there, there's no room to do a non op deal with somebody. So that one's done. If you turn your attention over to south justice, we're almost at the same place we were with south justice about a year ago, meaning internal geology is wrapping up and we think there's something there and we've proven that our geologists kind of know what they're doing. So I think there's a real opportunity to do a farm out at south justice. And I think the drilling locations there are not anywhere close to 92, but it'd be a number closer to 25 to maybe 30, 30 horizontal wells, which is still substantial. And we would approach the bigger guys that are experiencing the Burnberry. So that's on tap, that's in the lineup.

Michael Porter (Moderator)

Okay, I have another question that I think was answered, but I'm going to read it anyway. How do you plan to fund the remaining horizontal program? Should investors expect equity dilution or additional farm out structures?

Dante

No, it's going to be by debt. We have several lenders that are specialists in. Minority owner drill outs, so I won't advertise their names but you get favored rates. So it'll be our preference to fund the date, the debt with debt, the 35% working interest that we have. But we've also advertised, we have a clause in the farm out agreement that if we have trouble doing that, that the field could self fund it by producing the oil and letting the oil pay our share to the tune of 150% payout to the Virtus guys. Now we don't like to do that because it's a high cost of money, but I would prefer to do that rather than press on selling shares.

Michael Porter (Moderator)

Okay, and the last question, with new production being unhedged, how sensitive is EBITDA to a $10 move in oil prices once the horizontal drilling is online?

Dante

You know, Today we sell 250,000 barrels a year. So. And we sold that same volume in 25 and 24. So if you say you sell 250,000 barrels and you had $10. You're picking up. You're picking up two and a half million for every $10. But I've run a few numbers. I think with drilling at the end of the year, we might be producing half million barrels. I mean, it could be that strong. So $10 would be $5 million net contribution. Mitch, I don't know if you want to say something different than that. It's just simple math.

Mitch Trotter (Chief Financial Officer)

Yeah, I mean, it's simple math. You know, we took. We scaled back a little bit on the number of wells, and, you know, and obviously now with oil prices, it's gonna push harder, but certainly an extra couple hundred thousand over the 250. And so you take 200,000 extra barrels, you put your $10 in, plus or minus, because our forecast are around $70. And you can do the math. So basically, oil production this year will double. Now you get on into 27 after those 10 wells kick into place, and, you know, as Dante's been saying, you know, it'll double again. Well, yeah, it's almost triple the production. Maybe two and a half to triple. And it keeps going up from that. So because you got a different decline,

Michael Porter (Moderator)

Dante, that was the last question. I'm turning the call over to you.

Dante

Yeah, well, listen, those are good questions. I thank everybody for that. I do think, and we've had reported through Mike, concern about the lateness of the 10k. I'd like to just assure everybody we have an excellent relationship with the NYSE and the sec, and we have ongoing conversations with them. We don't see an issue with this thing getting out within a week. You know, we hate to say it's going to be, you know, tomorrow or it's going to be Friday or it's going to be Monday. And the way these things work, you know, we provide a bunch of data to the auditor, the auditor looks at it, and then they say, well, we got another question. And we go, oh, my goodness, really get another question. So we got to get them happy. And that's where we're at, trying to get them happy. And as soon as they're happy, they sign off and it issues and where you go. So I think that's about it. I appreciate all the calls. You know, we're open and transparent. So if somebody didn't voice a question that you want, you can call us, you can email us, you can, you know, any of us will be happy to chat with you. We're very excited about 26. Like a lot of you had already talked about the news is going to come rolling through almost every month. You're going to hear about work over some drilling and production, and we are very excited about it. I mean, there is risk. What will Mother Nature do? What will the wells do? But we're very optimistic. We think the science has been done and the homework has been done by ourselves and the Virtus team. We think the experimentation and the completion methods is going to happen here very shortly, and they'll lock in on just how many pounds of sand and what grade of sand and whether you use resin or not will all get figured out. And away you go. By the way, the Virtus guys have done this before, and they were very successful. We like the model that the Graeberg Jackson Field presented to us as a business. We like the outlook for south justice, and we like the opportunities that we're seeing in the marketplace to buy more properties. So with that, I'll turn it over to Matthew to wrap it up.

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