
Expand produced nearly 7.44 bcfed during the first quarter (93% natural gas), which was up nearly 10% from the first three months of 2025. Of that production, 46% came from assets in the Haynesville basin (up from about 39% a year earlier), 37% from Northeast Appalachia and the remainder from Southwest Appalachia.
Wichterich, who in February replaced Nick Dell’Osso while Expand’s directors search for a new permanent leader, is looking to have full-year 2026 production average about 7.5 bcfed while deploying between 11 and 12 rigs and six to seven completion crews. The current quarter will feature some seasonal curtailments, executives said, and production is expected to remain flat from early this year.
“We are in the right place at the right time,” Wichterich said on the conference call. “Our assets are reaching 90% of the expected demand growth in this country and our Haynesville [operation] is sitting at the epicenter of growth because of the LNG market. We think we are in the best position to take advantage of that.”
On the LNG front, Expand executives this week signed a 20-year sales and purchase agreement with Delfin FLNG Vessel 1 that calls for Expand to supply about 1.15 million tpa. That contract replaces previous deals with Delfin and Gunvor Group and calls for the gas to be sold at a Henry Hub price and to start flowing in 2031.
Expand produced a first-quarter net profit of $1.16 billion on total revenues of $4.4 billion. Those numbers were an improvement from early 2025, when the company lost $249 million on $2.2 billion in sales, the latter figure hampered by $1 billion loss on derivatives.
Shares of Expand (Ticker: EXE) were up nearly 3% to about $99.50 in afternoon trading on April 29. Over the last six months, they’re essentially flat and the company’s market capitalization is now nearly $24 billion.





















