
Matador Resources Co., Dallas, ramped up operations and spending during the third quarter—topping the midpoint of the July capex guidance by $95 million—to take advantage of lower service prices.
That decision resulted in Matador turning in line 34.5 net operated wells, which was 4.5 wells above executives’ guidance from 3 months ago. Those incremental wells added $15 million to capex during the quarter but executives said they also allocated $56 million to wells that they expect to turn in line this quarter. Also contributing to the spending increase was due to unexpected non-operated well activity of $15 million.
Those factors contributed to third-quarter capex coming in at $430 million versus the $335 million midpoint of executives’ range from the summer. For the full year, chairman and chief executive officer Joe Foran and his team now expect the midpoint of spending to be a little more than $1.5 billion, up from nearly $1.28 billion after the year’s second quarter.
During the current quarter, Matador produced more than 119,500 b/d of oil, which was above the range of 116,500-118,000 b/d of production Foran and his lieutenants forecast 3 months ago but below second-quarter’s s nearly 123,000 b/d. Total production was flat with the spring quarter at about 209,000 boe/d.
In midday trading, shares of Matador (Ticker: MTDR) were down about 10% to $39.42, the lowest level since early May. The company’s market capitalization, which was roughly $6.2 billion in late July, is now back to about $5 billion.
The executive team is guiding for full-year production to be about 206,000 boe/d, slightly higher than the previous 202,500 boe/d estimate. For 2026, the company expects oil production growth of 2-5% and total production to be about 210,000 boe/d. Foran said the team will use the greater efficiency gained over the last quarter—Matador’s drilling and completion cost now is about $845 per completed lateral foot compared with $880 earlier this year—to cut 2026 capex by 8-12%.
The greater-than-expected activity during the third quarter contributed to Matador producing a net profit of $201 million, which was down from $273 million in the same period of last year, while revenues climbed to $939 million from $900 million. The company’s production, transportation, processing, and lease operating expenses during the quarter climbed to about $190 million from $140 million.