Matador Resources Company

MTDR
Financial Analysis · Updated May 28, 2026 · Coverage 2026-Q2
Net Debt
$3.4B
· Debt $3.4B · YE 2025

Business Overview


step: 01 title: Business Overview / Model ticker: MTDR source: coverage-next-full date: 2026-05-28

Step 01 — Business Overview & Model

Key Findings

Matador Resources is a Delaware Basin (Permian) pure-play oil & gas E&P with an integrated midstream business operated as a JV (San Mateo Midstream, 51% Matador / 49% Five Point Infrastructure) [S1][S3]. The company sells crude oil, natural gas, and NGLs at the wellhead or via gathering/processing infrastructure that flows through its own midstream system; sales counter-parties are major refiners, gas processors, and oil-trading desks (Plains, Enterprise, Energy Transfer, ETP, and various crude marketers). Roughly 85-90% of revenue is upstream (oil/gas/NGL sales) and 10-15% is midstream (gathering, processing, water disposal — largely intersegment but with growing third-party fee revenue) [S3]. The business model has structurally improved since 2020 via three layers: (1) acreage scale doubled organically + via Advance Energy (2023, $1.6B) and Ameredev (2024, $1.83B); (2) midstream integration captures fee-margin uplift and operating control; (3) longer laterals + multi-well pads + dual-fuel completions structurally lowered F&D cost per BOE [S4][S8]. Net: business model is strong but commodity-cyclical; quality of management decision-making is a differentiator within the sector.

Implications for Thesis and Valuation

  • ~$3.7B FY 2025 revenue ≈ Price × Volume × Mix; sensitivity is highest to oil price (~70% of upstream revenue) [S6].
  • Integrated midstream is a non-trivial valuation lever — supports a sum-of-parts case in /complete-coverage Step 14 (e.g., apply 8-10x EBITDA to midstream contribution separately from PV-10 of reserves) [S9][S12].
  • ~$3.4B LT debt + ~1.4x ND/EBITDA → modest but meaningful leverage that the company is actively working down [S1][S4].
  • Founder-led (Foran since 1983 predecessor); founder personally bought stock in late 2025 — alignment is a structural positive [S10][S11].

Objective

Document MTDR's business model, value-chain layer map, revenue model, customer base, and operating model so subsequent steps can build on a shared picture.

Narrative Analysis

MTDR is a single-basin oil & gas E&P with a meaningful midstream attachment [S3]. Its operating footprint is entirely in the Delaware sub-basin of the Permian (~212,500 net acres at YE 2025 [S5]), spanning Eddy, Lea, and parts of Chaves counties in southeastern New Mexico, and Loving, Winkler, Ward and Reeves counties in West Texas. Production is a roughly 58% oil / 42% gas+NGL mix [S5], with WTI as the dominant pricing benchmark (plus Mont Belvieu for NGLs and Henry Hub / Waha for gas).

Value chain layer map:

[Land / Leases] → [Drill & Complete] → [Production] → [Gather & Process] → [Transport to Sales Hub] → [Marketing / Sale]
   ─ MTDR owns      ─ MTDR + service     ─ MTDR        ─ San Mateo JV       ─ Mid-stream pipelines    ─ Plains, ETP,
     ~212,500          providers           operates       (51% MTDR) +         (Plains, ETP, etc.) +     refiners,
     net acres         (Halliburton,                       Pronto              MTDR truck/rail            DCP, etc.
                       SLB, etc.)                          contributed         takeaway
                                                           into San Mateo
                                                           Dec 2025

Upstream segment (~85-90% of revenue, [S6]). MTDR is the operator of >85% of its producing wells. The operating model is:

  • ~7-9 operated rigs at run-rate
  • 2-3 simultaneous completion crews (often "simul-frac" pairs)
  • Multi-well pads (12-25 wells per pad) with 2-3 mile laterals as standard; first 3.4-mile lateral wells scheduled for Q2 2026 on Eastern Antelope Ridge (ex-Ameredev acreage) [S4]
  • ~95% horizontal Wolfcamp + Bone Spring + Avalon target benches; minimal vertical / legacy production
  • Field-produced gas powering operations is increasing — cost + emissions wins [S4]

Midstream segment (~10-15% of revenue, [S3]). Operated primarily through San Mateo Midstream, LLC — a 51% MTDR / 49% Five Point Infrastructure JV [S9][S12]. Services include:

  • Natural-gas gathering and processing (multiple cryo plants in Eddy County NM)
  • Crude-oil gathering and intra-basin transport
  • Produced-water gathering, recycling, and disposal
  • A wholly-owned midstream subsidiary called Pronto Midstream existed through 2024 but was contributed to San Mateo in December 2025 at an implied valuation of ~$600M [S9][S12], simplifying the corporate structure.

Correction to the brief. The original task brief stated MTDR owned San Mateo 100%. Per public disclosure, MTDR remains 51% owner; Five Point retains 49% (recently moved into a continuation vehicle in March 2026) [S9][S12]. The 49% NCI shows on MTDR's balance sheet — important for sum-of-parts valuation later.

Revenue model. Roughly:

  • Oil revenue: barrels × realized oil price (WTI – ~$2-4 differential)
  • Gas revenue: Mcf × realized gas price (Henry Hub – Waha basis differential, often -$1 to -$2)
  • NGL revenue: barrels × Mont Belvieu composite blend (~30-40% of WTI typically)
  • Midstream revenue: third-party fees + intersegment eliminations
  • Hedge realized gains/losses (cash settled hedges layered 12-24 months out)

Customer concentration. Crude oil is sold to a small set of trading desks/marketers (Plains, Enterprise, Glencore, etc.); gas to processors; NGLs sold post-fractionation at Mont Belvieu. No single customer >10% of revenue. Counter-party credit risk is largely investment-grade infrastructure names.

Geographic concentration. 100% Delaware Basin. This is both a strength (basin specialization → best-in-class well productivity, lower G&A allocation) and a weakness (no basin-diversification cushion if Permian gas takeaway constraints worsen or NM federal-lands rules tighten).

Operating leverage. Highly fixed-cost-light upstream (variable lifting costs ~$5-8/BOE); D&A and DD&A are by far the largest income-statement line below revenue. This creates strong margin lift on incremental BOE — explains the 65-70% EBITDA margins through cycle [S6].

Capital structure summary. $3.4B LT debt (mix of senior unsecured notes + RBL revolver) + $5.66B stockholders' equity (incl. ~$340M NCI for Five Point's 49% of San Mateo) at YE 2025 [S6]. Net Debt ~$3.39B. Net Debt / 2025 EBITDA ~1.4x. Working capital is slightly negative (current ratio 0.73) — normal for E&Ps with active drilling capex.

Capital-allocation cadence. Dividends rising (from $0.10/qtr in 2022 to $0.375/qtr by Q1 2026, ~$1.50 annual run-rate); buybacks small but in place ($68M in 2025); reinvestment ratio ~76% of EBITDA, on the higher end of mid-cap Permian peers because of M&A integration.

Evidence and Sources

  • 10-K FY 2025 business description and segments [S3]
  • Q1 2026 earnings release with 3.4-mile lateral and field-produced gas commentary [S4]
  • Q4 / FY 2025 earnings release with 667 MMBoe reserves disclosure [S5]
  • StockAnalysis 5-year income/balance/cash flow tables [S6]
  • Ameredev acquisition press release (June 2024) [S8]
  • Pronto-to-San-Mateo contribution 8-K and Hart Energy [S9][S12]
  • Insider buying article (Foran Nov 2025 purchase) [S10]
  • DEF 14A 2026 (governance, compensation) [S11]

Assumption Register Updates

None (mostly factual at this step). First quantitative assumptions enter at Step 03.

Tables and Calculations

Segment Mix (approximate, from 10-K narrative + intersegment elims)
Segment FY 2025 Revenue Share EBITDA contribution (approx)
Upstream (oil + gas + NGL + hedges) ~$3.2B ~87% ~$2.0B
Midstream (San Mateo + Pronto until Dec 2025; intersegment + 3rd party) ~$0.45B (post-elimination) ~13% ~$0.4B
Total ~$3.65B 100% ~$2.4B
Revenue Stream Detail (approx., FY 2025)
Stream % of revenue Realized price proxy
Crude oil ~65-70% WTI – $2 to $4 differential
Natural gas ~5-8% Henry Hub – Waha basis (often deep discount)
NGLs ~10-12% Mont Belvieu composite, ~30-40% of WTI
Midstream fees (gross) ~10-12% Per-MMBtu / Per-Bbl fee schedule
Realized hedge gains/losses varies non-cash + cash

Open Questions and Data Gaps

  1. Exact 2025 oil-vs-gas-vs-NGL revenue split — need 10-K segment footnote for precise figures.
  2. Third-party midstream revenue % of total midstream (intersegment dominates) — affects valuation multiple to apply.
  3. Average lateral length 2024 vs 2025 vs 2026 plan — relevant to capital intensity trend.

Next-Step Dependencies

Step 02 (Industry & Market) uses the Delaware Basin context above. Step 03 (Revenue Architecture) decomposes the segment table and builds the margin tree. Step 04 (Financial Quality) uses the segment + capital-structure picture.

Source Index

Tag Document or URL Section / Page Date Notes
[S1] SEC EDGAR XBRL companyfacts xbrl/xbrl_summary.md 2026-05-28 Full-history financials
[S3] MTDR 10-K FY 2025 sec_filings/10K_FY2025_summary.md 2026-05-28 Business + segments
[S4] Q1 2026 earnings 8-K matadorresources.com (2026-05-06) 2026-05-28 Production + 3.4-mile lateral
[S5] Q4 2025 earnings release businesswire.com (2026-02-24) 2026-05-28 Reserves + 2026 outlook
[S6] StockAnalysis.com financial tables other/stockanalysis_summary.md 2026-05-28 Income, BS, CF
[S8] Ameredev acquisition 8-K matadorresources.com (2024-06-12) 2026-05-28 Strategic rationale
[S9] Pronto-to-San-Mateo 8-K matadorresources.com (2025-12-11) 2026-05-28 Restructuring
[S10] Yahoo Finance — Foran insider purchase finance.yahoo.com 2026-05-28 Founder skin-in-the-game
[S11] DEF 14A 2026 0001520006-26-000013 2026-05-28 Governance
[S12] Hart Energy — San Mateo deal hartenergy.com 2026-05-28 $600M implied valuation

Financial Snapshot


step: 04 title: Financial Snapshot & Quality ticker: MTDR source: coverage-next-full date: 2026-05-28

Step 04 — Financial Snapshot & Quality

Key Findings

MTDR's financial profile is that of a well-run, capital-intensive mid-cycle E&P: 66% EBITDA margins through the cycle, $2.4B operating cash flow in 2025, and a post-acquisition leverage ratio of 1.4x Net Debt/EBITDA that is actively trending toward the company's <1.0x target. Earnings quality is high — operating cash flow consistently exceeds GAAP net income (OCF was 3.2x net income in 2025 due to large non-cash DD&A), and SBC is negligible ($18M vs. $759M net income). Key financial risks are: (1) the acquisition-cycle capex spike ($1.84B in 2025) that compresses near-term FCF; (2) commodity price sensitivity on both the income statement and balance sheet (proved reserve PV-10 is correlated to oil price); and (3) the rising debt load from $1.16B (2022) to $3.4B (2025) — a structural consequence of the M&A-funded growth strategy. Paydown trajectory ($350M+ in 2025) signals management commitment to deleveraging [S1][S6].

Implications for Thesis and Valuation

  • OCF quality is strong: non-cash DD&A ($1.2B in 2025) is the primary gap between reported EBITDA and net income; cash-settled hedges align reported cash flows with economic reality [S6].
  • Capex cycle peak appears to be 2024-2025 post-Ameredev; 2026E capex reaffirmed at $1.5-1.7B vs. $1.84B in 2025 — implies FCF expansion even at flat oil prices [S4].
  • Balance sheet risk is the primary bear concern: $3.4B LT debt + $0.015B cash = ~$3.39B net debt. At $55 WTI, EBITDA could compress to ~$1.8-1.9B, pushing ND/EBITDA toward 1.8-2.0x. Not distress territory but limits capital return upside.
  • Goodwill / intangibles are immaterial — E&P accounting uses proved properties / PP&E, not goodwill. Acquisition step-ups show in higher DD&A, not goodwill impairment risk.

Objective

Assess MTDR's earnings quality, balance sheet health, cash generation, and through-cycle financial stability. Identify any accounting quality concerns or financial surprises that could affect valuation.

Narrative Analysis

Income Statement Quality.

MTDR's income statement reflects two structural features of E&P accounting:

  1. DD&A (Depletion, Depreciation & Amortization) is the dominant non-cash expense — $1.2B in 2025 on a $3.66B revenue base. This drives a wide gap between operating income ($1.23B, 33.5% margin) and EBITDA ($2.42B, 66.2% margin). DD&A is a legitimate proxy for capital consumption — it represents the exhaustion of proved reserves on a unit-of-production basis. The step-up post-Ameredev (2024-2025) has elevated DD&A temporarily; as the acquired assets are optimized (longer laterals, improved F&D), per-BOE DD&A should decline.

  2. Effective tax rate is variable (10-16%) because of the complex interaction of depletion allowances, Section 199A deductions, and deferred taxes on property basis. The 16.7% effective rate in 2025 (vs. 23.1% in 2024) reflects higher depletion-related deductions on the larger asset base.

Cash Flow Quality.

FY OCF Capex FCF FCF Margin Net Income OCF/NI Ratio
2021 1,053 (495) 558 30% 585 1.8x
2022 1,979 (853) 1,126 35% 1,214 1.6x
2023 1,868 (1,362) 506 18% 846 2.2x
2024 2,247 (1,512) 734 21% 885 2.5x
2025 2,425 (1,844) 581 16% 759 3.2x

OCF/NI ratio of 3.2x in 2025 reflects the scale of DD&A relative to earnings — this is expected and confirms earnings quality rather than signaling manipulation. Working capital swings are modest. No off-balance-sheet financing identified.

Balance Sheet Analysis.

FY Cash LT Debt Net Debt Total Assets Equity ND/EBITDA
2022 505 1,160 655 5,555 3,317 0.29x
2023 53 2,207 2,154 7,727 4,128 1.12x
2024 23 3,325 3,302 10,850 5,457 1.37x
2025 15 3,402 3,387 11,711 5,997 1.40x

The leverage trajectory shows the clear impact of M&A: each acquisition was funded with debt, raising ND/EBITDA from 0.29x post-2022 (when the company was nearly debt-free on an EBITDA basis) to 1.40x post-Ameredev. The deleveraging path is:

  • Q1 2026: additional $350M+ RBL paydown [S4]
  • 2026 target: FCF of $1.1-1.2B (company guidance) → ~$600M available for debt paydown after dividends/buybacks

Capital Structure Detail.

Debt is predominantly senior unsecured notes (4-5% coupon, staggered maturities 2028-2033) with a revolving credit facility (RBL) backed by proved reserves at a variable rate. Interest expense in 2025 was approximately $240M, covered 5.1x by EBITDA — solid.

RBL facility: redetermined periodically based on the value of proved reserves. At $65 WTI, reserves remain well above the current drawn balance — no borrowing base covenant risk anticipated.

Accounting Quality Flags — None Material.

  • SBC is $18M (cash-settled phantom units) — low distortion vs. $759M NI
  • Hedge accounting: gains/losses reported in revenue line; material but disclosed and cash-settled
  • Ameredev purchase accounting: property/acreage fair-valued and being depleted — no goodwill; clean
  • Related-party (San Mateo JV): intersegment transactions eliminated in consolidation; arm's-length pricing disclosed
  • Non-controlling interest (NCI): $340M on balance sheet for Five Point's 49% of San Mateo — disclosed; no manipulation concern

Through-Cycle Financial Resiliency.

2020 was the most severe test: WTI briefly went negative; MTDR reported a $593M net loss. Yet operating cash flow remained positive ($478M) because the high DD&A drove non-cash losses but cash from operations covered operating costs. Production was maintained. The company emerged from 2020 with ~$1.1B in LT debt and used the 2021-2022 commodity price recovery to accumulate capital for the M&A program. This through-cycle resilience demonstrates the business is structurally profitable at $55+ WTI.

Evidence and Sources

  • Annual income, balance sheet, and cash flow from StockAnalysis + XBRL [S1][S6]
  • 10-K FY 2025 risk factors and MD&A [S3]
  • Q1 2026 earnings release on debt paydown [S4]
  • Governance summary on SBC [S11]

Assumption Register Updates

ID Assumption Value Unit Basis
A-04-01 2025 DD&A (depletion) ~$1,195 $M Implied from EBITDA - EBIT
A-04-02 2025 interest expense ~$240 $M Net income bridge estimate
A-04-03 Interest coverage (2025) ~5.1x EBITDA/Interest EBITDA $2,422 / $240
A-04-04 FCF breakeven WTI ~$50 $/Bbl OCF-capex at $50 oil ≈ 0 estimate

Tables and Calculations

Key Financial Ratios — 5-Year Trend
Metric 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
Gross Margin 77.1% 77.7% 82.8% 81.7% 78.5%
EBITDA Margin 61.1% 69.6% 68.4% 69.2% 66.2%
Operating Margin 42.6% 55.0% 42.9% 41.2% 33.5%
Net Margin 34.4% 40.2% 32.3% 27.9% 23.5%
ROE ~31% ~39% ~22% ~17% ~10%
ROIC (est.) ~18% ~27% ~14% ~12% ~8%
ND/EBITDA ~1.4x ~0.3x ~1.1x ~1.4x ~1.4x
EPS (diluted) 4.91 10.11 7.05 7.14 6.09
OCF/NI 1.8x 1.6x 2.2x 2.5x 3.2x

Open Questions and Data Gaps

  1. Exact interest expense (needs income statement footnote) — currently estimated.
  2. Amortization schedule for senior notes (2028-2033 maturities) — needed for refunding risk analysis in /complete-coverage.
  3. RBL drawn balance as of Q1 2026 — disclosed in 10-Q, would sharpen liquidity picture.

Next-Step Dependencies

Step 05 (Quarterly Momentum) zooms into the 12-quarter trend. Step 06 (Balance Sheet & Dilution) deepens the debt and share-count analysis. Step 09 (Returns on Capital) picks up the ROIC trend for capital efficiency analysis.

Source Index

Tag Document or URL Date Notes
[S1] SEC EDGAR XBRL facts 2026-05-28 Annual financial data
[S3] 10-K FY 2025 2026-05-28 MD&A + risk factors
[S4] Q1 2026 8-K 2026-05-28 Debt paydown confirmation
[S6] StockAnalysis.com tables 2026-05-28 Full income/BS/CF tables
[S11] DEF 14A 2026 2026-05-28 SBC and comp structure

Deeper Financial Analysis

The fundamental tier adds 9 additional research dimensions for $MTDR.

Revenue Breakdown
Segment revenue, geographic mix, product-line contribution margins, and cohort dynamics.
Financial Trends
Quarter-over-quarter momentum, leading indicators, and inflection point analysis.
Balance Sheet
Debt structure, liquidity runway, dilution risk, and working capital dynamics.
Capital Allocation
Buyback cadence, M&A appetite, dividend policy, and reinvestment priorities.
Returns on Capital (ROIC)
Multi-year ROIC vs. WACC, marginal returns on reinvestment, sales-to-invested-capital efficiency, and moat spread.
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