Matador Resources Co
F:7MR
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Matador Resources Co
Matador Resources is an independent oil and gas company that finds, develops, and produces crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas liquids in the United States. It focuses on drilling wells and building out acreage in oil-rich basins, then selling the hydrocarbons it pulls from the ground to larger energy buyers and processors. Its main customers are refineries, gas processors, pipeline operators, and other energy market participants that buy the company’s production or handle it after it leaves the wellhead. Matador makes money mainly by selling oil and gas at market prices, while also using some of its own midstream assets, such as pipelines and processing facilities, to move and prepare production for sale. What makes Matador’s business model different is that it combines upstream production with a small but useful midstream operation. That gives it more control over how its oil and gas gets to market and can reduce dependence on third-party infrastructure. In simple terms, it is an energy producer that both drills for hydrocarbons and helps move them out of the field.
Matador Resources is an independent oil and gas company that finds, develops, and produces crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas liquids in the United States. It focuses on drilling wells and building out acreage in oil-rich basins, then selling the hydrocarbons it pulls from the ground to larger energy buyers and processors.
Its main customers are refineries, gas processors, pipeline operators, and other energy market participants that buy the company’s production or handle it after it leaves the wellhead. Matador makes money mainly by selling oil and gas at market prices, while also using some of its own midstream assets, such as pipelines and processing facilities, to move and prepare production for sale.
What makes Matador’s business model different is that it combines upstream production with a small but useful midstream operation. That gives it more control over how its oil and gas gets to market and can reduce dependence on third-party infrastructure. In simple terms, it is an energy producer that both drills for hydrocarbons and helps move them out of the field.
Balance sheet: Management said Matador is in the strongest balance-sheet position in its history and emphasized that debt has come down while production has risen.
Growth approach: The company is still prioritizing measured, profitable growth rather than chasing volume, with capital spending kept under control despite having room to spend more.
Midstream value: San Mateo and the broader midstream footprint were described as a major strategic advantage, especially for flow assurance, water recycling, and avoiding negative Waha pricing.
Woodford catalyst: Matador drilled its first Woodford well and called it a major catalyst for the year, but said it is too early to count any Woodford inventory today.
Efficiency gains: Management pointed to faster drilling, more water recycling, electric fleets, and AI-driven process improvements as key drivers of lower well costs and better execution.
Capital cadence: First-quarter capital spending came in at $428 million, and management said the first half of the year is tracking exactly as planned, with spending expected to step down in the back half.