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Dealmaking in US Upstream Oil and Gas Falls as Volatility Rages Investors

Dealmaking in US Upstream Oil and Gas Falls as Volatility Rages Investors

Enverus, an analytics firm, said that the volatility in energy and equity markets scared investors during the second quarter. This slowed the pace of mergers, acquisitions, and divestitures in the U.S. Upstream Oil and Gas sector. The decline in dealmaking comes after a string of massive takeovers of oil and gas companies in recent years. These deals culminated in $192 billion in 2023.

There were $13.5 billion worth of deals disclosed in the quarter ended June 30, marking a 21% drop quarter-over-quarter, Enverus said. In the first half of 2025, a total of $30 billion was exchanged. This is a 60% drop compared to 2024.

Andrew Dittmar is the principal analyst of Enverus Intelligence. He said that volatility in equity and commodity markets has raised a yellow flag, slowing down dealmaking.

The oil prices dropped to multi-year lows during the last quarter, after U.S. president Donald Trump announced a list of trade tariffs, sparking fears of a possible recession and drop in fuel demand. In April, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) announced plans to reverse deep cuts in production. The price of oil also increased as traders' risk premiums rose due to the conflict in the Middle East.

According to LSEG data, U.S. Crude Futures reached a low on May 5 of $57.13 a barrel before swinging up to a peak of $75.14 a barrel by June 18.

Enverus reports that Houston-based EOG Resources, which is an exploration and production company, bought Encino Acquisition Partners in May for $5.6 billion. This deal was the largest of the second quarter.

Viper Energy purchased Sitio Royalties in June for $4.1 billion.

Enverus reported that these two transactions accounted over 75% for the second-quarter deal values.

Dittmar stated that "the engine of M&A in the past few years has sputtered, stalling due to only a few targets remaining".

He added that companies will need to look at buying assets overseas, whether in Canada or in other areas, such as Vaca Muerta in Argentina.

(source: Reuters)