RR
RANGE RESOURCES CORP (RRC)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 was a strong execution quarter: adjusted diluted EPS of $0.96 vs consensus $0.93 and revenue of $0.85B vs consensus $0.78B; GAAP diluted EPS was $0.40 and GAAP total revenues and other income were $690.6M. The beat was driven by higher realized natural gas and NGL prices and disciplined costs, despite a $159M non-cash derivative mark-to-market loss . EPS/revenue consensus from S&P Global showed a beat in both metrics for Q1 2025; values retrieved from S&P Global.*
- Realized prices after hedges averaged $4.02/mcfe (gas $3.64/mcf; NGL $27.75/bbl; oil $61.72/bbl) with a NGL premium of +$1.05/bbl to Mont Belvieu and an improved gas basis differential of ($0.15)/mcf to NYMEX .
- Management raised full-year 2025 NGL differential guidance to MB +$0.25 to +$1.25 (from +$0.00 to +$1.25 previously); capital ($650–$690M), production (~2.2 Bcfe/d), and per-unit expense guidance were maintained .
- Capital allocation remained balanced: $183M free cash flow enabled $68M buybacks (1.83M shares at ~$36.97) and $22M dividends, while net debt fell by ~$42M to $1.36B; CFO reiterated the May 2025 bond maturity will be addressed with cash on hand and a small revolver draw .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Higher realized pricing and NGL premium: “First quarter 2025 natural gas, NGLs and oil price realizations…averaged $4.02 per mcfe…pre-hedge NGL price…$27.79 per barrel, approximately $1.05 above Mont Belvieu” .
- Operational efficiency and record drilling: CEO highlighted “new program drilling record by averaging 5,961 feet per day” and consistent completions efficiency with an e-frac fleet, underpinning low capital intensity and repeatable well performance .
- Shareholder returns while de-leveraging: $68M buybacks, $22M dividends, and net debt reduced by ~$42M in the quarter; free cash flow was $183M supporting both returns and balance sheet strength .
What Went Wrong
- Derivative headwind: Q1 included a $159M mark-to-market derivative loss due to higher commodity prices, reducing GAAP profitability (GAAP diluted EPS $0.40) .
- Unit cash costs up modestly YoY: total cash unit costs rose to $2.01/mcfe from $1.96/mcfe (+3%), primarily on transportation/gathering/processing/compression (TGPC) expenses; DD&A also increased slightly .
- Near-term production dip: management flagged Q2 production “slightly down” due to scheduled processing maintenance before rising in H2 2025, a potential near-term headwind to volumes .
Financial Results
Revenue and EPS vs Prior Periods and Estimates
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
GAAP P&L and Cash Flow (reported)
Product Mix and Realized Pricing
Unit Costs per mcfe
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Range is off to a great start in 2025 with efficient operations, consistent well performance and strong free cash flow.” – CEO Dennis Degner .
- “During the quarter, Range set a new program drilling record by averaging 5,961 feet per day…while staying 98% within our…landing target window.” – CEO Dennis Degner .
- “Those capital allocation decisions were made possible by $183 million in free cash flow…we invested $68 million in share repurchases…paid $22 million in dividends and reduced net debt by $42 million.” – CFO Mark Scucchi .
- “We expect production to be slightly down in the second quarter as we undergo scheduled processing maintenance. Following Q2, we expect production to increase in the second half of the year.” – CEO Dennis Degner .
- “We are collaborating with Liberty Energy and Imperial Land Corporation to supply natural gas to a planned…power generation facility…a catalyst for attracting data centers.” – Company release .
Q&A Highlights
- Tariffs/LPG exposure: Management emphasized diversified transport/pricing, East Coast export advantage, and minimal China exposure; ~80% of LPG currently goes to Europe, supporting premium NGL realizations and improved guidance .
- In-basin demand & basis: Liberty/Homer City projects could consume up to ~90–100 mmcf/d; expectation that growing in-basin demand strengthens basis over time; Constitution pipeline visibility uncertain, but incremental brownfield expansions are positive signs .
- Hedging outlook: Strategy to insure fixed costs and preserve upside; 2026 hedging ~15–25% with attractive floors; 2025 ~35% hedged .
- Debt maturity: CFO to address May bond maturity via cash on hand and a small revolver draw; ongoing balance sheet optimization .
- Capital returns: Greater buybacks during market dislocation; total 28.6M shares retired historically; expect continued tilt toward returns while meeting balance sheet goals .
Estimates Context
- Q1 2025: revenue and adjusted EPS both beat consensus; prior quarters also show EPS beats (Q4 2024 $0.68 vs $0.60; Q1 2024 $0.69 vs $0.59). Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Pricing tailwinds and basis improvement drove a material beat: realized gas $3.64/mcf and NGL premium +$1.05/bbl underpinned $0.96 adjusted EPS vs $0.93 consensus and $0.85B revenue vs $0.78B ; values retrieved from S&P Global.*
- Guidance quality improved: NGL differential raised (MB +$0.25 to +$1.25), while capital/production and per-unit cost guidance held; near-term Q2 maintenance dip is transitory with H2 volume recovery .
- Operational cadence and efficiency are strategic: record drilling rates and e-frac efficiency support low reinvestment and options to modularly add “wedges” of growth into 2026–27 as demand materializes .
- Capital returns likely continue: opportunistic buybacks on market dislocations, sustained dividend ($0.09/qtr), and strengthened balance sheet (net debt ~$1.36B) create flexibility .
- Macro set-up constructive: normalized storage, accelerating LNG offtake, and in-basin demand projects (Liberty, Homer City) support tighter markets and favorable basis into 2026–27, benefiting Appalachia cost leaders .
- Risk monitor: derivative fair value volatility can swing GAAP results; TGPC costs remain a watch item as cash unit costs rose modestly; keep an eye on regulatory timelines for in-basin projects .
- Trading lens: Near-term catalyst is H2 production ramp and continued NGL premium realization; the maintained capex and improved price guidance plus buyback activity are supportive on pullbacks, while Q2 maintenance-driven volume dip is well telegraphed .