Silhouette of two oil pumps or pumpjacks in a field in sunset.
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Big shale oil and gas producers SM Energy and Civitas Resources announced on Monday that they will merge in a deal valued at $12.8 billion. The result of the merger is a new shale giant that will continue operations under the SM Energy name.
“This strategic combination creates a leading oil and gas company with enhanced scale, numerous value-adding synergies, and significant free cash flow, driving superior value to stockholders,” SM Energy CEO Herb Vogel said in a release. “Congratulations to the Civitas team on building a leading sustainable energy company in the Permian and DJ basins since its inception in 2021. Their operational excellence and talent are reflected in today’s transaction. Together, we look forward to unlocking stockholder value as a unified organization.”
Under the terms of the agreement, Civitas shareholders will receive 1.45 shares of SM Energy common stock at closing. SM Energy stockholders will own roughly 48% of the combined company at closing, with owners of Civitas shares holding 52% on a fully diluted basis. SM Energy will hold a majority on the new board of directors with six, compared to five who will be named by Civitas. Vogel will remain as CEO of SM Energy, though an already-in-progress succession plan involving current President and Chief Operating Officer Beth McDonald will continue to conclusion.
“This transformative transaction will immediately create a leading independent E&P company, with a strong asset position across the premium oil-oriented basins in the U.S.,” said Ben Dell from Kimmeridge, a major investor in Civitas. “The step-change in scale coupled with identified operational synergies should enhance long-term value to all shareholders for years to come.”
The merged company will hold 823,000 leased acres, with the biggest position sited in the prolific Midland Basin area of the larger Permian Basin region, followed closely by a sizable position in Colorado’s DJ Basin. The company’s release indicates its belief it will be able to benefit from an annual $200 million in synergies related to overhead and G&A, drilling and completion and operational costs, and cost of capital, with an aspirational upside of $300 million. Shares of SM Energy fell by 6% in early Monday trading, while Civitas held steady.
Andrew Dittmar, principal analyst at Enverus Intelligence Research (EIR), said in an email that the ability to exploit such synergies and economies of scale is a key element to ensuring the merger is successful. “With synergies so key to success in E&P corporate mergers, investors will closely scrutinize that potential,” Dittmar says. “A lack of operational overlap is a possible point of concern with just the Midland Basin sharing assets between the two companies and those largely positioned in different parts of the play.”
Debt reduction to meet the company’s stated target of 1.0x net leverage by the end of 2027 is another key factor, one which Dittmar sees as possibly problematic given the assumption of an average West Texas Intermediate crude price of $65 per barrel. Given the current low-price environment, Dittmar speculates that strategic asset sales could become necessary to achieve that goal.
“Supporting asset sale efforts is a strong appetite for assets from multiple refunded private equity teams looking to build new positions amid limited opportunities,” Dittmar says. “However, it can be challenging for public companies to identify positions that are both likely to draw buyer interest at a favorable valuation and that a company is willing to part with while preserving its hard-won operated inventory.”
With all of the biggest U.S. shale players having executed major buyouts and merger deals in the past five years and a dearth of significant private assets remaining on today’s market, the deal between SM Energy and Civitas continues a trend of mergers between corporate peers which has provided most M&A value during 2025.
Dittmar sees the trend as predictable, saying, “corporate M&A may screen more attractive for buyers given a lack of private assets available and higher asking prices in asset M&A markets versus where equity markets are currently valuing public companies.” He sees the trend continuing for the time being, adding, “corporate consolidation amid smaller sized oil-focused companies and gas M&A remain the best opportunities for deals.”
In a 2021 interview with Shale Magazine, Kimmeridge managing partner Ben Dell told me he expected the rapid consolidation wave then in its nascent stages would ensure the number of U.S. shale producers to ultimately be winnowed down to “10 to 15” big companies which would be best able to exploit economies of scale. The creation of a new shale giant under the banner of SM Energy shows Dell’s vision is proceeding right on pace.
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidblackmon/2025/11/03/sm-energy-civitas-merger-creates-a-new-shale-giant/


