Feb 24, 2022
Operator
Good morning. My name is Chantelle and I will be your conference operator today.
At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Callon Petroleum Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2021 Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise.
After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Thank you.
Kevin Smith, Director of Investor Relations, you may begin your conference.
Kevin Smith
Thank you, Chantelle. Good morning and thank you for taking the time to join our conference call today.
With me on today's call are Joe Gatto, President and Chief Executive Officer; Dr. Jeff Balmer, SBVP and Chief Operating Officer; and Kevin Haggard, SVP and Chief Financial Officer.
During our prepared remarks, we may reference the earnings results presentation and fourth quarter earnings press release, both of which are available on our website. So, I encourage everyone to download both documents if you haven't already.
You can find the slides on our Events & Presentations' page and the press release under the News headings both of which are located within the Investors' section of our website at www.callon.com. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone to review our cautionary statements, disclaimers, and important disclosures included on slide two of the presentation.
We will make some forward-looking statements during today's call that refer to estimates and plans. Actual results could differ materially due to the factors noted on these slides and in our periodic SEC filings.
We will also refer to some non-GAAP financial measures today, which we believe help to facilitate comparisons across periods and with our peers. For any non-GAAP measures we reference, we provide a reconciliation to the nearest corresponding GAAP measure.
You may find these reconciliations in the appendix to the earnings presentation slides and in our earnings press release, both of which are available on our website. Following our prepared remarks, we will open up the call for Q&A.
And with that, I would like to turn the call over Joe Gatto. Joe?
Joe Gatto
Thank you, Kevin and good morning to everyone joining us on the call, specially on a day with concerning developments in other parts of the world. As we run through our introductory comments, I encourage everyone to take a look at earnings presentation on website for additional background on our commentary.
Before we get started, I'd like to formally introduce Kevin Smith, our new Director of Investor Relations. Kevin has over 15 years of industry experience in the energy sector, working most recently in Investor Relations and previously as research analyst covering the E&P industry.
We are excited to have him here with us and I'm sure you'll all enjoy working with him. I'd like to start by discussing the fourth quarter during which we once again achieved stellar results and beat expectations.
For the quarter, total production came in at over 112,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day. This was at the high end of guidance driven by strong well results from the Permian Basin and an efficient integration of the Delaware acquisition.
Additionally, operating cost categories came in at either the midpoint or below guidance as our strong cost control were effective at mitigating inflationary pressures. Overall, Callon's operating performance combined with our disciplined capital spending program that was below budget for the year drove free cash flow generation to a new record of approximately $125 million for the quarter.
As I look back to 2021, we began the year with ambitious goals for leverage improvement, while maintaining a disciplined reinvestment model and advancing our sustainability initiatives. I'm very pleased to say that we deliver cross-border on those commitments.
Early in 2021, we outlined a capital allocation framework with reinvestment rates of 65% to 75% of our operating cash flow and planning prices. In 2021, Callon's actual CapEx ultimately represented less than 60% of our operating cash flow as commodity prices proved to be higher than our planning prices, while our capital plan remained unchanged, setting the stage for excess free cash flow -- directly debt reduction.
This cash flow profile was a clear product of our operating profit margin that grew by roughly 141% year-over-year and remains top-tier in the industry. As I mentioned earlier, aggressive debt reduction on both an absolute and leverage metric basis was a key focus for the team in 2021.
Our free cash flow generation combined with our asset monetization and liability management initiatives contributed to $760 million of absolute debt reduction and resulted in a net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio of two times on a fourth quarter annualized basis. These are impressive achievement that put us in an advantage position for further balance sheet improvement and disciplined reinvestment and a robust portfolio of drilling locations.
Alongside our operational and financial performance, we are all proud with the work the collective organization has done to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve Callon's overall carbon footprint. As you may recall, last spring, we announced meaningful goals to reduce flaring and GHG emissions by 2025.
Given our progress in reducing flaring in 2021, paired with increased methane emissions initiatives that are in process, we had accelerated our goal timeline by one year to 2024, increased our GHG reduction target to at least 50%. As part of raising that bar relative to our original GHG goals, we also expect to reduce our methane intensity to less than 0.2% by 2024, reduce total flaring to below 1% by 2024, and eliminate all routine flaring this year.
In the presentation materials we've outlined in inventory that represents 15 years of locations that are economic at $50 per barrel and below based on third-party estimates. But I also want to highlight our substantial crude reserve base of 485 million barrels of oil equivalent at year end comprised of 60% oil and 85% Permian volumes.
Importantly, increased PDP volumes by almost 30% in 2021 and PDP now represents 57% of total proved reserves. In addition to adding group volumes at an attractive valuation through acquisition, we were placed over 100% for 2021 production through the drill bit at a PDP F&D cost of approximately $8 per BOE.
In total, our SEC PV-10 valuation increased by nearly $5 billion as we exited the year with an SEC PV-10 value of $7.1 billion. For 2022, we have set a capital budget of $725 million, which represents an operating cash flow reinvestment rate of approximately 60% at $75 per barrel WTI is expected to generate free cash flow of well over $500 million using that oil price assumption.
At recent stripped pricing levels, the implied reinvestment rate would decline to approximately 52% and free cash flow would increase to nearly $700 million. Our capital allocation to the Permian will increase to 85% this year as we advance our scale development model across a recently expanded opportunity set of over 135,000 acres in the basin.
Importantly, Callon's steady development program and proactive contracting strategy for key services, which we began last year, will help mitigate inflationary pressures being seen in the spot markets. As a result, we are forecasting cost inflation for our drilling completion and equipment costs in the range of 10%, driven primarily by labor, steel, and fuel costs.
We're also budgeting approximately $20 million for environmental projects and initiatives, which are being accelerated this year to achieve the new goals and missions that I discussed earlier. Looking at our 2022 production profile, we expect to production reset in the first quarter of 2022 as our production levels are impacted by fourth quarter divestitures of approximately 3,000 BOE per day and a shift to a larger scale development model on the newly acquired properties, which will impact the timing of wells placed on production.
More specifically, the number of wells placed online in the fourth quarter of 2021 and the first quarter of 2022 combined, will be similar to the number in the third quarter of 2020 alone -- 2021 alone. Our POPs will rebound over 30 net wells in the second quarter of this year, in conjunction with an expansion in our DUC inventories over 45 wells in the first half.
This increased inventory will accommodate larger project sizes in the Permian and create operational flexibility for future quarters. Notice this shift in production timing will not compromise the sustain level strong free cash flow generation for the forecast of over $125 million in the first quarter.
With this positioning for more efficient scale development across a larger portion of our asset base, we expect to deliver 10% growth in our oil volumes during the course of the year. At an average annual total production rates of the year in line was 2021, they came in at approximately 105,000 BOE per day after adjusting for acquisition divestiture activity during the year.
Based on the forward curve, we also forecast sequential increases in operating cash flow through 2022, despite market backwardation. To sum-up of our outlook for the upcoming year, I'll leave you with a few key points.
Callon's extraordinary pace of deleveraging in 2021 will continue into 2022 on the strength of bleeding cash margins and a maintenance capital program that has benefited by a scaled development model. With free cash flow potential in excess of 10% of enterprise value with recent stripped pricing, we see a clear path to adding shareholder value as enterprise value is transferred from debt balances to equity value.
Callon's value proposition has a strong foundation and an inventory of 15 years of locations with $50 per barrel WTI and below with additional upside and ongoing to lineation from a multi-zone resource base. In other words, this is a sustainable business model, not a story of near-term liquidation high graded inventory.
I will now turn it over to Jeff to discuss operations.
Jeff Balmer
Thank you and good morning everyone. As Joe pointed out, the operating environment over the last 12 months presented many challenges and I'm proud to say that our team was up for them.
Thanks to our focus on execution and cost control, we had an outstanding year. Our production results came in at the high end of guidance as well performance trended above expectations.
Additionally, we exhibited exceptional cost controls as we came in at or below the midpoint of capital cost and lifting costs guidance, even in this inflationary environment. Now, dig into the cost environment and what we're doing to offset inflation later my prepared remarks.
Now, I'd like to discuss some of the operational highlights we had during the year. Starting with the Eagle Ford.
While, we did not have any completion activity in the Eagle Ford during the fourth quarter, I cannot overstate how important the 29 well Urban West project that came online during the second quarter played in our production results for the year. The Urban West project was the largest horizontal well development in the company's history and through a tremendous planning and coordination across essentially every part of Callon and it's been a terrific success.
Another highlight from the Eagle Ford is our ongoing efforts to vastly reduce emissions by having our fields on the electric grid. During the year, we connected five full fields to the power grid and this allowed us to take 43 generators from service, which not only reduces our carbon footprint, but also results in over $2 million in annual savings.
This year, our plan is to continue expanding the field electrification across the Eagle Ford assets to release an additional 30 more diesel generators. Also, we'll be replacing over 60% of the pneumatic devices with instrument air to help us move closer to our overall methane reduction targets.
So, shifting to the Midland Basin. We continue to have success with multi-bench targeting in our life of field development philosophy.
During the fourth quarter, we completed an eight-well, three-zone development in the Wolfcamp A, Wolfcamp B and Lower Spraberry formations, bringing on two of those wells at the end of 2021 and the other six in early January. Results to-date for that project are excellent with all wells meeting or exceeding our expectations.
The drilling days for the eight wells, which had an average lateral length of roughly 11,000 feet, averaged about 10 days from spud to rig release, which represents a reduction of 10% versus our average drilling time. So again, continued efficiency.
Moving to the Delaware, we were very active during the fourth quarter bringing online 16 wells. Three of the wells, which I'll discuss later, were from our newly acquired Delaware South properties.
So, Primex has become Delaware South. Two Ward County wells that we brought online that I would like to highlight are the Crowheart wells that we completed in the third Bone Springs formation.
So, a modestly nontraditional formation. These 5,000-foot lateral wells had an average 30-day IP rate of over 1,845 BOE per day, of which 85% was oil.
So, again, short 5,000-foot laterals making a significant amount of production. And the remaining wells in that development were Wolfcamp completions, all of which were performing in line with our expectations.
Throughout the year, we've been very active in the Delaware Basin, converting old gas lift systems to ESPs, or electric submersible pumps, and this decision has significantly helped improve well performance and reduce upfront costs of artificial gas systems. Our ESP management program is top tier and has resulted in an 80% improvement in run time since 2018.
Last year, we secured additional secondary gas gathering options for the Permian regions to help reduce our total gas flared. We also tested a dual fuel and electric frac fleet in the Permian region.
The success of these two projects led us to sign full year contracts for 2022 for both an electric frac fleet as well as a high substitution rate dual fuel fleet. This year, we plan to upgrade natural gas treatment facilities, and we will be replacing a majority of our natural gas operated pneumatics with no devices or instrument air to support our methane emission reduction initiatives.
So, next, I'd like to provide you with an update on the recently acquired Dover South assets. And really, this has been as close to a seamless transition from an operations standpoint as possible.
We completed the acquisition in October on the 1st. And within hours of closing, we had a crew on site drilling out frac bugs on the three wells that were drilled and completed by Primex.
Our team successfully brought the three wells online within seven days of closing. These wells have been producing for roughly 90 days plus and have oil cuts similar to our Delaware East assets and are performing in line with expectations.
Currently, we're operating two rigs in our Delaware South assets. We recently brought online six additional wells and plan to place another five wells on during the remainder portion of the first quarter.
Very excited about implementing our drilling and completion methods on this acreage. The size and stable nature of our overall development plan allows us to lock in supply and service contracts at more favorable pricing than operators that are having to deal with the tight spot market.
As Joe mentioned, our capital budget is going to be primarily focused on the Permian Basin, as we increased our attention to our Delaware assets. We plan on continuing to prioritize multi-bench development opportunities as we've really shifted away from the one and two-well pads to focus at a larger scale.
Over half of our 2022 Delaware program will target our new Delaware South assets. And then in the Midland Basin, our focus will be on multi-zone infill development, primarily focused on the Middle and Lower Spraberry and of course, the Wolfcamp A and B zones.
In total, we've allocated approximately 85% of our D&C budget to target the Permian. In the Eagle Ford, we'll continue to drill infill wells on our core acreage and remain focused upon optimizing completed methods and costs.
So, lastly, I'd like to discuss the steps we're taking to offset inflation. Just like our peers, we are experiencing cost inflation with average well costs of between 8% and maybe 12%.
We're primarily experiencing inflation in items like raw materials and fuel. And then, of course, we're also seeing our service providers pushing for price increases to reflect the tight labor market.
To offset this, we've locked in long-term service contracts and rigs and factories. Our size and scale allow us to use active vendor management and really partnerships and provides the opportunity also to buy in bulk, pushing efficiencies.
That is primarily due to a very stable, well outlined development program. And then specifically, one area that we think we can bring down our lifting costs is in the Delaware South assets.
We use our in-house expertise in chemicals management to source more effective and cheaper chemicals, and we've made significant progress in reducing our natural gas treatment costs. Additionally, again, in the Delaware South, we've already seen our proficiency in ESP run time, increase the overall run time for the field and the overall productivity of the new Delaware Basin assets.
So to wrap up, we exceeded expectations across the board in 2021. We've got the right plan, the right assets and the right operations team in place to once again deliver in 2022.
And with that, I'll turn it over to Kevin to handle the financials.
Kevin Haggard
Thank you, Jeff. During the fourth quarter and full year 2021, we delivered on our promises, set new records and achieve key financial goals like our deleveraging target.
Let's quickly look at some of these highlights. We set a new record for EBITDA, posting approximately $1 billion in adjusted EBITDA for the year.
We delivered on our divestiture targets and realized $210 million for adjustments. Perhaps most importantly, we reduced our leverage ratio by over two turns during the year, a remarkable achievement, ending the year with a pro forma leverage ratio of 2.3 times.
With regard to this 2.3, this is a pro forma calculation on leverage, which follows the closing of the Primex acquisition on October 1st. This pro forma metric is based on the same calculation we use with our lending banks and bonds.
During the fourth quarter, we once again were able to expand our peer-leading cash margins. Despite the higher lifting costs associated with our new Delaware South properties, which are targeted for significant reductions in 2022 as Jeff mentioned, we realized an increase in operating margins at the high oil weighting of our asset base, plus lower gathering transportation and processing on a per unit of production basis led to an 8% sequential increase in our quarterly operating margin to approximately $49 per BOE.
This top-tier margin helped us realize adjusted EBITDA of $339 million in the fourth quarter, a 16% increase over our third quarter results. The new company record level of adjusted EBITDA and reduced interest burden combined with our disciplined capital spending, has led to record levels of free cash flow.
During the fourth quarter, Callon generated an adjusted free cash flow of approximately $124 million. For the full year, we generated roughly $274 million of free cash flow.
Our capital discipline has provided the opportunity to reduce debt levels and strengthen the balance sheet. During 2021, we reduced our debt balance by $290 million and lowered our RBL borrowing level to below 50%.
If you consider the $470 million in cash we borrowed for the Primax acquisition, it is really $760 million of pro forma debt reduction over the course of the year. This also has positive implications for our equity value.
Callon has now reduced debt levels for two consecutive years. Since year-end 2019, we have paid down roughly $500 million of debt.
We view this as a form of returning line to shareholders as it has moved value from debt to equity. We are not done here either.
Based on our initial 2022 guidance and consensus estimates, we expect to generate approximately $500 million of free cash flow in 2022 at a flat $75 oil price. This quantum of cash flow puts us in a position to achieve absolute debt levels approaching $2 billion and a leverage ratio of around one and a half times by year-end.
The continued achievement of our stated financial goals should also allow us to remove the second lien notes from our capital structure and reduce our overall cost of debt, our financial metrics more closely mirror those of a BB credit rating. Turning to hedging, our hedge program for 2022 is fairly complete, minimizing the downside risk while still leaving upside potential.
As we look to 2023, we remain proactive in adding additional hedges. You could see from the latest slides, we've begun to add 2023 oil hedges that protect the floor of $70.
The market has been helpful in this regard with both the oil and natural gas curve strengthening recently in the outyears. The strides we have made in deleveraging over the past two years, plus the positive outlook for cash flow puts us in a good position to start having meaningful discussions about returning money to shareholders.
While we are increasing equity value through debt reduction, we are rapidly approaching the point where many of our debt reduction and leverage goals will be achieved, and we will need to discuss other ways to increase shareholder value. In the near-term, we can do this organically through continuing to invest in our business and creating value organically.
In the future, we can look to return capital to shareholders through means like dividends and share buybacks. This is something we will be evaluating throughout the year as we investigate the best options to generate value for our shareholders while protecting the balance sheet and affording us corporate flexibility.
And with that, I'm going to turn things back over to Joe before we move to Q&A.
Joe Gatto
Thanks Kevin. I think it's clearly appropriate to finish up here by thanking our employees for their tireless efforts and dedication which drove an exceptional year for Callon and certainly sets us up for great things to come.
So, with that, I'm going to turn it back to operator to open up for Q&A.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Derrick Whitfield with Stifel. Your line is open.
Derrick Whitfield
Thanks. Good morning all and congrats on your portfolio and deleveraging progress.
Joe Gatto
Thank you.
Derrick Whitfield
Perhaps for Joe or Kevin, kind of ending with where you guys ended in your prepared comments, your leverage stats have dramatically improved to date as a result of your actions since 2020 and the improving commodity price backdrop. With the potential to achieve sub one and a half times net debt-to-EBITDA leverage in 2022, how should we think about your longer-term preference for capital allocation or free cash flow once you achieved that metric?
Joe Gatto
Yes. Derrick, I'll start off there and see if Kevin wants to jump in.
But clearly, we're on a great path here, and we got follow-through, but things look good continued dramatic reduction on the power of our cash margins here. I think the deleveraging will continue to be at the top of the list, even if we get to one and a half target, we're still going to look to bring that down as you might have seen in the materials of sort of medium-term goals to bring that closer to one times.
But alongside that, as Kevin mentioned, there's clearly options, continue to invest in a very strong inventory and as we get to our leverage metrics and look out on a longer-term planning horizon, returns of capital and assess that. We've started assessing that just to get ahead of it.
We think later this year, we'll be in a position to make some more tangible decisions around it. But right now, it's certainly around keeping options open, deliver on our commitments out there and also taking feedback from investors.
There's certainly a lot of return of capital models being deployed right now and to talk to our investors and understand and where their priorities are as well is a key piece of that.
Derrick Whitfield
Great. And as my follow-up, referencing slide 12, -- could you elaborate on the importance of your delineated objectives for 2022?
More specifically, are you seeing these opportunities as a means to high-grade development activity? Or is this simply an evaluation to add inventory debt?
Joe Gatto
So, I think that we have some compelling opportunities here. These are not in our core locations.
We're always delineating. I think, Derek, as you're dealing with, especially in the Delaware, around a multi-zone resource base when you're there, developing some of the core zones.
We like to take the opportunity to target some of the non-core zones to say see, one, if they're going to compete for capital. We've seen results in these lens in other spots.
Some are very good and compelling, you could compete for capital. But as you know, in place like a Delaware Basin co-development is certainly important potentially when you're a developing zone.
So if this is going to be an economic zone over time, probably want to know that sooner than later. So, if it makes sense to develop now with the other zones, you want to put that into the plan.
If it's not going to for capital, we're not going to continue to put money into that effort.
Derrick Whitfield
Very helpful. Great update guys and thanks for your time.
Joe Gatto
Thanks Derrick.
Operator
Our next question comes from Neil Wiese with Truist. Your line is open.
Neil Wiese
Good morning Joe. Maybe a little along that same line.
I'm just wondering -- I really would love to hear it from you or Jeff, just on the larger scale development. I've always said why others were out there, I guess, just part maybe one or two zones you guys not only have been doing a large development, but you had right success.
And I'm just wondering, maybe talk a bit about what you just kind of mentioned a little bit. I'm just wondering how much of the plan -- how much more efficiencies are you seeing with that?
Maybe just, Jeff, if you could maybe share a little bit more on the upside you're seeing from this large-scale development.
Jeff Balmer
Yes, absolutely, that -- Callon has remained committed to that, and I'm very proud of that fact, even through 2019, 2020 and 2021, the development philosophy really remain the same from a very robust top-to-bottom analysis and implementation of the program. And you'll see that very well represented here in 2022.
Also, the nice part about the integration of these several companies over the last couple of years with the Carrizo and now the Primex is. You have three independent data sets that are all now congruent with each other, specializing in slightly different areas.
And the ability of the group to analyze all those different independent data sets and put those two together in a development program allows optimization of each particular pad and development system using larger, more regional aspects of it. So you'll see even in some of the mature assets like the Midland Basin, we put in an eight-well pad that was -- had one side founded on an infill basis and reasonably tight spacing, not tight, tight, but certainly 660-ish.
And we have fantastic results with several of the Wolfcamp B wells averaging over 1,000 barrels of oil a day. So, you'll see that continue to be reflected in the overall 2022 program.
The Delaware Basin South assets, the newer assets, we're starting with a little bit broader spacing just to get an idea of the overall productivity and depletion aspects, so we'll do some additional subsurface logging and take some different analysis to see how the fracture systems influence items, how the wells interact with each other, both vertically and laterally, but the overall top to bottom, left to right development program is very healthy within this company.
Neil Wiese
Great detail Jeff. And then maybe just, Joe, for you, Mike.
Kevin, just to follow-up. Obviously, the jump you guys talked about this morning, precedent on what was going on with oil prices.
And you mentioned a little bit taking advantage of the sort of baseline or for I'm just wondering from either a -- Joe, maybe a question for you is maybe from an operational or a hedging perspective, are there things that you would think about doing in the near-term incremental things to do in the near-term? Or is this is sort of business as usual, I guess?
Joe Gatto
Yes, for operational and capital deployment standpoint, I think it's certainly business as usual. As we talked about, we have a steady plan as well outlined that we're executing well on.
Obviously, maybe others are thinking about dialing up activity, maybe more private companies or very small portion of public companies. We're not going to be doing that, obviously, as we've talked about, we're focused on taking that excess free cash flow above our planning prices and put it to debt for the foreseeable future.
I think you also have to take into account some of the spot market pricing out there. If you wanted to make that decision is a very different price point.
It's sort of a step change from -- certainly from where we are. So maintaining that right cost structure, maintaining steady development and maintaining a clear focus on debt reduction is where we are.
And with better prices, we'll just take that extra cash flow benefit from the pricing that we've sort of locked in here and take the benefit there. On the hedging side, why don't I turn it back to Kevin, you can talk a little bit about how we've approached the market over the last few weeks and how we'll look at it going forward.
Kevin Haggard
Yes, I think over the past couple of weeks, we've taken advantage to layer on probably some base layer of hedges as insurance kind of protecting that $70 floor in 2023. And really that's -- those are light ads, and that's kind of an early look.
Certainly, the movement in the price curve today has had discussions around the floors here early on and seeing if there's a chance to take advantage of some movements in the price there as well. I would remind you that as the financial position and balance sheet continue to improve, you'll probably see overall a lesser percentage of production hedged as our balance sheet is able to carry through some of these sites.
Neil Wiese
Great details. Thank you all.
Jeff Balmer
Thanks Neil.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Phillips Johnston with Capital One. Your line is open.
Phillips Johnston
Hey guys. Thanks.
A question for Kevin on cash taxes. Obviously, you guys aren't expecting to be a cash taxpayer this year.
But if prices remain strong, when do you think you might become a cash tax payer?
Joe Gatto
Yes, I think that's -- it's a good question. I think at even price levels like this, it's still out below -- still out beyond our medium term forecast.
Phillips Johnston
Okay. Sounds good.
And then I appreciate all the details on the year-end reserves. I'm wondering what kind of next 12-month PDP decline rate for both oil and gas is embedded in the numbers?
And maybe how those decline rates have changed kind of versus what was assumed in your year-end 2020 reserve report?
Joe Gatto
Yes. Jeff, do you want to?
Jeff Balmer
Sure. Yes, absolutely.
The -- we're kind of in the mid-30s relative to the PDP decline rate, and it stayed relatively flat, which is a little hook and crook because when we brought in some additional assets such as the Eagle Ford, which tends to have a little bit of a mature -- more mature profile versus, say, some of the higher initial decline rates from some of the Delaware Basin new wells and those kinds of things, it's modestly coincidentally stayed in the same arena. So, from a PDP basis, we see relatively consistent overall decline rates from 2021 through 2022.
And of course, there will be some fluctuations with that. But the reserve picture remains extremely robust.
And when you grew that next door to the overall inventory that Callon has, it's an outstanding value proposition.
Phillips Johnston
Okay, great. Sounds good.
Thank you.
Jeff Balmer
Thank you.
Operator
There are no further questions at this time. I'll turn the call back over to Joe Gatto for closing remarks.
Joe Gatto
Thank you everyone for joining the call and your continued interest in Callon and everything that we've done this year and certainly what we expect to do going forward. We look forward to speaking with you again next quarter.
Thank you.
Operator
This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.