UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D. C. 20549
FORM 10-Q
/ x / Quarterly Report Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
For the quarterly period ended March 31,September 30, 2003
or
/ / Transition Report Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
For the transition period from _______ to ________
Commission File No. 1-13245
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
(Exact name of Registrant as specified in its charter)
Delaware 75-2702753
----------------------------------------- ---------------------
(State or other jurisdiction of (I.R.S. Employer
incorporation or organization) Identification Number)
5205 N. O'Connor Blvd., Suite 1400,900, Irving, Texas 75039
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------
(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)
Registrant's Telephone Number, including area code : (972) 444-9001
Not applicable
(Former name, former address and former fiscal year,
if changed since last report)
Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant (1) has filed all reports required
to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during
the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the Registrant was
required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing
requirements for the past 90 days.
Yes / x / No / /
Indicate by check markcheckmark whether the Registrant is an accelerated filer (as defined
in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).
YES X NO
----- ------Yes / x / No / /
Number of shares of Common Stock outstanding as of
April 28, 2003... 117,649,893October 30, 2003................................................ 118,027,311
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
Definitions of Oil and Gas Terms and Conventions Used Herein............ 3
PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Item 1. Financial Statements
Consolidated Balance Sheets as of March 31,September 30, 2003 and
December 31, 2002.......................................2002........................................... 4
Consolidated Statements of Operations for the three and
nine months ended March 31,September 30, 2003 and 2002....................2002............... 5
Consolidated Statement of Stockholders' Equity for the
threenine months ended March 31, 2003.......................September 30, 2003........................ 6
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the three and
nine months ended March 31,September 30, 2003 and 2002....................2002............... 7
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss)
for the three and nine months ended March 31,September 30,
2003 and 2002......2002............................................... 8
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.................Statements.................... 9
Item 2. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
Condition and Results of Operations.....................Operations......................... 24
Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk.............................................. 33Risk.... 36
Item 4. Controls and Procedures..................................... 35Procedures....................................... 38
PART II. OTHER INFORMATION
Item 1. Legal Proceedings........................................... 36Proceedings............................................. 39
Item 6. Exhibits and Reports on Form 8-K............................ 36
Signatures.................................................. 37
Certifications.............................................. 388-K.............................. 39
Signatures.................................................... 40
Exhibit Index............................................... 40Index................................................. 41
2
Definitions of Oil and Gas Terms and Conventions Used Herein
Within this Report, the following oil and gas terms and conventions have
specific meanings: "Bbl" means a standard barrel containing 42 United States
gallons; "BOE" means a barrel of oil equivalent and is a standard convention
used to express oil and gas volumes on a comparable oil equivalent basis; "Btu"
means British thermal unit and is a measure of the amount of energy required to
raise the temperature of one pound of water one degree Fahrenheit; "LIBOR" means
London Interbank Offered Rate, which is a market rate of interest; "MMBtu" means
one million Btu's;Btus; "MBbl" means one thousand Bbls; "MBOE" means one thousand BOE;
"Mcf" means one thousand cubic feet and is a measure of natural gas volume;
"MMcf" means one million cubic feet; "NGL" means natural gas liquid; "NYMEX"
means The New York Mercantile Exchange; "proved reserves" mean the estimated
quantities of crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas liquids which geological
and engineering data demonstrate with reasonable certainty to be recoverable in
future years from known reservoirs under existing economic and operating
conditions, i.e., prices and costs as of the date the estimate is made. Prices
include consideration of changes in existing prices provided only by contractual
arrangements, but not on escalations based upon future conditions.
(i) Reservoirs are considered proved if economic producibility is
supported by either actual production or conclusive formation test. The area of
a reservoir considered proved includes (A) that portion delineated by drilling
and defined by gas-oil and/or oil-water contacts, if any; and (B) the
immediately adjoining portions not yet drilled, but which can be reasonably
judged as economically productive on the basis of available geological and
engineering data. In the absence of information on fluid contacts, the lowest
known structural occurrence of hydrocarbons controls the lower proved limit of
the reservoir.
(ii) Reserves which can be produced economically through application of
improved recovery techniques (such as fluid injection) are included in the
"proved" classification when successful testing by a pilot project, or the
operation of an installed program in the reservoir, provides support for the
engineering analysis on which the project or program was based.
(iii) Estimates of proved reserves do not include the following: (A) oil
that may become available from known reservoirs but is classified separately as
"indicated additional reserves"; (B) crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas
liquids, the recovery of which is subject to reasonable doubt because of
uncertainty as to geology, reservoir characteristics, or economic factors; (C)
crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas liquids, that may occur in undrilled
prospects; and (D) crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas liquids, that may be
recovered from oil shales, coal, gilsonite and other such sources.
Gas equivalents are determined under the relative energy content method
by using the ratio of 6.0 Mcf of gas to 1.0 Bbl of oil or NGL.
With respectespect to information on the working interest in wells, drilling
locations and acreage, "net" wells, drilling locations and acres are determined
by multiplying "gross" wells, drilling locations and acres by Pioneer Natural
Resources Company's working interest in such wells, drilling locations or acres.
Unless otherwise specified, wells, drilling locations and acreage statistics
quoted herein represent gross wells, drilling locations or acres; and, all
currency amounts are expressed in U.S. dollars.
3
PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Item 1. Financial Statements
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(in thousands, except share data)
March 31,September 30, December 31,
2003 2002
----------- -----------
(Unaudited)
ASSETS
Current assets:
Cash and cash equivalents........................................equivalents......................................... $ 6,85812,651 $ 8,490
Accounts receivable:
Trade, net of reserves for doubtful accounts of $4,955$4,641
and $4,744 as of March 31,September 30, 2003 and December 31,
2002, respectively................................................ 125,374respectively........................................... 97,388 97,774
Affiliates.................................................... 462Due from affiliates............................................ 239 448
Inventories...................................................... 10,951Inventories....................................................... 19,054 10,648
Prepaid expenses................................................. 13,707expenses.................................................. 13,889 5,485
Deferred income taxes............................................ 14,400taxes............................................. 39,500 13,900
Other current assets:
Derivative assets,Derivatives.................................................... 1,856 2,508
Other, net of valuation reserves for doubtful accounts of $3,638$4,207
and $3,351 as of March 31,September 30, 2003 and December 31,
2002....... 5,346 3,150
Other......................................................... 7,447 7,1982002, respectively........................................... 11,161 7,840
---------- ----------
Total current assets........................................ 184,545assets......................................... 195,738 147,093
---------- ----------
Property, plant and equipment, at cost:
Oil and gas properties, using the successful efforts
method of accounting:
Proved properties............................................. 4,550,198properties.............................................. 4,767,281 4,252,897
Unproved properties........................................... 190,585properties............................................ 182,429 219,073
Accumulated depletion, depreciation and amortization............. (1,346,096)amortization.............. (1,555,709) (1,303,541)
---------- ----------
3,394,6873,394,001 3,168,429
---------- ----------
DeferredNoncurrent deferred income taxes.............................................. 76,449taxes.................................... 188,712 76,840
Other property and equipment, net.................................. 22,577net................................... 25,733 22,784
Other assets, net:
Derivative assets,assets:
Derivatives....................................................... 349 643
Other, net of valuation reserves for doubtful accounts of $848$371 and $1,136$1,227
as of March 31,September 30, 2003 and December 31, 2002............. 5,046 793
Other............................................................ 39,103 39,1772002, respectively... 37,077 39,327
---------- ----------
$ 3,722,4073,841,610 $ 3,455,116
========== ==========
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities:
Accounts payable:
Trade.........................................................Trade.......................................................... $ 158,884135,411 $ 117,582
Affiliates.................................................... 2,214Due to affiliates.............................................. 6,263 7,192
Interest payable................................................. 37,980payable.................................................. 38,039 37,458
Income taxes payable............................................. 1,452payable.............................................. 3,916 -
Other current liabilities:
Derivative obligations........................................ 118,075Derivatives.................................................... 109,200 83,638
Other......................................................... 37,863Other.......................................................... 30,002 28,722
---------- ----------
Total current liabilities................................... 356,468liabilities.................................... 322,831 274,592
---------- ----------
Long-term debt..................................................... 1,767,650debt...................................................... 1,621,364 1,668,536
Noncurrent derivative obligations.................................. 59,073derivatives.............................................. 44,999 42,490
Noncurrent deferred income taxes.................................... 12,713 8,760
Other noncurrent liabilities....................................... 115,372liabilities........................................ 123,798 85,841
Deferred income taxes.............................................. 11,889 8,760
Stockholders' equity:
Common stock, $.01 par value; 500,000,000 shares authorized;
119,601,844119,672,784 and 119,592,344 shares issued as of
March 31,September 30, 2003 and December 31, 2002, respectively...................... 1,196respectively......... 1,197 1,196
Additional paid-in-capital....................................... 2,715,198paid-in capital........................................ 2,726,969 2,714,567
Treasury stock, at cost; 1,980,7111,674,819 and 2,339,806 shares as of
March 31,September 30, 2003 and December 31, 2002, respectively............ (27,274)respectively......... (23,857) (32,219)
Deferred compensation............................................ (13,153)compensation............................................. (11,477) (14,292)
Accumulated deficit.............................................. (1,214,220)deficit............................................... (945,222) (1,298,440)
Accumulated other comprehensive income:
Deferredincome (loss):
Net deferred hedge gains (losses), net............................ (56,514)net of tax.................. (55,043) 9,555
Cumulative translation adjustment............................. 6,722adjustment.............................. 23,338 (5,470)
---------- ----------
Total stockholders' equity.................................. 1,411,955equity................................... 1,715,905 1,374,897
Commitments and contingenciescontingencies.......................................
---------- ----------
$ 3,722,4073,841,610 $ 3,455,116
========== ==========
The financial information included as of March 31,September 30, 2003 has been prepared by
management without audit by independent public accountants.
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these
consolidated financial statements.
4
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
(in thousands, except per share data)
(Unaudited)
Three months ended March 31,
----------------------Nine months ended
September 30, September 30,
--------------------- -----------------------
2003 2002 2003 2002
--------- --------- --------- -----------
Revenues and other income:
Oil and gas.........................................................gas...................................... $ 281,156332,515 $ 165,539168,317 $ 953,625 $ 506,286
Interest and other.................................................. 2,713 1,193other............................... 348 7,083 4,321 9,089
Gain (loss) on disposition of assets, net........................... 1,426 (74)net............... 46 3,353 1,576 4,374
-------- -------- 285,295 166,658-------- ---------
332,909 178,753 959,522 519,749
-------- -------- -------- ---------
Costs and expenses:
Oil and gas production.............................................. 64,024 51,018production........................... 71,806 49,970 205,387 150,705
Depletion, depreciation and amortization............................ 70,049 50,388amortization......... 103,534 54,748 274,142 156,081
Exploration and abandonments........................................ 35,867 21,120abandonments..................... 24,516 18,324 107,430 57,304
General and administrative.......................................... 15,481 11,918administrative....................... 15,207 12,466 44,332 35,142
Accretion of discount on asset retirement
obligations............... 1,094obligations.................................... 1,327 - Interest............................................................ 22,491 26,317
Other............................................................... 5,178 8,2663,656 -
Interest......................................... 23,212 20,347 69,526 71,405
Other............................................ 1,389 21,599 12,205 37,603
-------- -------- 214,184 169,027-------- ---------
240,991 177,454 716,678 508,240
-------- -------- -------- ---------
Income (loss) before income taxes and cumulative effect
of change in accounting principle....................................... 71,111 (2,369)principle................ 91,918 1,299 242,844 11,509
Income tax benefit (provision) benefit.......................................... (2,304) 410..................... 99,895 (2,189) 94,961 (3,216)
-------- -------- -------- ---------
Income (loss) before cumulative effect of change
in accounting principle............................................................ 68,807 (1,959)principle.......................... 191,813 (890) 337,805 8,293
Cumulative effect of change in accounting
principle, net of tax.........tax............................ - - 15,413 -
-------- -------- -------- ---------
Net income (loss)......................................................................................... $ 84,220191,813 $ (1,959)(890) $ 353,218 $ 8,293
======== ======== ======== ==========
Net income (loss) per share:
Basic:
Income (loss) before cumulative effect of
change in accounting principle......................................................principle.............. $ .591.64 $ (.02)(.01) $ 2.89 $ .07
Cumulative effect of change in accounting
principle, net of tax...tax....................... - - .13 -
-------- -------- -------- ---------
Net income (loss)......................................................................... $ .721.64 $ (.02)(.01) $ 3.02 $ .07
======== ======== ======== ==========
Diluted:
Income (loss) before cumulative effect of
change in accounting principle......................................................principle.............. $ .581.62 $ (.02)(.01) $ 2.86 $ .07
Cumulative effect of change in accounting
principle, net of tax...tax....................... - - .13 -
-------- -------- -------- ---------
Net income (loss)......................................................................... $ .711.62 $ (.02)(.01) $ 2.99 $ .07
======== ======== ======== ==========
Weighted average shares outstanding:
Basic............................................................... 116,743 104,055Basic......................................... 117,216 116,193 116,990 111,227
======== ======== Diluted............................................................. 118,675 104,055======== =========
Diluted....................................... 118,457 116,193 118,283 112,889
======== ======== ======== =========
The financial information included herein has been prepared by
management without audit by independent public accountants.
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these
consolidated financial statements.
5
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
(in thousands)
(Unaudited)
Accumulated Other
Comprehensive
Income (Loss)
--------------------------------------------
Net
Deferred
Hedge
Common DeferredGains
Stock Additional Deferred Hedge(Losses), Cumulative Total
Shares Common Paid-in Treasury Compen-Deferred Accumulated GainsNet Translation Stockholders'
Outstanding Stock Capital Stock sationCompensation Deficit (Losses)of Tax Adjustment Equity
----------- ------------- ---------- -------- --------------------- ----------- ------------------- ----------- ------------
Balance as of January 1,
2003....................2003................... 117,253 $ 1,196$1,196 $2,714,567 $(32,219) $(14,292) $(1,298,440) $ 9,555 $(5,470) $ 1,374,897(5,470) $1,374,897
Stock options exercised.. 359 - 401 4,945exercised
and employee stock
purchased.............. 797 1 1,630 10,711 - - - - 5,34612,342
Purchase of treasury
stock.................. (100) - - (2,349) - - - - (2,349)
Deferred income tax
valuation reserve
adjustment related to
stock-based
compensation........... - - 9,266 - - - - - 9,266
Deferred compensation:
Compensation deferred.. 948 - 2301,242 - (230)(1,242) - - - -
Deferred compensation
included in net
income................ - - 264 - - 1,3694,057 - - - 1,3694,321
Net income...............income.............. - - - - - 84,220353,218 - - 84,220353,218
Other comprehensive
income (loss):
DeferredNet deferred hedge
gains and losses,(losses),
net of tax:
DeferredNet deferred hedge
losses..............losses............. - - - - - - (116,432)(188,758) - (116,432)
Net losses included
in net income.......(188,758)
Deferred income tax
valuation reserve
adjustment related
to hedging......... - - - - - - 50,36323,288 - 50,36323,288
Net hedge losses
included in
net income......... - - - - - - 100,872 - 100,872
Translation
adjustment.adjustment........... - - - - - - - 12,192 12,19228,808 28,808
------- ----------- --------- ------- --------------- ---------- -------- ------ ----------------- ---------
Balance as of
March 31,
2003.................... 117,621September 30, 2003..... 117,998 $1,197 $2,726,969 $(23,857) $(11,477) $ 1,196 $2,715,198 $(27,274) $(13,153) $(1,214,220)(945,222) $ (56,514)(55,043) $ 6,722 $ 1,411,95523,338 $1,715,905
======= =========== ========= ======= ======= ========== ======== ====== ================= =========
The financial information included herein has been prepared by
management without audit by independent public accountants.
The accompanying notes are an integral part of
these consolidated financial statements.
6
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(in thousands)
(Unaudited)
Three months ended March 31,Nine months ended
September 30, September 30,
--------------------- ---------------------
2003 2002 2003 2002
--------- --------- --------- ---------
Cash flows from operating activities:
Net income (loss)................................................................................. $ 84,220191,813 $ (1,959)(890) $ 353,218 $ 8,293
Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to
net cash provided by operating activities:
Depletion, depreciation and amortization......................... 70,049 50,388amortization..... 103,534 54,748 274,142 156,081
Exploration expenses, including dry holes........................ 30,263 18,666holes.... 15,677 12,589 83,204 43,437
Deferred income taxes............................................ 254 (684)
(Gain) losstaxes........................ (103,691) 1,512 (103,938) 1,617
Gain on disposition of assets, net........................ (1,426) 74net........... (46) (3,353) (1,576) (4,374)
Accretion of discount on asset retirement
obligations............ 1,094obligations................................ 1,327 - 3,656 -
Interest related amortization.................................... (4,565) (992)amortization................ (4,781) (19) (13,960) (1,660)
Commodity hedge related amortization............................. (17,782) 6,680amortization......... (18,132) 6,184 (54,119) 20,307
Cumulative effect of change in accounting
principle, net of tax..tax...................... - - (15,413) -
Other noncash items.............................................. 4,733 6,304items.......................... 1,598 16,093 8,580 28,337
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
Accounts receivable.............................................. (25,967) (13,721)
Inventory........................................................ (360) 2,239receivable, net..................... 17,932 6,153 3,287 (4,715)
Inventories.................................. (4,678) 69 (8,895) 4,052
Prepaid expenses................................................. (8,222) 43expenses............................. 1,102 951 (8,404) 1,011
Other current assets............................................. 398 (50)assets, net.................... (2,712) (1,802) (3,276) (1,939)
Accounts payable................................................. 8,381 (14,456)payable............................. 23,281 (3,907) 28,951 (18,056)
Interest payable................................................. 522 (295)payable............................. 850 (384) 581 183
Income taxes payable............................................. 1,452payable......................... 1,740 - 3,916 -
Other current liabilities........................................ 9,158 (2,201)liabilities.................... (2,349) (290) (3,278) (4,320)
-------- -------- -------- --------
Net cash provided by operating activities..................... 136,789 50,036activities.. 222,465 87,654 546,676 228,254
-------- -------- -------- --------
Cash flows from investing activities:
Proceeds from disposition of assets................................ 15,553 51,644assets............. 9,294 59,895 35,006 118,831
Additions to oil and gas properties................................ (252,753) (88,262)properties............. (134,889) (226,440) (521,985) (489,733)
Other property additions, net...................................... (2,281) (2,154)net................... (1,814) (2,675) (8,170) (8,535)
-------- -------- -------- --------
Net cash used in investing activities......................... (239,481) (38,772)activities...... (127,409) (169,220) (495,149) (379,437)
-------- -------- -------- --------
Cash flows from financing activities:
Borrowings under long-term debt.................................... 116,628 33,290debt................. 50,913 210,792 222,725 466,668
Principal payments on long-term debt............................... (15,000) (15,290)debt............ (142,913) (56,257) (270,262) (442,583)
Common stock issuance proceeds, net of
issuance costs............................... - (4) - 236,000
Payment of other noncurrent liabilities.................................. (6,380) (30,504)liabilities......... (4,869) (67,142) (11,097) (103,704)
Exercise of long-term incentive plan stock options................. 5,346 4,439options and employee
stock purchases.............................. 2,481 3,149 12,342 10,756
Purchase of treasury stock...................... - - (2,349) -
Deferred debt issuance costs.................... - (135) - (3,293)
-------- -------- -------- --------
Net cash provided by (used in)
financing activities........... 100,594 (8,065)activities..................... (94,388) 90,403 (48,641) 163,844
-------- -------- -------- --------
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents................... (2,098) 3,199equivalents......... 668 8,837 2,886 12,661
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and
cash equivalents........... 466 (776)equivalents................................ (173) (63) 1,275 (1,493)
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period.........................period.... 12,156 16,728 8,490 14,334
-------- -------- -------- --------
Cash and cash equivalents, end of period...............................period.......... $ 6,85812,651 $ 16,75725,502 $ 12,651 $ 25,502
======== ======== ======== ========
The financial information included herein has been prepared by
management without audit by independent public accountants.
The accompanying notes are an integral part of
these consolidated financial statements.
7
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)
(in thousands)
(Unaudited)
Three months ended March 31,
----------------------Nine months ended
September 30, September 30,
--------------------- ---------------------
2003 2002 2003 2002
--------- --------- --------- ---------
Net income (loss)............................................................................. $ 84,220191,813 $ (1,959)(890) $ 353,218 $ 8,293
-------- -------- -------- --------
Other comprehensive income (loss):
DeferredNet deferred hedge gains and losses,(losses), net of
tax:
Net deferred hedge gains (losses)............ 46,568 (24,269) (188,758) (113,360)
Deferred income tax valuation reserve
adjustment related to hedging............. 23,288 - 23,288 -
Net hedge losses.................................. (116,432) (64,082)
Net (gains) losses included in net
income (loss)....... 50,363 (31,842)
Cumulative translation adjustment........................ 12,192 (134).............................. 27,911 1,651 100,872 (34,147)
Translation adjustment.......................... (1,017) (6,915) 28,808 1,827
-------- -------- -------- --------
Other comprehensive loss............................ (53,877) (96,058)income (loss).......... 96,750 (29,533) (35,790) (145,680)
-------- -------- -------- --------
Comprehensive income (loss)......................................................... $ 30,343288,563 $ (98,017)(30,423) $ 317,428 $(137,387)
======== ======== ======== ========
The financial information included herein has been prepared by
management without audit by independent public accountants.
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these
consolidated financial statements.
8
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
March 31,September 30, 2003
(Unaudited)
NOTE A. Organization and Nature of Operations
Pioneer Natural Resources Company (the "Company" or "Pioneer") is a
Delaware corporation whose common stock is listed and traded on the New York
Stock Exchange. The Company is an oil and gas exploration and production company
with ownership interests in oil and gas properties located in the United States,
Argentina, Canada, Gabon, South Africa and Tunisia.
NOTE B. Basis of Presentation
and Use of Estimates
Basis of Presentation
Presentation. In the opinion of management, the unaudited consolidated
financial statements of the Company as of March 31,September 30, 2003 and for the three
and nine month periods ended March 31,September 30, 2003 and 2002 include all adjustments
and accruals, consisting only of normal, recurring accrual adjustments, which
are necessary for a fair presentation of the results for the interim periods.
These interim results are not necessarily indicative of results for a full year.
Certain amounts in the prior period financial statements have been reclassified
to conform to the current period presentation.
Certain information and footnote disclosures normally included in
financial statements prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting
principles have been condensed or omitted in this Form 10-Q pursuant to the
rules and regulations of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission
("SEC"). These consolidated financial statements should be read in connection
with the consolidated financial statements and notes thereto included in the
Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2002.
Adoption of SFAS 143. On January 1, 2003, the Company adopted the
provisions of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 143, "Accounting
for Asset Retirement Obligations" ("SFAS 143"). SFAS 143 amended Statement of
Financial Accounting Standards No. 19, "Financial Accounting and Reporting by
Oil and Gas Producing Companies" ("SFAS 19") to require that the fair value of a
liability for an asset retirement obligation be recognized in the period in
which it is incurred if a reasonable estimate of fair value can be made. Under
the provisions of SFAS 143, asset retirement obligations are capitalized as part
of the carrying value of the long-lived asset. Under the provisions of SFAS 19,
asset retirement obligations were recognized using a cost-accumulation approach.
Prior to the adoption of SFAS 143, the Company recorded significant asset
retirement obligations through the unit-of-production method, except for asset
retirement obligations that were assumed in business combinations, which were
recorded at their estimated fair values on their dates of acquisition.
The adoption of SFAS 143 resulted in a January 1, 2003 cumulative effect
adjustment to record (i) a $13.8 million increase in the carrying values of
proved properties, (ii) a $26.3 million decrease in accumulated depreciation,
depletion and amortization of property, plant and equipment, (iii) a $1.0
million increase in current abandonment liabilities, (iv) a $22.4 million
increase in noncurrent abandonment liabilities and (v) a $1.3 million increase
in Argentine deferred income tax liabilities. The net impact of items (i)
through (v) was to record a gain of $15.4 million, net of tax, as a cumulative
effect adjustment of a change in accounting principle in the Company's
consolidated statementsConsolidated Statements of operationsOperations upon adoption on January 1, 2003. See
Note ENotes C and F for additional information regarding the Company's income taxes
and asset retirement obligations.
The following pro forma data summarizes the Company's net income (loss)
and net income (loss) per share for the three and nine month periods ended
September 30, 2003 and 2002 as if the Company had adopted the provisions of SFAS
143 on January 1, 2002, including an associatedaggregate pro forma asset retirement
obligationobligations on that date of $60.2 million:
9
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
March 31,September 30, 2003
(Unaudited)
Three months ended March 31,Nine months ended
September 30, September 30,
--------------------- ---------------------
2003 2002 -------- --------2003 2002
--------- --------- --------- ---------
(in thousands, except per share amounts)
Net income (loss), as reported.......................reported................. $ 84,220191,813 $ (1,959)(890) $ 353,218 $ 8,293
Pro forma adjustments to reflect retroactive
adoption of SFAS 143...............................143........................ - 1,270 (15,413) 563
------- -------2,594
-------- -------- -------- --------
Pro forma net income (loss)..........................income........................... $ 68,807191,813 $ (1,396)
======= =======380 $ 337,805 $ 10,887
======== ======== ======== ========
Net income (loss) per share:
Basic - as reported................................reported......................... $ .721.64 $ (.02)
======= =======(.01) $ 3.02 $ .07
======== ======== ======== ========
Basic - pro forma..................................forma........................... $ .591.64 $ (.01)
======= =======- $ 2.89 $ .10
======== ======== ======== ========
Diluted - as reported..............................reported....................... $ .71 $ (.02)
======= =======
Diluted- pro forma................................. $ .581.62 $ (.01) ======= =======$ 2.99 $ .07
======== ======== ======== ========
Diluted - pro forma......................... $ 1.62 $ - $ 2.86 $ .10
======== ======== ======== ========
Adoption of SFAS 145. On January 1, 2003, the Company adopteda dopted the
provisions of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 145, "Rescission
of FASB Statements No. 4, 44 and 64, Amendment of FASB Statement No. 13 and
Technical Corrections" ("SFAS 145"). Prior to SFAS 145, gains or losses on the
early extinguishment of debt were required to be classified in a company's
periodic consolidated statements of operations as extraordinary gains or losses,
net of associated income taxes, after the determination of income or loss from
continuing operations. SFAS 145 requires, except in the case of events or
transactions of a highly unusual and infrequent nature, that gains or losses
from the early extinguishment of debt be classified, on both a prospective and
retrospective basis, as components of a company's income or loss from continuing
operations. The adoption of SFAS 145 did not affect the Company's financial
position or liquidity. Under the provisions of SFAS 145, gains or losses from
the early extinguishment of debt are recognized in the Company's consolidated
statementsConsolidated
Statements of operations,Operations, except in the case of events or transactions of a
highly unusual and infrequent nature, as components of other income or other
expense and are included in the determination of the income (loss) from continuing
operations. Accordingly, extraordinary losses from the early extinguishment of
debt of $2.8 million and $19.5 million recorded during the three month periods
ended June 30 and September 30,2002,30, 2002, respectively, have been reclassified to
other expense.
Stock-based compensation. The Company accounts for stock-based
compensation granted under it's theits long-term incentive plan using the intrinsic
value method prescribed by Accounting Principles Board Opinion No. 25,
"Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees" and related interpretations.
Stock-based compensation expenses associated with option grants were not
recognized in the Company's net income (loss) offor the three and nine month
periods ended March 31,September 30, 2003 and 2002, as all options granted had exercise
prices equal to the market value of the underlying common stock on the dates of
grant. Stock-based compensation expense associated with restricted stock awards
is deferred and amortized to earnings ratably over the vesting periods of the
awards. The following table illustrates the pro forma effect on net income
(loss) and earningsnet income (loss) per share as if the Company had applied the fair
value recognition provisions of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No.
123, "Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation" to stock-based employee compensation:compensation
during the three and nine month periods ended September 30, 2003 and 2002:
10
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
March 31,September 30, 2003
(Unaudited)
Three months ended March 31,Nine months ended
September 30, September 30,
--------------------- ---------------------
2003 2002 -------- --------2003 2002
--------- --------- --------- ---------
(in thousands, except per share amounts)
Net income (loss), as reported.........................reported................... $ 84,220191,813 $ (1,959)(890) $ 353,218 $ 8,293
Plus: Total stock-based employee compensation
expense included in net income (loss)
for all awards, net of tax (1)................. 1,022 483 2,744 517
Deduct: Total stock-based employee compensation
expense determined under fair value based
method for all awards, net of related tax effects... (3,032) (2,541)
------- -------(1).......... (3,027) (3,462) (8,700) (8,819)
-------- -------- -------- --------
Pro forma net income (loss).................................................. $ 81,188189,808 $ (4,500)
=======(3,869) $ 347,262 $ (9)
======== ======== ======== ========
Net income (loss) per share:
Basic - as reported.................................reported............................ $ .721.64 $ (.02)
=======(.01) $ 3.02 $ .07
======== ======== ======== ========
Basic - pro forma...................................forma.............................. $ .701.62 $ (.04)
=======(.03) $ 2.97 $ -
======== ======== ======== ========
Diluted - as reported...............................reported.......................... $ .711.62 $ (.02)
=======(.01) $ 2.99 $ .07
======== ======== ======== ========
Diluted - pro forma.................................forma............................ $ .681.60 $ (.04)
=======(.03) $ 2.94 $ -
======== ======== ======== ========
- -----------
(1) Total stock-based employee compensation expense included in net income
(loss) is net of tax benefits of $587 thousand and $1.6 million during the
three and nine month periods ended September 30, 2003, respectively. Total
stock-based employee compensation expense determined under the fair value
based method for the three and nine month periods ended September 30, 2003
are net of $1.7 million and $5.0 million of tax benefits, respectively. No
tax benefits were recognized for the 2002 compensation expense. See Note C
for additional information regarding the Company's income taxes in the
United States.
UseNOTE C. Income Tax Assets
Since 1998, the Company has maintained a valuation allowance against a
portion of Estimatesits deferred tax asset position in the United States. As of MarchDecember
31, 2002, the Company's deferred tax valuation allowances totaled $247.0
million, comprised of $204.3 million of United States deferred tax valuation
allowances and $42.7 million of international deferred tax valuation allowances.
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 109 requires that the Company
continually assess both positive and negative evidence to determine whether it
is more likely than not that the deferred tax assets can be realized prior to
their expiration. In the third quarter of 2003, the Company used an exchange rateconcluded that it is
now more likely than not that it will realize its gross deferred tax asset
position in the United States after giving consideration to the following
specific facts:
o Over the past several years, the Company has been steadily improving its
portfolio of 3.0 pesosassets, including significant proved reserve discoveries and
follow-up development projects that have recently started to $1produce.
Specifically, Pioneer completed development activities and began production
operations on its Canyon Express gas project in September 2002 and on its
Company-operated Falcon field gas project in March 2003. The production
performance to-date and the reservoir data that has been accumulated
through September 30, 2003 on these projects provide assurance that these
projects will recover the reserves as predicted.
o During the three months ended September 30, 2003, the Company announced
additional Falcon area discoveries in the Tomahawk and Raptor fields and
expects first production from these fields in the second half of 2004. The
Company also expects to remeasurecomplete its other significant United States Gulf
of Mexico development projects, Harrier and Devils Tower, in early and
mid-2004, respectively.
11
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
September 30, 2003
(Unaudited)
o Commodity market supply and demand fundamentals have continued to stabilize
during the peso-denominated monetaryquarter as evidenced by quoted futures prices that suggest that
North American gas prices will remain relatively flat over the next five
years and that worldwide oil prices may decline modestly over that time
span compared to relatively high current levels for each commodity.
o The Company's future revenues are further protected against price declines
through its significant hedging program. The Company has hedged portions of
its oil price risk through 2005 and portions of its gas price risk through
2007. See Note E for information regarding the Company's hedge positions.
o The Company has generated record pretax income for the third quarter of
2003, significant net income for the nine months ended September 30, 2003
and net income in each of the years ended December 31, 2002, 2001 and 2000.
The Company has also generated significant taxable income for the third
consecutive quarter, including the deduction of 100 percent of its
intangible drilling costs for those periods. The Company believes that
these trends will continue for the foreseeable future.
o The Company performed various economic evaluations in the third quarter to
determine if the Company would be able to realize all of its deferred tax
assets, including its net operating loss carryforwards, prior to any
expiration. These evaluations were based on the Company's reserve
projections of existing producing properties and liabilitiesrecent discoveries being
developed. These evaluations employed varying price assumptions, some of
which included a significant reduction in commodity prices, and factored in
limitations on the use of the Company's Argentine subsidiaries.net operating loss carryforwards.
The evaluations did not include assumptions of increases in proved reserves
through future exploration or acquisitions. The evaluations indicated that
the deferred tax assets are realizable in the future.
Accordingly, during the third quarter of 2003, the Company reversed its
valuation allowance in the United States, resulting in the recognition of a
deferred tax benefit of $104.7 million ($.88 per diluted share). Further, the
reversal of the allowance increased stockholders' equity by $32.6 million as the
Company recognized the tax effects of previous stock option exercises and
deferred hedging gains and losses in other comprehensive income.
Pioneer will continue to monitor Company-specific, oil and gas industry
and worldwide economic factors and will reassess the likelihood that the
Company's net operating loss carryforwards and other deferred tax attributes
will be utilized prior to their expiration. There can be no assurances that
facts and circumstances will not materially change and require the Company to
reestablish a United States deferred tax asset valuation allowance in a future
period. As of September 30, 2003, the Company does not believe there is
sufficient positive evidence to reverse its valuation allowances related to
certain foreign tax jurisdictions. The Company's valuation allowances related to
foreign tax jurisdictions are $53.4 million as of September 30, 2003.
Income tax (provision) benefit attributable to income (loss) before
cumulative effect of change in accounting principle consists of the following
for the three and nine month periods ended September 30, 2003 and 2002:
Three months ended Nine months ended
September 30, September 30,
--------------------- ---------------------
2003 2002 2003 2002
--------- --------- --------- ---------
(in thousands)
Current:
U.S. state and local........... $ (201) $ (52) $ (839) $ (321)
Foreign........................ (3,595) (626) (8,138) (1,278)
-------- -------- -------- --------
(3,796) (678) (8,977) (1,599)
-------- -------- -------- --------
Deferred:
U.S. state and local........... 104,670 - 104,670 -
Foreign........................ (979) (1,511) (732) (1,617)
-------- -------- -------- --------
103,691 (1,511) 103,938 (1,617)
-------- -------- -------- --------
Total $ 99,895 $ (2,189) $ 94,961 $ (3,216)
======== ======== ======== ========
12
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
September 30, 2003
(Unaudited)
NOTE C.D. Asset Acquisition
On March 28, 2003, the Company purchased the remaining 25 percent working
interest that it did not already own in the Falcon field, the Harrier field and
surrounding satellite prospects in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico for $119.4
million, including $113.1 million of cash paid upon closing, $1.7 million of
asset retirement obligations assumed and $4.6 million of closing adjustments.
NOTE D.E. Derivative Financial Instruments
Fair value hedges. The Company monitors the debt capital markets and
interest rate trends to identify opportunities to enter into and terminate
interest rate swaps to minimize itsswap contracts with the objective of minimizing costs of capital.
During August and February 2003, the Company entered into interest rate swap
contracts to hedge a portion of the fair value of its 9-5/8 percent senior
notes. Under the terms of the interest rate swap contracts entered into during
August 2003 (the "August Contracts"), the Company willcontracted to receive a fixed
annual rate of 9-5/8 percent on $250$300.0 million notional amount and willagreed to pay
the counterparties a variable rate on the notional amount equal to the six-month
London Interbank Offered Rate,LIBOR, reset semi-annually, plus a weighted average margin ("LIBOR Margin") of
521.0 basis points. The terms of the interest rate swap contracts entered into
during February 2003 (the "February Contracts") differed from those of the
August Contracts only in notional amount and LIBOR Margin, which terms were
$250.0 million and 566.4 basis points. As of March 31,points, respectively. During September 2003, the
carryingCompany terminated the August Contracts for $10.1 million of cash proceeds. The
cash proceeds were comprised of $1.2 million of settlement gains attributable to
the period from August 2003 through the date of termination and $8.9 million
attributable to the fair value, on the date of termination, of the remaining
term of the August Contracts. During May 2003, the Company terminated the
February Contracts for $11.4 million of cash proceeds. The cash proceeds were
comprised of $2.0 million of settlement gains attributable to the period from
February 2003 through the date of termination and $9.4 million attributable to
the fair value, on the date of termination, of the remaining term of the
February Contracts. The $8.9 million and $9.4 million of proceeds attributable
to the fair value of the Company's fair valueremaining term of the August Contracts and February
Contracts are included in "Proceeds from disposition of assets" in the
accompanying Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows during the periods that the
hedges was an asset of $3.3 million.were terminated.
As of March 31,September 30, 2003, the carrying value of the Company's long-term
debt in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets included $29.5$34.7 million of
incremental liabilitycarrying value attributable to unamortized net deferred hedge gains
realized from terminated fair value hedge agreements terminated during 2002 and 2001.interest rate swap contracts. The
amortization of thesenet deferred hedge gains reduced the Company's reported interest
expense by $5.9$6.3 million and $2.9$2.3 million during the three month periods ended
March
31,September 30, 2003 and 2002, respectively, and by $18.1 million and $7.9 million
during the nine month periods ended September 30, 2003 and 2002, respectively.
The following table sets forth the scheduled amortization of net deferred
hedge gains and losses on terminated fair value hedges as of September 30, 2003
that will be recognized as reductionsincreases, in the case of losses, or decreases, in
the case of gains, to the Company's future interest expense:
11
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
March 31, 2003
(Unaudited)
First Second Third Fourth Outstanding
Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Total
------- ------- ------- ------- -----------
(in thousands)
2003 net hedge gain amortization......amortization....... $ 5,5407,948 $ 4,700 $ 4,131 $ 14,3717,948
2004 net hedge gain amortization......amortization....... $ 3,4917,266 $ 3,0996,074 $ 2,4375,447 $ 2,086 11,1134,512 23,299
2005 net hedge gain amortization....... $ 4,222 $ 2,773 $ 2,271 $ 1,533 10,799
Remaining net gainslosses to be amortized
through 2008.................... 4,051
-------
$ 29,535
=======2010......................... (7,329)
------
$34,717
======
13
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
September 30, 2003
(Unaudited)
The terms of the fair value hedges described above perfectly matched the
terms of the underlying senior notes. The Company did not exclude any component
of the derivatives' gains or losses from the measurement of hedge effectiveness.
Cash flow hedges. The Company utilizes from time to time, commodity swap and collar
contracts to (i) reduce the effect of price volatility on the commodities the
Company produces and sells, (ii) support the Company's annual capital budgeting
and expenditure plans and (iii) reduce commodity price risk associated with
certain capital projects. The Company has also utilized interest rate swap
agreements to reduce the effect of interest rate volatility on the Company's
variable rate line of credit indebtedness and forward currency exchange
agreements to reduce the effect of U.S. dollar to Canadian dollar exchange rate
volatility.
Oil. All material sales contracts governing the Company's oil production
have been tied directly or indirectly to the New York Mercantile ExchangeNYMEX prices. The following table sets
forth the Company's outstanding oil hedge contracts and the weighted average
NYMEX prices for those contracts as of March
31,September 30, 2003:
Yearly
First Second Third Fourth Outstanding
Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter TotalAverage
------- ------- ------- ------- -----------
Daily oil production:
2003 - Swap Contracts
Volume (Bbl).............. 23,000 21,043 17,000 20,338................ 14,000 14,000
Price per Bbl.............Bbl............... $ 24.8524.35 $ 24.37 $ 24.30 $ 24.5324.35
2004 - Swap Contracts
Volume (Bbl).............. 9,000 9,000 9,000 9,000 9,000................ 14,000 14,000 14,000 14,000 14,000
Price per Bbl.............Bbl............... $ 22.9624.65 $ 22.9624.65 $ 22.9624.65 $ 22.9624.65 $ 22.9624.65
2005 - Swap Contracts
Volume (Bbl).............. 2,000 2,000 2,000 2,000 2,000................ 12,000 12,000 12,000 12,000 12,000
Price per Bbl.............Bbl............... $ 24.0024.44 $ 24.0024.44 $ 24.0024.44 $ 24.0024.44 $ 24.0024.44
The Company reports average oil prices per Bbl including the effects of
oil quality adjustments and the net effect of oil hedges. The following table
sets forth the Company's oil prices, both reported (including hedge results) and
realized (excluding hedge results), and the net effect of settlements of oil
price hedges to revenue:on oil revenue for the three and nine month periods ended September
30, 2003 and 2002:
Three months ended March 31,
-------------------Nine months ended
September 30, September 30,
----------------- -----------------
2003 2002 2003 2002
------- ------- ------- -------
Average price reported per Bbl..........................Bbl..................... $ 25.8225.35 $ 23.1721.77 $ 25.14 $ 22.86
Average price realized per Bbl..........................Bbl..................... $ 30.9228.27 $ 18.5424.43 $ 28.84 $ 21.91
Addition (reduction) to oil revenue (in millions)............. $ (14.7)(9.1) $ 14.4(7.2) $ (32.9) $ 8.2
12
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
March 31, 2003
(Unaudited)
Natural gas liquids prices. During the three and nine month periods
ended March
31,September 30, 2003 and 2002, the Company did not enter into any NGL hedge
contracts.
Gas prices. The Company employs a policy of hedging a portion of its gas
production based on the index price upon which the gas is actually sold, or
based on NYMEX prices if NYMEX prices are highly correlated with the index
prices, in order to mitigate the basis risk between NYMEX prices and actual
index prices. The following table sets forth the Company's outstanding gas hedge
contracts and the weighted average index prices for those contracts as of
March 31,September 30, 2003:
14
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
September 30, 2003
(Unaudited)
Yearly
First Second Third Fourth Outstanding
Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Average
---------- ---------- ---------- --------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Daily gas production:
2003 - Swap Contracts
Volume (Mcf)................. 230,000 230,000 230,000 230,000................... 310,000 310,000
Index price per MMBtu........MMBtu.......... $ 3.764.39 $ 3.76 $ 3.76 $ 3.764.39
2004 - Swap Contracts
Volume (Mcf)................. 230,000 230,000 230,000 230,000 230,000................... 260,000 260,000 260,000 260,000 260,000
Index price per MMBtu........MMBtu.......... $ 4.064.05 $ 4.064.05 $ 4.064.05 $ 4.064.05 $ 4.064.05
2004 - Collar Contracts
Volume (Mcf)................. 35,000 35,000 35,000 35,000 35,000
Index price per MMBtu........ $4.00-6.76 $4.00-6.76 $4.00-6.76 $4.00-6.76 $4.00-6.76
2005 - Swap Contracts
Volume (Mcf)................. 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000
Index price per MMBtu........ $ 3.70 $ 3.70 $ 3.70 $ 3.70 $ 3.70
2006 - Swap Contracts
Volume (Mcf).................................... 20,000 20,000 20,000 20,000 20,000
Index price per MMBtu........MMBtu.......... $4.00-$6.60 $4.00-$6.60 $4.00-$6.60 $4.00-$6.60 $4.00-$6.60
2005 - Swap Contracts
Volume (Mcf)................... 60,000 60,000 60,000 60,000 60,000
Index price per MMBtu.......... $ 3.754.28 $ 3.754.28 $ 3.754.28 $ 3.754.28 $ 3.754.28
2006 - Swap Contracts
Volume (Mcf)................... 70,000 70,000 70,000 70,000 70,000
Index price per MMBtu.......... $ 4.23 $ 4.23 $ 4.23 $ 4.23 $ 4.23
2007 - Swap Contracts
Volume (Mcf).................................... 20,000 20,000 20,000 20,000 20,000
Index price per MMBtu........MMBtu.......... $ 3.75 $ 3.75 $ 3.75 $ 3.75 $ 3.75
The Company reports average gas prices per Mcf including the effects of
Btu content, gas processing and shrinkage adjustments and the net effect of gas
hedges. The following table sets forth the Company's gas prices, both reported
(including hedge results) and realized, (excluding hedge results), and the net effect of settlements of gas price hedges to revenue:on gas
revenue for the three and nine month periods ended September 30, 2003 and 2002:
Three months ended March 31,
-------------------Nine months ended
September 30, September 30,
----------------- -----------------
2003 2002 2003 2002
------- ------- ------- -------
Average price reported per Mcf..........................Mcf........... $ 4.063.64 $ 2.472.25 $ 3.91 $ 2.39
Average price realized per Mcf..........................Mcf........... $ 4.953.96 $ 1.872.09 $ 4.35 $ 2.12
Addition (reduction) to gas revenue
(in millions)...................................... $ (35.7)(18.9) $ 17.85.8 $ (68.0) $ 26.3
Hedge ineffectiveness and excluded items. During the theethree month periods
ended March 31,September 30, 2003 and 2002, the Company recognized other expense of $1.8$.3
million and $78 thousand,$1.4 million, respectively, related to the ineffective portions of
its cash flow hedging instruments. 13
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
March 31,During the nine month periods ended September
30, 2003 (Unaudited)and 2002, the Company recognized other expense of $2.6 million and $1.7
million, respectively, related to the ineffective portion of its cash flow
hedging instruments.
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) ("AOCI") - net deferred
hedge gains and losses, net.(losses), net of tax. As of March 31,September 30, 2003 and December 31,
2002, "AOCI - net deferred hedge gains (losses), net"net of tax" represented net
deferred losses of $56.5$55.0 million and net deferred gains of $9.6 million,
respectively. The AOCI"AOCI - net deferred hedge gains (losses), net of tax" balance
as of March 31,September 30, 2003 was comprised of $154.7$118.3 million of unrealized deferred
hedge losses on the effective portions of open commodity cash flow hedges, and $98.2$40.0
million of net deferred gains on terminated cash flow hedges.hedges and $23.3 million
of associated net deferred tax benefits. The decrease in AOCI"AOCI - net deferred
hedge gains (losses), net of tax" during the threenine months ended March 31,September 30,
2003 was primarily attributable to increases in future commodity prices relative
to the commodity prices stipulated in the hedge agreements, offset by the
reclassification of net deferred hedge losses to net income as derivatives
matured by their terms.terms and the reversal of associated United States deferred tax
valuation allowances. The unrealized net deferred hedge gains and losses associated with
15
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
September 30, 2003
(Unaudited)
open cash flow hedges remain subject to market price fluctuations until the
positions are either settled under the terms of the hedge agreements or
terminated prior to settlement. The net deferred gains and losses
on terminated cash flow
hedges are fixed.
During the twelve month periodmonths ending March 31,September 30, 2004, the Company expects
to reclassify $103.1$75.1 million of net deferred losses associated with open cash
flow hedges, and $64.1$27.8 million of net deferred gains on terminated cash flow hedges
and approximately $16.6 million of net deferred tax benefits from AOCI"AOCI - net
deferred hedge gains (losses), net of tax" to oil and gas revenue.revenue and income tax
(provision) benefit.
The following table sets forth the scheduled reclassifications of pretax
net deferred hedge gains and losses on terminated cash flow hedges as of
September 30, 2003 that will be recognized in the Company's future oil and gas
revenues:revenue:
First Second Third Fourth TotalYearly
Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter YearTotal
------- ------- ------- ------- ----------------
(in thousands)
2003 net deferred hedge gains......... $18,167 $17,807 $17,136 $53,110losses.... $(5,141) $(5,141)
2004 net deferred hedge gains.........gains..... $10,978 $10,932 $11,001 $10,954 43,865
2005 net deferred hedge gains.........gains..... $ 307 $ 310 $ 315 $ 317 1,249
------
$98,224$39,973
======
The net deferred commodity hedge gains and losses shown in the table above
include the following gains and losses for which cash settlements have been
deferred until the indicated future periods: (i) $22.8 million of net deferred
losses due during the fourth quarter of 2003, (ii) $1.2 million of net deferred
losses due during 2004 and (iii) $209 thousand of net deferred gains to be
received during 2005.
NOTE E.F. Asset Retirement Obligations
As referred to in Note B, the Company adopted the provisions of SFAS 143
on January 1, 2003. The Company hasCompany's asset retirement obligations primarily associated withrelate
to the future plugging and abandonment of proved properties and related
facilities. The Company has no assets that are legally restricted for purposes
of settling asset retirement obligations. The following table summarizes the
Company's asset retirement obligation transactions recorded in accordance with
the provisions of SFAS 143 during the three monthsand nine month periods ended
March
31,September 30, 2003 and in accordance with the provisions of SFAS 19 during the
three monthsand nine month periods ended March 31, 2002.September 30, 2002:
Three months ended March 31,
---------------------Nine months ended
September 30, September 30,
------------------- -------------------
2003 2002 2003 2002
-------- -------- -------- --------
(in thousands)
Beginning asset retirement obligation..................obligations..... $ 65,223 $ 37,294 $ 34,692 $ 39,461
Cumulative effect adjustment...........................adjustment............... - - 23,393 -
Liabilities incurred during period..................... 6,965period......... 7,740 - 14,755 -
Liabilities settled during period...................... (2,442) (1,641)period.......... (907) (3,028) (4,283) (5,836)
Accretion expense...................................... 1,094 651expense.......................... 1,327 622 3,656 1,905
Currency translation................................... 472 (597)translation....................... (36) 104 1,134 (538)
------- ------- ------- -------
Ending asset retirement obligation ....................obligations ....... $ 64,17473,347 $ 37,87434,992 $ 73,347 $ 34,992
======= ======= ======= =======
14
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
March 31, 2003
(Unaudited)
NOTE F.G. Commitments and Contingencies
Legal actions. The Company is party to various legal actions incidental
to its business, including, but not limited to, the proceedings described below.
The majority of these lawsuits primarily involve claims for damages arising from
oil and gas leases and ownership interest disputes. The Company believes that
the ultimate disposition of these legal actions will not have a material adverse
16
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
September 30, 2003
(Unaudited)
effect on the Company's consolidated financial position, liquidity, capital
resources or future results of operations. The Company will continue to evaluate
its litigation matters on a quarter-by-quarter basis and will adjust its
litigation reserves as appropriate to reflect the then current status of
litigation.
Alford. The Company is party to a 1993 class action lawsuit filed in the
26th Judicial District Court of Stevens County, Kansas by two classes of royalty
owners, one for each of the Company's gathering systems connected to the
Company's Satanta gas plant. The case was relatively inactive for several years.
In early 2000, the plaintiffs amended their pleadings to add claims regarding
the field compression installed by the Company in the 1990's. The lawsuit now
has two material claims. First, the plaintiffs assert that the expenses related
to the field compression are a "cost of production" for which plaintiffs cannot
be charged their proportionate share under the applicable oil and gas leases.
Second, the plaintiffs claim they are entitled to 100 percent of the value of
the helium extracted at the Company's Satanta gas plant. If the plaintiffs were
to prevail on the above two claims in their entirety, it is possible that the
Company's liability could reach $30$33.8 million, plus prejudgment interest.
However, the Company believes it has valid defenses to the plaintiffs' claims,
has paid the plaintiffs properly under their respective oil and gas leases, and
intends to vigorously defend itself.
The Company believes the cost of the field compression is not a "cost of
production", but is rather an expense of transporting the gas to the Company's
Satanta gas plant for processing, where valuable hydrocarbon liquids and helium
are extracted from the gas. The plaintiffs benefit from such extractions and the
Company believes that charging the plaintiffs with their proportionate share of
such transportation and processing expenses is consistent with Kansas law. The
Company has also vigorously defended against plaintiffs' claims to 100 percent
of the value of the helium extracted, and believes that in accordance with
applicable law, it has properly accounted to the plaintiffs for their fractional
royalty share of the helium under the specified royalty clauses of the
respective oil and gas leases.
The factual evidence in the case was presented to the 26th Judicial
District Court without a jury in December 2001. Oral arguments were heard by the
court in April 2002, and although the court has not yet entered a judgment or
findings, it could do so at any time. The Company strongly denies the existence
of any material underpayment to the plaintiffs and believes it presented strong
evidence at trial to support its positions. The Company has not yet determined
the amount of damages, if any, that would be payable if the lawsuit was
determined adverselyCourt were to render
an adverse judgement against the Company. Although the amount of any resulting
liability could have a material adverse effect on the Company's results of
operations for the quarterly reporting period in which such liability is
recorded, the Company does not expect that any such liability will have a
material adverse effect on its consolidated financial position as a whole or on
its liquidity, capital resources or future annual results of operations.
Kansas ad valorem tax. The Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978 ("NGPA") allows
a "severance, production or similar" tax to be included as an add-on, over and
above the maximum lawful price for gas. Based on a Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission ("FERC") ruling that Kansas ad valorem tax was such a tax, one of the
Company's predecessor entities collected the Kansas ad valorem tax in addition
to the otherwise maximum lawful price. The FERC's ruling was appealed to the
United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ("D.C. Circuit"),
which held in June 1988 that the FERC failed to provide a reasonedreasonable basis for
its findings and remanded the case to the FERC for further consideration.
15
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
March 31, 2003
(Unaudited)
On December 1, 1993, the FERC issued an order reversing its prior ruling,
but limitinglimited the effect of its decision to Kansas ad valorem taxes for sales made
on or after June 28, 1988. The FERC clarified the effective date of its decision
by an order dated May 18, 1994. The order clarified that the effective date
applies to tax bills rendered after June 28, 1988, not sales made on or after
that date. Numerous parties filed appeals on the FERC's action in the D.C.
Circuit. Various gas producers challenged the FERC's orders on two grounds: (1)
that the Kansas ad valorem tax, properly understood, does qualify for
reimbursement under the NGPA; and (2) the FERC's ruling should, in any event,
have been applied prospectively. Other parties challenged the FERC's orders on
the grounds that the FERC's ruling should have been applied retroactively to
December 1, 1978, the date of the enactment of the NGPA and producers should
have been required to pay refunds accordingly.
17
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
September 30, 2003
(Unaudited)
The D.C. Circuit issued its decision on August 2, 1996, which holds that
producers must make refunds of all Kansas ad valorem tax collected with respect
to production since October 4, 1983, as opposed to June 28, 1988. Petitions for
rehearing were denied on November 6, 1996. Various gas producers subsequently
filed a petition for writ of certiori with the United States Supreme Court
seeking to limit the scope of the potential refunds to tax bills rendered on or
after June 28, 1988 (the effective date originally selected by the FERC).
Williams Natural Gas Company filed a cross-petition for certiori seeking to
impose refund liability back to December 1, 1978. Both petitions were denied on
May 12, 1997.
The Company and other producers filed petitions for adjustment with the
FERC on June 24, 1997. The Company was seeking a waiver or set-off from FERC
with respect to that portion of the refund associated with (i) non-recoupable
royalties, (ii) non-recoupable Kansas property taxes based, in part, upon the
higher prices collected and (iii) interest for all periods. On September 10,
1997, FERC denied this request, and on October 10, 1997, the Company and other
producers filed a request for rehearing. Pipelines were given until November 10,
1997 to file claims on refunds sought from producers and refund claims totaling
approximately $30.2 million were made against the Company. Through March 31,September 30,
2003, the Company has settled $21.7 million of the original claim amounts. As of
March 31,September 30, 2003 and December 31, 2002, the Company had on deposit $10.5
million and $10.6 million, respectively, including accrued interest, in an
escrow account and had corresponding obligations for the remaining claim
recorded in other current liabilities in the accompanying Consolidated Balance
Sheets. The Company believes that the escrowed amounts, plus accrued interest,
will be sufficient to settle the remaining claims.
NOTE G.H. Income (Loss) Per Share Before Cumulative Effect of Change in
Accounting Principle
Basic income (loss) per share before cumulative effect of change in
accounting principle is computed by dividing income (loss) before cumulative
effect of change in accounting principle by the weighted average number of
common shares outstanding for the period. The computation of diluted net income
(loss) per
share before cumulative effect of change in accounting principle reflects the
potential dilution that could occur if securities or other contracts to issue
common stock that are dilutive to net income before cumulative effect of change in
accounting principle were exercised or converted into common stock or resulted
in the issuance of common stock that would then share in the earnings of the
Company.
The following table is a reconciliation of the basic and diluted weighted
average common shares outstanding forduring the three monthsand nine month periods ended
March 31,September 30, 2003 and 2002:
16
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
March 31, 2003
(Unaudited)
Three months ended March 31,
----------------------Nine months ended
September 30, September 30,
----------------- -----------------
2003 2002 --------- ---------2003 2002
------- ------- ------- -------
(in thousands)
Weighted average common shares outstanding:
Basic............................................. 116,743 104,055Basic ..................................... 117,216 116,193 116,990 111,227
Dilutive common stock options (a)................. 1,793........... 1,006 - 1,106 1,662
Restricted stock awards (b)....................... 139awards..................... 235 - 187 -
------- ------- Diluted........................................... 118,675 104,055------- -------
Diluted..................................... 118,457 116,193 118,283 112,889
======= ======= ======= =======
- ------------------------
(a) Common stock options to purchase 1,377,5191,179,766 shares and 4,998,951shares1,868,588 shares of
common stock were outstanding but not included in the computations of
diluted net income (loss) before cumulative effect of change in accounting
principle per share for the three monthsmonth periods ended March 31,September 30, 2003
and 2002, respectively, and common stock options to purchase 1,308,582
shares and 2,024,455 shares of common stock were outstanding but not
included in the computations of diluted income before cumulative effect of
change in accounting principle per share for the nine month periods ended
September 30, 2003 and 2002, respectively, because the exercise prices of
the options were greater than the average market price of the common shares
and would behave been anti-dilutive to the computations. In-the-money options
representing 1,226,7461,932,385 weighted average equivalent shares of common stock
and 395 weighted average equivalent shares of unvested restricted stock
were not included in the computation of diluted net loss per sharebefore cumulative
effect of change in accounting principle for the three monthsmonth period ended
March 31,September 30, 2002, since they have a dilutive effect to net loss
per share.
(b) During the three months ended March 31, 2003, the Company issued 9,500
restricted shares of the Company's common stock to key employees of the
Company. The restricted shares issued to the key employees vest on the
third anniversaries of their issuances.that period's
loss.
18
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
September 30, 2003
(Unaudited)
NOTE H.I. Geographic Operating Segment Information
The Company has operations in only one industry segment, that being the
oil and gas exploration and production industry; however, the Company is
organizationally structured along geographic operating segments, or regions. The
Company has reportable operations in the United States, Argentina and Canada.
Other foreign is primarily comprised of operations in Gabon, South Africa and
Tunisia.
The following table providestables provide the Company's interim geographic operating
segment data.data for the three and nine month periods ended September 30, 2003 and
2002. Geographic operating segment income tax benefits (provisions) have been
determined based on statutory rates existing in the various tax jurisdictions
where the Company has oil and gas producing activities. The "Headquarters and
Other" table column includes revenues and expenses that are not routinely included in
the earnings measures internally reported to management on a geographic
operating segment basis.
17
United Other Headquarters Consolidated
States Argentina Canada Foreign and Other Total
-------- --------- -------- ------- ------------ ------------
(in thousands)
Three month period ended September 30, 2003:
Revenues and other income:
Oil and gas............................ $285,623 $ 30,777 $ 15,592 $ 523 $ - $ 332,515
Interest and other..................... - - - - 348 348
Gain on disposition of assets, net..... (2) - - - 48 46
------- ------- ------- ------ ------- --------
285,621 30,777 15,592 523 396 332,909
------- ------- ------- ------ ------- --------
Costs and expenses:
Oil and gas production................. 61,456 6,616 3,689 45 - 71,806
Depletion, depreciation and
amortization......................... 80,160 13,651 7,156 161 2,406 103,534
Exploration and abandonments........... 17,275 1,275 1,789 4,177 - 24,516
General and administrative............. - - - - 15,207 15,207
Accretion of discount on asset
retirement obligations............... - - - - 1,327 1,327
Interest............................... - - - - 23,212 23,212
Other.................................. - - - - 1,389 1,389
------- ------- ------- ------ ------- --------
158,891 21,542 12,634 4,383 43,541 240,991
------- ------- ------- ------ ------- --------
Income (loss) before income taxes........ 126,730 9,235 2,958 (3,860) (43,145) 91,918
Income tax benefit (provision)........... (46,256) (3,232) (1,168) 1,351 149,200 99,895
------- ------- ------- ------ ------- --------
Net income (loss) ....................... $ 80,474 $ 6,003 $ 1,790 $(2,509) $106,055 $ 191,813
======= ======= ======= ====== ======= ========
Three month period ended September 30, 2002:
Revenues and other income:
Oil and gas............................ $137,155 $ 19,149 $ 12,013 $ - $ - $ 168,317
Interest and other..................... - - - - 7,083 7,083
Gain on disposition of assets, net..... 3,087 - - - 266 3,353
------- ------- ------- ------ ------- --------
140,242 19,149 12,013 - 7,349 178,753
------- ------- ------- ------ ------- --------
Costs and expenses:
Oil and gas production................. 43,713 3,622 2,635 - - 49,970
Depletion, depreciation and
amortization......................... 33,607 12,227 6,713 - 2,201 54,748
Exploration and abandonments........... 12,557 2,843 1,429 1,495 - 18,324
General and administrative............. - - - - 12,466 12,466
Interest............................... - - - - 20,347 20,347
Other.................................. - - - - 21,599 21,599
------- ------- ------- ------ ------- --------
89,877 18,692 10,777 1,495 56,613 177,454
------- ------- ------- ------ ------- --------
Income (loss) before income taxes........ 50,365 457 1,236 (1,495) (49,264) 1,299
Income tax benefit (provision)........... (17,628) (160) (521) 523 15,597 (2,189)
------- ------- ------- ------ ------- --------
Net income (loss) ....................... $ 32,737 $ 297 $ 715 $ (972) $(33,667) $ (890)
======= ======= ======= ====== ======= =========
19
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
March 31,September 30, 2003
(Unaudited)
United Other Headquarters Consolidated
States Argentina Canada Foreign and otherOther Total
----------------- --------- -------- ----------------- ------------ ------------
(in thousands)
Three monthsNine month period ended March 31,September 30, 2003:
Revenues and other income:
Oil and gas revenue............. $239,251gas............................ $ 23,381819,758 $ 18,52479,632 $ 53,712 $ 523 $ - $ - $ 281,156953,625
Interest and other..............other..................... - - - - 2,713 2,7134,321 4,321
Gain on disposition of assets... 1,246assets, net..... 1,319 - 1 - 179 1,426
------- -------256 1,576
-------- ------- ------- ------- --------- 240,497 23,381 18,525 - 2,892 285,295
------- ---------------
821,077 79,632 53,713 523 4,577 959,522
-------- ------- ------- ------- --------- Production costs................ 55,537 5,409 3,078--------
Costs and expenses:
Oil and gas production................. 177,377 18,204 9,761 45 - - 64,024205,387
Depletion, depreciation and
amortization................. 52,858 8,326 6,551 - 2,314 70,049amortization......................... 211,457 33,970 21,458 161 7,096 274,142
Exploration and abandonments.... 17,787 3,044 11,327 3,709abandonments........... 57,665 10,847 14,949 23,969 - 35,867107,430
General and administrative......administrative............. - - - - 15,481 15,48144,332 44,332
Accretion of discount on asset
retirement obligations.......obligations............... - - - - 1,094 1,094
Interest........................3,656 3,656
Interest............................... - - - - 22,491 22,491
Other ..........................69,526 69,526
Other.................................. - - - - 5,178 5,178
------- -------12,205 12,205
-------- ------- ------- ------- --------- 126,182 16,779 20,956 3,709 46,558 214,184--------
446,499 63,021 46,168 24,175 136,815 716,678
-------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- --------- --------
Income (loss) before income taxes and
cumulative effect of change in
accounting principle...... 114,315 6,602 (2,431) (3,709) (43,666) 71,111principle ................. 374,578 16,611 7,545 (23,652) (132,238) 242,844
Income tax benefit (provision).. (40,010) (2,311) 960 1,298 37,759 (2,304).......... (136,721) (5,814) (2,979) 8,278 232,197 94,961
-------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ----------------- --------
Income (loss) before cumulative effect
of change in accounting principle....................principle..... $ 74,305237,857 $ 4,29110,797 $ (1,471)4,566 $(15,374) $ (2,411)99,959 $ (5,907) $ 68,807337,805
======== ======= ======= ======= ======= ======= =========
United Other Headquarters Consolidated
States Argentina Canada Foreign======== ========
Nine month period ended September 30, 2002:
Revenues and other Total
-------- --------- -------- --------- ------------ ------------
(in thousands)
Three months ended March 31, 2002:income:
Oil and gas revenue............. $131,461gas........................... $ 23,259411,139 $ 10,81957,459 $ 37,688 $ - $ - $ 165,539506,286
Interest and other..............other.................... - - - - 1,193 1,193
Loss9,089 9,089
Gain (loss) on disposition of
assets...assets, net......................... 3,249 (3) 1,010 - - (11) - (63) (74)118 4,374
-------- ------- ------- ------- ------ ------- ---------
131,461 23,259 10,808-------- --------
414,388 57,456 38,698 - 1,130 166,6589,207 519,749
-------- ------- ------- ------- ------ ------- ---------
Production costs................ 44,844 3,585 2,589-------- --------
Costs and expenses:
Oil and gas production................ 132,725 10,023 7,957 - - 51,018150,705
Depletion, depreciation and
amortization................. 31,674 10,099 6,464amortization........................ 97,594 31,263 20,758 - 2,151 50,3886,466 156,081
Exploration and abandonments.... 13,311 2,140 2,303 3,366abandonments.......... 39,841 6,631 5,272 5,560 - 21,12057,304
General and administrative......administrative............ - - - - 11,918 11,918
Interest........................35,142 35,142
Interest.............................. - - - - 26,317 26,317
Other ..........................71,405 71,405
Other................................. - - - - 8,266 8,26637,603 37,603
-------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ---------
89,829 15,824 11,356 3,366 48,652 169,027-------- --------
270,160 47,917 33,987 5,560 150,616 508,240
-------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ----------------- --------
Income (loss) before income taxes........................ 41,632 7,435 (548) (3,366) (47,522) (2,369)taxes...... 144,228 9,539 4,711 (5,560) (141,409) 11,509
Income tax benefit (provision).. (14,571) (2,602) 231 1,178 16,174 410......... (50,480) (3,339) (1,986) 1,946 50,643 (3,216)
-------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ----------------- --------
Net income (loss)..................................... $ 27,06193,748 $ 4,8336,200 $ (317)2,725 $ (2,188) $(31,348)(3,614) $ (1,959)(90,766) $ 8,293
======== ======= ======= ======= ======= ======= ================= ========
18
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
March 31, 2003
(Unaudited)
NOTE I.J. Pioneer USA
Pioneer Natural Resources USA, Inc. ("Pioneer USA") is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of the Company that has fully and unconditionally guaranteed the
long-term debt of the Company. In accordance with practices accepted by the SEC,
the Company has prepared Consolidating Condensed Financial Statements in order
to quantify the assets and results of operations of Pioneer USA as a subsidiary
guarantor. The following Consolidating Condensed Balance Sheets, Consolidating
Condensed Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Income (Loss) and
Consolidating Condensed Statements of Cash Flows present financial information
for Pioneer Natural Resources Company as the Parent on a stand-alone basis
(carrying any investments in subsidiaries under the equity method), financial
information for Pioneer USA on a stand-alone basis (carrying any investment in
non-guarantor subsidiaries under the equity method), the non-guarantornon- guarantor
subsidiaries of the Company on a consolidated basis, the consolidation and
elimination entries necessary to arrive at the information for the Company on a
consolidated basis and the financial information for the Company on a
consolidated basis. Pioneer USA is not restricted from making distributions to
the Company.
1920
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
March 31,September 30, 2003
(Unaudited)
CONSOLIDATING CONDENSED BALANCE SHEET
As of March 31,September 30, 2003
(in thousands)
(Unaudited)
ASSETS
Pioneer
Natural
Resources Non-
Company
Pioneer Guarantor The
(Parent)Consolidated
Parent USA Subsidiaries Eliminations Company
-----------Total
---------- ----------- ------------ ------------ -----------------------
Current assets:
Cash and cash equivalents............. $ 232,182 $ 2,4631,762 $ 4,3728,707 $ - $ 6,85812,651
Other current assets.................. 1,809,562 (1,529,990) (101,885) 177,687assets, net............. 1,706,269 (1,389,079) (134,103) - 183,087
--------- ---------- --------- ---------- --------- ----------
Total current assets............. 1,809,585 (1,527,527) (97,513) 184,5451,708,451 (1,387,317) (125,396) - 195,738
--------- ---------- --------- ---------- --------- ----------
Property, plant and equipment, at cost:
Oil and gas properties, using the
successful efforts method of accounting:
Proved properties.................. - 3,215,816 1,334,382 4,550,1983,340,061 1,427,220 - 4,767,281
Unproved properties................ - 28,856 161,729 190,58525,844 156,585 - 182,429
Accumulated depletion, depreciation and
amortization....................amortization........................ - (972,799) (373,297) (1,346,096)
----------(1,124,926) (430,783) - (1,555,709)
--------- ---------- --------- ---------- ----------
- 2,271,873 1,122,814 3,394,6872,240,979 1,153,022 - 3,394,001
--------- ---------- --------- ---------- ----------
---------- ----------
DeferredNoncurrent deferred income taxes................... 74,811taxes........ 186,935 - 1,638 76,4491,777 - 188,712
Other property and equipment, net....... - 18,488 4,089 22,57721,607 4,126 - 25,733
Other assets, net....................... 18,693 15,952 9,504 44,14914,094 16,863 6,469 - 37,426
Investment in subsidiaries.............. 1,354,117 136,6021,511,495 158,123 - (1,490,719)(1,669,618) -
------------------- ---------- --------- ---------- ----------
$3,420,975 $ 3,257,2061,050,255 $1,039,998 $(1,669,618) $ 915,388 $1,040,532 $ 3,722,407
==========3,841,610
========= ========== ========= ========== ==========
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities..................... $ 31,68932,593 $ 255,459257,300 $ 69,32032,938 $ - $ 356,468322,831
Long-term debt.......................... 1,767,6501,621,364 - - 1,767,650- 1,621,364
Noncurrent deferred income taxes........ - - 12,713 - 12,713
Other noncurrent liabilities............ - 189,415 (14,970) 174,445
Deferred income taxes...................194,712 (25,915) - - 11,889 11,889168,797
Stockholders' equity.................... 1,457,867 470,514 974,293 (1,490,719) 1,411,9551,767,018 598,243 1,020,262 (1,669,618) 1,715,905
Commitments and contingencies - - - -
----------contingencies...........
--------- ---------- --------- ---------- ----------
$3,420,975 $ 3,257,2061,050,255 $1,039,998 $(1,669,618) $ 915,388 $1,040,532 $ 3,722,407
==========3,841,610
========= ========== ========= ========== ==========
CONSOLIDATING CONDENSED BALANCE SHEET
As of December 31, 2002
(in thousands)
ASSETS
Non-
Pioneer Guarantor TheConsolidated
Parent USA Subsidiaries Eliminations Company
-----------Total
---------- ----------- ------------ ------------ -----------------------
Current assets:
Cash and cash equivalents............. $ 6 $ 1,783 $ 6,701 $ - $ 8,490
Other current assets..................assets, net............. 1,727,828 (1,480,657) (108,568) - 138,603
------------------- ---------- --------- ---------- ----------
Total current assets............. 1,727,834 (1,478,874) (101,867) - 147,093
------------------- ---------- --------- ---------- ----------
Property, plant and equipment, at cost:
Oil and gas properties, using the
successful efforts method of accounting:
Proved properties.................. - 3,024,845 1,228,052 - 4,252,897
Unproved properties................ - 43,969 175,104 - 219,073
Accumulated depletion, depreciation and
amortization....................amortization........................ - (947,091) (356,450) - (1,303,541)
------------------- ---------- --------- ----------- ----------
- 2,121,723 1,046,706 - 3,168,429
--------- ---------- --------- ----------- ----------
---------- ----------
DeferredNoncurrent deferred income taxes...................taxes........ 75,311 - 1,529 - 76,840
Other property and equipment, net....... - 19,000 3,784 - 22,784
Other assets, net....................... 16,067 14,231 9,672 - 39,970
Investment in subsidiaries.............. 1,247,042 136,159 - (1,383,201) -
------------------- ---------- --------- ---------- $ 3,066,254----------
$3,066,254 $ 812,239 $ 959,824 $(1,383,201) $ 3,455,116
=================== ========== ========= ========== ==========
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities..................... $ 30,785 $ 216,065 $ 27,742 $ - $ 274,592
Long-term debt, lessnet of current maturities.maturities 1,668,536 - - - 1,668,536
Noncurrent deferred income taxes........ - - 8,760 - 8,760
Other noncurrent liabilities............ - 147,970 (19,639) 128,331
Deferred income taxes................... - - 8,760 8,760128,331
Stockholders' equity.................... 1,366,933 448,204 942,961 (1,383,201) 1,374,897
Commitments and contingencies...........
- - - ---------- ---------- --------- ---------- ----------
-------- ---------
$ 3,066,254$3,066,254 $ 812,239 $ 959,824 $(1,383,201) $ 3,455,116
========= ========== ========= ========== ========== ========= ==========
20
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
March 31, 2003
(Unaudited)
CONSOLIDATED CONDENSED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
AND COMPREHENSIVE LOSS
For the Three Months Ended March 31, 2003
(in thousands)
(Unaudited)
Non-
Pioneer Guarantor The
Parent USA Subsidiaries Eliminations Company
--------- --------- ------------ ------------ ----------
Revenues:
Oil and gas.............................. $ - $ 214,715 $ 66,441 $ $ 281,156
Interest and other....................... - 786 1,927 2,713
Gain on disposition of assets, net....... - 1,230 196 1,426
-------- -------- -------- ---------
- 216,731 68,564 285,295
-------- -------- -------- ---------
Costs and expenses:
Oil and gas production.................... - 50,529 13,495 64,024
Depletion, depreciation and
amortization............................ - 51,830 18,219 70,049
Exploration and abandonments.............. - 19,792 16,075 35,867
General and administrative................ 295 12,310 2,876 15,481
Accretion of discount on asset
retirement obligations.................. - 857 237 1,094
Interest.................................. 5,081 17,192 218 22,491
Equity (income) loss from subsidiaries.... (89,626) 5,454 - 84,172 -
Other..................................... 30 813 4,335 5,178
-------- -------- -------- ---------
(84,220) 158,777 55,455 214,184
-------- -------- -------- ---------
Income before income taxes and cumulative
effect of change in accounting
principle................................ 84,220 57,954 13,109 71,111
Income tax provision........................ - - (2,304) (2,304)
-------- -------- -------- ---------
Income before cumulative effect of change
in accounting principle.................. 84,220 57,954 10,805 68,807
Cumulative effect of change in accounting
principle, net of tax.................... - 11,859 3,554 15,413
-------- -------- -------- ---------
Net income.................................. 84,220 69,813 14,359 84,220
Other comprehensive income (loss):
Deferred hedge gains and losses:
Deferred hedge losses, net of tax...... - (103,549) (12,883) (116,432)
Net losses included in net income...... - 44,444 5,919 50,363
Cumulative translation adjustment........ - - 12,192 12,192
-------- -------- -------- ---------
Comprehensive income........................ $ 84,220 $ 10,708 $ 19,587 $ 30,343
======== ======== ======== =========
21
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
March 31,September 30, 2003
(Unaudited)
CONSOLIDATEDCONSOLIDATING CONDENSED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
AND COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)
For the ThreeNine Months Ended March 31,September 30, 2003
(in thousands)
(Unaudited)
Non- Consolidated
Pioneer Guarantor Income Tax Consolidated
Parent USA Subsidiaries Provision Eliminations Total
--------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------
Revenues and other income:
Oil and gas......................... $ - $ 753,928 $ 199,697 $ - $ - $ 953,625
Interest and other.................. - 1,796 2,525 - - 4,321
Gain on disposition of assets, net.. - 1,469 107 - - 1,576
-------- --------- -------- --------- -------- --------
- 757,193 202,329 - - 959,522
-------- --------- -------- --------- -------- --------
Costs and expenses:
Oil and gas production.............. - 162,911 42,476 - - 205,387
Depletion, depreciation and
amortization...................... - 208,144 65,998 - - 274,142
Exploration and abandonments........ - 59,123 48,307 - - 107,430
General and administrative.......... 998 34,828 8,506 - - 44,332
Accretion of discount on asset
retirement obligations............ - 2,824 832 - - 3,656
Interest............................ 17,690 50,803 1,033 - - 69,526
Equity (income) loss from
subsidiaries...................... (268,108) 26,166 - - 241,942 -
Other............................... 72 2,191 9,942 - - 12,205
-------- --------- -------- --------- -------- --------
(249,348) 546,990 177,094 - 241,942 716,678
-------- --------- -------- --------- -------- --------
Income before income taxes and
cumulative effect of change in
accounting principle............... 249,348 210,203 25,235 - (241,942) 242,844
Income tax benefit (provision)....... - - (8,909) 103,870 - 94,961
-------- --------- -------- --------- -------- --------
Income before cumulative effect of
change in accounting principle..... 249,348 210,203 16,326 103,870 (241,942) 337,805
Cumulative effect of change in
accounting principle, net of tax... - 11,859 3,554 - - 15,413
-------- --------- -------- --------- -------- --------
Net income........................... 249,348 222,062 19,880 103,870 (241,942) 353,218
Other comprehensive income (loss):
Net deferred hedge gains (losses),
net of tax:
Net deferred hedge losses........ - (176,351) (12,407) - - (188,758)
Deferred income tax valuation
reserve adjustment related
to hedging.................... - - - 23,288 - 23,288
Net hedge losses included in net
income........................ - 93,114 7,758 - - 100,872
Translation adjustment............. - - 28,808 - - 28,808
-------- --------- -------- --------- -------- --------
Comprehensive income................. $ 249,348 $ 138,825 $ 44,039 $ 127,158 $(241,942) $ 317,428
======== ========= ======== ========= ======== ========
CONSOLIDATING CONDENSED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
AND COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)
For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2002
(in thousands)
(Unaudited)
Non- Consolidated
Pioneer Guarantor TheIncome Tax Consolidated
Parent USA Subsidiaries Provision Eliminations CompanyTotal
--------- ------------------- ------------ ------------ ---------------------- ------------
Revenues:
Revenues and other income:
Oil and gas..............................gas........................ $ - $ 125,921386,021 $ 39,618120,265 $ - $ 165,539- $ 506,286
Interest and other.......................other................. - 741 452 1,193
Loss7,143 1,946 - - 9,089
Gain on disposition of assets, net.......net. - 3,224 1,150 - - (74) (74)4,374
------- --------- -------- --------- -------- --------
- 396,388 123,361 - - 519,749
------- --------- -------- --------- - 126,662 39,996 166,658
-------- -------- -------- ---------
Costs and expenses:.................
Oil and gas production...................production............ - 44,541 6,477 51,018127,402 23,303 - - 150,705
Depletion, depreciation and
amortization...........................amortization.................... - 32,266 18,122 50,38898,268 57,813 - - 156,081
Exploration and abandonments.............abandonments...... - 13,950 7,170 21,12041,131 16,173 - - 57,304
General and administrative............... 263 9,501 2,154 11,918
Interest................................. 4,517 17,969 3,831 26,317administrative........ 945 27,518 6,679 - - 35,142
Interest.......................... 62,036 9,166 203 - - 71,405
Equity (income) loss from
subsidiaries... (2,822) 2,766subsidiaries.................... (24,243) 5,856 - 56 - Other.................................... 1 268 7,997 8,26618,387 -
Other............................. (47,031) 56,430 28,204 - - 37,603
-------- --------- -------- --------- -------- --------
(8,293) 365,771 132,375 - 18,387 508,240
-------- --------- 1,959 121,261 45,751 169,027-------- --------- -------- -------- -------- ---------
Income (loss) before income taxes............ (1,959) 5,401 (5,755) (2,369)taxes 8,293 30,617 (9,014) - (18,387) 11,509
Income tax benefit..........................provision ............... - - 410 410(3,216) - - (3,216)
-------- --------- -------- --------- -------- --------
-------- ---------
Net income (loss)............................ (1,959) 5,401 (5,345) (1,959)................... 8,293 30,617 (12,230) - (18,387) 8,293
Other comprehensive income (loss):
DeferredNet deferred hedge gains and losses:
Deferred hedge losses,(losses),
net of tax....... (138) (50,485) (13,459) (64,082)tax:
Net deferred hedge losses....... (4) (94,816) (18,540) - - (113,360)
Net hedge (gains) losses
included in net income............................... 290 (26,547) (5,585) (31,842)
Cumulative translation adjustment.........income
(loss)........................ 447 (29,023) (5,571) - - (134) (134)(34,147)
Translation adjustment............ - - 1,827 - - 1,827
-------- --------- -------- --------- -------- --------
-------- ---------
Comprehensive loss...........................income (loss)......... $ (1,807)8,736 $ (71,631)(93,222) $ (24,523)(34,514) $ (98,017)- $ (18,387) $(137,387)
======== ========= ======== ========= ======== ======== ======== =========
22
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
March 31,September 30, 2003
(Unaudited)
CONSOLIDATING CONDENSED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
For the ThreeNine Months Ended March 31,September 30, 2003
(in thousands)
(Unaudited)
Non-
Pioneer Guarantor TheConsolidated
Parent USA Subsidiaries CompanyTotal
--------- --------- ------------ ----------------------
Cash flows from operating activities:
Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities...................................... $(106,957)activities........ $ 198,84121,453 $ 44,905355,799 $ 136,789169,424 $ 546,676
-------- -------- -------- --------- ----------
Cash flows from investing activities:
Proceeds from disposition of assets............... - 15,472 81 15,553assets.............. 18,267 16,124 615 35,006
Additions to oil and gas properties...............properties.............. - (204,983) (47,770) (252,753)(351,174) (170,811) (521,985)
Other property (additions) dispositions, net......net..... - (2,358) 77 (2,281)
--------(10,948) 2,778 (8,170)
-------- -------- --------- ----------
Net cash used inprovided by (used in) investing
activities.......... - (191,869) (47,612) (239,481)
--------activities.................................. 18,267 (345,998) (167,418) (495,149)
-------- -------- --------- ----------
Cash flows from financing activities:
Borrowings under long-term debt................... 116,628debt.................. 222,725 - - 116,628222,725
Principal payments on long-term debt.............. (15,000)debt............. (270,262) - - (15,000)(270,262)
Payment of other noncurrent liabilities.................liabilities.......... - (6,292) (88) (6,380)(9,822) (1,275) (11,097)
Exercise of long-term incentive plan
stock options.................................. 5,346options and employee stock
purchases..................................... 12,342 - - 5,346
--------12,342
Purchase of treasury stock....................... (2,349) - - (2,349)
-------- -------- --------- ----------
Net cash provided by (used in)used in financing activities......................... 106,974 (6,292) (88) 100,594
--------activities......... (37,544) (9,822) (1,275) (48,641)
-------- -------- --------- ----------
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash
equivalents...................................... 17 680 (2,795) (2,098)equivalents..................................... 2,176 (21) 731 2,886
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and
cash equivalents........................equivalents............................... - - 466 4661,275 1,275
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period..............................period.... 6 1,783 6,701 8,490
-------- -------- -------- --------- ----------
Cash and cash equivalents, end of period........................................period.......... $ 232,182 $ 2,4631,762 $ 4,3728,707 $ 6,85812,651
======== ======== ======== ========= ==========
CONSOLIDATING CONDENSED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
For the ThreeNine Months Ended March 31,September 30, 2002
(in thousands)
(Unaudited)
Non-
Pioneer Guarantor TheConsolidated
Parent USA Subsidiaries CompanyTotal
--------- --------- ------------ ----------------------
Cash flows from operating activities:
Net cash provided by (used in) operating
activities..................................... $(299,553) $ (73,878)259,502 $ 93,313268,305 $ 30,601 $ 50,036228,254
-------- -------- -------- --------- ----------
Cash flows from investing activities:
Proceeds from disposition of assets............... 51,420 162 62 51,644assets.............. 31,994 85,682 1,155 118,831
Additions to oil and gas properties...............properties.............. - (57,342) (30,920) (88,262)(284,367) (205,366) (489,733)
Other property additions, net.....................net.................... - (1,092) (1,062) (2,154)(7,466) (1,069) (8,535)
-------- -------- -------- --------- ----------
Net cash provided by (used in) investing
activities........................ 51,420 (58,272) (31,920) (38,772)activities.................................. 31,994 (206,151) (205,280) (379,437)
-------- -------- -------- --------- ----------
Cash flows from financing activities:
Borrowings under long-term debt................... 33,290debt.................. 466,668 - - 33,290466,668
Principal payments on long-term debt.............. (15,290)debt............. (442,583) - - (15,290)(442,583)
Common stock issuance proceeds, net of issuance
costs.......................................... 236,000 - - 236,000
Payment of other noncurrent liabilities.................liabilities.......... - (29,988) (516) (30,504)(43,886) (59,818) (103,704)
Exercise of long-term incentive plan
stock options.................................. 4,439options and employee stock
purchases...................................... 10,756 - - 4,43910,756
Deferred debt issuance costs..................... (3,293) - - (3,293)
-------- -------- -------- --------- ----------
Net cash provided by (used in) financing
activities........................ 22,439 (29,988) (516) (8,065)activities.................................. 267,548 (43,886) (59,818) 163,844
-------- -------- -------- --------- ----------
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash
equivalents...................................... (19) 5,053 (1,835) 3,199equivalents..................................... (11) 9,465 3,207 12,661
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and
cash equivalents........................equivalents............................... - - (776) (776)(1,493) (1,493)
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period..............................period.... 79 10,900 3,355 14,334
-------- -------- -------- --------- ----------
Cash and cash equivalents, end of period........................................period.......... $ 6068 $ 15,95320,365 $ 7445,069 $ 16,75725,502
======== ======== ======== ========= ==========
23
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
Item 2. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and
Results of Operations
The information included in Item 2 and Item 3 of this document includes
forward-looking statements that are made pursuant to the Safe Harbor Provisions
of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking
statements, and the business prospects of Pioneer Natural Resources Company ("Pioneer"(the
"Company" or the "Company""Pioneer"), are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties
which may cause the Company's actual results in future periods to differ
materially from the forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties
include, among other things, volatility of oil and gas prices, product supply
and demand, competition, international operations and associated international
political and economic instability, government regulation or action, litigation,
the costs and results of drilling and operations, the Company's ability to
replace reserves, or implement its business plans or complete its development
projects as scheduled, access to and cost of capital, uncertainties about
estimates of reserves, quality of technical data, environmental and environmentalweather
risks, acts of war and terrorism. These and other risks are described in the
Company's 2002 Annual Report on Form 10-K that is available from the United
States Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC").
Financial and Operating Performance
The Company's financial and operating performance for the firstthird quarter
of 2003 was highlighted by strong production from the Company's deepwater Gulf
of Mexico Canyon Express and the Company-operated Falcon field gas projects and
increased oil and gas sales in Argentina. Argentine oil drilling results
exceeded expectations while a strengthening Argentine economy boosted gas sales.
The production growth achieved by the Company, together with favorable worldwide
oil and North American gas prices; growthprices, has resulted in significant increases in the
Company's deepwater Gulfnet income and net cash provided by operating activities during the
three and nine month periods ended September 30, 2003, as compared to the same
respective periods of Mexico sales volumes,
including reaching full production rates from the Canyon Express gas development
and first production during March 2003 from the Company-operated Falcon field,
which is the second of five significant projects that the Company plans to bring
on production through early 2004; the announcement of a strategic joint
exploration agreement with Woodside Energy (USA) Inc. ("Woodside") for a
two-year drilling program over the shallow-water Texas shelf region of the Gulf
of Mexico; the Harrier field discovery, a Falcon field satellite that has been
sanctioned for development; a discovery in Alaska on three exploration wells
drilled on the Company's NW Kuparuk prospect which are currently being evaluated
for commercial viability; and the acquisition of the remaining 25 percent
working interest that the Company did not already own in the Falcon field, the
Harrier field and surrounding satellite prospects for $119.4 million (see Note C
of Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included in "Item 1. Financial
Statements" for additional information regarding this acquisition).2002.
The Company reported net income of $84.2$191.8 million ($.711.62 per diluted
share) and $353.2 million ($2.99 per diluted share) for the three and nine month
periods ended September 30, 2003, respectively, as compared to a net loss of
$890 thousand ($.01 per diluted share) and net income of $8.3 million ($.07 per
diluted share) for the same respective periods of 2002. The Company's net income
for the nine months ended March 31,September 30, 2003 includingincludes a $15.4 million ($.13 per
share) benefit from the cumulative effect of change in accounting principle, net
of tax, associated with the Company's adoption of Statement of Financial
Accounting PrinciplesStandards No. 143, "Accounting for Asset Retirement Obligations"
("SFAS 143") on January 1, 2003, as compared to a net loss of $2.0 million ($.02 per share) for the same
period in 2002.2003. See Notes B and EF of Notes to Consolidated
Financial Statements included in "Item 1. Financial Statements" for additional
information regarding the Company's adoption of new accounting pronouncements.
Net income for the three and nine month periods ended September 30, 2003 was
also positively impacted by the reversal of the Company's United States deferred
tax asset valuation allowances. See "Results of Operations - Income tax benefits
(provisions)" for information regarding the reversal of the United States
deferred tax asset valuation allowances.
The Company's net cash provided by operating activities was $136.8$222.5
million and $546.7 million for the three monthsand nine month periods ended March 31,September
30, 2003, respectively, representing an increaseincreases of $86.8$134.8 million, or 174154
percent, and $318.4 million, or 140 percent, over the net cash provided by
operating activities of the same period inrespective periods of 2002. The increase in netNet cash provided
by operating activities during the three and nine month periods ended September
30, 2002 was primarily a result of higher gas volumes$87.7 million and commodity
prices.$228.3 million, respectively. During the three
months ended March 31,September 30, 2003, the Company used its net cash provided by
operating activities, together with proceeds from the disposition of assets, and net borrowings under long-term debt to
fund $252.8$134.9 million of additions to oil and gas properties.properties and to repay $92.0
million of long-term debt. During the nine months ended September 30, 2003, the
Company used its net cash provided by operating activities, together with
proceeds from the disposition of assets, to fund $522.0 million of additions to
oil and gas properties and to repay $47.5 million of long-term debt.
Drilling Highlights
During the first threenine months of 2003, the Company completed its Falcon
field development, continuedincurred $531.8
million in capital expenditures including $207.3 million for development
activities, at Devils Tower in$192.7 million for exploration activities and $131.8 million on
acquisitions. The majority of the deepwater GulfCompany's development and exploration
expenditures was spent on drilling wells, seismic data and infrastructure for
the Company's significant development projects. The primary component of Mexico and Sable in South Africa, successfully drilled its
Harrier prospect, a Falcon satellite discovery, and drilled its first three
exploratory wells in Alaska, as referred to above. The Company also acquiredthe
24
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
acquisition expenditures was the Company's purchase of the 25 percent working
interest it did not already own in the Falcon field, the Harrier field and
surrounding satellite prospects during March of 2003. In
total, the Company incurred $285.7 million in capital expenditures during the
first quarter of 2003 including $77.4 million for development activities, $85.0
million for exploration activities and $123.3 million on acquisitions. Other
than the Falcon area acquisition, the majority of the Company's capital
24
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
expenditures was spent on drilling wells and fabricating infrastructure for the
Company's significant development projects. The following tables
summarize the Company's development drilling and exploration and extension
drilling activities for the threenine months ended March 31,September 30, 2003:
Development Drilling
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beginning Wells Wells Successful Unsuccessful Ending Wells
in Progress Spud Wells Wells Inin Progress
--------------- -------- ---------- ------------ ------------------- --------- ------------- -----------
Gulf of Mexico/Gulf Coast..... 1 6 718 18 - -1
Permian Basin................. 2 36 33 - 5115 112 2 3
Mid-Continent................. 4 18 18 - 495 93 3 3
------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Total Domestic......... 7 60 58 - 9228 223 5 7
------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Argentina..................... 3 9 8 - 426 26 2 1
Canada........................ 4 10 7 7 -
Tunisia....................... - 1 1 - -
------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Total Worldwide........ 14 79 73 7 13265 257 14 8
====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Exploration/Extension Drilling
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beginning Wells Wells Successful Unsuccessful Ending Wells
in Progress Spud Wells Wells Inin Progress
--------------- -------- ---------- ------------ ------------------- --------- ------------- -----------
Gulf of Mexico/Gulf Coast.... - 11 4 1 26 1
Alaska....................... - 3 - - 3
Mid-Continent................ - 2 2 - -
------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Total Domestic.......... - 7 1 216 6 6 4
------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Argentina.................... 6 10 9 324 19 7 4
Canada....................... 4 46 16 24 1026 8
South Africa................. - 3 - 3 -
Tunisia...................... - 24 - 1 13
------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Total Worldwide......... 10 65 26 3093 41 43 19
====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Domestic. The Company spent $227.6$405.1 million during the first threenine months
of 2003 on acquisition, drilling and seismic activities in the Gulf of
Mexico/Gulf Coast, Alaska, Permian Basin and Mid-Continent areas of the United
States.
Gulf of Mexico/Gulf Coast Area.area. In the Gulf of Mexico/Gulf Coast area,
the Company spent $170.3$278.4 million of acquisition, drilling and seismic capital.
In the deepwater Gulf of Mexico, the Company completed its Falcon field
development in mid-March 2003 and, as previously discussed, purchased the
remaining 25 percent working interest in Falcon and related prospects that the
Company did not already own. The Company has two major producing properties
and two major development projects that
remain in progress as of March 31,September 30, 2003:
o Canyon Express - The TotalFinaElf-operated Aconcagua and the
Marathon-operated Camden Hills discoveries in Mississippi Canyon began
producing in September 2002. Associated with the start-up of this project,
several operational and mechanical difficulties were encountered which
delayed achieving full production rates of 110 to 120 MMcf of gas per day
until late January 2003.
o Falcon - The Company-operated Falcon field started producing in mid-March
2003. On March 28, 2003, the Company purchased the remaining 25 percent
working interest that the Company did not already own in 32 blocks in the
Falcon area, including the Falcon field, the Harrier field and surrounding
satellite prospects. To accommodate incremental Harrier field production
and potential throughput associated with planned exploration, an additional
parallel pipeline connecting the Falcon field to the Falcon platform on the
Gulf of Mexico shelf will be added, doubling its capacity to 400 MMcf of
gas per day. As is further discussed below, the Company expects first gas
production from Harrier field in late 2003 or early 2004 with combined
daily gas production from Falcon field and Harrier field expected to reach
275 MMcf per day.
25
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
o Devils Tower - The Dominion-operated Devils Tower development project in
Mississippi Canyon was sanctioned in 2001 as a spar development project
with the owners leasing a spar from a third party for the life of the
field. The hull of the spar was constructed in Indonesia and was
successfully transported to the United States during the first quarter of
2003 where the topsides will be added during the thirdfourth quarter of 2003.
The spar has slots for eight dry tree wells and up to three subsea tie-back
wells and is capable of handling 60 MBbls of oil per day and 60 MMcf of gas
per day. Eight Devils Tower wells and one subsea tie-back well have been
drilled and are awaiting completion. Devils Tower production is scheduled
to begin in earlythe second quarter of 2004 and will be phased in as the wells
are individually completed from the spar. PioneerThe Company also plans to spud
its satellite Goldfinger prospect and participate in an appraisal well on
the Triton prospect during the fourth quarter of 2003. If successful, these
wells could be the second and third subsea tie-back wells. The Company
holds a 25 percent working interest in thethese projects.
o HarrierHarrier/Tomahawk/Raptor - The Company discovered the Harrier field during
the first quarter of 2003 encountering over 350 feetand the Tomahawk and Raptor fields during the
third quarter of gas-bearing sand in a single zone.
Pioneer2003. The Company operates the blockblocks with a 100 percent
25
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
working interest subsequent to the acquisition discussed above, and expects to develop the fieldis
developing all three fields as a
single-wellsingle- well subsea tie-backtie-backs to the Falcon
field facilities which were designed to be expandable. FirstTo accommodate this
incremental production and potential throughput associated with additional
planned exploration, an additional parallel pipeline connecting the Falcon
field to the Falcon platform on the Gulf of Mexico shelf is being added,
doubling its capacity to 400 MMcf of gas per day. The Company expects first
gas production from the Harrier field is
anticipated in late 2003 or early 2004.2004 with combined daily gas
production from the Falcon field and the Harrier field expected to reach
275 MMcf per day. In addition, the Company expects first gas production
from the Tomahawk and Raptor fields in the third quarter of 2004 thereby
approaching full capacity on the Falcon subsea systems.
The Company plans to spud a well on the BP-operated Juno prospect in the
Mississippi Canyon area in early November 2003. The Juno well will test a
high-potential deep structure. The Company owns a 25 percent working interest in
this prospect. In addition to the development projects described above in the
deepwater Gulf of Mexico, the Company drilled two exploratory dry holes in the
Falcon area during the first quarter and plans to drill two additionalquarter. The Company controls 32 blocks in the area
providing numerous exploration prospects
there later this year. If successful, these Falcon area prospects could also be
tied backopportunities for future subsea tiebacks to the
Falcon field to utilize excess pipeline capacity. Additionally,
the Company has a multi-year inventory of prospects on the 32 blocks it holds in
the area.systems.
During January 2003, the Company announced a joint exploration agreement
with Woodside Energy (USA), Inc. ("Woodside"), a subsidiary of Woodside Energy
Ltd. of Australia, for a two-year drilling program over the shallow-water Texas
shelf region of the Gulf of Mexico. Under the agreement, Woodside has taken a 50
percent working interest in 47 offshore exploration blocks operated by the
Company. The agreement covers eight prospects and 19 leads and includes five
exploratory wells to be drilled in 2003 and three in 2004. Most of the wells to
be drilled under the agreement will target gas plays below 15,000 feet. The
eight wells to be drilled by the parties in 2003 and 2004 are on prospects
generated and leased by the Company since 1997. The first wellthree wells under this
joint agreement was spud during the first quarter of 2003.were unsuccessful. The fourth well is still in progress and the
results are expected to be known in MayDecember 2003. Additionally, the Company and
Woodside will evaluate shallower gas prospects on the Gulf of Mexico shelf on
other blocks covered by the leases for potential inclusion in the drilling
program.
In the onshore Gulf Coast region of the United States, the Company has
concentrated its drilling efforts in the Pawnee field in South Texas, where
three development wells and one extension well that was in progress at year end was completed and two wells were successfully drilledcompleted
during the first quarternine months of 2003. The Company spud an
extension well to the Pawnee field subsequent to quarter end and plans to drill an additional
threefour development wells and two extension wells during the remainder of 2003.
Alaska. In Alaska, the Company spent $26.6$34.1 million during the first threenine
months of 2003 to drill three exploration wells on the NW Kuparuk prospect to
test a possible extension of the productive sands in the Kuparuk River field
into the shallow waters offshore. Although all three of the wells found the
sands filled with oil, they were too thin to be considered commercial. The wells
also encountered thick sections of oil-bearing Jurassic-aged sands. The first
well flowed at a sustained rate of approximately 1,300 barrels per day. The test
results are currently being evaluated to determine the commercial viability of
the Jurassic reservoir.
On the North Slope of Alaska, the Company recently participated in a
state lease sale and was the apparent high bidder on 53 tracts covering
approximately 150,000 acres, establishing a leasehold over a variety of
prospects.
Permian Basin area. In the Permian Basin area, the Company spent $19.4$49.6
million during the first threenine months of 2003 primarily on development drilling
in the Spraberry oil trend where thefield. The Company plans to drill up to 150approximately 140 wells in
the Spraberry field during 2003. The Company has drilled 114 wells in the
Permian Basin area during the nine months ended September 30, 2003, 103 of which
were drilled in the Spraberry field.
Mid-Continent area. In the Mid-Continent area, the Company spent $11.3$43.0
million during the first threenine months of 2003, primarily in the West Panhandle
field where the Company plans to drill up toapproximately 100 wells this year. The
Company also plans to drill up to 30approximately 20 Hugoton wells later this year. 26
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANYDuring the nine
months ended September 30, 2003, the Company has drilled 79 West Panhandle field
wells and 19 Hugoton wells.
Argentina. In Argentina, the Company spent $10.0$36.7 million of acquisition,
drilling and seismic capital during the first threenine months of 2003. The majority
of costs was spent onto drill extension and development drillingwells targeting oil
reserves in the Neuquen Basin.
26
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
Canada. In Canada, the Company spent $37.3$41.2 million of acquisition,
drilling and seismic capital during the first threenine months of 2003, primarily in
the Chinchaga, Martin Creek and Ladyfern areas that are only accessible for
drilling during the winter months. PioneerThe Company tested several shallow gas plays
finding multiple gas-bearing zones based on open-hole logs and mud log shows in
several wells. However, unseasonably warm weather resulted in a very short
drilling season in Canada, and approximately eight of the wells drilled will
have to be tested during next year's winter drilling season. Three wells were
drilled to test the Slave Point formation in the Ladyfern field area. One well
was successfulunsuccessful, and has been connected to a production pipeline, one well istwo wells were unsuccessful in the Slave Point formation
but are being evaluated and one well was unsuccessful.for uphole potential in another formation.
Africa. In Africa, the Company spent $10.9$48.8 million of acquisition,
drilling and seismic capital during the first threenine months of 2003 in South
Africa, Tunisia and Gabon.
South Africa. In South Africa, the Company spent $6.0$32.8 million of capital
on theto drill three exploratory wells and to continue development of its Sable field
that is expected to have firstbegan production during August 2003. First sales of Sable oil salesoccurred
during October 2003. During the third quarter. Development drilling is complete, the floating
production facility has been anchored into position in the field and upgrades
are still ongoing while the wells are tied in. Subsequent tosecond quarter end,of 2003, the Company spud the first of itsdrilled
three 2003 planned exploratory wells in South Africa, during 2003.none of which were
commercial.
Tunisia. In Tunisia, the Company spent $3.6$14.0 million of capital during
the first threenine months of 2003. The Company began development activitiesdrilled two exploration wells on its Adam
discovery which is expected to begin productionthe
Anadarko-operated Anaguid permit during the second quarter assuming government approval of 2003. The CEM-1
encountered 95 feet of net gas and condensate pay in upper Ordovician
sandstones. In a drill stem test, the unstimulated well flowed at a rate of
3,600 Mcf per day and 540 Bbls per day. A second well, the SEA-1, encountered 52
feet of net pay in the same section. Both wells have been suspended pending the
evaluation of commercial development plans.
On the Borj El Khadra permit, the Company completed development
activities on the Adam 1 discovery well and began production in late May 2003.
The well has been producing at a gross stabilized rate of over 3,500 Bbls per
day with first sales occurring during the third quarter of 2003. The Company
participated in the successful Adam 2 development well, the first development
well in the 860 square kilometer Adam concession. The Company also began
drilling the Hawa exploration well in the southern portion of the Adam
concession and results are expected during the fourth quarter of 2003. The
Company has a 28 percent interest in the Adam concession. In addition, the
Company drilled its
first operatedan unsuccessful exploration well on itsthe Jorf permit that was non-commercial, and spud the
first of two exploration wells on its Anadarko-operated Anaguid permit.early in
2003.
Gabon. In Gabon, the Company spent $1.3$2.0 million during the first quarternine
months of 2003. The Company is attempting to gainhas received ministerial approval from the government of Gabon for the improved
terms negotiated for the Olowi permit, in which the Company has a 100 percent
working interest. The Company plans to commence a multi-well drilling program in
early 2004 to further define the scale of a development ofplan, initially focusing
on the field under improved fiscal terms, dueLower Gamba. The Company has begun to the size
and complexity ofsolicit interest from possible new
partners in the project.
Results of Operations
Oil and gas revenues. Revenues from oil and gas operations totaled $281.2$332.5
million and $953.6 million for the three monthsand nine month periods ended March 31,September
30, 2003, respectively, compared to $165.5$168.3 million and $506.3 million for the
same period inrespective periods of 2002. The increase in oil and gas revenues isduring the
three and nine month periods ended September 30, 2003, as compared to the same
respective periods of 2002, was principally attributable to increasedincremental gas
productionsales from the Canyon Express project and
initial production from the Falcon field in theCompany's deepwater Gulf of Mexico Canyon Express and toFalcon
field projects, increased oil and gas sales in Argentina and commodity price
increases. As expected, declines in Canadian production partially offset the
above described increases to oil and gas revenues.
27
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
The following table provides the Company's volumes and average reported
prices, including the results of hedging activities, for the three monthsand nine
month periods ended March 31,September 30, 2003 and 2002:
27
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
Three months ended March 31,
--------------------------Nine months ended
September 30, September 30,
--------------------- --------------------
2003 2002 2003 2002
-------- ----------------- -------- --------
Production:
Oil (MBbls).............................. 2,870 3,109.................. 3,088 2,724 8,877 8,639
NGLs (MBbls)............................. 1,983 1,939................. 2,085 2,088 6,129 6,008
Gas (MMcf)............................... 40,240 29,496
Total................... 59,117 35,404 156,336 96,065
Worldwide (MBOE)............................. 11,560 9,963............. 15,025 10,713 41,062 30,658
Average daily production:
Oil (Bbls)............................... 31,894 34,541................... 33,560 29,611 32,517 31,646
NGLs (Bbls).............................. 22,033 21,539.................. 22,658 22,693 22,451 22,007
Gas (Mcf)................................ 447,107 327,736
Total.................... 642,579 384,822 572,659 351,888
Worldwide (BOE).............................. 128,444 110,703.............. 163,314 116,441 150,411 112,301
Average reported prices:
Oil (per Bbl):
United States..........................States.............. $ 25.8525.04 $ 24.27
Argentina..............................22.28 $ 25.6125.06 $ 20.61
Canada.................................23.74
Argentina.................. $ 31.8126.10 $ 17.55
Worldwide..............................20.25 $ 25.8225.31 $ 23.1720.27
Canada..................... $ 28.97 $ 24.67 $ 28.67 $ 21.32
Tunisia.................... $ 26.94 $ - $ 26.94 $ -
Worldwide.................. $ 25.35 $ 21.77 $ 25.14 $ 22.86
NGLs (per Bbl):
United States..........................States.............. $ 18.29 $ 14.12 $ 18.98 $ 13.05
Argentina.................. $ 21.63 $ 10.70
Argentina..............................12.73 $ 24.2722.86 $ 8.97
Canada.................................13.12
Canada..................... $ 27.5123.62 $ 12.41
Worldwide..............................14.57 $ 22.0026.10 $ 10.7315.85
Worldwide.................. $ 18.71 $ 14.10 $ 19.51 $ 13.17
Gas (per Mcf):
United States..........................States.............. $ 4.724.38 $ 3.05
Argentina..............................3.08 $ 4.64 $ 3.12
Argentina.................. $ .54 $ .68
Canada..................................42 $ 4.34.55 $ 2.27
Worldwide...............................49
Canada..................... $ 4.063.57 $ 2.472.31 $ 4.00 $ 2.41
Worldwide.................. $ 3.64 $ 2.25 $ 3.91 $ 2.39
On a BOE basis, worldwide average daily production increased by 1640
percent and 34 percent during the three monthsand nine month periods ended March 31,September
30, 2003, respectively, as compared to the same period inrespective periods of 2002.
During the firstthird quarter of 2003 as compared to the firstthird quarter of 2002,
worldwide oil production declinedincreased by eight percent;13 percent, NGL production remained
virtually unchanged and gas production, augmented by incremental production from
both the Canyon Express and Falcon field gas projects, increased by 67 percent.
During the first nine months of 2003, as compared to the first nine months of
2002, worldwide oil production increased by three percent, NGL production
increased by two percent;percent and gas production, augmented by a full
quarternine months of
production from Canyon Express and initial production duringsince March from the Falcon field,
increased by 3663 percent. Per BOE average daily production, on a first-quarterthird- quarter
to first-quarterthird-quarter comparison, increased by 2654 percent in the United States and by
15 percent in Argentina, while production in Argentina and Canada decreased by eight16 percent.
During the first nine months of 2003 as compared to the first nine months of
2002, per BOE average daily production increased by 45 percent in the United
States and 12by 13 percent respectively.
Secondin Argentina, while production in Canada decreased by
14 percent.
Fourth quarter 2003 production volumes areis expected to average 150,000 to 165,000
BOE per day. GasDuring the fourth quarter, the Company expects the first cargo
sales for oil produced into storage in both South Africa and Tunisia. However,
due to uncertainty regarding the timing of cargos, total sales during the fourth
quarter are difficult to predict. In South Africa, volume estimates reflect a
slower ramp-up of Sable field production isdue to mechanical problems with
compression equipment.
As in past years, Argentine gas sales are expected to rise duringbe impacted by the
secondseasonal decline in gas demand as Argentina enters their summer season. Fourth
quarter gas sales will also be impacted, as expected, by a resultone to two week
shut-in of the acquisition of an additional 25 percent working
interest in the Falcon field and realization of a full quarter of production
from the Falcon field. The range of expected daily production for the second
quarter of 2003 is expanded as a result of the production variability inherent
in bringing high volume, high impact wells into an otherwise relatively stable
production mix. Includedorder to tie in the second quarter guidance is a reductionHarrier satellite discovery
for first production in net
Falcon production volume reflecting the one-eighth royalty that becomes
effective if the average NYMEX gas price exceeds $4.10 per Mcf for 2003.
The Company is also widening the range of expected 2003 production to
55 million to 60 million BOE to reflect the Falcon royalty and the heightened
variability related to high volume wells. The Falcon field is performing better
than expected, and the Harrier field has the potential for early start-up, while
first oil sales from the Sable field are now expected in the third quarter. With
a full year of production from new fields brought on in 2003 and the addition of
at least two large fields in late 2003 or early2004, the Company expects 2004
production to range from 63 million to 75 million BOE.2004.
28
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
As previously discussed, above, oil and gas revenues for the quarterthree and nine
month periods ended March 31,September 30, 2003 were positively impacted by commodity
price increases. Comparing the firstthird quarter of 2003 to the same respective
period in 2002, the Company's average worldwide oil 28
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
price increased 11 percent;16 percent,
average worldwide NGL prices increased 33 percent and average worldwide gas
prices increased 62 percent. Comparing the first nine months of 2003 to the same
respective period in 2002, the Company's average worldwide NGLoil price increased
105 percent;10 percent, average worldwide NGL prices increased 48 percent and the Company's average
worldwide gas priceprices increased 64 percent.
Hedging activities. The oil and gas prices that the Company reports are
based on the market price received for the commodities adjusted by the results
of the Company's cash flow hedging activities. The Company utilizes commodity
derivative instruments (swaps(swap and collar contracts) in order to (i) reduce the
effect of the volatility of price changes on the commodities the Company
produces and sells, (ii) support the Company's annual capital budgeting and
expenditure plans and (iii) lock in prices to protect the economics related toreduce commodity price risk associated with certain
capital projects. During the first quarter ofthree and nine month periods ended September 30,
2003, the Company's commodity price hedges decreased oil and gas revenues by
$50.4$28.0 million and $100.9 million, respectively, as compared to $32.2decreasing oil
and gas revenues by $1.4 million of commodity price hedge gainsand increasing oil and gas revenues by $34.5
million during the same periodrespective periods in 2002. See Note DE of Notes to
Consolidated Financial Statements included in "Item 1. Financial Statements" for
specific information regarding the Company's hedging activities during the three
and nine month periods ended March 31,September 30, 2003 and 2002.
During the second quarter ofOctober 2003, the Company has entered into the
following new oil and gas price hedges: (i) 3,000swap contracts to hedge
6,315 Bbls per day of 2005fourth quarter 2003 oil swap
contracts withsales at a weighted average fixed
price per Bbl fixed prices of $24.00, (ii) 50,000 MMBtu$31.51, 4,227 Bbls per day of 2005 gas swap contracts with2004 oil sales at a weighted
average fixed price per MMBtuBbl of $29.20, 4,000 Bbls per day of 2008 oil sales at a
fixed pricesprice per Bbl of $4.40,$26.05 and (iii) 10,000 MMBtu20,000 Mcf per day of 2004 gas sales at a
weighted average fixed price per Mcf of $4.96. Additionally, the Company
terminated its collar contracts with average per MMBtu
fixed floor prices of $4.00 and fixed ceiling prices of $6.85. The Company also
terminated 2,000 Bblsthat hedged 20,000 Mcf per day of May through December2004 gas
sales.
Interest and other revenues. Interest and other revenues during the three
and nine month periods ended September 30, 2003 oil swap contracts
with average per Bbl fixed prices of $25.00totaled $348 thousand and 1,000 Bbls per day of third$4.3
million, respectively, as compared to $7.1 million and fourth quarter 2003 oil swap contracts with average per Bbl fixed prices of
$24.00.$9.1 million during the
same respective periods in 2002.
Gain (loss) on disposition of assets. During the three monthsand nine month periods
ended March
31,September 30, 2003, the Company recorded $1.4$46 thousand and $1.6 million,
respectively, of net gains on the disposition of assets, as compared to $.1$3.4
million and $4.4 million, respectively, of net lossesgains on the disposition of
assets during the same periodrespective periods in 2002. ProductionSee "Capital resources -
Sales of assets" for additional information regarding proceeds from sales of
assets.
Oil and gas production costs. During the three and n ine month periodperiods
ended March 31,September 30, 2003, total production costs per BOE averaged $5.54,$4.78 and
$5.00, respectively, representing an increase of $.42$.12 per BOE (eight(three percent)
and an increase of $.08 per BOE (two percent), respectively, as compared to
total production costs per BOE of $5.12$4.66 and $4.92 during the same period in 2002, and representing an increase of $1.01 per BOE (22
percent), as compared to production costs per BOE of $4.53 during the fourth
quarterrespective
periods of 2002. Lease operating expenses and workover expenses represent the
components of production costs for which the Company has management control,
while production and ad valorem taxes and field fuel expenses are directly
related to commodity price changes.
The increase in production costs per BOE during the first quarter ofthree months ended
September 30, 2003, as compared to the first quarter ofsame respective period in 2002, is primarily duecan be
attributed to increasesan increase in production taxeslease operating and field fuel expenses, as a result of higher gas prices,
partially
offset by decreases in lease operating expenses,lower production and ad valorem taxes and workover costs. As comparedThe increase
in lease operating expenses is primarily due to the fourth quarterstrengthening of 2002,both the
Argentine peso and the Canadian dollar, while the increase in field fuel
expenses is the result of higher gas prices. The decrease in per BOE production
and ad valorem taxes is primarily due to the incremental production associated
with Canyon Express and Falcon which are not subject to production or ad valorem
taxes.
The increase in production costs per BOE during the first quarter ofnine months ended
September 30, 2003, was dueas compared to increasesthe same respective period in 2002, can be
attributed to an increase in field fuel and lease operating expenses as well as
production taxes, partially offset by lower ad valorem taxes and workover costs.
The increase in field fuel expenses as ais the result of higher gas prices, and the
increase in production taxes, while benefitting from incremental production from
Canyon Express and Falcon where there are no production taxes, still increased
due to higher lease operating expenses associated with the start-up ofcommodity prices.
29
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
The following table provides the Company's deepwater Gulf of Mexico Canyon Express production.production costs per BOE for
the three and nine month periods ended September 30, 2003 and 2002:
Three months ended March 31,
-----------------------Nine months ended
September 30, September 30,
------------------- ------------------
2003 2002 2003 2002
------- ------- ------- -------
(per BOE)
Lease operating expense.......................expense............. $ 3.023.03 $ 3.292.63 $ 3.00 $ 2.93
Taxes:
Production................................. .84 .50Production....................... .55 .60 .65 .58
Ad valorem................................. .48valorem....................... .37 .54 .41 .54
Field fuel expenses........................... 1.00 .49expenses................. .68 .63 .79 .59
Workover costs................................ .20 .30costs...................... .15 .26 .15 .28
------ ------ ------ ------
Total production costs.....................costs........ $ 5.544.78 $ 5.124.66 $ 5.00 $ 4.92
====== ====== ====== ======
Based on market-quoted commodity prices in mid-Aprilduring October 2003, the Company
expects secondfourth quarter 2003 production costs to average $4.85$4.75 to $5.15 per BOE.
29
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANYThe potential increase is primarily due to higher per BOE lease operating
expenses associated with forecasted Sable production and an increase in expected
workover costs.
Depletion, depreciation and amortization expense. The Company's total
depletion, depreciation and amortization expense per BOE was $6.06$6.89 and $5.06$6.68 for
the three and nine month periods ended March 31,September 30, 2003, respectively, as
compared to $5.11 and 2002, respectively.$5.09 during the same respective periods of 2002.
Depletion expense per BOE, the largest component of depletion, depreciation and
amortization increased to $5.86expense, was $6.73 and $6.50 per BOE during the three monthsand nine
month periods ended March 31,September 30, 2003, respectively, as compared to $4.84$4.91 and
$4.88 per BOE during the same periodrespective periods of 2002. The increase in 2002,per
BOE depletion expense is primarily due to increases in higher cost-basis
deepwater Gulf of Mexico production volumes.
The Company expects secondfourth quarter 2003 depletion, depreciation and
amortization expense to average $6.50$6.90 to $6.90$7.30 per BOE. The increase is
principally attributable to higher cost-basis Sable production volumes.
Exploration, and abandonments/abandonments, geological and geophysical costs. Exploration,
and abandonments/abandonments, geological and geophysical costs were $35.9$24.5 million and $107.4
million during the three and nine month periods ended September 30, 2003,
respectively, as compared to $18.3 million and $57.3 million during the same
respective periods in 2002. The increase in exploration, abandonments,
geological and geophysical costs during the first nine months ended March 31,of 2003 as
compared to $21.1 million
during the same periodfirst nine months of 2002 is primarily due to increased
exploration/extension drilling in 2002.the Gulf of Mexico, South Africa, Canada and
Tunisia and increases in seismic acquisitions that will contribute to future
exploration activities. During the first quarternine months of 2003, the Company
completed and evaluated 5684 exploration/extension wells, 2641 of which were
successfully completed as discoveries. During the same respective period in
2002, the Company completed and evaluated 27 exploration/extension wells, 20 of
which were successfully completed as discoveries.
30
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
The following table provides the Company's geological and geophysical
costs, exploratory dry hole expense leaseand leasehold abandonments expense and other
exploration expense for the three and nine month periods ended March 31,September 30, 2003 and 2002:
United Other Consolidated
States Argentina Canada Foreign Total
-------- --------- --------- ---------- --------------- ------------
(in thousands)
Three months ended March 31,September 30, 2003:
Geological and geophysical............geophysical.............. $ 5,8398,110 $ 1,732458 $ 1,337619 $ 1,474774 $ 10,3829,961
Exploratory dry holes................. 11,358 880 8,714 2,227 23,179holes................... 7,127 778 1,069 3,403 12,377
Leasehold abandonments and other...... 590 432 1,276 8 2,306
------ ------other........ 2,038 39 101 - 2,178
------- ------ ------- $17,787------- ------- -------
$ 3,04417,275 $ 11,3271,275 $ 3,7091,789 $ 35,867
====== ======4,177 $ 24,516
======= ============= ======= ======= =======
Three months ended March 31,September 30, 2002:
Geological and geophysical............geophysical.............. 6,210 $ 4,300114 $ 1,570682 $ 1,0031,450 $ 3,332 $ 10,2058,456
Exploratory dry holes................. 7,840 399 1,159 26 9,424holes................... 4,119 1,212 8 45 5,384
Leasehold abandonments and other...... 1,171 171 141other........ 2,228 1,517 739 - 4,484
------ ------- ------- ------- -------
$ 12,557 $ 2,843 $ 1,429 $ 1,495 $ 18,324
======= ======= ======= ======= =======
Nine months ended September 30, 2003:
Geological and geophysical.............. $ 25,797 $ 6,966 $ 2,534 $ 3,102 $ 38,399
Exploratory dry holes................... 28,306 2,209 10,939 20,859 62,313
Leasehold abandonments and other........ 3,562 1,672 1,476 8 1,491
------ ------6,718
------- ------- ------- ------- -------
$ 57,665 $ 10,847 $ 14,949 $ 23,969 $107,430
======= ======= ======= ======= =======
Nine months ended September 30, 2002:
Geological and geophysical.............. $ 16,512 $ 3,329 3,049 $ 5,303 $ 28,193
Exploratory dry holes................... 18,803 1,611 1,198 249 21,861
Leasehold abandonments and other........ 4,526 1,691 1,025 8 7,250
------- ------- ------ ------- $13,311-------
$ 2,14039,841 $ 2,3036,631 $ 3,3665,272 $ 21,120
====== ======5,560 $ 57,304
======= ============= ======= ======= =======
The Company expects secondfourth quarter 2003 exploration and abandonment
expense to be $25$20 million to $50$40 million, dependent largely on exploratory
drilling results.results and expected seismic expenditures.
General and administrative expense. General and administrative expenseexpenses
for the three and nine month periods ended March 31,September 30, 2003 and 2002 was $15.5were $15.2 million
and $11.9$44.3 million, respectively.respectively, as compared to $12.5 million and $35.1 million
during the same respective periods in 2002. The $3.6increases of $2.7 million increaseand
$9.2 million in general and administrative expense duringfor the first quarter ofrespective three and
nine month periods ended September 30, 2003, as compared to the same period ofrespective
periods in 2002, isare primarily due to increases in performance relatedadministrative staff and
performance-related compensation costs.
The Company expects secondfourth quarter 2003 general and administrative
expense to be approximately $14 million to $15 million.
Accretion of discount on asset retirement obligations. During the three
monthsand nine month periods ended March 31,September 30, 2003, accretion of discount on asset
retirement obligations was $1.1 million.$1.3 million and $3.7 million, respectively. The
provisions of SFAS 143 require that the accretion of discount on asset
retirement obligations be classified in the consolidated statement of operations
separate from interest expense. Prior to 2003 and the adoption of SFAS 143, the
Company classified accretion of discount on asset retirement obligations inas a
component of interest expense. The Company's interest expense during the three
monthsand nine month periods ended March 31,September 30, 2002 includes $651included $622 thousand and $1.9
million, respectively, of accretion of discount on asset retirement obligations
that was calculated prior to the adoption of SFAS 143 based on asset retirement
obligations recorded in purchased business combinations. See "Cumulative effect
of change in accounting principle" and Notes B and EF of Notes to Consolidated
Financial Statements included in "Item 1. Financial Statements" for additional
information regarding the Company's adoption of SFAS 143.
30The Company expects fourth quarter 2003 accretion of discount on asset
retirement obligations to be approximately $1 million.
31
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
Interest expense. Interest expense was $22.5$23.2 million and $69.5 million
for the quarterthree and nine month periods ended March 31,September 30, 2003, respectively, as
compared to $26.3$20.3 million and $71.4 million for the same periodrespective periods in
2002. The $3.8increase of $2.9 million (or 14 percent) decrease in interest expense duringfor the
first
quarter ofthree months ended September 30, 2003, as compared to the first quartersame respective period
of 2002, is primarily attributable to a $4.3 million decrease in capitalized
interest due to a
$3.9 millionthe completion of the Canyon Express gas project and Falcon
field development, partially offset by an increase in recorded hedge gains. The
decrease of $1.9 million (or three percent) in interest rate hedge gains, including amortizationexpense for the nine
months ended September 30, 2003, as compared to the same respective period of
deferred hedge gains;2002, is primarily attributable to interest rate savings from the repayment of a
higher yielding capital cost obligation and a portion of the Company's 9-5/8
percent and 8-7/8 percent senior notes; andnotes, lower underlying market rates of
interest.interest, a 12.5 basis point decrease on May 16, 2003 in the Eurodollar margin
component of the interest rate specified in the Company's $575 million corporate
credit facility (the "Credit Facility"), the aforementioned separate
classification of accretion of discount on asset retirement obligations, and an
increase of $2.3 million in interest rate hedge gains. Partially offsetting the
decreases in interest expense components described above was a $6.0 million
decline in interest capitalized during the first nine months of 2003, as
compared to the same respective period in 2002.
The Company expects secondfourth quarter 2003 interest expense to be $24$21
million to $26 million, including accretion of discount on asset retirement
obligations.$23 million.
Other expenses. Other expenses for the three monthsand nine month periods ended
March 31,September 30, 2003 and 2002 were $5.2$1.4 million and $8.3$12.2 million, respectively.respectively, as
compared to $21.6 million and $37.6 million for the same respective periods in
2002. The $20.2 million decrease in other expenseexpenses during the three months ended
September 30, 2003, as compared to the same respective period of 2002, is
primarily attributable to a $5.4$19.5 million loss recognized from the early
extinguishment of higher yielding senior notes in 2002. The $25.4 million
decrease in the
remeasurement of Argentine peso-denominated net monetary assets and a $2.2
million improvement in Canadian gas marketing margins; partially offset by a
$1.8 million increase in commodity hedge ineffectiveness, a $1.0 million
increase in realized foreign exchange losses and other expense increases.during the nine months ended September 30, 2003, as
compared to the same respective period of 2002, is primarily attributable to a
$22.3 million loss recognized from the early extinguishment of higher yielding
senior notes in 2002. See "Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle"
presented below for information regarding the reclassification of 2002
extraordinary losses on the early extinguishment of debt.
Income tax provision (benefit)benefits (provisions). During the three and nine month periods
ended March 31,September 30, 2003, the Company recognized an income tax provisionbenefits of $2.3$99.9
million principally associated withand $95.0 million, respectively. During the three and nine month periods
ended September 30, 2002, the Company recognized income tax provisions of $2.2
million and $3.2 million, of which $2.1 million and $2.8 million, respectively,
was attributable to Argentine taxable income, as compared to anincome. The income tax benefit of $.4 million duringfor the
threenine months ended March 31, 2002.
Due to uncertainties regardingSeptember 30, 2003 excludes a $1.3 million Argentine provision
that is associated with the Company's utilizationgain recognized from the adoption of net operating
loss carryforwards and other credit carryforwards,SFAS 143 on
January 1, 2003 (see "Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle"
presented below).
Since 1998, the Company has establishedmaintained a valuation reserves to reduce the carrying valueallowance against a
portion of its deferred tax assets. Theasset position in the United States. As of December
31, 2002, the Company's deferred tax valuation reserves are reduced whenallowances totaled $247.0
million, comprised of $204.3 million of United States deferred tax valuation
allowances and $42.7 million of international deferred tax valuation allowances.
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 109 requires that the Company's
financial results establish thatCompany
continually assess both positive and negative evidence to determine whether it
is more likely than not that the deferred tax assets previously reserved willcan be usedrealized prior to
their expiration. DuringIn the secondthird quarter of 2003, the Company concluded that it is
now more likely than not that it will realize its gross deferred tax asset
position in the United States after giving consideration to the following
specific facts:
o Over the past several years, the Company has been steadily improving its
portfolio of assets, including significant proved reserve discoveries and
follow-up development projects that have recently started to produce.
Specifically, Pioneer completed development activities and began production
operations on its Canyon Express gas project in September 2002 and on the
Falcon field in March 2003. The production performance to-date and the
reservoir data that has been accumulated through September 30, 2003 on
these projects provide assurance that these projects will recover the
reserves as predicted.
o During the three months ended September 30, 2003, the Company announced
additional Falcon area discoveries in the Tomahawk and Raptor fields and
expects first production from these fields in the second half of 2004. The
Company also expects to complete its other significant United States Gulf
of Mexico development projects, Harrier and Devils Tower, in early and
mid-2004, respectively.
32
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
o Commodity market supply and demand fundamentals have continued to stabilize
during the quarter as evidenced by quoted futures prices, that suggest that
North American gas prices will remain relatively flat over the next five
years and that worldwide oil prices may decline modestly over that time
span compared to relatively high current levels for each commodity.
o The Company's future revenues are further protected against price declines
through its significant hedging program. The Company has hedged portions of
its oil price risk through 2005 and portions of its gas price risk through
2007. See Note E of Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included in
"Item 1. Financial Statements" for information regarding the Company's
hedge positions.
o The Company has generated record pretax income for the third quarter of
2003, significant net income for the nine months ended September 30, 2003
and net income in each of the years ended December 31, 2002, 2001 and 2000.
The Company has also generated significant taxable income for the third
consecutive quarter, including the deduction of 100 percent of its
intangible drilling costs for those periods. The Company believes that
these trends will continue for the foreseeable future.
o The Company performed various economic evaluations in the third quarter to
determine if the Company would be able to realize all of its deferred tax
assets, including its net operating loss carryforwards, prior to any
expiration. These evaluations were based on the Company's reserve
projections of existing producing properties and recent discoveries being
developed. These evaluations employed varying price assumptions, some of
which included a significant negative change to commodity prices, and
factored in limitations on the use of the Company's net operating loss
carryforwards. The evaluations did not include assumptions of increases in
proved reserves through future exploration or acquisitions. The evaluations
indicated that the deferred tax assets are realizable in the future.
Accordingly, during the third quarter of 2003, the Company reversed its
valuation allowance in the United States, resulting in the recognition of a
deferred tax benefit of $104.7 million. Further, the reversal of the allowance
increased stockholders' equity by $32.6 million as the Company recognized the
tax effects of previous stock option exercises and deferred hedging gains and
losses in other comprehensive income.
Pioneer will continue to monitor Company-specific, oil and gas industry
and worldwide economic factors and will reassess the likelihood that the
Company's net operating loss carryforwards and other deferred tax attributes
will be utilized prior to their expiration. There can be no assurances that
facts and circumstances will not materially change and require the Company to
reestablish a United States deferred tax asset valuation allowance in a future
period. As of September 30, 2003, the Company does not believe there is
sufficient positive evidence to reverse its valuation allowances related to
certain foreign tax jurisdictions.
The Company estimates that its fourth quarter cash income tax provisiontaxes will approximate $5be
$4 million to $6 million, principally comprised of Argentine income taxes and
minimalnominal alternative minimum tax in the United States as the Company benefits
from its net operating loss carryforwards in the United States and Canada. In
the future, the Company's effective tax rate on earnings in the United States
will approximate statutory rates as a result of the aforementioned reversal of
deferred tax valuation allowances.
Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle. As previously
noted,discussed, the Company adopted the provisions of SFAS 143 on January 1, 2003 and
in
accordance with the provisions of SFAS 143, recognized a $15.4 million or $.13
per share, benefit from the cumulative effect of change in
accounting principle, net of $1.3 million of associated Argentine deferred
income taxes.
On January 1, 2003, the Company also adopted the provisions of SFAS 145,
the provisions of which dodid not result in a cumulative effect adjustment. In
accordance with the provisions of SFAS 145, the Company reclassified to other
expense extraordinary losses from the early extinguishment of debt of $2.8
million and $19.5 million recordedrealized during the three month periods ended June 30
and September 30, 2002, respectively.
See Note B of Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included in
"Item 1. Financial Statements" for additional information regarding the
Company's adoption of SFAS 143 and SFAS 145.
33
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
Capital Commitments, Capital Resources and Liquidity
Capital commitments. The Company's primary needs for cash are for
exploration, development and acquisitions of oil and gas properties, repayment
of contractual obligations and working capital obligations.
Oil and gas properties. The Company's cash expenditures for additions to
oil and gas properties during the three monthsand nine month periods ended March 31,September
30, 2003 and 2002
totaled $252.8$134.9 million and $88.3$522.0 million, respectively. The Company's first
quarter 2003
additions to oil and gas properties were funded by $136.8$222.5 million and $546.7
million of net cash provided by operating activities $15.6 million of proceeds from
disposition of assetsduring the three and borrowings under long-term debt.nine
month periods ended September 30, 2003, respectively. The Company's first
quartercapital
expenditures during the three months ended September 30, 2002 expenditures were internally funded by
$50.0$87.7 million of net cash provided by operating activities, and a portion of the Company's $51.6$59.9 million of
proceeds from the disposition of assets.
31
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANYassets and borrowings under the Credit
Facility. The Company has increased itsCompany's capital budget for 2003 to approximately
$650expenditures during the nine months ended
September 30, 2002 were funded by $228.3 million includingof net cash provided by
operating activities, $118.8 million of proceeds from the first quarter 2003 acquisitiondisposition of assets
and proceeds from the remaining 25
percent working interest in Falcon field, Harrier field and surrounding
prospects and the additional 2003 exploration and development costs attributable
to those interests.April 2002 sale of 11.5 million shares of common stock
(the "Stock Offering").
Contractual obligations. The Company's contractual obligations include
long-term debt, operating leases, Btu swap agreements (which are fixed in amount
and are not subject to market risk), terminated commodity hedges and other
contracts. During the threenine months ended March 31,September 30, 2003, the Company increasedreduced
its long-term debt by $99.1$47.2 million, reduced its obligations under the Btu swap
agreements by $1.7$4.9 million and settled terminatedlocked-in $24.2 million of remaining liabilities
associated with the termination of commodity hedge obligations for $198 thousand. Contractualhedges prior to their scheduled
maturity. The Company's contractual obligations for which the ultimate
settlement amounts are not fixed and determinable includeare currently limited to
derivative contracts that are sensitive to future changes in commodity prices, currency
exchange rates and interest rates.prices.
See "Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk" for a
table of changes in the fair value of the Company's derivative contract assets
and liabilities during the threenine months ended March 31,September 30, 2003.
Working capital. Funding for the Company's working capital obligations is
provided by internally-generated cash flow. Funding for the repayment of
principal and interest on outstanding debt and the Company's capital expenditure
program may be provided by any combination of internally-generated cash flow,
proceeds from the disposition of non-strategicnon- strategic assets or alternative financing
sources as discussed in "Capital resources" below.
Capital resources. The Company's primary capital resources are net cash
provided by operating activities, proceeds from financing activities and
proceeds from sales of non-strategic assets. The Company expects that these
resources will be sufficient to fund its capital commitments induring the
remainder of 2003.
Operating activities. Net cash provided by operating activities during
the three monthsand nine month periods ended March 31,September 30, 2003 and 2002 were $136.8$222.5 million
and $50.0$546.7 million, respectively.respectively, as compared to $87.7 million and $228.3
million for the same respective periods in 2002. The increase in net cash
provided by operating activities during the three monthsand nine month periods ended
March 31,September 30, 2003, as compared to the same periodrespective periods in 2002, is
primarily due to higher gas sales volumesproduction and to higher commodity prices.
Financing activities. Net cash provided by financing activities during
the three months ended March 31, 2003 were $100.6 million as compared to net cash used in financing activities during the
three monthsand nine month periods ended March 31, 2002
of $8.1 million. During the three months ended March 31,September 30, 2003 the primary
source ofwas $94.4 million and
$48.6 million, respectively. In comparison, net cash provided by financing
activities was borrowings under$90.4 million and $163.8 million during the Company's $575 million corporate credit facility (the "Credit Facility"). The
first quarterthree and nine month
periods ended September 30, 2002, respectively. During the nine months ended
September 30, 2003, borrowings under the Credit Facility werenet cash provided by operating activities has been used to
fund the $113Company's capital projects, repay borrowings of $117.7 million cash paymentduring
the first half of 2003, including normal closing adjustments, to acquire an
additional 25 percent working interest in the Falcon field, the Harrier field
and surrounding satellite prospects in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico.Mexico and to
reduce long-term debt by $47.5 million. During Januarythe third quarter of 2003, net
cash provided by operating activities increased while net cash used for
investing activities declined allowing the Company to reduce long-term debt by
$92.0 million. During the three and nine month periods ended September 30, 2002,
the Company used a portion of the $236.0 million of net proceeds from the Stock
Offering to fund a portion of the net cash used in investing activities and to
repay a portion of its long-term debt and other noncurrent liabilities.
During August and February 2003, the Company entered into interest rate
swap contracts to hedge a portion of the fair value of its 9-5/8 percent senior
notes due in 2010.
Thenotes. Under the terms of thesethe interest rate swap contracts obligateentered into during
August (the "August Contracts"), the Company was to receive a fixed annual rate
of 9-5/8 percent on $300.0 million notional amount and agreed to pay the
counterparties a variable annual rate on the notional amount equal to the six-month
London Interbank Offered Rate34
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
LIBOR, reset semi-annually, plus a weighted average margin ("LIBOR"LIBOR Margin") plus 566.4of
521.0 basis points; obligatepoints. The terms of the counterparties to pay the
Company a fixed rate of 9-5/8 percent; and, provide for a notional debt amount
of $250 million. The interest rate swap contracts matureentered into
during February 2003 (the "February Contracts") differed from those of the
August Contracts only in 2010.notional amount and LIBOR Margin, which terms were
$250.0 million and 566.4 basis points, respectively. During September 2003, the
Company terminated the August Contracts for $10.1 million of cash proceeds. The
cash proceeds were comprised of $1.2 million of settlement gains attributable to
the period from August 2003 through the date of termination and $8.9 million
attributable to the fair value, on the date of termination, of the remaining
term of the August Contracts. During May 2003, the Company terminated the
February Contracts for $11.4 million of cash proceeds. The cash proceeds were
comprised of $2.0 million of settlement gains attributable to the period from
February 2003 through the date of termination and $9.4 million attributable to
the fair value, on the date of termination, of the remaining term of the
February Contracts.
Outstanding borrowings under the Credit Facility totaled $365$218.0 million
as of March 31, 2003.September 30, 2003, excluding $28.8 million of undrawn letters of credit
issued under the Credit Facility. The weighted average interest raterates on the
Company's indebtedness for the three monthsand nine month periods ended March 31,September 30,
2003 was 5.11were 5.2 percent and 5.3 percent, respectively, as compared to 6.115.8 percent
and 6.4 percent for the three months ended March 31,same respective periods in 2002, taking into account the
effect of lower market interest rates and the Company's interest rate swaps.
As the Company pursues its strategy, it may utilize various financing
sources, including fixed and floating rate debt, convertible securities,
preferred stock or common stock. The Company may also issue securities in
exchange for oil and gas properties, stock or other interests in other oil and
gas companies or related assets. Additional securities may be of a class
preferred to common stock with respect to such matters as dividends and
liquidation rights and may also have other rights and preferences as determined
by the Company's Board of Directors.
Sales of assets. During the three monthsand nine month periods ended March 31,September
30, 2003, and 2002, proceeds from the sale of assets totaled $15.6$9.3 million and $51.6$35.0
million, 32
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
respectively.respectively, as compared to $59.9 million and $118.8 million for the
same respective periods in 2002. The Company's 2003 asset divestitures were
primarily comprised of shallow-waterderivative assets and Gulf of Mexico shelf prospects, in
which a partial interest was sold to Woodside. The Company's 2002 asset
divestitures were primarily comprised of hedge derivatives.derivative assets.
Book capitalization and liquidity. TotalThe Company's total debt was $1.8$1.6
billion as of March 31,September 30, 2003 as compared to total debt ofand $1.7 billion onas of December 31, 2002. The
Company's total book capitalization at March 31,September 30, 2003 was $3.2$3.3 billion,
consisting of total debt of $1.8$1.6 billion and stockholders' equity of $1.4$1.7
billion. Consequently, the Company's debt to total book capitalization increased to
55.6at
September 30, 2003 was 48.6 percent at March 31, 2003 from 54.6 percentand at December 31, 2002.2002 was 54.8 percent.
The Company's ratio of current assets to current liabilities was .52.61 at
March 31,September 30, 2003 and .54 at December 31, 2002.2002 was .54. Including $28.8 million of
undrawn and outstanding letters of credit, the Company had $181.2$328.2 million of
unused borrowing capacity available under its Credit Facility as of March 31,September
30, 2003.
During the remainderfourth quarter of 2003, the Company anticipates that net cash
provided by operating activities, based on current commodity prices, will exceed
budgeted capital expenditures and contractual obligations and be sufficient to
reduce long-term debt by $75an additional $25 million to $100 million$50 million.
New Accounting Interpretation and Recent Developments
During January 2003, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued
Interpretation No. 46, "Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities" ("FIN 46"),
which requires the consolidation of certain entities that are determined to be
variable interest entities ("VIE's"). An entity is considered to be a VIE when
either (i) the entity lacks sufficient equity to carry on its principal
operations, (ii) the equity owners of the entity cannot make decisions about the
entity's activities or (iii) the entity's equity neither absorbs losses or
benefits from gains. For VIEs created subsequent to January 31, 2003, the
provisions of FIN 46 must be applied immediately. For VIEs created prior to that
date, the adoption of FIN 46 is required for all reporting periods subsequent to
December 15, 2003.
Subsequent to January 31, 2003, the Company has not acquired an interest
in any VIEs that would require immediate consolidation under FIN 46. The Company
is currently reviewing its financial arrangements to determine whether any VIEs
existed prior to January 31, 2003 that should be consolidated by the Company in
accordance with FIN 46. The Company does not believe that the consolidation of
VIEs that existed prior to January 31, 2003, if any, will have a material impact
on its future financial position, results of operations or liquidity.
35
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
In its recent review of registrants' filings, the staff of the SEC has
taken the position that Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 142,
"Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets" ("SFAS 142"), requires oil and gas
entities to separately report on their balance sheets the costs of leasehold
mineral interests acquired after June 30, 2001, including related accumulated
depletion, as intangible assets and provide related disclosures. The Company has
historically included producing leasehold costs in the proved properties caption
on its balance sheet since the value of the leases is inseparable from the year-end 2002 balance.value
of the related oil and gas reserves. This classification is consistent with the
provisions of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 19, "Financial
Accounting and Reporting by Oil and Gas Producing Companies", and standard
industry practice. Almost all costs included in the unproved properties caption
on the balance sheet are leasehold mineral interests that are regularly
evaluated for impairment based on lease term and drilling activity. The SEC
staff has referred the question of SFAS 142 applicability for consideration by
the Emerging Issues Task Force. If the provisions of SFAS 142 are determined to
be applicable to oil and gas leasehold mineral interests, reclassifications
within property, plant and equipment on the Consolidated Balance Sheets and
additional disclosures may be required. The Company does not believe that the
provisions of SFAS 142, if determined to be applicable, will have a material
impact on its financial position, results of operations or liquidity. At
September 30, 2003, the Company had cumulative expenditures of no more than $450
million on costs of leasehold mineral interests since June 30, 2001, that are
included in oil and gas properties in the Company's Consolidated Balance Sheet.
Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
The following quantitative and qualitative disclosures about market risk
are supplementary to the quantitative and qualitative disclosures provided in
the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2002.
As such, the information contained herein should be read in conjunction with the
related disclosures in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 2002.
The following table reconciles the changes that occurred in the fair
values of the Company's open derivative contracts during the first quarternine months
of 2003:
Derivative Contract Assets (Liabilities)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Foreign
Interest Exchange
Commodity Rate Rate Total
-------------------- -------- -------- --------- ----------
(in thousands)
Fair value of contracts outstanding
as of December 31, 2002............... $ (108,804)$(108,804) $ - $ 15 $ (108,789)$(108,789)
Changes in contract fair value........... (117,511) 3,283(220,470) 21,497 3 (114,225)(198,970)
Contract realizations:
Maturities........................... 68,049 -156,539 (3,230) (18) 68,031
Termination153,291
Terminations - cash settlements....... 123settlements...... 125 (18,267) - - 123(18,142)
Terminations - future net obligations 1,01253,362 - - 1,012
---------53,362
-------- ------- ----- -----------------
Fair value of contracts outstanding
as of March 31, 2003.................. $ (157,131) $ 3,283September 30, 2003.............. $(119,248) $ - $ (153,848)
=========- $(119,248)
======== ======= ===== =================
The following disclosures provide specific information about material
changes that have occurred since December 31, 2002 in the Company's portfolio of
financial instruments. The Company may recognize future earnings gains or losses
on these instruments from changes in market commodity prices, interest rates or
foreign exchange rates.
Interest rate sensitivity. The following table provides information, in
U.S. dollar equivalent amounts, about the financial instruments that the Company
was a party to as of March 31, 2003During August and that are sensitive to changes in
interest rates. For debt obligations, the table presents maturities by expected
maturity dates together with the weighted average interest rates expected to be
paid on the debt, given current contractual terms and market conditions. For
fixed rate debt, the weighted average interest rate represents the contractual
fixed rates that the Company was obligated to periodically pay on the debt as of
March 31, 2003. For variable rate debt, the average interest rate represents the
average rates being paid on the debt projected forward proportionate to the
forward yield curve for the six-month LIBOR.
During February 2003, the Company
entered into interest rate swap contracts to hedge a portion of the fair value
of its 9-5/8 percent senior notes. Under the terms of the interest rate swap
contracts entered into during August (the "August Contracts"), the Company willwas
to receive a fixed annual rate of 9-5/8 percent on $250$300.0 million notional
amount and willagreed to pay the counterparties a variable rate on the notional
amount equal to the six-month LIBOR, reset semi-annually, plus a weighted
average margin ("LIBOR Margin") of 566.4521.0 basis points. The accompanying table presentsterms of the interest
rate swap agreement
33contracts entered into during February 2003 (the "February Contracts")
differed from those of the August Contracts only in notional amount and LIBOR
Margin, which terms were $250.0 million and 566.4 basis points, respectively.
During September 2003, the Company terminated the August Contracts for $10.1
million of cash proceeds. The cash proceeds were comprised of $1.2 million of
settlement gains attributable to the period from August 2003 through the date of
termination and $8.9 million attributable to the fair value, on the date of
termination, of the remaining term of the August Contracts. During May 2003, the
Company terminated the February Contracts for
36
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
notional amount together with$11.4 million of cash proceeds. The cash proceeds were comprised of $2.0 million
of settlement gains attributable to the fixed rateperiod from February 2003 through the
date of termination and $9.4 million attributable to be received bythe fair value, on the date
of termination, of the remaining term of the February Contracts.
The following table provides information about the debt obligations of
the Company onthat are sensitive to changes in interest rates as of September 30,
2003. The table presents the notional amount anddebt obligations by maturity dates, the variable rateweighted
average interest rates expected to be paid on the notional amountdebt given current contractual
terms and market conditions and the debt's estimated basedfair value. For fixed rate
debt, the weighted average interest rate represents the contractual fixed rates
that the Company was obligated to periodically pay on the currentdebt as of September
30, 2003. For variable rate debt, the average interest rate represents the
average rates being paid byon the Companydebt projected forward proportionate to the
forward yield curve for the six-month LIBOR.
Interest Rate Sensitivity
Derivative and Other Financial Instruments as of March 31, 2003
Asset
(Liability)Interest Rate Sensitivity
Debt Obligations as of September 30, 2003
Three months Fair Value
ended Year ended December 31, Liability at
December 31, -------------------------------------------------- September 30,
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Thereafter Total Fair Value2003
----------- ------ -------- -------- -------- -------------- -------- ---------- ---------- ------------
(in thousands, except interest rates)
Total Debt:
U.S. dollar denominated
maturities:
Fixed rate debt............debt........... $ - $ - $141,443$136,376 $ - $159,400 $1,101,807 $1,402,650 $(1,417,515)$156,393 $1,110,595 $1,403,364 $(1,534,589)
Weighted average...........average
interest rate (%)............... 7.93 7.93 7.95 7.95 7.94 7.94 7.92 7.907.91
Variable rate debt.........debt........ $ - $ - $365,000$218,000 $ - $ - $ - $ 365,000218,000 $ (365,000)(218,000)
Average interest rate (%).. 2.61 3.65 3.54
Interest Rate Hedge Derivatives:
Notional debt amount....... $250,000 $250,000 $250,000 $250,000 $250,000 $ 250,000 $ 250,000 $ 3,283
Fixed rate receivable (%).. 9.625 9.625 9.625 9.625 9.625 9.625
Variable rate payable (%).. 6.895 7.938 9.185 9.942 10.266 10.558. 2.45 3.15 4.61
Commodity price sensitivity. During the first quarternine months of 2003, the
Company entered into certain oil and gas hedge derivatives and terminated other
oil and gas hedge derivatives. The following tables provide information about
the Company's oil and gas derivative financial instruments thatof the Company was
a partythat
were sensitive to oil and gas price changes as of March 31,September 30, 2003. All of
thethese oil and gas derivative financial instruments that the Company was a party to as of March 31, 2003 and that were
sensitive to oil or gas price changes qualified as hedges.
See Note DE of Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included in
"Item 1. Financial Statements" for information regarding the terms of the
Company's derivative financial instruments that are sensitive to changes in oil
and gas prices.
Pioneer Natural Resources Company
Oil Price Sensitivity
Derivative Financial Instruments as of March 31,September 30, 2003(3)
Three months Year ended Fair Value
ended December 31, Liability at
December 31, -------------------- September 30,
2003 2004 2005 Fair Value2003
------------ -------- -------- -------- -----------------------
(in thousands, except volumes and prices)thousands)
Oil Hedge Derivatives:
Average daily notional Bbl volumes (1):
Swap contracts............................ 20,338 9,000 2,000 $(23,072)contracts............................... 14,000 14,000 12,000 $ (20,467)
Weighted average fixed price
per Bbl..............................Bbl................................. $ 24.5324.35 $ 22.9624.65 $ 24.0024.44
Average forward NYMEX oil
prices (2)................................................................... $ 24.9628.47 $ 24.1626.99 $ 23.0325.38
- ---------------
(1) See Note DE of Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included in "Item
1. Financial Statements" for hedge volumes and weighted average prices by
calendar quarter.
(2) The average forward NYMEX oil and gas prices are based on April 28,October 30, 2003 market
quotes. The average forward NYMEX oil price per Bbl for calendar 2008, as
of the close of business on October 30, 2003, was $25.91.
(3) During AprilOctober 2003, the Company entered into new oil swap contracts to
hedge 3,0006,315 Bbls per day of forecasted calendar 2005 oilfourth quarter 2003 sales at ana weighted average
fixed price per Bbl fixed price of $24.00. During April 2003, the Company also terminated (i)
swap contracts that hedged 2,000$31.51, 4,227 Bbls per day of forecasted May through
December 2003 oil2004 sales at ana
weighted average fixed price per Bbl fixed price of $25.00$29.20 and (ii) swap contracts that hedged 1,0004,000 Bbls per day of
forecasted July
through December 2003 oil2008 sales at an averagea fixed price per Bbl fixed price of $24.00. The April 2003 oil derivative hedge transactions are not reflected
in the table prepared as of March 31, 2003.$26.05.
3437
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
Pioneer Natural Resources Company
Gas Price Sensitivity
Derivative Financial Instruments as of March 31, 2003(4)September 30, 2003 (4)
2006 Asset
and (Liability)Three Months Fair Value
ended Year ended December 31, Liability at
December 31, ----------------------------------------- September 31,
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Fair Value2003
----------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -----------------------
(in thousands, except volumes and prices)thousands)
Gas Hedge Derivatives (1):
Average daily notional MMBtuMcf
volumes (2):
Swap contracts............................. 230,000 230,000 10,000contracts.................... 310,000 260,000 60,000 70,000 20,000 $ (135,359)(98,720)
Weighted average fixed price
per MMBtu.............................MMBtu...................... $ 3.764.39 $ 4.064.05 $ 3.704.28 $ 4.23 $ 3.75
Collar contracts........................... 35,000contracts.................. 20,000 $ 1,300(61)
Weighted average short call
ceiling price per MMBtu.......................MMBtu........ $ 6.766.60
Weighted average long put
floor price per MMBtu............................MMBtu......... $ 4.00
Average forward NYMEX gas
prices (3)........................................................... $ 5.344.71 $ 4.874.75 $ 4.524.70 $ 4.334.62 $ 4.65
- ---------------
(1) To minimize basis risk, the Company enters into basis swaps for a portion
of its gas hedges to connect the index price of the hedging instrument from
a NYMEX index to an index which reflects the geographic area of production.
The Company considers these basis swaps as part of the associated swap and
optioncollar contracts and, accordingly, the effects of the basis swaps have been
presented together with the associated contracts.
(2) See Note DE of Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included in "Item
1. Financial Statements" for hedge volumes and weighted average prices by
calendar quarter.
(3) The average forward NYMEX oil and gas prices are based on April 28,October 30, 2003 market
quotes.
(4) During AprilOctober 2003, the Company entered into new gas swap contracts to
hedge 50,000
MMBtu20,000 Mcf per day of forecasted calendar 2005 gas2004 sales at ana weighted average fixed price
per MMBtu fixed price of $4.40. During April 2003,$4.96. Additionally, the Company also entered into
costlessterminated its collar
contracts to hedge 10,000 MMBtuthat hedged 20,000 Mcf per day of forecasted
calendar 2004 gas sales at an average per MMBtu floor price of $4.00 and an
average per MMBtu ceiling price of $6.85. The April 2003 gas derivative
hedge transactions are not reflected in the table prepared as of March 31,
2003.sales.
Item 4. Controls and Procedures
(a) Evaluation of disclosure controls and procedures. Within 90 days prior toAs of the filing dateend of the
period covered by this Report, the Company's principalchief executive officer ("CEO") and
principalchief financial officer ("CFO") carried out an evaluation of the effectiveness
of the Company's disclosure controls and procedures. Based on those evaluations,
the Company's CEO and CFO believe (i) that the Company's disclosure controls and
procedures are designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed by
the Company in the reports it files under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 is
recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified
in the SEC's rules and forms and that such information is accumulated and
communicated to the Company's management, including the CEO and CFO, as
appropriate to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure; and (ii)
that the Company's disclosure controls and procedures are effective.
(b) Changes in internal controls. There have been no significant changes in the
Company's internal controls or in other factors that could significantly affect
the Company's internal controls subsequent to the evaluation referred to in Item
4. (a), above, nor have there been any corrective actions with regard to
significant deficiencies or material weaknesses.
3538
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
PART II. OTHER INFORMATION
Item 1. Legal Proceedings
As discussed in Note FG of Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
included in "Item 1. Financial Statements", the Company is a party to various
legal actions incidental to its business. Except for the specific legal actions
described in Note F,G, the Company believes that the probable damages from such
other legal actions will not be in excess of 10 percent of the Company's current
assets.
Item 6. Exhibits and Reports on Form 8-K
Exhibits
99.131.1 Chief Executive Officer certification under Section 302 of
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
31.2 Chief Financial Officer certification under Section 302 of
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
32.1 Chief Executive Officer certification under Section 906 of
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
99.232.2 Chief Financial Officer certification under Section 906 of
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
Reports on Form 8-K
During the three months ended March 31,September 30, 2003, the Company filed with
the SEC current reports on Form 8-K on January 10, January 23, JanuaryJuly 17, July 30 and March
31.August 19.
The Company's January 10July 17, 2003 Form 8-K provides,provided, as an exhibit thereto, the
Company'sa
news release dated January 10, 2003, which updated the Company's
fourth quarter 2002 outlook.
The Company's January 23 Form 8-K provides, as exhibits thereto, two news
releases issued by the Company on January 23July 17, 2003 announcing, together with
related information, (i) anticipated first production from the Sable field
offshore of South Africa in August 2003, (ii) updates on the Harrier field and
a supplemental schedule
attachment, reporting (i) the Company's total proved oil and gas reserves as of
December 31, 2002 and the Company's 2003 capital budget for planned development
and exploration activities, (ii) a supplemental schedule of the Company's proved
reserves as of December 31, 2002 and related reserve replacement statistics for
the year ended December 31, 2002Devils Tower project developments and (iii) the Company's joint exploration
program in the Gulf of Mexico with Woodside Energy (USA) Inc.an update on second quarter guidance
based upon then known market conditions.
The Company's JanuaryJuly 30, 2003 Form 8-K provides,provided, as exhibitsan exhibit thereto, twoa
news releasesrelease issued by the Company on JanuaryJuly 30, and a schedule attachment,
reporting (i)2003 announcing the Company's
financial and operating results for the fourth
quarter 2002, an operational update andended June 30, 2003; providing
the Company's firstthird quarter 2003 financial outlook (ii) tables summarizing, as of January 30, 2003,based on then current
expectations and providing information regarding the Company's open oil hedge positions, openand gas hedge positions and deferred hedge
gains and losses on terminated commodity hedges, and (iii) the Company's
discovery on its Harrier prospect in the Gulf of Mexico.price
hedges.
The Company's March 31,August 19, 2003 Form 8-K provides,provided, as exhibitsan exhibit thereto, twoa
news releasesrelease issued by the Company on March 31August 18, 2003 announcing, together with
related information, (i) firstcommencement of production from the Sable field, (ii) a
discovery on the Tomahawk prospect in the Falcon field in the Gulf of Mexico (ii) approval of Harrierand
(iii) the participation in a successful development (iii) acquisition of an additional
interestwell in Falcon, Harrier and related assets, (iv) a new Company record for
North American gas production and (v) an update on operations.
36the Adams field in
Tunisia.
39
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
SIGNATURESS I G N A T U R E S
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the
Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the
undersigned heretothereunto duly authorized.
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
Date: April 30,October 31, 2003 By: /s/ Timothy L. Dove
-----------------------------------
Timothy L. Dove
Executive Vice President and
Chief Financial Officer
Date: April 30,October 31, 2003 By: /s/ Richard P. Dealy
-----------------------------------
Richard P. Dealy
Vice President and Chief
Accounting Officer
37
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
CERTIFICATIONS
I, Scott D. Sheffield, certify that:
1. I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of Pioneer Natural
Resources Company (the "Company"):
2. Based on my knowledge, this quarterly report does not contain any untrue
statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make
the statements made, in light of circumstances under which such statements were
made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this quarterly
report;
3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial
information included in this quarterly report, fairly present in all material
respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the
Company as of, and for, the periods presented in this quarterly report;
4. The Company's other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing
and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act
Rules 13a-14 and 15d-14) for the Company and we have:
a) designed such disclosure controls and procedures to ensure that material
information relating to the Company, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is
made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period
in which this quarterly report is being prepared;
b) evaluated the effectiveness of the Company's disclosure controls and
procedures as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing date of this
quarterly report (the "Evaluation Date"); and
c) presented in this quarterly report our conclusions about the effectiveness of
the disclosure controls and procedures based on our evaluation as of the
Evaluation Date;
5. The Company's other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our
most recent evaluation, to the Company's auditors and the audit committee of the
Company's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent function):
a) all significant deficiencies in the design or operation of internal controls
which could adversely affect the Company's ability to record, process, summarize
and report financial data and have identified for the Company's auditors any
material weaknesses in internal controls; and
b) any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other
employees who have a significant role in the Company's internal controls; and
6. The Company's other certifying officer and I have indicated in this quarterly
report whether or not there were significant changes in internal controls or in
other factors that could significantly affect internal controls subsequent to
the date of our most recent evaluation, including any corrective actions with
regard to significant deficiencies and material weaknesses.
April 30, 2003
/s/ Scott D. Sheffield
-----------------------------------------
Scott D. Sheffield, Chairman, President
and Chief Executive Officer
38
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
I, Timothy L. Dove, certify that:
1. I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of Pioneer Natural
Resources Company (the "Company"):
2. Based on my knowledge, this quarterly report does not contain any untrue
statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make
the statements made, in light of circumstances under which such statements were
made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this quarterly
report;
3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial
information included in this quarterly report, fairly present in all material
respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the
Company as of, and for, the periods presented in this quarterly report;
4. The Company's other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing
and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act
Rules 13a-14 and 15d-14) for the Company and we have:
a) designed such disclosure controls and procedures to ensure that material
information relating to the Company, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is
made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period
in which this quarterly report is being prepared;
b) evaluated the effectiveness of the Company's disclosure controls and
procedures as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing date of this
quarterly report (the "Evaluation Date"); and
c) presented in this quarterly report our conclusions about the effectiveness of
the disclosure controls and procedures based on our evaluation as of the
Evaluation Date;
5. The Company's other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our
most recent evaluation, to the Company's auditors and the audit committee of the
Company's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent function):
a) all significant deficiencies in the design or operation of internal controls
which could adversely affect the Company's ability to record, process, summarize
and report financial data and have identified for the Company's auditors any
material weaknesses in internal controls; and
b) any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other
employees who have a significant role in the Company's internal controls; and
6. The Company's other certifying officer and I have indicated in this quarterly
report whether or not there were significant changes in internal controls or in
other factors that could significantly affect internal controls subsequent to
the date of our most recent evaluation, including any corrective actions with
regard to significant deficiencies and material weaknesses.
April 30, 2003
/s/ Timothy L. Dove
-------------------------------------------
Timothy L. Dove, Executive Vice President
and Chief Financial Officer
3940
PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES COMPANY
Exhibit Index
Page
99.1*31.1* Chief Executive Officer certification under Section 302 of
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
31.2* Chief Financial Officer certification under Section 302 of
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
32.1* Chief Executive Officer certification under Section 906 of
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
99.2*32.2* Chief Financial Officer certification under Section 906 of
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
- -------------
* filed herewith
4041