Unknown Executive
Good morning, and welcome to the Capricorn Energy PLC Full Year Results Investor Presentation. [Operator Instructions] Before we begin, I would like to submit the following poll.
And I would now like to hand you over to CEO, Randy Neely. Good morning to you, sir.
Randall Neely
Good morning, and good morning to everyone, and thank you for joining us for Capricorn's 2025 Full Year Results Presentation. I'm joined today by our CFO, Eddie Ok; and our COO, Geoff Probert.
First, let me take a moment to address the evolving situation in the Middle East, particularly the conflict involving the U.S., Israel and Iran. We are closely monitoring the developments, but our operations remain stable and unaffected.
It is very much business as usual for us on the ground. But before we also dive into the presentation, I want to briefly address the recent speculation regarding a potential offer for Capricorn.
I understand there may be considerable interest, but due to the takeover code, I'm unable to provide any specific information beyond what was in our statement earlier this month. To reiterate, Alamadiyaf al-Masiyyah, also known as the Cafani Group, has made multiple unsolicited nonbinding proposals for potential all-cash offer for Capricorn.
Discussions are ongoing, and the Capricorn Board is actively seeking further clarity regarding Cafani's funding arrangements. Under the U.K.
takeover code, they have until the 8th of April 2026 to make a firm offer. At this stage, there is no certainty that a firm offer will be made nor clarity on the terms of any such offer should one materialize.
So let's get into the presentation. 2025 was a significant year operationally, strategically and the financial progress made for the company, and a number of milestones were met across our Egyptian operations.
2025 marked a pivotal year for Capricorn. I believe we may have made the turn from a turnaround story to a serious growth opportunity in the Egypt and hopefully shortly, the U.K.
North Sea arena. Over the past year, accounts receivable outstanding has come down materially, which allowed a significant reduction in accounts payable as well as retiring the company's senior debt.
We also received the approval from the EGPC Board for the consolidation and amendment of the 8 jointly held production sharing contracts with Cheiron, our operating partner in the Western Desert. We are now only awaiting ratification, which we expect in the near term.
Following EGPC Board approval, jointly with our partner, we were able to begin increasing our development activities to arrest the production declines. This, combined, of course, with the very solid technical work of our team resulted in our achieving the higher end of our production guidance.
We put this graphic into our materials over a year ago to represent our base intentions and where we're going to take the company. Hopefully, our results are showing that we meant it.
We now have an almost debt-free balance sheet. We have a disciplined and rigorous approach that we operate within and project on to our partner.
And to be very clear, our partner has been receptive to this and has worked very collaboratively with us over the past year plus to allow a very -- sorry, to follow a very similar approach. We are now set to take advantage of all the hard work accomplished over this past 3 years, rebuilding Capricorn.
In the near term, we will look to build on our base in Egypt, both organically and through acquisitions and also look to capitalize on our geographic location and capabilities in the U.K. North Sea.
I'll now turn it over to Eddie, who will walk through some of our results and guidance for 2026.
Eddie Ok
Thanks, Randy, and good morning, everyone. 2025 was a solid year as we not only achieved some key structural milestones in the Egypt business, but also really cleaned up our balance sheet.
Production was just over 20,000 BOEs on a working interest basis, and we preserved a 40% liquids weighting in that production base. OpEx increased slightly over the prior year at $540 per BOE, driven by our fixed cost base and the currency devaluation from the prior year, having largely worked its way through the system.
We're guiding to an OpEx range of $5 to $7 a BOE for 2026. A successful capital program in 2025 of $77 million invested, drove production performance in the year and set a sustainable foundation for '26's program.
We had material collections in 2025 of $217 million, resulting in us ending the year with an $86 million receivables balance on $81 million in Egypt net cash flow. With only $30 million outstanding on a ring-fenced junior facility and having repaid the senior facility early, we entered '26 with a significantly improved balance sheet.
The business ended 2025 with $103 million in cash, net of facility debt, which represents a year-over-year cash increase of $80 million, and we continue lobbying efforts with EGPC to return our receivables to a reasonable level. We are encouraged by the recent press from EGPC and the minister about receivables balances for IOCs and remain confident in the ultimate collection of our outstanding revenues.
For 2026, the drilling activity completed in '25 and planned '26 activity will shift overall production to a slightly higher liquids weighting at about 43%, though 2 turnarounds planned for the year will impact full year production estimates as we guide to 18,000 to 22,000 BOEs per day. Capital of $85 million to $95 million this year will prioritize liquids and ratification will be critical to unlock acreage perspective for additional exploitation and development activity.
Next up, Geoff is going to take you through our operational plans for the year.
Geoffrey Probert
Thanks, Eddie, and good morning, everyone. Next slide.
2025 Egypt operational activity was a year of 2 halves, with the first half primarily fulfilling legacy exploration obligations and the second, pivoting the 4 rigs to development drilling. It's worth noting here that without the EGPC agreement to merge our 50-50 concessions and improvements on the payment side, we would not have been able to support much further development drilling there post the first half exploration commitments.
So the timing was excellent for all parties. Development drilling was effectively reopened on BED, which supported by the ongoing reservoir management program contributed to improved production performance and a solid year-end exit rate.
The legacy exploration yields success in NUMB and encouragement in Southeast Horus with the latter sufficient to move into the next exploration phase. Next slide, please.
Much of this is a reiteration of what we've said on the merged concession before with improvements in concession longevity and fiscal terms a catalyst to increase Capricorn's reserves and production with value and cash flow enhanced through increased investment self-funded from Egypt. Two bullets I'd like to highlight are first, the example, approximately $5 per BOE improvement in netbacks at $80 a barrel Brent; and second, replacement of more than 250% of our 2025 production through reserve adds with the merged concession being a major contributor to that.
For EGPC, our increased and more importantly, sustained investment delivers greater production over the long term for Egypt, having the potential to be a true win-win for all stakeholders. We continue to expect customer ratification in the near future with our investments since mid-2025, consistent with the application of the new terms.
Next slide. This final operational slide demonstrates the impact of the new merged concession agreement on reserves and resources underlying our business.
We previously highlighted the potential to convert up to 20 million barrels approximately working interest resources and reserves into reserves with the merged concession. We've achieved that as the 277% reserves replacement ratio shows.
We've already identified a resource maturation runway with a further 332 million barrels of oil equivalent unrisked working interest 2C, of which around 80 million barrels of oil equivalent has been evaluated by GLJ. With some prospective resources to chase and discussions underway to improve the ASW concession, these are a bonus.
All in all, the new merged concession supported by operational excellence and regular EGPC payments has helped transform the outlook for Capricorn Energy. Thanks for your time and attention.
I'm now passing it back to Randy to wrap up.
Randall Neely
Thanks, Geoff. So in closing, I would like to emphasize that we are now positioned to take advantage of all the hard work undertaken over the past 3 years.
We are near debt-free with net cash of over $100 million at the end of 2025, thanks in part to regular robust collections of our revenues over the past 15 months and in particular, the last 6 months of 2025. We have new terms to the bulk of our concession agreements now just awaiting ratification, which we expect to happen shortly.
We have a strong and collaborative working relationship with our joint venture partner, Cheiron. Our technical team has identified significant contingent resources for the JV to mature and exploit.
We continue to be laser-focused on building cash flow and shareholder value. And our plan is to do that by continuing to employ technical rigor, be focused on costs and details and by seeking out opportunities to expand our operations in Egypt and realizing on our advantaged position in the U.K.
North Sea. I want to thank everyone for attending.
We're going to open the floor for questions, but I'll remind you that we will not be able to make any comments on the potential offer for Capricorn as mentioned in the opening.
Unknown Executive
That's great, Randy, Eddie, Geoff. Thank you very much indeed for your presentation.
[Operator Instructions] I would like to remind you that a recording of this presentation, along with a copy of the slides and the published Q&A can be accessed via investor dashboard. And Diana, at this point, if I may hand back to you to take us through the Q&A session, and I'll pick up from you at the end.
Thank you.
Unknown Executive
Thanks very much, Alex. So we have 2 questions that have been submitted.
Thank you very much for submitting them. Just to say any that aren't answered on the call will be followed up via the Investor Meet platform with a written response from the company.
So to our presenters, first of all, we have the question, you mentioned M&A in Egypt and the broader MENA region. What valuation thresholds or return hurdles are you applying in the current oil price environment?
Randall Neely
Well, given the recent changes in oil prices, we haven't factored any change -- long-term changes into our analysis at this stage. We do, however, always look for a reasonable rate of return on any investments.
And for us, that typically means kind of starting with a 25% rate of return given just generally the business itself and, of course, the region.
Unknown Executive
And then we have another question asking what production and cash flow uplift do you expect from the merged concession over the next 2 to 3 years? And what key risks could delay or reduce those benefits?
Geoffrey Probert
Okay. I'll take that.
In terms of the cash flow at the start, at first we don't really forecast cash flow, although we do put the CPR out there. So that's a place you can go and do your own calculations, I guess.
Similar, I guess, on production as well. In terms of production, the new concession agreement is focused on giving us running room and the opportunity to grow.
And I mentioned the -- not just the reserve side, but the continued resources side, which is a significant underlay to that GLJ evaluated CPR. I think in 2 to 3 years -- over the next 2 to 3 years, key risks, obviously, they're geological, but that's mitigated to a large extent by some of the improvement in the runway we have land-wise.
There is the new development leases, which about our small BED concession area, apart from those concession. [indiscernible] North area, too.
Plus over [indiscernible], we have with an improved gas price for incremental investments, some additional running room there. So there's a lot of broader, if I say, opportunity there to allow us to mitigate any risk from a geoscience point of view.
Really, the thing that drives our investment is respect we get and we increasingly and continue to get from EGPC, our operating partner in Cairo, there in terms of being paid by EGPC is critical. So we've been very fortunate that we've been prioritized along with others in the IOC space for payments, and that really drives right into this investment we see.
So that's what underpins our production.
Unknown Executive
And we've got just one final question here asking what's the biggest financial risk that investors may be overlooking from Rob?
Eddie Ok
Yes, Rob, I think that our annual report and the section that we publish on principal risks and uncertainties adequately captures our risk management process. And as always, within the operational jurisdiction of Egypt, receivables collections with us having one customer for our oil and gas is a sort of principal risk.
But given the recent press out of the ministry as well as the minister in the past 48 hours, there's been a real commitment on the part of Egypt to ensure that IOCs are getting paid and continue to get paid. And so we look forward to continuing to invest in this jurisdiction.
Unknown Executive
That's great, Randy, Eddie, Geoff. Thank you for addressing those questions for investors today.
But Randy, before we direct investors to provide you with a feedback, which is particularly important to you and the company, could I please just ask you for a few closing comments?
Randall Neely
Well, I think I'll just reiterate, I think the company has done a lot of heavy lifting over the past few years, and I'll spare going through the storybook, but a huge amount of work has been done over the last 3 years to put the company in this position, terrific balance sheet, great working relationships with our partners, not only Cheiron, but also the government and a great future with respect to the contract renegotiation that's taken place over the past 1.5 years. And so we're now in that position to take advantage in Egypt, and we're just sort of in the beginning to try to as I said, capitalize on our geographic and capabilities in the U.K.
North Sea. So we're looking forward to expanding our operations and more to come in future months.
Thank you very much for attending.
Unknown Executive
Perfect. Thank you very much indeed to you all for updating investors today.
Could I please ask investors not to close this session as you'll now be automatically redirected to provide your feedback, which will help the company better understand your views and expectations. On behalf of the management team, we would like to thank you for attending today's presentation, and good morning to you all.