Operator
Good morning, my name is Ena and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Topaz Energy Corp, Fourth Quarter 2024 Results Conference Call.
[Operator Instructions] Thank you, Mr. Staples.
You may begin your conference.
Marty Staples
Thank you, Ena, and welcome everyone to our discussion of Topaz Energy Corp results as at and for the period ended December 31st, 2024. My name is Marty Staples and I'm the President & CEO of Topaz.
With me today is Cheree Stephenson, CFO and VP, Finance. Before we get started, I refer you to the advisories on forward-looking statements contained in the news release as well as the advisories contained in the Topaz annual information form and within our MD&A available on SEDAR and our website.
I also draw your attention to the material factors and assumptions in those advisories. We'll start this morning by speaking to some of the recent and fourth quarter 2024 highlights.
After these opening remarks, we'll be open for questions. 2024 marked another year of transformational growth for Topaz.
During the year, 430.6 million of royalty and infrastructure acquisitions were completed, which contributed to a 38% increase in annualized processing revenue, an 11% increase to year end 2024 royalty production and a 52% increase to our yearend royalty acreage. Topaz's fourth quarter royalty production average 20,300 Boe/d, 8% higher than Q3 2024.
While year end 2024, Royalty Production of 21,400 Boe/d increased 14% over 2023 annual production driven by 13% higher liquids Royalty Production and 14% higher natural gas Royalty Production from our recent acquisitions. Topaz's fourth quarter royalty revenue of 60.2 million represented 73% of total revenue and generated a 99% operating margin, while fourth quarter processing revenue and other income achieved a new company record of 21.9 million, which was 19% higher than Q4 2023.
Our infrastructure portfolio generated 100% utilization and a 93% operating margin in the quarter. Our full year 2024 profitability was driven by record liquids production, 18% higher processing revenue and 11.5 million natural gas hedging gain or $0.40 in mcf.
In 2024, operators spud record 630 gross wells 23.2 net across our royalty acreage, which increased 9% from 2023 and represents 15% of the total rig releases across the Western Canadian sedimentary basing during the year. In 2024, operators spent approximately 2.5 billion of capital of 4% increase from the prior year.
This operator funded development was demonstrated through our annual reserve report, which evaluates Topaz proved, developed, producing and probable developed reserves before any future undeveloped applications. Topaz’s year end 2024 total proof plus probable reserves of 59.5 million Boe increased 23% from year end 2023, which includes the impact of 2024 royalty production volume of 7 million Boe.
For our approved plus probable developed reserves operators generated 10.5 million Boe of drilling extensions and recovery relative to the 7 million Boe produced in 2024, this represents a new company record production replacement of 1.5x at no cost Topaz. During the fourth quarter, operators spud 175 gross well on our acreage, which was diversified across our portfolio with 57 in the Clearwater, 33 in Northeast BC, Montney, 42 in deep basin, 16 in Peace River, 6 across Central Alberta, and 21 in southeast Saskatchewan and Manitoba.
In 2024, 55% of the gross wells spud across Topaz royalty acreage were in the Clearwater and Northeast BC. Topez's high growth royalty areas, since the beginning of 2023, 44% of all new wells drilled across the Clearwater area in Alberta and 26% of all new wells drilled across the Northeast BC Montney area.
We're on Topaz royalty acreage, where Topaz average royalty production has increased 34% and 11% respectively. Based on our plan operator drilling activity, we split the current 30 to 32 active rigs on our acreage will be maintained through the first quarter of 2025.
Topaz generated Q4 total revenue and other income of 82 point million, cashflow of 73.9 million and an 87% free cash flow margin providing 71.4 million of free cash flow. Cashflow of $0.49 per diluted share and free cash flow of $0.47 per diluted share, both increased 7% from Q3 2024.
Topaz distributed 50.6 million in quarterly dividends, $0.33 per share during Q4, representing a 4.8% trailing annualized dividend yield to the fourth quarter average share price and generated 20.8 million of excess free cash flow is allocated to acquisition growth. During the fall, the full year of 2024 Topaz paid 191.2 million in dividends, 68% payout ratio, which included two dividend increases growing the dividend 7% since year end 2023.
We've announced our 2025 guidance ranges of 21,000 to 23,000 Boe/d average royalty production, and 88 million to 92 million of processing revenue and other income. Topaz expects to exit 2025 with net debt to EBITDA of 1.2 times and generate a 63% payout ratio, which remains sustainable through the end of 2025 at $0 AECO and $55 U.S.
WTI, attributed to the fixed revenue provided by our infrastructure portfolio and our hedging contracts in place, which are available in our most recently filed MD&A. Additionally, through our recent acquisitions in 2024, the incremental $400 million of tax pools have deferred Topaz cash horizon further enhancing our expected 2025 profitability.
Thanks very much, and at this time we're pleased to answer any questions.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Patrick O'Rourke from ATB Capital Market.
Patrick O'Rourke
Congratulations on another solid quarter here. Just wondering if you could touch on the reserve bookings there, strong growth -- is that when you think about the process of that booking, is there any discretion there?
Is that simply a linear extrapolation of the bookings of your royalty payers? And just curious with respect to how aggressively the water flood results you're seeing in the Clearwater have been booked.
Cheree Stephenson
Yes, I can take that for sure. Good morning, Patrick.
It's Cheree. It really is a delineation of our operators reserves, and it is just obviously the proved reserves -- proved developed reserves.
There's a probable wedge, but there's obviously no future undeveloped locations. We want to always make that clear.
But within the changes for this year, there were technical revisions of 1.4 million barrels, and that's inclusive of that overall 10.5 million barrels relative to the 7 million of Boe/d or sorry Boe of production. But of that 1.4 million boe of technical revisions, the result 1.1 attributed to the enhanced recovery within the water flood.
So our view is, there's incremental value attributed to that improved recovery, but not the full value, and it is an extension or an extrapolation of the primary operator's reserves for sure.
Patrick O'Rourke
And maybe just a higher level strategic question, thinking about where the balance sheet is now, the payout ratio sort of being at the lower end here? How do you think about the priorities in terms of capital allocation today?
Is it paying down debt? Is it potential dividend growth glide path or are you still seeing a significant opportunity set on the acquisition side?
Marty Staples
Yes, good question, Patrick. So we've been pretty, I think, focused on letting this last acquisition we did in Q3 of 2024, which was the big ad that we had with terminally.
We wanted to soak for a quarter or two before we thought about the dividend, and just kind of see exactly operationally what that asset was going to do. And so, we do see M&A opportunities in the system right now, and so don't want to go out and just raise our dividend immediately.
I think you can expect at least one dividend raised this year and we'll kind of manage that alongside what commodity and what side alongside what growth we're seeing inside our complex.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Your next question comes on the line of Jeremy McCrea from BMO Capital Markets.
Jeremy McCrea
Marty you just mentioned there acquisitions. Could you maybe give a little bit more detail?
Are you seeing the M&A landscape more interesting right now? Is there more opportunities?
What kind of rates and competitiveness are some of these deals and then some of these operators looking for? And maybe part one of the question, and then just part two, if we're a year from now, what's going to be like the surprise thing that we're going to be talking about on this conference call here a year from now, just in terms of what was the kind of the surprise development that wasn't really being expected by a lot of the by investors in that?
Marty Staples
Yes, so from an M&A standpoint, like obviously we just announced the deal a month ago, so you can see we've been active into the early part of 2025 and that was with Logan Energy. We did a hybrid infrastructure royalty deal in the Montney -- Alberta Montney.
I think there's more set up like that where it seems like it's competitive either on the royalty side or the infrastructure side, but nobody can really marry those two together. And so that's where I think we're completely unique in the M&A space is where we can do both sides of that equation.
Yes, I mean what we're feeling right now in industry is there's a tremendous amount of uncertainty and I think when you hear noise like tariff, and it changes every week, it creates opportunity we've been working on or unlocks opportunity we haven't thought about yet. So I do believe that there's going to be opportunity this year.
In 2024, similar to 2023, we saw about $2 billion of acquisition opportunity in both years; in ‘23, we did $60 million in acquisitions; last year we did 430 million, so it was one of our busiest years we've had since inception of the company. We do see more opportunity kind of coming down the pipe right now, but I would say that there's a slight pause by everyone just kind of waiting to react to exactly what the new world or the new order's going to look like.
From our standpoint, we think we'll be transactional. We budget anywhere from a $100 million to $300 million in acquisition dollars this year.
We'll generate just over $100 million of excess free cash flow and so goal number one is to deploy that excess free cash flow into M&A. If we cannot, we'll replenish the balance sheet as you kind of suggested, we'll just pay down some debt and that's a good spot for us to be as well.
Big surprises in the year, I think are of the biggest surprises we see every year and that's technological changes. And I think we saw that with the response and [Tamrac] put their press release out this morning, look at what they've been able to achieve through a water flood and these are still early innings.
I think we're 18 months to 24 months into kind of real water flood development and we're seeing very sustainable oil production start coming out of a number of our areas. Lots of running room from a reserve, standpoint I think on uplift there.
That's probably number one. Number two, I think we've seen Tourmaline start moving to a completion design that you're -- that's very popular with you, and this is going from open hold to to case, wells.
And from our standpoint that is having some good response. And so I think that's something that we're going to see some big surprise to the upside.
And think back to 2023 Tourmaline did 19 exploration projects. We were able to book 750 locations based on the capital that they spent.
And so those are always tremendous surprises for us when we can add 750 locations to our portfolio at zero cost to Topaz. Those are big surprises we like to talk about.
Cheree, would you add anything to that?
Cheree Stephenson
I would just add that we don't actually book those locations, [so we didn’t] book very much. No, we just -- I just think the value of the diversification of the portfolio really shone through in ‘24 and we see that continuing into 2025.
Operator
And your next question comes on the line of Jamie Kubik from CIBC.
Jamie Kubik
Can you maybe just talk a a little bit about the guidance range you gave on industry spending on Topaz lands for 2025? You indicate scenario of potentially 2.2 billion versus upward range of 2.8 billion, industry did do 2.5 in 2024.
Can you just talk about what sort of scenario you might see 2.2 spent versus 2.8 spent and the impact that might have on guidance? Thanks
Cheree Stephenson
For sure. Hey Jamie.
So with the overall production guide is that ‘21 to ‘23, really when we think about guidance, we think about the midpoint up to the higher end. And so, we are very optimistic that midpoint is, or higher up to that ‘23 is more reality.
And so within that, we would think about 2.5 billion to 2.8 billion of operator spending. Really the lower end is more difficult to quantify, it just comes down to different royalty rates in which land is developed, et cetera.
So it's not as precise as it would be if we were an operator. And the lower end of the guide is just there, as a sort of catchall, given the macro uncertainty.
But we definitely see good line of sight to that midpoint or high and 2.5 billion to even 3 billion of capital if all goes well within the WCSB, as far as [egress] and gas market goes. So I think you can think about it as a similar year-over-year and that 2.5 billion of operator capital, but few different moving parts obviously within with royalty rates, et cetera.
Jamie Kubik
And maybe just shifting to the M&A side of things, and you've talked about this a little bit already, but can you just speak a little bit more to the recent monteney deal that you executed on earlier this month. The growth potential you see in that asset, how it compares to previous transactions and some of the key events from that deal that we should look for in 2025?
Marty Staples
Yes, for sure. And so Logan was a company that we were quite interested in.
They had two kind of main core areas. One in Simonette and one in the Pouce Coupe area.
We were pretty encouraged by the Montney development that was going on early stages in Pouce Coupe. We put a GORR on a 100,000 acres inside that with a $50 million capital commitment.
So currently sitting on average about 2,500 Boe/d, we see that asset doubling within year one and probably another double on top of that by kind of end of year three. So lots of activity that's going to take place inside that portfolio, good running room from an inventory standpoint.
And then to compliment that they're building a facility to mainly use of purpose facility, we took a 35% ownership inside that facility under a 15 year long-term take or pay contract. We do believe that 15 years will be more than enough for them to satisfy the commitment they have with inventory there, and potentially recontract that after for some volume.
So it set well up really well for kind of the recipe that we're looking for. Number one, quality of the asset; number two, quality of the owner, and then it translated acccredly back to Topaz.
And I guess on a whole we would've paid about a 7.5x multiple between the facility and the royalty. But it does with the capital commitment compressed very quickly.
And as I mentioned before, that's a $50 million capital commitment.
Operator
Thank you. And there are no further question at this time.
I'll now hand a call back to Mr. Staples for any closing remarks.
Marty Staples
Yes, thanks very much everyone and appreciate the support through 2024 and hope 2025 is another great year. Talk next quarter.
Operator
This concludes today's call. Thank you for participating.
You may now disconnect.