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Antero Resources Corporation (AR -1.31%)
Q2 2021 Earnings Call
Jul 29, 2021, 11:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Greetings and welcome to the Antero Resources Second Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note, this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to our host, Brendan Krueger, Vice President of Finance and Treasurer of Antero Resources. Thank you. You may begin.

Brendan E. Krueger -- Vice President of Finance and Treasurer

Thank you, operator. Thank you for joining us for Antero's Second Quarter 2021 Investor Conference Call. We'll spend a few minutes going through the financial and operational highlights, and then we'll open it up for Q&A. I would also like to direct you to the homepage of our website at www.anteroresources.com, where we have provided a separate earnings call presentation that will be reviewed during today's call. Before we start our comments, I would like to first remind you that during this call, Antero management will make forward-looking statements. Such statements are based on our current judgments regarding factors that will impact the future performance of Antero and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond Antero's control. Actual outcomes and results could materially differ from what is expressed, implied or forecast in such statements. Today's call may also contain certain non-GAAP financial measures. Please refer to our earnings press release for important disclosures regarding such measures, including reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP financial measures. Joining me on the call today are Paul Rady, Chairman, President and CEO; Michael Kennedy, CFO; and David Cannelongo, Vice President of Liquids Marketing and Transportation. I will now turn the call over to Paul.

Paul M. Rady -- Co-Founder, President, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Brendan. Let's begin with slide three titled, Best Exposure to Rising Commodity Prices. During the second quarter, our business model delivered EBITDAX of $319 million and free cash flow of $105 million. Our financial results highlight the significant leverage we have to rising natural gas and C3+ NGL prices. During the second quarter, our C3+ NGL price averaged $40.32 per barrel, a 159% increase from the year ago period. Our firm transportation portfolio led to an unhedged realized natural gas price at an $0.18 per Mcf premium to NYMEX. Further, these strong realizations led to an increase in guidance for our realized price premium relative to NYMEX. Despite widening differentials in the Appalachian Basin, we now expect to realize a premium to NYMEX in the range of $0.15 to $0.25 per Mcf for the full year 2021, which is $0.05 higher than our previous guidance. Our firm transportation portfolio not only provides flow assurance to NYMEX-based markets during periods of pipeline capacity constraints, but delivers premium realized prices. Looking ahead, we are currently the least hedged in our company history on the natural gas side entering 2022 and have very little NGLs hedged and no propane after October one of this year, 2021.

This is a testament to our commodity fundamentals teams that have remained bullish on the outlook for both natural gas and NGLs heading into this winter. The combination of our FT portfolio and our low hedge profile makes Antero the most efficient way to gain direct exposure to NYMEX and Mont Belvieu prices. Now let's turn to slide four which illustrates the benefits of Antero's firm transportation portfolio. As illustrated on the chart, our FT portfolio has significantly reduced realized pricing volatility, especially when compared to Appalachian basis differentials. During the second quarter, this competitive advantage resulted in price realizations that were $0.90 per Mcf better than in-basin Appalachian pricing, which was $0.72 per MMBtu back of NYMEX.

This premium pricing and liquids-rich focus has allowed Antero to consistently generate peer-leading EBITDAX margins and capture upside from both natural gas and NGL prices. Importantly, this basis volatility over the last year has been occurring in an overall no-growth environment in Appalachia, and we see the potential for a wide basis to continue into the future. slide five details the historical and future Appalachian basis differentials in green compared to the net gas production, which is shown in red versus takeaway capacity shown in green. As you can see, when overall production exceeds the takeaway capacity, the basis blows out. Looking at last year, you see circled in yellow that basis has been very volatile even in this no-growth environment. As depicted on the right-hand side of the page, futures prices continue to widen due to tight takeaway capacity and the uncertainty of future projects like MVP. What we expect to see is price-related shut-ins or realized prices at a wide discount to NYMEX by our Appalachian peers who are short firm transportation. These attributes result in Antero being the best way to gain direct exposure to rising NYMEX prices. Turning to slide six. Let's discuss the dramatic drilling and completion efficiency gains that are helping to drive our well costs lower. Starting with the chart in the top left. During the second quarter, our average lateral length drilled per well continued its steady progression higher, averaging 13,908 lateral feet per well. This represents an 11% increase compared to the average lateral length in 2020. Note also our new record lateral length of just under 19,000 feet, which is a record for us in both Marcellus and Utica. Moving to the chart on the top right, we averaged more than 6,600 lateral feet drilled per day during the second quarter. Our completion efficiency also continued to improve, averaging 9.8 stages per day during the quarter, which was a company record for a quarter and a 23% increase compared to the 2020 average. Finally, our average drill-out feet per day has continued to increase each year and averaged 4,092 feet per day in the second quarter. With that, I'm going to turn it over to our Vice President of Liquids Marketing and Transportation. Dave Cannelongo for his comments.

David A. Cannelongo -- Vice President of Liquids Marketing and Transportation

Thanks, Paul. In the NGL market, the bullish fundamental trends that we highlighted during the first quarter of this year have continued to take shape through today. We saw a steady climb in prices for all NGL products during the second quarter and into the third quarter, driven by underlying strength in crude pricing, continued tightness in the LPG market and higher natural gas pricing. As a result, we have experienced the highest sustained pricing we have seen since 2014 for C3+ NGLs and since early 2019 for ethane. Focusing on the U.S. propane market, I'll refer you to slide seven titled, Propane Market Fundamentals. The storage build thus far this injection season has been insufficient to make up the large deficit to historical levels that we discussed in the first quarter. Propane days of supply remained 21% below the five year average, while total inventories are 24% lower than this time last year. Looking forward, most industry consultants anticipate that the U.S. will reach a peak propane storage level of 75 million to 80 million barrels this fall at the end of injection season. On this slide, we assume that the U.S. reaches the midpoint of that range, 77.5 million barrels in early October. We then show a repeat of the same weekly withdrawals observed last year during winter 2020, 2021. As a reminder, the 2020, 2021 winter season, while overshadowed by memories of cold temperatures in February was overall substantially warmer than historical norms and followed an underwhelming crop drying season. This scenario would result in the U.S. ending withdrawal season with only about 15 million barrels in storage, significantly below the 5-year minimum storage level. This would translate to only about five to nine days of supply next spring, assuming demand and export levels are similar to those seen in spring 2021. This is materially below the lowest days of supply observed in recent history, which was 13.5 days directly following the historic 2014 polar vortex. Ultimately, we believe that there is a very small probability of the U.S. actually reaching the unprecedented low storage levels illustrated in the graph. However, this scenario clearly indicates that Mont Belvieu prices need to move even higher over the coming months to curtail exports and avoid domestic propane shortages.

Looking at the forward strip, with the latest LPG waterborne freight pricing, we are currently seeing the market price in a conservative case for propane and butanes that do not reflect the fundamentals I just touched on. Given our continued bullish view on the outlook for NGL pricing, we remain essentially unhedged on our LPG beginning on October one and through 2022 and beyond as we look to take advantage of the pricing dislocation we see this winter and into next year. As shown on slide eight, Asian Far East Index, or FEI propane, has historically reached 110% of Asian naphtha prices on a dollar per metric ton basis during the peak winter months over the past decade, driven by inelastic winter demand in the region. Last winter, Asian prices were even stronger on a relative basis, climbing to 124% of naphtha in December of 2020. After taking into account U.S. stock fees and shipping costs to the Asian market, the Mont Belvieu forward curve is currently pricing in an assumption of FEI propane trading at approximately 110% of Asia nap this winter. This implies $0.20 to $0.25 per gallon of potential upside from Mont Belvieu propane prices if we see last year's pricing relationships play out again this winter with even tighter inventory levels. Finally, turning to the petrochemical market.

Margins for cracking propane in the U.S., Northwest Europe and Northeast Asia have trended lower over the last year compared to margins from cracking other feedstocks, such as ethane, naphtha and butane. As a result, we believe most of the crackers with flexibility to switch away from propane as a feedstock have already done so for some time, indicating that we are currently at or near a floor of global steam cracker propane use. Therefore, we believe further downside risk of steam crackers switching away from propane to other feedstocks is very limited as we look ahead to this winter in 2022 and higher prices. At the same time, new LPG petrochemical demand continues to come online, including a combined 170,000 barrels a day of new PDH demand for propane being added in China during 2021, with as much as an incremental 155,000 barrels a day in 2022 and more than 180,000 barrels a day of new build capacity possible in 2023 should all projects move forward. This is in addition to 110,000 barrels a day of non-China PDH demand coming online in the same time period across Europe, North America and Vietnam. Overall, the global demand pull for LPG continues to materialize, and Antero continues to benefit on multiple fronts. Not only are we reaching this international demand directly through our capacity on the Mariner East system, but we also benefit from the macro uplift in Mont Belvieu pricing, which is now unhindered by the dock capacity and shipping constraints that have impacted the market in previous years. With that, I will turn it over to Mike.

Michael N. Kennedy -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Dave. I'd like to start on slide nine, highlighting our balance sheet, which is a significant strength for Antero. Over the last 12 months, we have transitioned to substantial free cash flow generation, successfully executed our asset sale program and rebalanced Antero's senior note maturity profile. In May, we used proceeds from a $600 million senior note offering due 2030 to redeem all of the senior notes due in 2023. Following this offering, our next maturity is not until 2025. During the second quarter, we generated over $100 million of free cash flow, further enhancing our financial position. As depicted on the top left portion of the slide, this free cash flow, along with the $51 million contingency payment received from the override transaction, was used to reduce net debt by $158 million during the second quarter. This brings our total debt to approximately $2.4 billion. The top right quadrant of the slide illustrates the LTM EBITDAX improvement from just over $1 billion at year-end to over $1.4 billion at the end of the second quarter. This improvement was a direct result of Antero's differentiated business strategy that Paul discussed earlier with a focus on liquids development and a firm transportation portfolio that provides best-in-class price realizations. Total debt reduction, combined with an improvement in LTM EBITDAX, decreased leverage to 1.7 times at the end of the second quarter, down from 3.1 times at year-end 2020. This debt reduction during the quarter resulted in liquidity increasing to $1.9 billion. As we look ahead, we expect to continue maximizing free cash flow and reducing total debt. Our leverage is expected to fall below 1.5 times by year-end 2021 and below one times in 2022, and we achieve our absolute debt target of below $2 billion in early 2022. Now to put first quarter financial results into perspective, let's turn to slide 10 titled, Financial Strength Relative to Peers.

The top of the slide highlights our balance sheet positioning. On the left, you see our $2.4 billion of total debt ranked second among our peers. However, the chart on the right-hand side of the page shows that our net debt-to-EBITDAX of 1.7 times ranks first against our Appalachia peers. The bottom of the page focuses on financial performance year-to-date. We have generated $838 million of EBITDAX and $521 million of free cash flow during the first half of 2021, which ranks first in the peer group and well above our other peers. Free cash flow is nicely above all of our peers and highlights the financial exposure we have in a rising commodity price environment. This exposure is highlighted on slide 11 titled, Enhanced Free Cash Flow Profile. The increase in the natural gas and NGL future strips results in a substantial free cash flow outlook at Antero. We forecast over $750 million of free cash flow in 2021 and even higher free cash flow expected in 2022. Further, looking out through 2025, we are now targeting over $3.5 billion in free cash flow, signifying substantial annual free cash flow growth through that time period despite the heavily backwardated commodity strip. This year is also an exciting year for Antero's ESG initiatives as we make progress toward our 2025 goals. We are happy to announce our pilot program with Project Canary's TrustWell Certification process. By using a third-party to review the process and procedures we aim to validate the high environmental standards by which we produce our natural gas.

Antero's certification process is set to begin in the fourth quarter of 2021 and to be completed in 2022. The TrustWell Certification also aligns with Antero's long-term goals, which are shown on slide 12, titled, Natural Gas Producers Have the Lowest Emissions. These goals include achieving net zero carbon emissions, reducing our industry-leading GHG intensity and methane leak loss rates. We also plan to complete and publish our TCFD analysis with our 2020 ESG performance results later in 2021. To summarize, the impressive operating financial momentum continues for Antero. slide 13 titled, Key Investment Highlights, summarizes position of strength we are in today following this execution. We have significant scale as the fourth largest natural gas producer and second largest NGL producer in the U.S., providing attractive exposure to strengthening commodity prices. Since the beginning of our deleveraging program, we've reduced debt by approximately $1.4 billion, issued $2.1 billion of new senior notes and redeemed our 2021, 2022 and 2023 maturities. The result is an undrawn credit facility and an extension to our average maturity date by over four years. We expect to achieve leverage of under 1.5 times by the end of 2021 and as we approach our debt goal of under $2 billion much sooner than anticipated. Lastly, assuming today's strip prices, which includes a backwardated NGL and natural gas strip, we are forecasting substantial free cash flow generation of over $3.5 billion through 2025. These operational, financial and ESG metrics place Antero among a small group of E&Ps with significant scale, low leverage, sustained free cash flow generation and leading ESG performance. With that, I will now turn the call over to the operator for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from SubashChandra with Northland Securities.

Subash Chandra -- Northland Securities. -- Analyst

Good morning everybody, I was hoping to start with just the land budget. It's not a big number, I guess, in the grand scheme of things, but maybe relatively significant. What drove the decision and what you're trying to do there?

Paul M. Rady -- Co-Founder, President, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Hey good morning Subash, Yes. What we're trying to do is a relatively small amount, but our drilling is going very well. And so it's just continued blocking up in the areas that we're developing, just small tracks here and there to perfect our drilling units.

Subash Chandra -- Northland Securities. -- Analyst

Are you finding, in doing that, that this might be onetime costs? Or should we expect that a similar budget on a recurring basis?

Paul M. Rady -- Co-Founder, President, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

I'm not sure, but it will set us up for the next at least two years.

Michael N. Kennedy -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Another way to think about it, too, is you've seen some recent M&A, and that's really because of the constrained inventory and not having locations or transport. And this really ensures our ability to continue to develop the type of areas and liquids and the performance we have going forward without really having to rely on M&A for future development.

Subash Chandra -- Northland Securities. -- Analyst

Okay. And then a modeling question, just on, I guess, GP&T, which, from the outside, is very hard for us to sort of figure out. But could you provide some guidance as to what that number specifically might look like on the strip? I mean given just the surge in pricing, perhaps offset by some of the Mariner contents, etc. Does that number stays flat or goes up oor down from here?

Michael N. Kennedy -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. As the increase of the GP&T is really because of the rise in commodity prices and fuel costs and that alarm taxes and severance taxes. So if there is no backwardation in the strip and these continued the high prices continue, then you'd see a similar level to Q2 and Q3 and Q4, where we guided in the future. So, and it's probably flat unless that backwardated does occur and it would come up a little bit. What we have out in our guidance page, kind of long term assumptions is for total cash production and net marketing expense. This year, it's $2.29 to $236 million. But then in the out years for the five year period, it averages $2.10 to $2.15. So some of that GP&T comes down. And then the net marketing expenses we know comes down as well, so, assuming the backwardation that GP&T should come off as the backwardation occurs.

Subash Chandra -- Northland Securities. -- Analyst

That was helpful. Just, if I can just sneak one in because I'm not sure if I'm interpreting this correctly, but did NGL hedges go up for the third quarter?

Paul M. Rady -- Co-Founder, President, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yes, they did, Subash. So I think early in the second quarter, we were seeing such strong, although backwardated NGL prices, we pinched ourselves a little bit, and we weren't used to such high prices. So we said let's make sure this doesn't go away. So we did put in hedges for second and third quarter. And in hindsight, you can see, well, we got the security, but it was, that's what happens when you hedge in a backwardated curve and the prices stay flat or increase. So that was our decision then. But again, a shout out to our commodities group, both on the liquid side and on the gas side. So we are wide open beginning October one and for NGLs for fourth quarter, next year and beyond, so we can capitalize on the NGL prices and the good fundamentals outlook that David Cannelongo described. And then just to touch on the gas side, I know you didn't ask that. But our last hedging on the gas side was 16 months ago or so as we were in the beginnings of the COVID crisis and going into borrowing base season. So we hedged out some, and that was one of the things that a lot of people did during that time. But haven't hedged any natural gas and have unwound some, and unwound some liquids as well. So a reflection that we're bullish on both product streams.

Neal Dingmann -- Truist Securities. -- Analyst

My question, maybe, Mike, for, maybe for you, Paul, just on the slide 15. Just talking about your long term outlook assumptions. Can you talk a little bit about sort of, number one, just the NGL price assumptions? to me they look actually quite maybe conservative, you could call that. I'm wondering, could you talk about how you're thinking about the NGL price assumptions? And then secondly, on the annual production, looks like you're assuming relatively flat. Could you talk about sort of the mix, will that, is that likely going to be about the same, do you think, as you're at now?

Michael N. Kennedy -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. On the NGL price, just looking at the outlook, it just follows the strip. So the strip right now on our NGL barrel, which, if you remember, there is no ethane in and it's about 58% propane, so very heavy barrel. It's about $50 for the second half of '21, and then it goes down to $40 in '22 and then down to $30 and '23, '24 and '25. So very backwardated. So even on a backwardated strip, and this assumes flat production, like you mentioned, in the same mix between gas and liquids, that's where we get to three, over $3.5 billion of free cash flow. So it's maintenance capital case, current production mix, heavily backwardated strip $50 to $40 to $30.

Paul M. Rady -- Co-Founder, President, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

And naturally, it is a backwardated strip. But we feel good about the fundamentals, the demand, the momentum in the liquids markets that David Cannelongo outlined a little bit ago. So we would hope that the front of the curve will roll forward at higher prices. It will continue to be backwardated, but if one lives on the front of the curve, will reap the very highest prices to accelerate our debt repayment.

Michael N. Kennedy -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. And then the backwardation, NYMEX gas, it's is $2.75 gas in those '23, '24 and '25 time frames. It's just, we're following the strip.

Neal Dingmann -- Truist Securities. -- Analyst

Okay. And then the mix of the annual production, is that, can we assume that would be approximately the same as you're at now.

David A. Cannelongo -- Vice President of Liquids Marketing and Transportation

Yes.

Neal Dingmann -- Truist Securities. -- Analyst

And then just last, I think I know the answer to this, but again, given your solid FT position, is there an opportunity to move? I mean you guys are already very, very NGL focused. I understand that. Did you have the ability, Paul, with the cadence kind of going forward to move around because of, it seems like your ample FT. I know some people are constrained and not able to do that as much some other operators. Can you maybe talk about where your FT sits now and maybe the optionality when it comes to operations, that, that might give you?

Paul M. Rady -- Co-Founder, President, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yes, it does give us, certainly, operational flexibility. With our drilling partnership, as you know, one of the advantages of that was that the drilling partner with their gas fills more of our FT as their production as well as ours comes on. So they benefit, but they also fill some of that. And then we do have a healthy marketing group that buys a lot of third party gas at places like Clarington. So we're in that market. We certainly buy Clarington gas and take it to Chicago, and there's a very good spread there even paying a premium to M2 prices. So definitely in the market and filling, taking gas to the Gulf, taking it to Chicago. Of course, also to Cove Point, which is a NYMEX based market. So filling with distressed third party gas and capitalizing and working to offset any unutilized FT and the demand charge that's associated with that.

Operator

Our next question comes from Umang Choudhary with Goldman Sachs.

Umang Choudhary -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Hi good morning, and thankyou for taking my questions, My first my first question is really on the framework for cash return to shareholders. Can you help us with the framework? And once you achieve your target debt of sub-$2 billion early next year?

Michael N. Kennedy -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Good question. We are paying down debt much more rapidly than anticipated even from this first quarter. And so it should be in early 2022. I think previously, we thought it would be kind of mid-'22. So that's been accelerated. So we will be evaluating the return on capital for 2022, and we'll continue to monitor the markets and see how people value certain ways of returning capital. But depending on the valuation at the time, we'll be opportunistic on how we move forward. I will say, based on our current valuation, where we trade about four times EV to EBITDA for '21 and '22. And over a 20% free cash flow yield for those same years and even approaching a 15% free cash flow yield on an enterprise value basis. Now share buybacks do look attractive at today's levels. And as you know, we saw dislocation last year as well, and we did buy back almost 20% of the company. So we have a history of trying to take advantage of those dislocations.

Umang Choudhary -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Got it. That makes sense. I guess my follow up question is on your activity levels next year, given you're bullish on NGLs and natural gas for next year, like how does that determine your activity between liquids area and the dry gas area? And then would love your thoughts around natural gas outlook in general?

Paul M. Rady -- Co-Founder, President, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. So yes, with our outlook on NGLs and gas, it's still, the economics are stronger drilling in our liquids rich area. We do have a very good inventory there. And the liquids rich fairway, a little under 1,000 locations that we still have to drill there and roughly the same on our dry gas side. But economics right now just because liquids are so strong, it definitely points us toward continuing the development in the liquids, natural gas liquids fairway, which we'll do. And then our outlook on gas, fundamentally there's a lot of research out there, but we see, of course, the higher power burn than we've seen in quite a while with natural gas. People are apparently more reluctant to switch to coal due to, for ESG reasons. We know the fundamental fixed appetite of LNG along the Gulf that continues to grow. We feed a lot of those LNG facilities. But if it's at roughly 11 Bcf a day, the feed gas capacity and spreads are very strong right now, as you know, to help some of the other projects that are on the drawing board go FID in relatively quick time. So we're seeing that, yes, production is out there at roughly 90 Bcf a day, but between power burn LNG feed gas and exports to Mexico, which are roughly six Bcf a day that quite a bit of the 90 Bcf a day is used up in those realms. And people are showing pretty good discipline on, in the natural gas basins and associated gas, too. So we feel pretty good that the fundamentals are there that natural gas will remain strong.

Operator

Thank you, Our next question comes from David Deckelbaum with Cowen.

David Deckelbaum -- Cowen -- analyst

Good morning guys, thanks for taking questions today. Mike, actually, you were just highlighting your strong track record of share buybacks. I'm curious in light of that in the valuation that you see as compelling right now, if we might see an active program happening before you hit some of those absolute debt metrics, especially given your view the curve isn't really reflecting the reality of economics that you're going to experience?

Michael N. Kennedy -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer

All that's true, but what's also true is we really want low debt. So, and that's a priority of ours. So we're going to achieve that below $2 billion before we contemplate any sort of return of capital.

David Deckelbaum -- Cowen -- analyst

Appreciate those priorities. Also curious, just on your discussions around, I thought it was interesting in your prepared remarks, you guys commented on the NGL markets. And the fact that you don't really see incremental risk from those that would switch the flexibility of other crackers is sort of already in the market. With that being the case and demands being more centered around PDH in China, when you look at relationships like FEI propane versus naphtha, do you just see further dislocation over time where propane just is truly an idiosyncratic product?

David A. Cannelongo -- Vice President of Liquids Marketing and Transportation

David, great question. I think you're exactly right in your assessment there. That's what we witnessed last year, and we didn't see those levels for just a week or two. It was for three consecutive months in a row. And so we would agree with that assessment that previously, the steam cracker switching was part of the narrative around propane prices, and it's really taking a back seat as we've seen over the last year, 1.5 years. And with the additional res/com and on purpose petrochemical demand that is really only able to consume LPG. We see that historical relationship being less relevant going forward and that upside as you hit cold temperatures and strong petrochemical product demand growth that should continue.

David Deckelbaum -- Cowen -- analyst

I guess in that vein, and this will be my last one. Given the importance of securing that product, are you seeing an increase in conversations or inbounds particularly on, in foreign markets just for securing demand contracts where you would effectively be able to set your price at levels where the curve might not be reflecting? And do you have an interest in doing things like that?

David A. Cannelongo -- Vice President of Liquids Marketing and Transportation

Inbounds, yes, are certainly increasing. I mean, even looking at, on the more immediate term, I can't think of a vessel that we've loaded, where the buyer hasn't wanted to try and accelerate that loading date just due to inventory levels in the destination markets that they were going to. So yes, the interest is there. I don't know that we believe that we're going to need to do anything long-term on the contract side to be able to see those values. We do like the flexibility that our current export strategy gives us, which allows us to keep volume during the higher seasonal winter months as prices commanded. So we like that flexibility and not sure we'd be willing to give that up for a long term contract at this point. We think ultimately, Belvieu prices and prices at the Mariner East stock will recognize that reality as we move along.

David Deckelbaum -- Cowen -- analyst

Appreciate the comments on the time. Hope you guys have something fun plan for the sub-$2 billion party.

Paul M. Rady -- Co-Founder, President, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

We'll start planning now.

Operator

Our next question comes from Arun Jayaram with JPMorgan.

Arun Jayaram -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Yeah good morning. Paul, I wanted to see if you could elaborate on how you see Antero's hedging philosophy evolve as the balance sheet gets to much lower levels of leverage and you're generating a lot of free cash flow. And you did note that you hadn't added a gas hedge in 16 months, if I heard you correctly. So that's a bit of an unusual circumstance given your historical focus on hedging a lot of the gas exposure.

Paul M. Rady -- Co-Founder, President, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Good morning Arun. Yes, good question. We have been historically, I imagine we're the leading hedger over the last 15 years or so for nat gas. But it was a little more, it really worked for a number of years when the curve was in contango. And so we did very well. I think our cash gains are nearing $6 billion right now. So it was very successful for its time, but it's been consistently now a little bit more of a picture of backwardation. And if you can live on the front, or close to the front, you're going to reap the highest prices rather than hedging into a backwardated curve. And so I do think our, as our balance sheet has evolved and we look at certainly fundamentals as well as momentum, but that to us has to live more on the front of the curve. And at least for the near term, that, as I just mentioned, we'll accelerate the delivering, which is really a high priority for us after what we and the rest of the industry have been through the last 18 months or so. So at least for now, it's be patient. And I'm not sure the run is over on nat gas. It's flirting with $4, and out for cal '22 continues to climb. So we're in no hurry. We are half hedged. So 1.1 Bcf a day for cal '22 out of roughly 2.2 Bcf a day expected, and then virtually unhedged in cal '23. So we are enjoying the fundamentals. We see all the factors I mentioned as well as inventory exhaustion in a number of plays, which is spurring M&A. So I'm, we feel good that supply is going to be in that 90 Bcf a day range, and there's just more and more calls on that 90 Bcf to go to LNG, go to Mexico, go to power burn. And so I think we've just changed a little bit over the last 1.5 years, and we have the luxury of being patient to ride the upside on natural gas, and as I mentioned before, NGLS, too, very good fundamentals there.

Arun Jayaram -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Great. And my follow-up, Paul, you did kind of bump your, call it, your premium that you expect for your gas molecules relative to NYMEX. Could you talk about what's driving that? I know you've mentioned for the second half of the year. And more importantly, how do you think about that premium as we think about 2022?

Michael N. Kennedy -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. It was just better differentials or no differentials where we sell the gas or we just follow the strip markets on that when we update that. So those have improved the markets where we sell the gas. And so that's the improvement. Looking out into 2022, it's still a similar premium. I think we're around the $0.10 premium going forward. So we did $0.18 in second quarter. We raised the guidance to up to $0.25 this year. But then going forward, we back it off to a $0.10 premium in those out years.

Arun Jayaram -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Great, thanks a lot mate.

Operator

Our next question comes from David Heikkinen with Pickering Energy Partners.

David Heikkinen -- Pickering Energy Partners -- Analyst

Looking at your, at slide 15 is really just considering your 2021 to 2025 plan, particularly 2022 to 2025 on a lateral feet that will be drilled and completed, given you continue to stretch your lateral length. You have a drop in well count, but I'm curious, have you give, or can you give us some guidance as far as how you think about lateral lengths completed in the back post '21 plan?

Michael N. Kennedy -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. We mentioned they're around 13,000 feet this quarter. I think there are 12,000 to 13,000 feet in any barriers here.

David Heikkinen -- Pickering Energy Partners -- Analyst

So no further lengthening...

Michael N. Kennedy -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer

No. But in practice, I would think that was what we would try to achieve. But based on our current acreage position, current ability to drill the wells, 12,000 to 13,000 feet, but we'll try to go longer.

Paul M. Rady -- Co-Founder, President, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yes, we'll try to go longer. Mike is talking average, and we do have a number on the books in the plan that will be 17,000 foot plus in the Marcellus. So not across the board, but there's a handful of those, probably at least 5, somewhere in that range, out of 60 or 65 wells that will be in that 17,000 and 18,000 foot range.

Operator

Our next question comes from Holly Stewart with Scotia Howard Weil.

Holly Stewart -- Scotia Howard Weil -- Analyst

Good morning Gentlemen, maybe the first one for, I think, for probably for Mike. Mike, can you just remind us of the FT roll-offs that are coming? And then any impact to the GP&T line?

Michael N. Kennedy -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. No. Big event occurs on October 1. That's when our Rec capacity goes from 600 million to 400 million a day. So when you do the math on that, we're accelerating at about $0.50. So 200, that's about $35 million a year, $8.5 million a quarter. So that's the next big one, and we have in Colombia rolling off as well. So after that, it's steady march down to 2024 when we meet the, when the FT actually meets our production. But the big one is October one of this year.

Holly Stewart -- Scotia Howard Weil -- Analyst

Okay. That's great. Helpful. And then just given the inflationary environment that we're in right now, can you just talk about how you're thinking about capex next year and any impact on those levels?

Michael N. Kennedy -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer

No, it's still maintenance capital. You should assume we're at that for the foreseeable future. You remember, the drilling JV, which really what allowed us to say maintenance capital for at least the next four years. And still grow volumes to meet some of that FT capacity and to achieve some midstream earnout. So no need to come off that maintenance capital level. We already have the scale being the fourth largest gas producer, the second largest liquids and seeing the rapid deleveraging that we're enjoying some maintenance capital is planned, definitely for '22 and beyond.

Holly Stewart -- Scotia Howard Weil -- Analyst

Okay. But don't expect any sort of inflationary pressures on that number?

Michael N. Kennedy -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer

No, we don't see any inflationary. And we obviously have measures in place to reduce well costs if there are inflationary that they should offset them.

Operator

Our next question comes from Jeoffrey Lambujon with Tudor, Pickering, Holt.

Jeoffrey Lambujon -- Tudor, Pickering, Holt -- Analyst

As you guys mentioned the market in terms of commodity and generally equity performance has been seeing the benefits of industry remaining at maintenance capital. So just given the shift in the forward curve, how are you thinking about capital allocation to the drill bit over the next few years as it relates to growth or a lack thereof? I know you mentioned maintenance is what's assumed in the multiyear free cash flow outlook. But more so, I just wanted to get your bigger picture mindset on drill bit capital since the free cash flow profile allows you to execute on a lot of your objectives from debt reduction to cash returns.

Michael N. Kennedy -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. It's really maintenance capital. Like I mentioned, we're really enjoying the efficiencies we're seeing. We've got everything lined out well. All of our commitments needed to develop the field from midstream or transport in place, no need to make more commitments. So it's really working out well for us. So we don't see any sort of deviation from that plan. And as you mentioned, we do get the debt down to substantially, basically out of that. So there will be a lot of return of capital opportunities around that as well. So that's what we're going to pursue.

Jeoffrey Lambujon -- Tudor, Pickering, Holt -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

That's the end of our question-and-answer session. I'll now turn it back to Brendan Krueger for closing remarks.

Brendan E. Krueger -- Vice President of Finance and Treasurer

Thank you for joining us on today's call. Please reach out with any further questions. Thank you all.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 47 minutes

Call participants:

Brendan E. Krueger -- Vice President of Finance and Treasurer

Paul M. Rady -- Co-Founder, President, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

David A. Cannelongo -- Vice President of Liquids Marketing and Transportation

Michael N. Kennedy -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer

Subash Chandra -- Northland Securities. -- Analyst

Neal Dingmann -- Truist Securities. -- Analyst

Umang Choudhary -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

David Deckelbaum -- Cowen -- analyst

Arun Jayaram -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

David Heikkinen -- Pickering Energy Partners -- Analyst

Holly Stewart -- Scotia Howard Weil -- Analyst

Jeoffrey Lambujon -- Tudor, Pickering, Holt -- Analyst

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