New York, May 23, 2026, 17:03 EDT
Devon Energy heads into the long U.S. market weekend after a week that saw shares slump, despite a modest gain Friday. Investors weighed the company’s $2.6 billion deal for more Delaware Basin acreage. Devon finished Friday at $47.22, up 0.23% on the session, but off roughly 4.6% from last week’s close.
Timing is important here. U.S. markets are closed over the weekend and the New York Stock Exchange will not reopen until Tuesday, with Monday’s session shut for Memorial Day. That will be the first chance for investors to react in full to the lease-sale news.
Devon looks different for investors now than it did a month ago. It agreed earlier this year to merge with Coterra Energy through an all-stock deal. The combined company will have an enterprise value of $58 billion, more exposure to the Permian Basin, and has set a target for $1 billion in annual pre-tax savings by 2027.
Devon Energy is adding 16,300 net undeveloped acres in Lea and Eddy counties, New Mexico. That gives Devon drilling rights on the land but no wells yet. The company said the deal brings about 400 net locations, based on two-mile horizontal laterals, and an 87.5% net revenue interest after royalties. CEO Clay Gaspar called the deal a “rare and compelling opportunity.” SEC
Devon shares slipped roughly 2.5% after the deal news, Reuters reported, with analysts raising questions about the price tag. Matt Portillo at TPH & Co said investors will likely be “surprised by the sticker price.” At RBC Capital Markets, Scott Hanold called the cost “eye watering” versus earlier Permian transactions. Reuters
Bullish case for Delaware Basin land? Chris Atherton, CEO of Efficient Markets, told Reuters the area is “virgin rock” and said the Bureau of Land Management auction was “a knife fight.” Efficient Markets helped run the sale. Top acreage is tight, and Devon put down a big price for a larger position. Reuters
Competition is heating up. Matador Resources on Thursday said it bought 5,154 net undeveloped acres in the Delaware Basin core for roughly $1.1 billion. The deal is smaller but shows that buyers are still chasing top New Mexico shale assets after years of deals.
Oil’s price is helping Devon right now, but it’s not enough by itself. Brent crude finished Friday at $103.54 a barrel, with U.S. West Texas Intermediate closing at $96.60. Traders kept an eye on the slow pace of U.S.-Iran negotiations and ongoing Strait of Hormuz disruptions. “We have so many headlines back and forth, it’s hard to keep up,” Phil Flynn, senior analyst at Price Futures Group, told Reuters. Reuters
Energy stocks held steady late in the day. The Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund finished at $59.49, rising 0.6%. Devon shares reflected deal activity during the week, moving away from their usual tracking of oil prices.
Devon heads into the week with investors weighing if the Delaware buy will be seen as adding long-term value or if the cash deal so soon after a big merger will hit the shares. The company has signed off on an $8 billion share buyback and bumped its fixed quarterly dividend up to $0.32. Devon plans to update its guidance for the merged business in mid-June. Free cash flow—money left after capital spending—remains the number to watch.
Devon could get squeezed from two sides if the oil price falls or if Coterra integration, federal-land rules or drilling costs end up higher than expected. That could force the company to defend its balance sheet while still keeping up with buybacks and dividends. Devon lists commodity-price swings, federal-land regulation and risks around the merger in its own filings as key uncertainties for its future.
Devon heads into Tuesday with a clearer story than the acreage numbers alone suggest. It picked up more Permian rock. Now the question for investors is whether the company paid up for discipline, or just overpaid.