Vitesse (VTS) 15th Annual Midwest IDEAS Investor Conference summary
Event summary combining transcript, slides, and related documents.
15th Annual Midwest IDEAS Investor Conference summary
22 Jan, 2026Company history and business model
Founders previously ran a successful NYSE oil company, focusing on low-cost operations and eventual sale, before starting this venture as a non-operator in the Bakken shale, aiming for long-term, inflation-protected oil income.
Shifted from being an operator to a non-operator, investing in undeveloped acreage and partnering financially with operators, allowing for a lighter staff and less capital intensity.
Secured long-term capital from Jefferies/Leucadia, enabling gradual asset development and compounding returns over many years.
Spun off from Jefferies, with a significant portion of shares held by long-term aligned investors, and implemented a $2 dividend, later raised to $2.10.
Focuses on high-yield, inflation-protected oil assets, leveraging technology improvements for better capital efficiency and returns.
Asset structure and risk management
Holds mineral rights (not surface land) in the Bakken, participating in 7,000 wells with an average 3% interest, diversified across about 35 operators.
Acts as a financial partner, sharing in well production and returns, with risk spread across many wells and operators.
Employs hedging strategies, typically two years out, to manage oil price volatility and protect distributable cash flow.
Maintains a proprietary database, Luminous, for company-wide financial decision-making and process orientation.
Trades at a premium to NAV due to long-term drilling inventory not fully captured in reserve reports, differentiating from typical microcaps.
Capital allocation and financial strategy
Plans to invest over $1.5 billion in undeveloped acreage over 10–15 years, targeting $3–$4 billion in returns at current strip prices.
Prioritizes fixed dividend payments, with organic CapEx yielding 60–100% IRR and near-term development deals at 35–40% IRR.
Considers asset acquisitions only if highly accretive, with a disciplined approach to capital deployment and a focus on dividend growth.
Buyback program in place but only $2 million spent due to share price resilience; company remains lightly levered, with a preference for RBL over riskier debt.
Production costs for existing wells are around $20 per barrel, with new well breakevens near $40, and flexibility to adjust CapEx in lower price environments.
Latest events from Vitesse
- Q1 2026: 7% production growth, $42.3M net loss, major acquisition, and 9% dividend yield.VTS
Q1 20265 May 2026 - Delivers high free cash flow, a 9% yield, and 25 years of drilling inventory from diversified assets.VTS
Investor presentation4 May 2026 - Strong 2025 growth, major acquisition, and robust dividends set up long-term value.VTS
Q4 20252 May 2026 - Shareholders will vote on directors, auditor ratification, and review governance, compensation, and ESG policies.VTS
Proxy filing17 Apr 2026 - Election of eight directors and auditor ratification set for virtual vote on June 5, 2026.VTS
Proxy filing17 Apr 2026 - Shares issued in a recent acquisition are registered for resale, with no proceeds to the company.VTS
Registration filing10 Apr 2026 - Disciplined capital allocation and technology drive high-yield, low-risk oil and gas returns.VTS
16th Annual Midwest Ideas Conference3 Feb 2026 - Disciplined capital allocation and technology drive strong dividends and resilience in the Bakken.VTS
17th Annual Southwest IDEAS Conference3 Feb 2026 - Q2 net income $10.9M, 19% production growth, and dividend up 5% to $0.525 per share.VTS
Q2 20242 Feb 2026