London-listed Harbour Energy has struck a $3.2 billion deal to buy LLOG Exploration Company LLC from LLOG Holdings, marking Harbour’s entry into the U.S. deepwater Gulf—referred to by Harbour as the “Gulf of America” following a U.S. federal naming change in 2025.
The consideration comprises $2.7 billion cash and $0.5 billion in Harbour voting shares, with LLOG Holdings expected to own about 11% of Harbour’s listed voting ordinary shares at completion. The buyer said the transaction should close in late Q1 2026, subject to customary conditions including U.S. antitrust clearance under the HSR Act.
LLOG is a long-established private deepwater operator with a portfolio centered on operated hubs including Who Dat, Buckskin, and the Leon-Castile developments—positions Harbour says provide meaningful operational control and a runway of tie-back and drilling opportunities.
Harbour is highlighting LLOG’s current output of about 34,000 boe/d, with a plan that could roughly double production by 2028, largely tied to activity in the Lower Tertiary Wilcox trend and infrastructure-led drilling.
For Harbour, the acquisition is framed as a portfolio rebalancing and durability play:
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Reserve life extension and scale: Harbour says the purchase adds material 2P reserves and improves group reserve life, supporting production around the 500,000 boe/d level through the decade (company guidance).
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Improved cash generation profile: Management is guiding to free cash flow per share accretion from 2027 and plans to shift its distributions framework toward a payout-ratio approach in 2026, blending base dividends with buybacks to align with international peers.
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Tax and margin uplift: LLOG’s oil-weighted deepwater barrels and U.S. fiscal structure are presented as supportive for margins and Harbour’s effective tax rate (company statements).
Financing includes an underwritten $1 billion bridge, a $1 billion term loan, and existing liquidity, increasing leverage in the near term but positioned by Harbour as consistent with maintaining an investment-grade trajectory.
The deal fits a broader theme: independents with mature-basin exposure are looking to secure longer-life, higher-margin offshore barrels with established infrastructure and repeatable infill/tie-back inventories—particularly in the U.S. deepwater Gulf, where brownfield-style projects can offer competitive cycle times relative to frontier developments.
It also reinforces the Gulf’s continued relevance in global supply, even as naming politics remain unsettled internationally: U.S. agencies have adopted “Gulf of America,” while many market participants and non-U.S. bodies still use “Gulf of Mexico.”