Toms Capital disclosed a top-five position in Devon Energy within weeks of the company closing its $7.2 billion all-stock merger with Coterra Energy, making it the second activist shareholder to pressure the $28 billion enterprise value operator. The fund joins Kimmeridge Energy Management, which took a stake in late 2024, in what is now a coordinated assault on capital return policy at one of the Permian Basin's largest independent producers.
Devon completed the Coterra combination on January 10, creating a 930,000 net acre position across the Delaware and Powder River basins with projected annual free cash flow exceeding $4 billion at strip pricing. Toms Capital filed its 13F disclosure showing the position on February 12, three weeks after the deal closed and one week after Devon announced a $2 billion buyback authorization alongside fourth-quarter earnings. The timing suggests the fund entered after integration risk had cleared but before management could demonstrate post-merger capital discipline.
The double-activist setup matters because Devon's stock trades at 4.2x forward EBITDA despite peer multiples near 5.1x, a discount driven by investor skepticism over whether the company will sustain its 10 percent annual production decline strategy or chase volume growth. Kimmeridge and Toms each manage between $3 billion and $5 billion, enough combined firepower to force board conversations but not enough to wage a proxy fight alone. Their simultaneous presence suggests coordinated pressure for a variable dividend framework tied to WTI above $70 per barrel, similar to the structure Kimmeridge extracted from Ovintiv in 2022.
Operators and allocators should watch for three near-term catalysts. First, Devon's March analyst day will clarify whether management commits to the existing 50 percent free cash flow return target or raises it to 60-70 percent under activist pressure, with Toms and Kimmeridge likely securing private meetings ahead of the public event. Second, the company's first-quarter earnings in late April will show whether Coterra's legacy Delaware assets are generating the $1.15 billion annual synergy run-rate management projected, validating the merger thesis or giving activists ammunition to push for asset sales. Third, proxy filings due by April 30 will reveal whether either fund crossed the 5 percent beneficial ownership threshold requiring Schedule 13D disclosure, which would mandate public statements of intent and likely trigger board nomination conversations.
Devon has generated $11.3 billion in free cash flow since 2021 while returning $8.1 billion to shareholders, a 72 percent return rate that ranks in the top quartile among independent E&Ps. The activists are not arguing for financial discipline. They are arguing the current buyback-heavy approach leaves $420 million in annual tax liability on the table compared to a dividend structure, and that the Coterra merger created enough scale to support a $2.50 per share base dividend without sacrificing balance sheet optionality. Management has six weeks until the analyst day to preempt that math or defend why it is wrong.