Has anyone sold a % of their royalties in Ohio, Guernsey County? Just wondering what the going rate was on the average acre.

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I called gateway the other day and they seem only to be buying royalties if there is a producing well near by or you are part of a drilling unit. My 21 acres in Wills township is on the wrong side of I-70. (Shugarts is on the south side).  evidently where there are no well drilled yet so they didn't even call me back.... I was gonna see what the going rate for 3 to 5% of my 20%. That would have left me at least 15% maybe hold me over till I get in a unit and get drilled....

Hi Evan, My property borders the north side of I-70 just north of county home rd on fairground rd. I just talked to Gateway Royalties and they are not doing too much in Wills township depending on exactly where you are in Wills. I am still waiting on info to see if I am a desirable plot or not.... Thanks for input....

A comparable sale was identified as having taken place on 11 June 2013 in Section 22, Township 7, Range 8, northeastern part of Noble County. The details were: Steven M. Gant et al sold to LL&B Headwater 1, LP, Austin, TX, the Buyer being a mineral rights syndicator (buying mineral rights, re-packaging them, “putting pink ribbons on” and promoting to investors). The tax parcels in Marion Township were: 23-0021340, 23-0021308.001 and 23-0021310. There was a drilled 4-lateral well (shown drilled, but non-completed) within 2 miles of the acreage as of that date.

The consideration was $10,500 per acre of mineral rights as back-calculated from taxes paid in the amount of $11,725.56 for the 279.181-acre parcels. With taxes at $4.00 per $1,000 of value in the transaction the sale price must have been $2,931,390, or $10,500 per acre.

Further, the parcels are not Held-By-Production at a historic 12.5% royalty, but have been recently leased at a high bonus rate and a high royalty representative of the Utica shale play boom. Therefore, this Gant Sale, showing a $10,500/acre value, is comparable to a multiplier of 2.0, exactly “2” times the local lease bonus of $5,250/acre published for Noble County at that time. This relationship can (with care) be used as a “bridge” from Lease Bonus to Fair Market Value of comparable mineral rights. Note: Mineral rights consist of BOTH Executive Rights (right to sign leases and receive bonuses) and Non-participating Royalty Interests (right to receive royalties in case of production).

John B. Gustavson, Certified Minerals Appraiser

John, while I appreciate your insight into the matter, I have a question: can a purchase from more than a year ago be relied upon for current pricing given the volatility of the mineral market?

No. More recent sales must be found and included. I agree with your comment about the volatility of the market. I just finished a study in Butler County, PA, where I found 11 mineral transactions over the last 18 months. I detected relatively small changes in $/acre with time (and I saw no trend, up or down).

There was correlation with operator rate of activities, so I had to examine closeness of a transacted mineral property to permitting, drilling and production and make sure that these factor are comparable to those of the Subject, which I appraise.

And then there are other factors, too, such as geology and market for gas and liquids. Regards, John  

Well your learned opinion is quite appreciated here.  Thank you for taking the time to share the results of your work.

Thank You

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