Might the U.S. middle market be losing its torque?
That’s the question Akerman and PitchBook posed in their review of third-quarter data involving deal activity, exit volume, valuation and fundraising trends for smaller buyout funds in the U.S. (less than $1 billion).
The duo found a marginal decline in third quarter transaction activity despite a projected record year for middle market buyouts, which they said led them to wonder whether the historically long dealmaking bull run “may be getting long in the tooth.”
Still, Akerman and PitchBook project an 11 percent in increase in buyout activity in the middle market for all of 2018, with a 15 percent jump in deals with enterprise values of less than $200 million. They also said the sub-$1 billion buyout funds are on pace for a significant increase in value over last year, the third consecutive strong year in the market.
Accounting firm EisnerAmper also came out with some interesting insights about private equity and M&A recently. The firm predicts that PE may account for half of all M&A activity within the next five years.
It’s almost there. Last year, for example, there were 4,496 private equity-related M&A deals worth $611 billion versus 11,038 M&A transactions overall worth $1.9 trillion, citing PitchBook data. And through Oct. 31 of this year, there were 3,788 PE deals worth $554.2 billion versus 8,289 deals worth $1.5 trillion overall.
The increase in activity has forced private equity fund managers to become more creative in their sourcing and deploying of capital, especially given competition from new firms that have entered the marketplace, the firm said.
In more recently released data on the overall M&A market, PitchBook said that there were more than 15,000 transactions worth a combined $2.4 trillion overall through the first nine months of the year. However, the firm noted that both transaction value and volume overall are down year-over-year as M&A activity proved vulnerable to rising interest rates in North America.
Back in Texas, the work of lawyers on deals last week came in at a decent level, despite the Thanksgiving holiday. There were 15 transactions worth $4.5 billion, versus 18 deals valued at $6.137 billion the previous week.
M&A, private equity and venture transactions amounted to $4 billion while a single capital markets transaction was worth $500 million.
Eleven law firms and 110 lawyers in Texas were involved versus 13 firms and 98 attorneys the previous week.
Weekly Corporate Deal Tracker Roundup Stats
A compilation of weekly stats from The Lawbook's CDT Weekly Roundup
(Deal Values in Millions)
(Deal Values in Millions)
Deal Count | Amount | Firms | Lawyers | M&A Count | M&A Value $M | CapM Count | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
09-Nov-24 | 14 | $2,110 | 12 | 139 | 12 | $1,410 | 2 | $700 |
02-Nov-24 | 12 | $52,788 | 11 | 107 | 11 | $52,738 | 1 | $50 |
26-Oct-24 | 8 | $3,160 | 8 | 65 | 7 | $3,065 | 1 | $75 |
19-Oct-24 | 12 | $5,304 | 11 | 136 | 11 | $4,554 | 1 | $750 |
12-Oct-24 | 17 | $8,438 | 12 | 150 | 15 | $8,116 | 2 | $322 |
05-Oct-24 | 22 | $23,181 | 12 | 189 | 15 | $19,980 | 7 | $3,201 |
28-Sep-24 | 11 | $2,356 | 7 | 144 | 7 | $53 | 4 | $2,303 |
21-Sep-24 | 12 | $9,568 | 10 | 169 | 5 | $4,101 | 7 | $5,467 |
14-Sep-24 | 24 | $10,988 | 12 | 235 | 16 | $7,175 | 8 | $3,813 |
7-Sep-24 | 12 | $20,420 | 16 | 168 | 11 | $20,307 | 1 | $112.9 |
31-Aug-24 | 13 | $20,631 | 9 | 134 | 12 | $14,775 | 1 | $5,856 |
24-Aug-24 | 19 | $8,452 | 21 | 325 | 16 | $7,102 | 3 | $1,350 |
17-Aug-24 | 25 | $49,196 | 16 | 304 | 11 | $39,386 | 14 | $9,810 |
10-Aug-24 | 20 | $12,264 | 15 | 312 | 16 | $9,794 | 4 | $2,470 |
03-Aug-24 | 26 | $16,498 | 16 | 334 | 18 | $8,137 | 8 | $8,361 |
27-Jul-24 | 19 | $16,442 | 21 | 271 | 15 | $13,838 | 4 | $2,604 |
20-Jul-24 | 15 | $16,016 | 14 | 184 | 10 | $14,232 | 5 | $1,784 |
13-Jul-24 | 20 | $17,220 | 14 | 265 | 18 | $7,146 | 2 | $10,074 |
6-Jul-24 | 11 | $3,941 | 11 | 95 | 8 | $2,650 | 3 | $1,291 |
29-Jun-24 | 14 | $6,296 | 15 | 224 | 8 | $6,296 | 6 | $1,927 |
22-Jun-24 | 12 | $5,679 | 8 | 137 | 5 | $210 | 7 | $5,469 |
15-Jun-24 | 13 | $9,895 | 16 | 214 | 10 | $5,280 | 3 | $4,615 |
8-Jun-24 | 19 | $23,859 | 13 | 239 | 12 | $19,436 | 7 | $4,423 |
1-Jun-24 | 12 | $34,510 | 11 | 147 | 9 | $26,110 | 3 | $8,400 |
25-May-24 | 13 | $9,684 | 15 | 171 | 10 | $4,434 | 3 | $5,250 |
18-May-24 | 11 | $5,490 | 11 | 173 | 8 | $3,129 | 3 | $2,361 |
11-May-24 | 22 | $14,855 | 14 | 227 | 16 | $11,105 | 6 | $3,750 |
4-May-24 | 13 | $3,139 | 9 | 87 | 10 | $1,297 | 3 | $1,842 |
27-Apr-24 | 10 | $6,684 | 6 | 28 | 10 | $6,684 | 0 | 0 |
20-Apr-24 | 19 | $15,989 | 11 | 147 | 9 | $5,208 | 10 | $10,781 |
13-Apr-24 | 13 | $8,952 | 9 | 76 | 10 | $1,652 | 3 | $7,300 |
6-Apr-24 | 22 | $22,616 | 14 | 222 | 14 | $13,501 | 8 | $13,116 |
30-Mar-24 | 12 | $9,286 | 8 | 136 | 8 | $4,299 | 4 | $4,987 |
23-Mar-24 | 18 | $5,451 | 17 | 266 | 16 | $4,759 | 2 | $692 |
16-Mar-24 | 21 | $11,437 | 13 | 186 | 14 | $9,316 | 6 | $2,070 |
9-Mar-24 | 23 | $4,695 | 21 | 218 | 19 | $2,723 | 4 | $1,972 |
2-Mar-24 | 20 | $9,108 | 19 | 372 | 14 | $4,558 | 6 | $4,550 |
24-Feb-24 | 19 | $16,382 | 12 | 248 | 15 | $9,507 | 4 | $6,875 |
17-Feb-24 | 16 | $29,932 | 15 | 157 | 12 | $29,216 | 4 | $716 |
10-Feb-24 | 25 | $10,750 | 17 | 196 | 19 | $5,372 | 6 | $5,379 |
3-Feb-24 | 12 | $8,416 | 18 | 125 | 9 | $3,416 | 3 | $5,000 |
27-Jan-24 | 9 | $8,165 | 9 | 87 | 8 | $7,815 | 1 | $800 |
20-Jan-24 | 14 | $4,084 | 12 | 109 | 12 | $3,219 | 2 | $865 |
13-Jan-24 | 17 | $33,588 | 12 | 256 | 12 | $26,765 | 5 | $6,823 |
6-Jan-24 | 8 | $7,915 | 8 | 84 | 6 | $7,265 | 2 | $650 |
30-Dec-23 | 17 | $14,599 | 12 | 99 | 15 | $2,714 | 2 | $11,885 |
23-Dec-23 | 23 | $4,182 | 13 | 219 | 16 | $1,813 | 7 | $2,370 |
16-Dec-23 | 13 | $16,436 | 13 | 280 | 7 | $15,150 | 5 | $1,286 |
9-Dec-23 | 26 | $14,633.90 | 17 | 244 | 16 | $8,095 | 10 | $6,538.90 |
2-Dec-23 | 13 | $6,720 | 9 | 57 | 12 | $6,630 | 1 | $90 |
25-Nov-23 | 9 | $4,835 | 9 | 131 | 6 | $1,785 | 3 | $3,050 |
18-Nov-23 | 22 | $6,568.70 | 17 | 184 | 14 | $4,709.20 | 8 | $1,859.50 |
11-Nov-23 | 15 | $9,825 | 13 | 179 | 12 | $6,581 | 3 | $3,244 |
4-Nov-23 | 15 | $20,582.50 | 14 | 193 | 12 | $19,417.50 | 3 | $1,165 |
28-Oct-23 | 18 | $68,419.10 | 18 | 152 | 15 | $66,646 | 3 | $1,773.10 |
21-Oct-23 | 16 | $6,755.90 | 16 | 165 | 15 | $6,755.90 | 1 | $3 |
14-Oct-23 | 14 | $67,851.20 | 13 | 125 | 9 | $61,998.50 | 5 | $5,852.70 |
7-Oct-23 | 17 | $6,595.50 | 13 | 228 | 16 | $5,995.50 | 1 | $600 |
30-Sep-23 | 17 | $1,896.45 | 13 | 189 | 14 | $806.45 | 3 | $1,090 |
23-Sep-23 | 23 | $6,432.70 | 17 | 230 | 16 | $1,402.80 | 7 | $5,029.90 |
16-Sep-23 | 25 | $23,226.70 | 23 | 353 | 16 | $17,239 | 9 | $5,987.70 |
9-Sep-23 | 12 | $6,369 | 8 | 102 | 7 | $4,311 | 5 | $2,058 |
2-Sep-23 | 14 | $2,522 | 6 | 92 | 13 | $1,322 | 1 | $1,200 |
26-Aug-23 | 17 | $12,160.25 | 13 | 202 | 15 | $6,573.25 | 2 | $5,587.00 |
19-Aug-23 | 19 | $11,505 | 13 | 213 | 15 | $11,255 | 4 | $250 |
12-Aug-23 | 19 | $9,698.80 | 13 | 184 | 7 | $3,270 | 12 | $6,428.80 |
5-Aug-23 | 13 | $5,201 | 12 | 118 | 12 | $5,051 | 1 | $150 |
29-Jul-23 | 15 | $21,031.60 | 13 | 196 | 11 | $18,292.00 | 4 | $2,739.60 |
22-Jul-23 | 18 | $3,992 | 12 | 130 | 13 | $2,808 | 5 | $1,184 |
15-Jul-23 | 13 | $8,254.95 | 13 | 81 | 13 | $8,254.95 | 0 | 0 |
8-Jul-23 | 16 | $5,441.45 | 12 | 172 | 11 | $2,443 | 5 | $2,998.45 |
1-Jul-23 | 16 | $6,872 | 10 | 105 | 12 | $5,474 | 4 | $1,398 |
24-Jun-23 | 13 | $10,914 | 16 | 201 | 10 | $7,874 | 3 | $3,040 |
17-Jun-23 | 17 | $5,880.70 | 15 | 151 | 15 | $4,705.70 | 2 | $1,175 |
10-Jun-23 | 19 | $8,516.10 | 13 | 111 | 16 | $6,252.40 | 3 | $2,263.70 |
June 3 2023 | 12 | $6,104.42 | 12 | 138 | 8 | $4,256.92 | 4 | $1,847.50 |
27-May-23 | 17 | $12,200 | 10 | 67 | 11 | $6,165 | 6 | $6,035 |
20-May-23 | 11 | $22,458.10 | 8 | 103 | 4 | $19,455 | 7 | $3,003 |
13-May-23 | 12 | $7,034 | 10 | 101 | 8 | $5,460 | 4 | $1,574 |
6-May-23 | 20 | $3,297.60 | 18 | 196 | 17 | $2,985.60 | 3 | $312 |
29-Apr-23 | 23 | $3,691.20 | 18 | 135 | 17 | $1,969.70 | 6 | $1,721.50 |
22-Apr-23 | 16 | $5,570 | 14 | 104 | 14 | $4,750 | 2 | $1,000 |
15-Apr-23 | 12 | $23,818.10 | 9 | 59 | 10 | $21,618.10 | 2 | $2,200 |
8-Apr-23 | 16 | $7,949 | 9 | 173 | 9 | $5,472 | 7 | $3,477 |
1-Apr-23 | 21 | $18,676.70 | 12 | 175 | 11 | $10,926.70 | 10 | $7,750 |
25-Mar-23 | 15 | $8,779.50 | 10 | 141 | 5 | $2,362 | 10 | $6,416.50 |
18-Mar-23 | 7 | $14,048.80 | 6 | 69 | 5 | $13,345 | 2 | $703.80 |
11-Mar-23 | 21 | $11,576 | 16 | 165 | 16 | $8,131 | 5 | $3,445 |
4-Mar-23 | 20 | $9,668 | 11 | 228 | 16 | $8,209 | 4 | $1,459 |
25-Feb-23 | 13 | $5,335 | 13 | 130 | 12 | $4,235 | 1 | $1,200 |
18-Feb-23 | 14 | $5,743.70 | 13 | 158 | 8 | $898.70 | 6 | $4,845 |
11-Feb-23 | 16 | $12,088 | 12 | 137 | 12 | $9,965 | 4 | $2,123 |
4-Feb-23 | 17 | $8,066 | 15 | 140 | 13 | $5,614 | 4 | $2,452 |
28-Jan-23 | 7 | $2,180 | 7 | 75 | 5 | $1,692.75 | 2 | $488 |
21-Jan-23 | 17 | $5,768 | 16 | 174 | 12 | $1,918 | 5 | $3,850 |
14-Jan-23 | 11 | $2, 800 | 10 | 102 | 8 | $421 | 3 | $2,400 |
7-Jan-23 | 18 | $8,296 | 11 | 167 | 14 | $6,461 | 3 | $1,835 |
31-Dec-22 | 14 | $2,732 | 11 | 99 | 12 | $2,092 | 2 | $640 |
17-Dec | 14 | $7,919 | 13 | 115 | 12 | $7,419 | 1 | $500 |
10-Dec-22 | 14 | $10,093 | 12 | 88 | 11 | $7,093 | 3 | $3,000 |
3-Dec-22 | 26 | $12,800.90 | 11 | 172 | 20 | $4,141 | 6 | $8,659.90 |
26-Nov-22 | 8 | $2,266.70 | 8 | 5 | 3 | $76 | 5 | $2,190.70 |
19-Nov-22 | 21 | $2,886 | 15 | 212 | 19 | $2,550 | 2 | $336 |
12-Nov-22 | 13 | $15,093.70 | 9 | 81 | 9 | $14,200 | 4 | $893.70 |
5-Nov-22 | 25 | 19,337.20 | 16 | 509 | 22 | $8,267.20 | 3 | $11,070 |
29-Oct-22 | 15 | $7,805.30 | 9 | 116 | 14 | $7,180.30 | 1 | $625 |
22-Oct-22 | 20 | $8,193.50 | 13 | 253 | 13 | $5,442 | 7 | $2,751.50 |
15-Oct-22 | 9 | $3,046.10 | 9 | 139 | 7 | $2,588.30 | 2 | $457.80 |
8-Oct-22 | 19 | $2,011.80 | 12 | 114 | 16 | $833.80 | 3 | $1,178 |
1-Oct-22 | 23 | $5,532.90 | 16 | 156 | 18 | $4,952.30 | 5 | $580.60 |
24-Sep-22 | 18 | $5,194 | 14 | 216 | 15 | $4,050 | 3 | $1,144 |
17-Sep-22 | 21 | $8,352.30 | 12 | 320 | 15 | $4,759.60 | 6 | $3,592.70 |
10-Sep-22 | 15 | $19,853.50 | 10 | 126 | 13 | $19,403.60 | 2 | $450 |
3-Sep-22 | 9 | $2,312 | 9 | 62 | 9 | $2,312 | 0 | 0 |
27-Aug-22 | 16 | $30,891.70 | 10 | 135 | 15 | $30,666.40 | 1 | 227.7 |
20-Aug-22 | 12 | $1,977 | 8 | 152 | 9 | 925 | 3 | $1,052 |
13-Aug-22 | 18 | $8,004.70 | 11 | 242 | 11 | $2,844.70 | 7 | $5,160 |
6-Aug-22 | 24 | $7,948.90 | 12 | 240 | 17 | $3,577 | 7 | $4,371.90 |
30-Jul-22 | 8 | $6,941 | 9 | 78 | 7 | $6,839 | 1 | $102 |
23-Jul-22 | 11 | $801 | 11 | 92 | 10 | $801 | 1 | 0 |
16-Jul-22 | 14 | $3,650 | 10 | 122 | 14 | $3,650 | 0 | 0 |
9-Jul-22 | 10 | $3,557.70 | 7 | 68 | 9 | $3,557.70 | 1 | 0 |
2-Jul-22 | 18 | $8,609.40 | 13 | 152 | 15 | $2,754.40 | 3 | $5,855 |
25-Jun-22 | 15 | $6,142 | 13 | 146 | 9 | $2,017 | 6 | $4,125 |
18-Jun-22 | 17 | $11,890.10 | 14 | 228 | 15 | $11,410 | 2 | 479.7 |
11-Jun-22 | 17 | $7,600 | 12 | 123 | 10 | $2,300 | 7 | $5,300 |
4-Jun-22 | 12 | $2,937 | 10 | 127 | 9 | $692 | 3 | $2,245 |
28-May-22 | 9 | $3,197.60 | 11 | 86 | 9 | $3,197.60 | 0 | 0 |
21-May-22 | 14 | $7,284.50 | 12 | 185 | 11 | $6,609 | 3 | $675.50 |
14-May-22 | 11 | $306.60 | 9 | 80 | 10 | $306.60 | 1 | $225 |
7-May-22 | 16 | $10,451.75 | 12 | 108 | 12 | $1,827 | 4 | $8,624.75 |
30-Apr-22 | 16 | $2,296.50 | 16 | 157 | 12 | $895.50 | 4 | $1,401 |
23-Apr-22 | 10 | $2,241 | 11 | 58 | 8 | $1,641 | 2 | $600 |
16-Apr-22 | 11 | $6,643 | 7 | 156 | 8 | $2,359 | 3 | $4,284 |
9-Apr-22 | 17 | $4,429 | 14 | 184 | 11 | $1,690 | 6 | $2,739 |
2-Apr-22 | 13 | $1,755 | 8 | 84 | 10 | $1,145 | 3 | $610 |
26-Mar-22 | 11 | $3,205 | 8 | 65 | 6 | $200 | 5 | $3,005 |
19-Mar-22 | 13 | $2,239.17 | 9 | 106 | 13 | $2,239.17 | 0 | 0 |
12-Mar-22 | 18 | $12,016 | 11 | 239 | 15 | $11,965 | 2 | $51.35 |
5-Mar-22 | 17 | $6,786 | 13 | 137 | 13 | $5,161 | 4 | $1,625 |
26-Feb-22 | 12 | $5,095 | 8 | 149 | 9 | $4,437.50 | 3 | $658 |
19-Feb-22 | 17 | $22,229 | 17 | 174 | 14 | $21,354 | 3 | $875 |
12-Feb-22 | 12 | $2,344.70 | 10 | 73 | 8 | $641.70 | 4 | $1,703 |
5-Feb-22 | 11 | $2,503 | 8 | 99 | 11 | $2,503 | 0 | 0 |
29-Jan-22 | 11 | $3,872 | 12 | 101 | 12 | $3,872 | 0 | 0 |
22-Jan-22 | 13 | $5,143.50 | 10 | 99 | 12 | $4,842.50 | 1 | $301 |
15-Jan-22 | 12 | $7,605 | 9 | 155 | 9 | $6,480 | 3 | $1,025 |
8-Jan-22 | 13 | $8,256.20 | 11 | 102 | 13 | $8,256.20 | 0 | 0 |
1-Jan-22 | 9 | $1,273.80 | 6 | 50 | 9 | $1,273.80 | 0 | 0 |
25-Dec-21 | 21 | $4,734.75 | 11 | 176 | 16 | $3,410 | 5 | $1,324.75 |
18-Dec-21 | 26 | $7,325.20 | 15 | 193 | 18 | $3,640.20 | 8 | $3,685.20 |
11-Dec-21 | 16 | $5,017 | 10 | 109 | 13 | $1,417 | 3 | $3,600 |
4-Dec-21 | 14 | $2,310 | 8 | 86 | 8 | $2,310 | 6 | $1,882.05 |
27-Nov-21 | 9 | $3.460.1 | 10 | 101 | 6 | $1,758 | 3 | $1,702.60 |
20-Nov-21 | 20 | $22,792 | 15 | 157 | 12 | $18,864.50 | 8 | $3,928 |
13-Nov-21 | 21 | $26,729 | 12 | 178 | 13 | $11,822 | 8 | $14,907 |
6-Nov-21 | 12 | $8,303 | 13 | 157 | 10 | $6,682 | 3 | $1,621 |
30-Oct-21 | 21 | $10,368 | 15 | 218 | 15 | $9,24.4 | 6 | $1,103.00 |
23-Oct-21 | 21 | $18.783.1 | 15 | 222 | 11 | $12,314 | 10 | $6,468.60 |
16-Oct-21 | 15 | $3,868 | 11 | 118 | 15 | $2,293 | 2 | $1,575 |
9-Oct-21 | 20 | $8,610 | 16 | 175 | 16 | $7,795 | 4 | $815 |
2-Oct-21 | 14 | $6,250 | 11 | 137 | 10 | $5,200 | 4 | $1,050 |
25-Sep-21 | 11 | $11,460 | 9 | 93 | 7 | $10,200 | 4 | $1,250 |
18-Sep-21 | 11 | $16,603 | 8 | 99 | 8 | $15,084 | 3 | $1,519 |
11-Sep-21 | 17 | $10,653 | 11 | 103 | 13 | $8,503 | 4 | $2,150 |
4-Sep-21 | 13 | $7,222 | 10 | 89 | 11 | $6,715 | 2 | $507 |
28-Aug-21 | 12 | $763 | 9 | 63 | 11 | $663 | 1 | $100 |
21-Aug-21 | 12 | $29,659 | 7 | 79 | 11 | $29,579 | 1 | $80 |
14-Aug-21 | 22 | $17,845 | 11 | 199 | 12 | $12,805 | 10 | $5,04 |
7-Aug-21 | 17 | $13,670 | 12 | 139 | 15 | $11,766 | 2 | $1,904 |
31-Jul-21 | 21 | $8,160 | 11 | 134 | 10 | $3,574 | 10 | $4,586 |
July 24,2021 | 21 | $6,367 | 11 | 139 | 15 | $3,712 | 6 | $2,655 |
17-Jul-21 | 14 | $4,009 | 11 | 124 | 12 | $2,015 | 2 | $1,994 |
10-Jul-21 | 16 | $3,997 | 13 | 143 | 11 | $1,597 | 4 | $2,4 |
3-Jul-21 | 24 | $7,492 | 13 | 94 | 16 | $3,769 | 8 | $3,722 |
26-Jun-21 | 10 | $4,995 | 7 | 85 | 8 | $3,847 | 2 | $1,148 |
19-Jun-21 | 28 | $16,830 | 8 | 228 | 9 | $1,861 | 19 | $14,968 |
12-Jun-21 | 26 | $27,238 | 15 | 209 | 19 | $25,602 | 7 | $1,636 |
5-Jun-21 | 15 | $15,539 | 13 | 100 | 13 | $14,709 | 2 | $600 |
29-May-21 | 35 | $20,279 | 11 | 145 | 28 | $18,64 | 7 | $1,639 |
22-May-21 | 24 | $53,208 | 14 | 174 | 17 | $51,047 | 7 | $2,161 |
15-May-21 | 18 | $10,620 | 13 | 220 | 11 | $5,870 | 7 | $4,809 |
8-May-21 | 17 | $10,400 | 11 | 156 | 15 | $8,386 | 2 | $2,500 |
1-May-21 | 21 | $7,200 | 16 | 115 | 12 | $3,808 | 9 | $3,392 |
24-Apr-21 | 8 | $20,200 | 9 | 31 | 8 | $20,200 | 0 | 0 |
17-Apr-21 | 14 | $6,270 | 8 | 102 | 11 | $40,180 | 3 | $2,260 |
10-Apr-21 | 15 | $8,940 | 13 | 129 | 14 | $7,990 | 1 | $950 |
3-Apr-21 | 18 | $19,513 | 10 | 151 | 12 | $16,923 | 6 | $2,590 |
27-Mar-21 | 27 | $13,942 | 15 | 244 | 14 | $4,300 | 13 | $9,633.50 |
20-Mar-21 | 11 | $2,046 | 4 | 102 | 3 | $270 | 8 | $1,776 |
13-Mar-21 | 15 | $3,270 | 9 | 109 | 6 | $538 | 9 | $2,732 |
6-Mar-21 | 24 | $13,617 | 10 | 196 | 13 | $10,395 | 11 | $3,222 |
27-Feb-21 | 19 | $8,105 | 12 | 139 | 15 | $4,970 | 4 | $3,135 |
20-Feb-21 | 9 | $8,820 | 9 | 153 | 8 | $8,520 | 1 | $300 |
13-Feb-21 | 12 | $4,852.60 | 7 | 81 | 7 | 2,766 | 5 | $2,086.60 |
6-Feb-21 | 18 | $9,752 | 13 | 153 | 14 | $5,222 | 4 | $4,530 |
30-Jan-21 | 18 | $9,449 | 9 | 182 | 15 | $8,753.80 | 3 | $695.30 |
23-Jan-21 | 14 | $8,150 | 8 | 118 | 6 | $4,000 | 8 | $4,150 |
16-Jan-21 | 17 | $6,783 | 13 | 138 | 11 | $2,400 | 6 | $4,382.90 |
9-Jan-21 | 22 | $6,829 | 14 | 135 | 18 | $3,139.30 | 4 | $3,690 |
2-Jan-21 | 7 | $1,466 | 7 | 60 | 7 | $1,466 | 0 | 0 |
26-Dec-20 | 18 | $15,900 | 12 | 163 | 16 | $5,300 | 1 | $600 |
19-Dec-20 | 18 | $9,769 | 14 | 110 | 14 | $8,426 | 4 | $1,343 |
12-Dec-20 | 10 | $7,200 | 9 | 100 | 9 | $3,325 | 1 | $3,830 |
5-Dec-20 | 15 | $4,261 | 9 | 122 | 9 | $2,780 | 6 | $1,481 |
28-Nov-20 | 19 | $7,758 | 10 | 110 | 13 | $4,003 | 6 | $3,755 |
14-Nov-20 | 14 | $864.10 | 14 | 157 | 12 | $289.10 | 2 | $575 |
7-Nov-20 | 13 | $6,332 | 9 | 129 | 9 | $2,483.50 | 4 | $3,849 |
31-Oct-20 | 10 | $3,995.80 | 8 | 103 | 6 | $3,231.10 | 4 | $754.70 |
24-Oct-20 | 6 | $18,100 | 6 | 58 | 5 | $17,709 | 1 | $350 |
17-Oct-20 | 8 | $351.90 | 5 | 55 | 8 | $351.90 | 0 | 0 |
10-Oct-20 | 7 | $5,229 | 3 | 50 | 4 | $735 | 3 | $4,494 |
3-Oct-20 | 14 | $21,428 | 9 | 173 | 9 | $17,535 | 5 | $3,893 |
26-Sep-20 | 10 | $12,770 | 8 | 93 | 5 | $10,300 | 5 | $2,470 |
19-Sep-20 | 14 | $8,365 | 9 | 101 | 6 | $1,020 | 8 | $7,345 |
12-Sep-20 | 6 | $4,406 | 8 | 59 | 3 | $1,270 | 3 | $3,136 |
5-Sep-20 | 11 | $5,191 | 8 | 117 | 9 | $4,061 | 2 | $1,130 |
29-Aug-20 | 11 | $2,531 | 9 | 94 | 5 | $1,130 | 6 | $1,401 |
22-Aug-20 | 18 | $6,574 | 12 | 140 | 7 | $1,930 | 11 | $4,644 |
15-Aug-20 | 13 | $4,991 | 10 | 97 | 7 | $1,216 | 6 | $3,775 |
8-Aug-20 | 12 | $32,092 | 11 | 112 | 9 | $30,457 | 3 | $1,635 |
1-Aug-20 | 7 | $5,287 | 8 | 76 | 5 | $3,687 | 2 | $1,600 |
25-Jul-20 | 9 | $18,751 | 6 | 67 | 7 | $18,403 | 2 | $348 |
18-Jul-20 | 6 | $1,982.50 | 5 | 50 | 4 | $1,407.50 | 2 | $575 |
11-Jul-20 | 11 | $565.10 | 12 | 75 | 10 | $65.10 | 1 | $500 |
4-Jul-20 | 10 | $8,889 | 8 | 98 | 9 | $8,788 | 1 | $100.30 |
27-Jun-20 | 8 | $6,874 | 10 | 50 | 5 | $4,972.50 | 3 | $2,081.50 |
20-Jun-20 | 12 | $4,444 | 9 | 115 | 7 | $2,829 | 5 | $1,615 |
13-Jun-20 | 6 | $3,582 | 4 | 37 | 2 | $350 | 4 | $3,232 |
6-Jun-20 | 11 | $3,213.70 | 8 | 65 | 7 | $470 | 4 | $2,743.70 |
30-May-20 | 8 | $7,335 | 7 | 48 | 6 | $4,639 | 2 | $2,697 |
23-May-20 | 4 | $432.40 | 4 | 34 | 3 | $432.40 | 1 | 0 |
16-May-20 | 6 | $310 | 6 | 34 | 5 | $310 | 1 | 0 |
9-May-20 | 18 | $5,630 | 16 | 124 | 14 | $3,180 | 4 | $2,450 |
2-May-20 | 15 | 10,400 | 10 | 90 | 8 | $1,900 | 7 | $,8,500 |
25-Apr-20 | 8 | $3,400 | 9 | 36 | 5 | $1,000 | 3 | $2,450 |
18-Apr-20 | 19 | $9,500 | 14 | 92 | 8 | $185.70 | 11 | $9,360 |
11-Apr-20 | 12 | $6,000 | 9 | 40 | 5 | $190 | 7 | $5,800 |
4-Apr-20 | 14 | $8,200 | 11 | 68 | 10 | $2,200 | 4 | $6,000 |
28-Mar-20 | 16 | $6,500 | 13 | 96 | 10 | $3,700 | 6 | $2,800 |
21-Mar-20 | 11 | $11,910 | 7 | 33 | 7 | $2,250 | 4 | $9,960 |
14-Mar-20 | 7 | 809.8 | 6 | 34 | 6 | 684.8 | 1 | 125 |
7-Mar-20 | 16 | $2,500 | 15 | 70 | 13 | $669 | 3 | $1,400 |
29-Feb-20 | 13 | $15,260 | 13 | 128 | 11 | $11,760 | 2 | $3,500 |
22-Feb-20 | 12 | $3,700 | 10 | 92 | 10 | $2,560 | 2 | $1,130 |
15-Feb-20 | 16 | $1,250 | 10 | 84 | 12 | $35 | 4 | $1,222 |
8-Feb-20 | 18 | $6,080 | 14 | 123 | 14 | $2,595 | 4 | $3,485 |
1-Feb-20 | 21 | $20,900 | 12 | 101 | 14 | $17,860 | 7 | $3,060 |
25-Jan-20 | 13 | $7,430 | 13 | 62 | 12 | $6,430 | 1 | $1,000 |
18-Jan-20 | 23 | $9,580 | 15 | 120 | 19 | $6,580 | 4 | $3,000 |
11-Jan-20 | 21 | $14,200 | 18 | 199 | 16 | $1,020 | 5 | $13,200 |
4-Jan-20 | 22 | $6,400 | 11 | 119 | 16 | $3,204 | 6 | $3,245 |
28-Dec-19 | 22 | $7,150 | 19 | 175 | 18 | $6,800 | 4 | $327.40 |
14-Dec-19 | 24 | $36,300 | 23 | 167 | 19 | $9,500 | 5 | $26,800 |
7-Dec-19 | 11 | $10,400 | 11 | 55 | 7 | $1,082 | 4 | $9,370 |
November 30. 2019 | 14 | $2,450 | 12 | 126 | 12 | $1,760 | 2 | $692.50 |
23-Nov-19 | 16 | $1,995 | 10 | 41 | 11 | $615 | 5 | $1,380 |
16-Nov-19 | 15 | $3,820 | 13 | 135 | 11 | $2,500 | 4 | $1,271 |
9-Nov-19 | 25 | $12,900 | 17 | 182 | 23 | $12,200 | 2 | $575 |
2-Nov-19 | 10 | $2,470 | 12 | 61 | 9 | 2,450 | 3 | $22 |
26-Oct-19 | 12 | $5,560 | 14 | 70 | 11 | $3,860 | 1 | $1,700 |
19-Oct-19 | 8 | $6,600 | 8 | 138 | 8 | $6,600 | 0 | 0 |
12-Oct-19 | 19 | $4,300 | 14 | 55 | 16 | $3,800 | 3 | $500 |
5-Oct-19 | 18 | $14,500 | 19 | 166 | 15 | $11,100 | 3 | $3,400 |
28-Sep-19 | 19 | $8,100 | 18 | 132 | 18 | $7,560 | 1 | $550 |
21-Sep-19 | 14 | $6,300 | 16 | 66 | 11 | $2,160 | 3 | $4,170 |
14-Sep-19 | 15 | $23,800 | 12 | 56 | 11 | $21,250 | 4 | $2,570 |
7-Sep-19 | 17 | $3,500 | 15 | 98 | 14 | $1,900 | 3 | $1,600 |
31-Aug-19 | 5 | $8,700 | 6 | 50 | 5 | $8,700 | 0 | 0 |
24-Aug-19 | 16 | $10,000 | 14 | 82 | 15 | $4,250 | 1 | $5,750 |
16-Aug-19 | 10 | $1,680 | 5 | 52 | 7 | $650 | 3 | $950 |
9-Aug-19 | 17 | $17,700 | 15 | 68 | 14 | $3,900 | 3 | $13,800 |
2-Aug-19 | 13 | $5,760 | 12 | 108 | 13 | $5,760 | NA | NA |
27-Jul-19 | 11 | $7,300 | 13 | 76 | 8 | $6,570 | 3 | $730 |
20-Jul-19 | 13 | $11,800 | 13 | 125 | 11 | $5,300 | 2 | $6,500 |
13-Jul-19 | 10 | $775 | 7 | 46 | 8 | $542.50 | 2 | $233 |
6-Jul-19 | 7 | $2,500 | 9 | 85 | 7 | $2,500 | 0 | 0 |
29-Jun-19 | 23 | $8,290 | 15 | 154 | 17 | $2,300 | 6 | $5,970 |
22-Jun-19 | 17 | $10,700 | 10 | 139 | 14 | $7,700 | 3 | $3,000 |
15-Jun-19 | 11 | $13,500 | 14 | 160 | 11 | $13,500 | NA | NA |
8-Jun-19 | 13 | $2,870 | 17 | 55 | 11 | $1,570 | 2 | $1,300 |
1-Jun-19 | 10 | $4,460 | 11 | 60 | 8 | $4,140 | 2 | $315 |
25-May-19 | 17 | $4,360 | 14 | 79 | 14 | $3,700 | 3 | $612 |
18-May-19 | 22 | $9,000 | 17 | 150 | 16 | $3,400 | 6 | $5,600 |
11-May-19 | 18 | $19,800 | 17 | 177 | 15 | $18,300 | 3 | $1,500 |
4-May-19 | 10 | $7,075 | 6 | 32 | 8 | $6,900 | 2 | $175 |
27-Apr-19 | 15 | $3,200 | 14 | 117 | 14 | $3,160 | 1 | $40 |
20-Apr-19 | 13 | $13,500 | 10 | 90 | 9 | $12,200 | 4 | $1,300 |
13-Apr-19 | 16 | $38,900 | 14 | 91 | 14 | $37,800 | 2 | $1,100 |
6-Apr-19 | 12 | $6,870 | 11 | 94 | 10 | $6,730 | 2 | $50 |
30-Mar-19 | 15 | $6,470 | 12 | 84 | 10 | $7,91.5 | 5 | $5,677 |
23-Mar-19 | 18 | $6,450 | 14 | 91 | 14 | $5,042 | 4 | $1,408 |
16-Mar-19 | 14 | $10,180 | 12 | 115 | 11 | $8,800 | 3 | $1,300 |
9-Mar-19 | 9 | $1,800 | 6 | 49 | 8 | $1,300 | 1 | $500 |
2-Mar-19 | 20 | $3,033 | 16 | 107 | 14 | $1,817 | 6 | $1,262 |
23-Feb-19 | 12 | $2,040 | 8 | 69 | 9 | $614.60 | 3 | $1,430 |
16-Feb-19 | 16 | $9,970 | 18 | 77 | 16 | $9,970 | 0 | 0 |
9-Feb-19 | 14 | $6,400 | 10 | 110 | 14 | $6,400 | 0 | 0 |
2-Feb-19 | 18 | $6,740 | 15 | 99 | 16 | $5,720 | 2 | $950 |
26-Jan-19 | 13 | $2,770 | 11 | 67 | 11 | $918.95 | 2 | $1,850 |
19-Jan-19 | 15 | $3,819 | 16 | 76 | 12 | $2,594 | 3 | $1,225 |
12-Jan-19 | 18 | $7,283 | 14 | 92 | 15 | $1,683 | 3 | $5,600 |
5-Jan-19 | 10 | $529 | 12 | 50 | 10 | $529 | 0 | 0 |
22-Dec-18 | 17 | $2,570 | 13 | 87 | 14 | $941 | 3 | $1,629 |
15-Dec-18 | 10 | $2,860 | 8 | 26 | 8 | $264 | 2 | $2,600 |
8-Dec-18 | 15 | $1,819 | 16 | 65 | 12 | $552 | 3 | $1,267 |
1-Dec-18 | 12 | $7,500 | 10 | 90 | 9 | $1,200 | 3 | $6,200 |
28-Nov-18 | 15 | $4,500 | 11 | 107 | 14 | $4,000 | 1 | $500 |
19-Nov-18 | 18 | $6,137 | 13 | 98 | 13 | $2,142 | 5 | $3,995 |
14-Nov-18 | 18 | $9,200 | 13 | 152 | 15 | $8,500 | 3 | $694 |
6-Nov-18 | 16 | $17,300 | 16 | 183 | 14 | $16,361 | 2 | $950 |
29-Oct-18 | 14 | $14,400 | 18 | 127 | 17 | $13,800 | 1 | $600 |
24-Oct-18 | 13 | $6,140 | 13 | 126 | 11 | $5,122 | 2 | $1,018 |
17-Oct-18 | 18 | $18,390 | 15 | 125 | 14 | $12,292 | 4 | $6,098 |
10-Oct-18 | 29 | $3,149 | 18 | 104 | 20 | $1,647 | 9 | $819 |
2-Oct-18 | 18 | $9,300 | 11 | 67 | 14 | $7,300 | 4 | $2,000 |
25-Sep-18 | 13 | $7,000 | 11 | 75 | 10 | $6,000 | 3 | $995 |
18-Sep-18 | 9 | $3,570 | 7 | 44 | 9 | $3,570 | 0 | 0 |
11-Sep-18 | 13 | $5,900 | 10 | 132 | 13 | $5,900 | 0 | 0 |
7-Sep-18 | 14 | $5,000 | 15 | 86 | 11 | $4,000 | 3 | $1,000 |
29-Aug-18 | 15 | $20,700 | 14 | 79 | 13 | $4,700 | 2 | $16,000 |
20-Aug-18 | 10 | $12,400 | 11 | 53 | 8 | $11,380 | 3 | $1,057 |
14-Aug-18 | 12 | $19,900 | 12 | 132 | 9 | $18,889 | 3 | $1,011 |
7-Aug-18 | 16 | $68,600 | 11 | 106 | 13 | $67,259 | 3 | $1,340 |
31-Jul-18 | 15 | $15,100 | 15 | 95 | 11 | $13,060 | 4 | $2,060 |
23-Jul-18 | 13 | $2,130 | 15 | 60 | 10 | $1,804 | 3 | $1,100 |
17-Jul-18 | 14 | $5,370 | 17 | 98 | 9 | $4,310 | 5 | $1,100 |
9-Jul-18 | 16 | $11,200 | 15 | 74 | 10 | $11,080 | 6 | $862 |
3-Jul-18 | 13 | $7,000 | 7 | 81 | 12 | $6,330 | 1 | $750 |
25-Jun-18 | 15 | $8,800 | 13 | 97 | 9 | $4,970 | 6 | $3,930 |
18-Jun-18 | 13 | $14,200 | 14 | 80 | 7 | $221 | 6 | $14,290 |
11-Jun-18 | 12 | $6,300 | 8 | 96 | 8 | $5,910 | 4 | $803 |
6-Jun-18 | 13 | $14,500 | 10 | 88 | 8 | $14,154 | 5 | $579 |
31-May-18 | 11 | $4,890 | 10 | 63 | 8 | $3,240 | 3 | $1,790 |
22-May-18 | 15 | $20,400 | 11 | 63 | 9 | $19,808 | 6 | $885 |
15-May-18 | 15 | $4,700 | 15 | 106 | 10 | $3,900 | 5 | $643 |
9-May-18 | 11 | $1,400 | 13 | 88 | 9 | $1,300 | 2 | $560 |
1-May-18 | 8 | $14,250 | 7 | 88 | 7 | $13,400 | 1 | $450 |
24-Apr-18 | 12 | $5,300 | 6 | 61 | 11 | $4,470 | 1 | $800 |
17-Apr-18 | 9 | $1,800 | 10 | 44 | 7 | $2,330 | 2 | $1,434 |
11-Apr-18 | 11 | $2,500 | 8 | 32 | 6 | $1,690 | 5 | $809 |
3-Apr-18 | 15 | $13,400 | 11 | 121 | 9 | $12,020 | 6 | $1,090 |
28-Mar-18 | 10 | $4,000 | 10 | 92 | 7 | $3,870 | 3 | $215 |
19-Mar-18 | 17 | $5,800 | 13 | 51 | 10 | $590 | 7 | $5,165 |
12-Mar-18 | 15 | $3,130 | 11 | 43 | 11 | $2,360 | 4 | $788 |
6-Mar-18 | 19 | $5,400 | 13 | 116 | 10 | $1,530 | 9 | $4,860 |
27-Feb-18 | 20 | $6,600 | 13 | 69 | 14 | $5,530 | 6 | $1,030 |
19-Feb-18 | 15 | $5,500 | 14 | 111 | 10 | $3,990 | 6 | $1,980 |
12-Feb-18 | 23 | $10,900 | 17 | 157 | 12 | $7,110 | 11 | $3,840 |
5-Feb-18 | 16 | $8,600 | 13 | 100 | 7 | $1,330 | 9 | $7,800 |
30-Jan-18 | 11 | $12,600 | 11 | 68 | 5 | $7,300 | 6 | $4,982 |
24-Jan-18 | 19 | $9,400 | 15 | 129 | 5 | $2,010 | 14 | $7,337 |
18-Jan-18 | 10 | $6,280 | 8 | 49 | 2 | $2,100 | 8 | $4,188 |
9-Jan-18 | 12 | $16,500 | 12 | 92 | 9 | $15,890 | 3 | $475 |
3-Jan-18 | 10 | $2,500 | 9 | 47 | 8 | $2,350 | 2 | $150 |
27-Dec-17 | 15 | $9,000 | 15 | 113 | 9 | $7,568 | 6 | $1,784 |
18-Dec-17 | 15 | $13,800 | 16 | 164 | 9 | $13,010 | 7 | $1,118 |
11-Dec-17 | 14 | $9,700 | 10 | 126 | 12 | $2,940 | 4 | $8,500 |
4-Dec-17 | 6 | $1,800 | 6 | 31 | 5 | $1,510 | 1 | $300 |
28-Nov-17 | 7 | $3,850 | 8 | 76 | 4 | $3,260 | 3 | $285 |
16-Nov-17 | 10 | $2,700 | 10 | 48 | 6 | $1,840 | 4 | $856 |
8-Nov-17 | 15 | $2,380 | 17 | 91 | 10 | $1,860 | 5 | $516 |
1-Nov-17 | 12 | $4,700 | 17 | 94 | 9 | $3,400 | 4 | $1,300 |
23-Oct-17 | 15 | $10,500 | 10 | 67 | 10 | $9,780 | 4 | $1,530 |
18-Oct-17 | 6 | $2,000 | 37 | 3 | $225 | 3 | $1,820 | |
10-Oct-17 | 12 | $6,570 | 100 | 9 | $3,880 | 3 | $3,360 | |
2-Oct-17 | 8 | $3,100 | 11 | 19 | 3 | $1,630 | 5 | $1,750 |
25-Sep-17 | 8 | $4,880 | 8 | 79 | 5 | $2,660 | 5 | $2,070 |
18-Sep-17 | 9 | $4,770 | 3 | $300 | 6 | $4,470 | ||
12-Sep-17 | 11 | $4,430 | 8 | $2,030 | 3 | $2,400 | ||
1-Sep-17 | 4 | $1,310 | 3 | $317 | 1 | $1,000 | ||
23-Aug-17 | 11 | $13,640 | 9 | 8 | $11,840 | 3 | $1,800 |
The industries involved included oil and gas, of course, as well as telecommunications, construction, consumer products and healthcare.
M&A AND PRIVATE EQUITY INVESTMENTS
Akin advises Cimarex on $1.6B Resolute purchase
As The Texas Lawbook previously reported, Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld advised Denver-based Cimarex Energy Co. on its Nov. 19 purchase of crosstown company Resolute Energy Corp. for $1.6 billion, including debt.
Chris LaFollette, partner in charge of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld’s Houston office, and counsel Cynthia Mabry led the deal team advising Cimarex along with lawyers in the firm’s New York office.
Other Texas lawyers involved were counsel Chris Centrich, associate Leana Garipova and partners Alison Chen and Jocelyn Tau on tax.
Akin has represented Cimarex on several equity and debt offerings over the past several years, including a $654 million public offering of its common stock in 2015 and a $750 million debt offering the year before.
Arnold & Porter and Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz are Resolute’s legal advisors. Evercore provided financial advice to Cimarex and Petrie Partners Securities and Goldman Sachs did so for Resolute.
Cimarex’s $35 per share offer is a 14.8 percent premium over Resolute’s closing share price on Nov. 16. Resolute had $710 million in long-term debt as of Sept. 30.
Resolute shareholders will have the right to take up to $35 per share in cash, 0.3943 shares of Cimarex stock or a combination of $14 per share in cash and 0.2366 shares of Cimarex. The purchase price must be made up of 60 percent stock and 40 percent cash.
Analysts were surprised by the move, as Cimarex has historically focused on organic leasing to build up its property position and wasn’t willing to pay $40,000 per acre for deals in the Permian Basin that were light on cash flow (it paid $22,000 per acre for Resolute’s assets).
Analysts at Tudor, Pickering, Holt see more consolidation coming among oil and gas explorers and producers, with the potential for 10 additional transactions next year approaching $35 billion to $40 billion in value.
Cimarex said the purchase will boost its earnings and cash flow per share next year, expand its Reeves County footprint by 21,100 acres and add 35,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, 45 percent of which is oil, to its production.
The deal has to clear Resolute shareholders and regulators and is expected to close in the first quarter. Cimarex stockholders will own around 94.4 percent of the combined company and Resolute shareholders will hold 5.6 percent.
Cimarex said it will fund the deal with cash on hand, including proceeds from the $570 million sale of Ward County assets to Callon Petroleum this past May, and borrowings under its revolving credit facility.
Famed Dallas buyout king Tom Hicks bought Resolute via a special purpose acquisition company from Natural Gas Partners in 2009 for $582 million, a move that took it public.
But the company suffered for many years under a mound of debt, forcing it to borrow money from hedge funds at distressed levels and cut the base salaries of its managers.
It was able to sell some of its properties when oil prices recovered, including its interests in the Aneth field in southeastern Utah’s Paradox Basin to Australia’s Elk Petroleum last year for $195 million. But activist hedge funds came after Resolute earlier this year urging a strategic review of alternatives, including a possible sale.
Latham, Weil aid on QEP’s $735M asset sale to Aethon
QEP Resources Inc. said Nov. 19 that its units agreed to sell natural gas and oil producing properties to Aethon Energy for $735 million.
Aethon is an investment firm led by Albert Huddleston, a Dallas oilman who married into the billionaire Hunt family.
The assets include undeveloped acreage and associated gas gathering and treating systems and are located in the Haynesville/Cotton Valley of East Texas and northern Louisiana.
Latham & Watkins represented Denver-based QEP with a team led by Houston partner Stephen Szalkowski with associates Greg Sorensen and Rebecca Kendall.
Houston partners John Greer and Michael Dillard advised on corporate matters while Houston partner Tim Fenn with associate Jim Cole helped on tax matters; Houston partner Joel Mack assisted on environmental matters; and Houston counsel Natalie McFarland weighed in on finance matters.
Weil Gotshal & Manges and Sidley Austin advised Aethon.
The Weil team in Dallas was led by partner Rodney Moore and included associates Andrew Stotts, Rob Martin and Courtney Luster; real estate attorney Leslie Smith; tax partner Jonathan Macke and associate Adam Arikat; and litigation partner Ray Guy.
The Sidley team included Dallas partner Scott Parel.
QEP chairman, CEO and president Chuck Stanley said the sale is an important next step in the company’s process of becoming a Permian pure-play company. He said the proceeds would be used to fund development of its core Permian assets, reduce debt and return cash to shareholders through its $1.25 billion share repurchase program.
Raymond James analyst John Freeman said the $735 million sale exceeded his $700 million valuation. He added that QEP will need to pay down $950 million in debt to reach a 1.5 to 2 times target leverage range after closing both the Williston and Haynesville asset sales, which would leave $1.2 billion for share buybacks.
The sale is expected to close in January if it clears regulators.
Gibson Dunn counsels Prime on $700M Spring Mobile purchase
Gibson Dunn & Crutcher said it represented Prime Communications on its acquisition of the Spring Mobile business from GameStop Corp. for $700 million.
The team was led by Dallas partner Jeff Chapman and associates Paige Lager and Tom Canny.
Dallas partner Jonathan Whalen advised on representation and warranty insurance matters while Dallas partner David Sinak and associate Michael Cannon advised on tax matters.
Pepper Hamilton provided legal counsel to Grapevine-based GameStop, whose general counsel is Dan Reed. The UT law grad has been in the company’s legal department for 12 years after a nine-year stint at Jackson Walker.
GameStop sought financial advise from Perella Weinberg Partners. J.P. Morgan Securities and SunTrust Robinson Humphrey were Prime’s financial advisors.
GameStop said the business owns and operates 1,289 AT&T wireless stores. The transaction is expected to close this quarter if it clears regulators.
GameStop said the proceeds may be used to reduce its outstanding debt, fund share repurchases, reinvest in its core businesses to drive growth or some combination of those options.
Bank of America analyst analyst Curtis Nagle said in a note that the sale will sap the company’s already falling earnings base but a large share buyback and a lot of cash on its balance sheet should support its shares in the near term.
GameStop’s board, with the help of outside financial advisors, has been reviewing its strategic and financial alternatives to enhance shareholder value.
The company said the board determined that the sale was in the best interest of the company and its shareholders as it generates immediate cash and will help it increase its focus on video games and collectibles.
Executive chairman Dan DeMatteo said the board will continue to review strategic and financial options to boost stockholder value.
V&E represents EIG on $375M purchase of VPPs
Vinson & Elkins said Nov. 20 it advised investment funds managed by EIG Global Energy Partners on their purchase of five-year volumetric production payments associated with certain offshore oil and gas properties from an undisclosed seller for $375 million.
The parties also entered into an arrangement regarding the delivery and marketing of overriding royalty hydrocarbons by the seller. The deal closed Oct. 18.
The team was led by partners Brian Moss, John B. Connally, Mingda Zhao and Bryan Loocke with assistance from associates Caitlin Lawrence, Emma Jiang, Joe Higdon and Tukeni Obasi.
Also advising from Texas were counsel Steve Tarry on finance matters; partners Wendy Salinas and Todd Way and senior associate Julia Pashin on tax; partner Michael Holmes on litigation; and partner Paul Heath on restructuring/organization.
Others involved were partner David Peck and associates Christine Mainguy and Miron Klimkowski on tax; and associates Alex Lewis, Connor Long, Sean Roberts and Kara Chung on corporate matters.
A volumetric production payment, or VPP, is a right to a fractional share of the hydrocarbons produced for a certain period of time or until a specified amount of revenue is received. Such payments are used to finance oil and gas operations and are intended to be classified as real property interests.
V&E aids Natural Resource on $205M VantaCore sale to Sun Capital
Vinson & Elkins said Nov. 19 it advised coal producer Natural Resource Partners, or NRP, on the sale of its construction aggregates business VantaCore Partners to a Sun Capital Partners affiliate for $205 million.
The V&E corporate team was led by firm partners in New York but included senior associate Benji Barron in Houston.
Most of the rest of the team was in Texas, including partner Jim Meyer and associate Megan James on tax; partner Shane Tucker and associate Kristy Fields on executive compensation/benefits; and partner Tom Wilson and counsel Grace Ho on labor/employment.
Others weighing in were counsel Scot Dixon on real estate; partner Devika Kornbacher on intellectual property; partner Darin Schultz and senior associate Ryan Hunsaker on finance; and counsel Sarah Mitchell on litigation.
Credit Suisse was NRP’s financial advisor.
Kathryn S. Wilson is Natural Resource’s general counsel. The University of Texas law graduate previously practiced at V&E and was general counsel at Antero Resources for a year.
Houston-based Natural Resource Partners expects the sale to close by year-end.
The divestiture will help the company substantially accelerate the de-levering and de-risking of its capital structure, COO and president Craig Nunez said in a statement.
NRP’s chairman and CEO is Corbin “Corby” Robertson Jr., the grandson of oil wildcatter Hugh Roy Cullen who took control of the family business in 1978.
According to Forbes, Robertson began winding down the family’s Quintana Petroleum assets by 1980 and went all-in on coal, with NRP owning 21 billion tons of reserves by 2003 – the largest collection apart from the U.S. government.
The collapse in coal prices has pushed NRP’s stock down 76 percent since the beginning of 2014. Forbes dropped the Cullen family off its list of America’s richest families in 2016. In 2015 it was estimated to be worth $1.5 billion.
Bellami Hair attracts $120M investment/commitment from Cathexis
Bellami Hair, a Los Angeles-based hair extensions brand, said it attracted a $20 million investment and an additional $100 million commitment from Cathexis Holdings, the family office of wealthy Houston businessman William B. Harrison.
Jackson Walker partner David Deaton counseled Cathexis on the deal.
Harrison is a regular client of Jackson Walker. Earlier this year, firm associate Carey Hain advised him on his purchase of a bluff-top property in Torrance/Redondo Beach, Calif., for $22.75 million, which reportedly set a record for the area.
Jackson Walker also counseled Harrison’s Cathexis Oil & Gas on the largest U.S. ranch purchased last year, the 83,368-acre Cielo Vista Ranch in Colorado (partner Alfie Meyerson). The property – which claims to have one of the country’s highest peaks – had been listed at $105 million.
Bellami Hair, which claims to be the world’s largest hair extension brand, said the monies will help it become a significant player in the $84 billion per year beauty industry.
The company was founded in 2012 by Julius Salerno and Nikki Eslami, who expanded their business by providing the best quality products while enlisting the help of influencers – including Guy Tang and Kylie Jenner – to attract consumers. Earlier this year, the two launched a professional products line and an education program for stylists.
The brand operates locations in six North American markets, including Los Angeles, Houston, Miami, New York, Las Vegas and Vancouver, British Columbia. Bellami plans to open stores in London, Paris, Dubai and Sydney over the next couple of years.
Bellami is Cathexis’ first foray outside of its traditional portfolio, which includes real estate, oil and gas and construction. Harrison said in a statement that the firm is interested in working with companies that operate in industries with high compound annual growth rates.
“Our investments only consider industry titans and Bellami has proven to be a fearless leader in their category,” he said.
Harrison is the scion to one of Texas’ original oil fortunes, according to the Denver Post. Forbes put the family’s worth at $1.3 billion in 2014.
His father, oil and ranching baron Bruce Harrison, passed away in 2004 at age 54 when he was only 17. Harrison fils was scheduled to receive his inheritance when he turned 30 last year, the newspaper said.
Baker Botts counsels Kimbell on $107.8M asset drop-down
Baker Botts said Nov. 21 it represented Kimbell Royalty Partners on the purchase of oil and gas royalty assets from certain affiliated sellers for $107.8 million in stock.
The Baker Botts team included corporate partners Jason Rocha and Joshua Davidson, senior associate Eileen Boyce and associate Jennifer Gasser; tax partner Michael Bresson, special counsel Chuck Campbell and associate Katie McEvilly; and global projects partner Erin Hopkins and associate Taylor Lopez.
Potter Anderson & Corroon was counsel to the conflicts committee of Kimbell, which used Evercore as its legal advisor. Bracewell partner Will Anderson and associate Benjamin J. Martin represented Evercore.
Mayer Brown partner Jeff Dobbs in Houston led sellers’ legal team, which included partners Bill Heller IV and Ed Osterberg and associate Ruchira Podali. UBS was the sellers’ financial advisor.
The assets are mostly located in the Eagle Ford Shale, Permian Basin, Appalachian Basin and Bakken Formation.
The purchase price includes 6.5 million newly issued units in Kimbell Royalty Operating. The transaction is expected to close by Dec. 20.
Amerisur signs $93.25M farm-out with Occidental Andina
Amerisur Resources plc said Nov. 23 that it inked a farm-out agreement with Occidental Andina, an affiliate of Houston-based Occidental Petroleum Corp., across four exploration blocks in southern Colombia.
Occidental managing counsel Brad Pollack lead the deal. Vinson and Elkins assisted as deal counsel, including partner John B. Connally and associate Danny Hatch, and Posse Herrera Ruize assisted as Colombian counsel.
Amerisur used its in-house counsel and Sanclemente Fernández Abogados.
The blocks involved in the deal include Putumayo-9, Terecay, Tacacho and Mecaya, all in the Putumayo region of the South American country. They extend 1.4 million acres and have prospective resources of 656 million barrels of oil.
In exchange for a 50 percent interest in each block, Occidental Andina will fund a $93.25 million exploration and appraisal program between 2019 and 2021, including 85 percent of the $65 million in planned 2D seismic cost expenditures and the $38 million planned drilling program. Amerisur will operate the blocks.
The work program includes the acquisition of 878 kilometers of 2D seismic and the drilling of five exploration wells.
The transaction has to clear the Agencia Nacional de Hidrocarburos.
Amerisur CEO John Wardle said in a statement that the deal will amply fund, widen and bring forward its exploration programs in the blocks, which management at both companies believe to hold very substantial resource potential.
Amerisur is an oil and gas producer and explorer focused on South America.
Gibson Dunn represents Lonestar on $38.7M deal with Sabine
Gibson Dunn & Crutcher represented Lonestar Resources on its purchase of assets in South Texas’ Eagle Ford Shale from Sabine Oil & Gas Corp. and Alerion Gas AXA for $38.7 million.
Lonestar said the proved oil and gas reserves are worth an estimated $77 million.
Houston partner Justin Stolte led the deal team. UBS was Sabine’s financial advisor.
Greg Packer is general counsel of Lonestar, which he joined last year.
The University of Chicago-trained lawyer previously was general counsel of Howard Energy Partners. Before that, Packer practiced at Latham & Watkins (he was at the firm at the same time as Stolte) and was a judicial extern to former Judge Alex Kozinski on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Fort Worth-based Lonestar also increased its senior secured credit facility to $275 million from $190 million. As of Sept. 30, borrowings under the facility were $163.9 million, leaving $111.1 million of liquidity available under the new borrowing base.
The interest rate grid that the company pays was reduced by 0.5 percent and the term was extended to November 2023 from July 2020.
The acquisition included 3,084 gross or 2,706 net acres in the Sugarkane Field in DeWitt County, Texas. The properties, 95 percent of which are operated, produce 800 barrels of oil equivalent per day from 20 wells. Estimated annualized EBITDAX from the production is $6 million.
Lonestar said it’s identified 26 Lower Eagle Ford drilling locations with additional drilling potential in the Upper-Lower Eagle Ford, the Upper Eagle Ford and the Austin Chalk.
To account for the additional volumes associated with the assets, Lonestar increased its 2019 production outlook from a range of 13,000 to 14,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day to 13,700 to 14,700 barrels of oil equivalent per day. It also increased its 2019 EBITDAX outlook from $140 million to $160 million to $145 million to $165 million.
Lonestar CEO Frank D. Bracken III said in a statement that the acquisition is a continuation of Lonestar’s strategy of accretively expanding its Eagle Ford Shale position while maintaining a returns-focused investment approach.
“We believe the application of our geo-engineered drilling and completion process can yield highly productive wells that yield attractive rates of return on invested capital,” he said.
HuntonAK aids Evercore as advisor to GasLog on $25M affiliate deal
Hunton Andrews Kurth said Nov. 16 that Houston partner Mark Young represented Evercore as financial advisor to the conflicts committee of GasLog Partners’ board on a modification to its partnership agreement with GasLog Ltd.
Under the terms of the agreement, which closed Nov. 16, GasLog Partners’ incentive distribution rights, or IDR’s, will be reduced on certain quarterly distributions.
Meanwhile, GasLog Ltd. will waive IDR payments resulting from any asset or business acquired by GasLog Partners in exchange for $25 million.
Kastner Gravell advises Cottonwood on $3M Well Data funding
Well Data Labs, which provides a completions data software platform to oil and gas producers, raised $3 million in Series B funding led by Cottonwood Venture Partners.
Current Well Data investors also participated in the round.
Kastner Gravelle’s Evan Kastner and Ariana Zikopoulos Coppola counseled Cottonwood on the investment.
Well Data said the financing will allow it to continue expanding its team and its core products along with bolt-on products, including real-time data feeds and machine learning models as the industry shifts toward advanced analytics.
Founded in 2014 by CEO Josh Churlik, Well Data offers a web application built to give operators a fast, simple way to manage, analyze and report on their internal frac data.
Well Data said it’s recently launched a real-time frac data service, seen operators use its platform on 15 percent of frac jobs in the U.S., added 15 new employees, quadrupled its sales and customer count since last year and expanded into an 11,000-square-foot office in Denver’s lower downtown.
“The oil and gas industry is just beginning to utilize high quality frac data to enhance completions and the Well Data Labs platform is the leading technology enabling use of that data,” Cottonwood managing partner Jeremy Arendt said in a statement.
Houston-based Cottonwood raised $32 million for its inaugural fund in October with legal advice from Vinson & Elkins. It’s led by Arendt, Ryan Gurney and Mark Mills and has Tudor, Pickering, Holt principal Maynard Holt on its board (Arendt was a former investment banker at TPH). Other portfolio companies include MineralSoft, SitePro, Ambyant and Novi.
Locke Lord aids Catapult on Cretic sale to Forbes Energy Services
Forbes Energy Services Ltd. said Nov. 16 that it acquired Cretic Energy Services from Catapult Energy Services Group for an undisclosed sum.
Catapult is a portfolio company of NGP and NGP Energy Technology Partners.
Locke Lord partner Kevin Peter in Houston counseled Catapult. Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson counseled Forbes.
Piper Jaffray’s Simmons Energy provided financial advice to Catapult and Houlihan Lokey assisted Forbes.
Michael Hatfield has led Catapult’s legal and human resources functions since 2013. Before that, the University of Houston law graduate worked at Italian oil company Eni, Stewart Title and Accenture.
Headquartered in Montgomery, Texas, Cretic provides large-diameter, extended-reach coiled tubing services to oil and gas producers predominantly in the Permian Basin.
The company claims it was an early mover in bringing high capacity coiled tubing units to the market and is one of the fastest growing providers to address specific demands associated with completing long lateral wells.
The acquisition is expected to position Forbes as a leading completions service provider by adding seven large-diameter coiled tubing spreads, engineered fluids, nitrogen pumping, thru-tubing and other completion support services to its coiled tubing business.
The combined company will have one of the largest fleets of large-diameter, high-capacity coiled tubing units and an established footprint in the Permian Basin and South Texas as well as a presence in niche markets in East Texas, Oklahoma and other states surrounding Texas.
Forbes CEO and president John Crisp said in a statement that the acquisition dovetails directly with the company’s offering of completion and production-related services and is an opportunity to accelerate growth.
Cretic was co-founded in 2013 by CEO and president Joe Michetti, who previously co-founded Infinistar Energy Services and sold it in 2009 to Weatherford International, where he managed its global coiled tubing product line. He will become president and co-COO of Forbes.
Gregory Laake led the investment from Catapult, which was founded in 2013 to establish, invest in and support start-up oilfield products and services companies.
To fund the Cretic acquisition, Forbes entered into a new $35 million asset-based lending facility with Regions Bank and amended and upsized its first lien term loan to receive an additional $60 million of proceeds.
Forbes plans to repay the $50 million short-term portion of the term loan with proceeds from an offering of rights to purchase unsecured subordinated convertible debt securities to its shareholders on a pro rata basis.
If Forbes doesn’t complete the rights offering within 12 months, the short-term portion of the term loan will automatically convert to unsecured subordinated convertible debt securities.
Webster Capital-backed BayMark Health acquires SpecialCare
BayMark Health Services, a Lewisville, Texas-based portfolio company of Webster Capital, acquired SpecialCare Hospital Management for an undisclosed sum.
BayMark general counsel Susan Meyercord led the deal. The University of Texas law graduate previously was a trial attorney at the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of the Solicitor.
SpecialCare is a St. Louis-based provider of inpatient stabilization and withdrawal management services for addiction sufferers. It works with 46 acute care hospitals in 13 states.
Before the acquisition, BayMark operated 186 outpatient locations and was the largest company of its kind in North America treating those with opioid use disorder.
SpecialCare CEO William A. Billings said in a statement that the company chose to merge with BayMark to meet the growing demands of its industry and potentially expand its services to those in need through its hospital partnerships.
BayMark said more than 115 Americans die each day of an opioid overdose and millions of Americans struggle with opioid use.
The company offers highly structured opioid treatment programs using methadone or buprenorphine and office-based buprenorphine programs, both of which incorporate counseling as part of the treatment plan. It also offers outpatient withdrawal management services with naltrexone therapy and residential treatment in certain locations.
BayMark CEO David K. White said in a statement that integrating the company’s network of programs with acute medical services will benefit patients and improve accessibility to high-quality care.
SpecialCare will keep its name and much of its staff.
After the acquisition, BayMark will manage or operate 209 programs, 146 opioid treatment programs, eight office-based buprenorphine treatment programs, 12 outpatient withdrawal management facilities, 46 inpatient withdrawal management programs and one residential treatment facility across 32 states and the Canadian province of Ontario.
Porter Hedges, Locke Lord aid on Elevate’s asset purchase
Elevate Midstream Partners said Nov. 15 that it acquired the assets of Woodland Midstream Partners and Orion Pipeline in partnership with private equity firm Tailwater Capital. Terms weren’t disclosed.
The assets include gathering, treating and processing assets in East Texas.
Porter Hedges advised Houston-based Elevate, including Kevin Poli with assistance from Geoff Schultz, Allison Wilbanks and Joe Laurel. Mac Marshall also advised on the Orion transaction.
Locke Lord counseled the sellers, including Mitch Tiras, Hunter Summerford and Freddy Feldman on Woodland and Greg Heath and Rachel Fitzgerald on Orion.
Elevate CEO Roger Fox said in a statement that the acquisition gives the company a strong asset base in East Texas and that it will continue exploring opportunities for growth in and around the system to serve its East Texas producers.
The Woodland acquisition includes systems in Texas and Louisiana and some of Woodland’s management team are staying on. Orion provides natural gas gathering, treating and compression services for production, also primarily from the Haynesville and Cotton Valley formations in Western Panola and Eastern Rusk Counties.
Elevate now owns and operates more than 180 miles of active pipelines, 19,000 horsepower of compression, a gas processing plant and related dehydration and natural gas liquids stabilization equipment.
Joel Fry led the deal from Dallas-based Tailwater, which backed Elevate last year with an equity commitment of up to $100 million.
CAPITAL MARKETS ACTIVITY
Latham advises managers on Helmerich’s $500M exchange offer
Latham & Watkins said Nov. 21 that it advised the dealer managers on Helmerich & Payne Inc.’s $500 million exchange offer and consent solicitation.
Houston partner David Miller led the deal team with associates Eric Schoppe, A.J. Million, Drew Tengler-West and Jordan Mack.
Baker Botts represented Helmerich & Payne, including partners David Emmons, Jeremy Moore and Rachael Lichman.
The Tulsa company will exchange up to $500 million of new 4.65 percent senior notes due 2025 with registration rights and cash for any and all outstanding 4.65 percent senior notes due 2025 issued by unit Helmerich & Payne International Drilling Co.
Founded in 1920, Helmerich & Payne designs, fabricates and operates drilling rigs in conventional and unconventional plays around the world. It also develops and implements advanced automation, directional drilling and survey management technologies.
Its assets include 350 land rigs in the U.S., 32 international land rigs and eight offshore platform rigs.
UPDATE:
HuntonAK represented FourPoint on JV earlier in the year
Hunton Andrews Kurth announced Nov. 20 that it represented FourPoint Energy on its formation of DoublePoint Energy in June with Double Eagle Energy Holdings III. Terms weren’t disclosed.
The HuntonAK team included Mike O’Leary, Courtney Cochran Butler, Ashley Muehlberger, Allison Mantor and Erin Juvenal.
As The Lawbook previously reported, Vinson & Elkins advised Double Eagle Energy on the venture.
FourPoint is sponsored by Quantum Energy Partners and GSO Capital Partners with a $525 million commitment. Double Eagle III has $1 billion in backing from funds managed by affiliates of Apollo Global Management, Magnetar Capital and management.