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The Texas Lawbook

Free Speech, Due Process and Trial by Jury

  • Appellate
  • Bankruptcy
  • Commercial Litigation
  • Corp. Deal Tracker/M&A
  • GCs/Corp. Legal Depts.
  • Firm Management
  • White-Collar/Regulatory
  • Pro Bono/Public Service/D&I

CDT Roundup: 13 Deals, 10 Law Firms, 90 Texas Lawyers, $13.5B

April 22, 2019 Claire Poole

As The Texas Lawbook has observed, capital markets activity has been moribund so far this year, especially in the energy industry. Last week, Drillinginfo confirmed it with its latest capital markets review.

The Austin data analytics provider said there was $22 billion worth of debt and equity raised in the first quarter. While that’s up 9% over the fourth quarter, it’s down 45% year-over-year.

After coming to a stop in the fourth quarter, equity deals amounted to $505 million in the first quarter through the initial public offerings of New Fortress Energy and Tortoise Acquisition Corp., Drillinginfo noted. But overall, equity issues were still down 70% over the fourth quarter and 81% over the same quarter last year, with Brigham Minerals the only company to file an S-1 in the quarter.

Christopher George, director of Drillinginfo’s securities, credit and private equity database Capitalize, said in a statement that Wall Street has forced financial discipline onto oil and gas companies and seeks return of capital, dividends and share buybacks as evidence. 

“Until the sector demonstrates this behavior across the board, the spout of equity capital is being choked off,” he said. “The first quarter represents the least amount raised from the fewest deals in any quarter this decade.”

Bond issues, meanwhile, fell 28% over the fourth quarter and 38% year-over-year to $21 billion. The average deal size decreased from $772 million in the fourth quarter to $691 million in the first. Investment grade issuers dominated the activity, selling 75% of the bonds floated or 13 out of 17 issues.

On the private equity front, midstream deals dominated the activity with 44% of the new management teams backed during the quarter – which is on pace to surpass the high of 32 new teams in 2017.

“This should come as no surprise given the successful midstream fund closures in 2018,” George said. If last year’s fund closures are a harbinger, he added, then the industry should expect to see a strong year for oilfield services-focused private equity as well.

Among Texas lawyers, there was a fair amount of dealmaking this past week but mostly outside of the energy spectrum. There were 13 deals valued at $13.5 billion, versus 16 transactions worth $38.9 billion the previous week – thanks to Chevron’s $33 billion acquisition of Anadarko Petroleum – and 9 deals valued at $1.8 billion during the same week last year. 

Weekly Corporate Deal Tracker Roundup Stats

A compilation of weekly stats from The Lawbook's CDT Weekly Roundup
(Deal Values in Millions)

Week Ending
Deal CountAmountFirmsLawyersM&A CountM&A Value $MCapM Count
CapM Value $M
03-May-202511$4,249139011$2,226.52$2,022.5
26-Apr-202512$8,78791689$6,0113$2,776
19-Apr-202511$8,09771389$7,9852$112
12-Apr-202513$2,392815210$2,0653$327
05-Apr-202519$27,7621518816$25,4733$2,289
29-Mar-202521$8,1881025816$4,1255$4,064
22-Mar-202519$6,4851423115$4,1284$2,857
15-Mar-202513$13,7371315110$9,9324$3,805
8-Mar-20257$2,2345665$2242$2,100
1-Mar-202511$3,05087510$2,5501$500
24-Feb-2512$16,39771496$6,6356$9,862
17-Feb-2517$12,1361313410$9,4112$2,725
10-Feb-2514$7,15491799$4,9505$2,204
3-Feb-2516 $10,068720011$7,5535$2,515
25-Jan-2514$10,261101259$2,2075$8,054
18-Jan-2519$7,3821531612$2,3007$5,082
11-Jan-2521$33,5601618716$32,5215$1,039
4-Jan-259$6,8279809$6,82700
21-Dec-2411$2,79811928$2,2293$570
14-Dec-2415$5,3231218612$3,8123$1,511
07-Dec-2416$4,7661023111$2,32152,445
30-Nov-2410$10,29191034$8,2906$2.001
23-Nov-2415$4,5531515311$3,3794$1,174
16-Nov-2417$11,4881124513$10,1864$1,303
09-Nov-2414$2,1101213912$1,4102$700
02-Nov-2412 $52,788 1110711$52,7381$50
26-Oct-248$3,1608657$3,0651$75
19-Oct-2412$5,3041113611$4,5541$750
12-Oct-2417$8,4381215015$8,1162$322
05-Oct-2422$23,1811218915$19,9807$3,201
28-Sep-2411$2,35671447$534$2,303
21-Sep-2412$9,568101695$4,1017$5,467
14-Sep-2424$10,9881223516$7,1758$3,813
7-Sep-2412$20,4201616811$20,3071$112.9
31-Aug-2413$20,631913412$14,7751$5,856
24-Aug-2419$8,4522132516$7,1023$1,350
17-Aug-2425$49,1961630411$39,38614$9,810
10-Aug-2420$12,2641531216$9,7944$2,470
03-Aug-2426$16,4981633418$8,1378$8,361
27-Jul-2419$16,4422127115$13,8384$2,604
20-Jul-2415$16,0161418410$14,2325$1,784
13-Jul-2420$17,220 1426518$7,146 2$10,074
6-Jul-2411$3,941 11958$2,650 3$1,291
29-Jun-2414$6,296 152248$6,296 6$1,927
22-Jun-2412$5,679 81375$210 7$5,469
15-Jun-2413$9,895 1621410$5,280 3$4,615
8-Jun-2419$23,859 1323912$19,436 7$4,423
1-Jun-2412$34,510 111479$26,110 3$8,400
25-May-2413$9,684 1517110$4,434 3$5,250
18-May-2411$5,490 111738$3,129 3$2,361
11-May-2422$14,855 1422716$11,105 6$3,750
4-May-2413$3,139 98710$1,297 3$1,842
27-Apr-2410$6,684 62810$6,684 00
20-Apr-2419$15,989 111479$5,208 10$10,781
13-Apr-2413$8,952 97610$1,652 3$7,300
6-Apr-2423$26,616 1422214$13,501 8$13,116
30-Mar-2412$9,286 81368$4,299 4$4,987
23-Mar-2418$5,451 1726616$4,759 2$692
16-Mar-2421$11,437 1318614$9,316 6$2,070
9-Mar-2423$4,695 2121819$2,723 4$1,972
2-Mar-2420$9,108 1937214$4,558 6$4,550
24-Feb-2419$16,382 1224815$9,507 4$6,875
17-Feb-2416$29,932 1515712$29,216 4$716
10-Feb-2425$10,750 1719619$5,372 6$5,379
3-Feb-2412$8,416 181259$3,416 3$5,000
27-Jan-249$8,165 9878$7,815 1$800
20-Jan-2414$4,084 1210912$3,219 2$865
13-Jan-2417$33,588 1225612$26,765 5$6,823
6-Jan-248$7,915 8846$7,265 2$650
30-Dec-2317$14,599 129915$2,714 2$11,885
23-Dec-2323$4,182 1321916$1,813 7$2,370
16-Dec-2313$16,436 132807$15,150 5$1,286
9-Dec-2326$14,633.90 1724416$8,095 10$6,538.90
2-Dec-2313$6,720 95712$6,630 1$90
25-Nov-239$4,835 91316$1,785 3$3,050
18-Nov-2322$6,568.70 1718414$4,709.20 8$1,859.50
11-Nov-2315$9,825 1317912$6,581 3$3,244
4-Nov-2315$20,582.50 1419312$19,417.50 3$1,165
28-Oct-2318$68,419.10 1815215$66,646 3$1,773.10
21-Oct-2316$6,755.90 1616515$6,755.90 1$3
14-Oct-2314$67,851.20 131259$61,998.50 5$5,852.70
7-Oct-2317$6,595.50 1322816$5,995.50 1$600
30-Sep-2317$1,896.45 1318914$806.45 3$1,090
23-Sep-2323$6,432.70 1723016$1,402.80 7$5,029.90
16-Sep-2325$23,226.70 2335316$17,239 9$5,987.70
9-Sep-2312$6,369 81027$4,311 5$2,058
2-Sep-2314$2,522 69213$1,322 1$1,200
26-Aug-2317$12,160.25 1320215$6,573.25 2$5,587.00
19-Aug-2319$11,505 1321315$11,255 4$250
12-Aug-2319$9,698.80 131847$3,270 12$6,428.80
5-Aug-2313$5,201 1211812$5,051 1$150
29-Jul-2315$21,031.60 1319611$18,292.00 4$2,739.60
22-Jul-2318$3,992 1213013$2,808 5$1,184
15-Jul-2313$8,254.95 138113$8,254.95 00
8-Jul-2316$5,441.45 1217211$2,443 5$2,998.45
1-Jul-2316$6,872 1010512$5,474 4$1,398
24-Jun-2313$10,914 1620110$7,874 3$3,040
17-Jun-2317$5,880.70 1515115$4,705.70 2$1,175
10-Jun-2319$8,516.10 1311116$6,252.40 3$2,263.70
June 3 202312$6,104.42 121388$4,256.92 4$1,847.50
27-May-2317$12,200 106711$6,165 6$6,035
20-May-2311$22,458.10 81034$19,455 7$3,003
13-May-2312$7,034 101018$5,460 4$1,574
6-May-2320$3,297.60 1819617$2,985.60 3$312
29-Apr-2323$3,691.20 1813517$1,969.70 6$1,721.50
22-Apr-2316$5,570 1410414$4,750 2$1,000
15-Apr-2312$23,818.10 95910$21,618.10 2$2,200
8-Apr-2316$7,949 91739$5,472 7$3,477
1-Apr-2321$18,676.70 1217511$10,926.70 10$7,750
25-Mar-2315$8,779.50 101415$2,362 10$6,416.50
18-Mar-237$14,048.80 6695$13,345 2$703.80
11-Mar-2321$11,576 1616516$8,131 5$3,445
4-Mar-2320$9,668 1122816$8,209 4$1,459
25-Feb-2313$5,335 1313012$4,235 1$1,200
18-Feb-2314$5,743.70 131588$898.70 6$4,845
11-Feb-2316$12,088 1213712$9,965 4$2,123
4-Feb-2317$8,066 1514013$5,614 4$2,452
28-Jan-237$2,180 7755$1,692.75 2$488
21-Jan-2317$5,768 1617412$1,918 5$3,850
14-Jan-2311$2, 800101028$421 3$2,400
7-Jan-2318$8,296 1116714$6,461 3$1,835
31-Dec-2214$2,732 119912$2,092 2$640
17-Dec14$7,919 1311512$7,419 1$500
10-Dec-2214$10,093 128811$7,093 3$3,000
3-Dec-2226$12,800.90 1117220$4,141 6$8,659.90
26-Nov-228$2,266.70 853$76 5$2,190.70
19-Nov-2221$2,886 1521219$2,550 2$336
12-Nov-2213$15,093.70 9819$14,200 4$893.70
5-Nov-222519,337.201650922$8,267.20 3$11,070
29-Oct-2215$7,805.30 911614$7,180.30 1$625
22-Oct-2220$8,193.50 1325313$5,442 7$2,751.50
15-Oct-229$3,046.10 91397$2,588.30 2$457.80
8-Oct-2219$2,011.80 1211416$833.80 3$1,178
1-Oct-2223$5,532.90 1615618$4,952.30 5$580.60
24-Sep-2218$5,194 1421615$4,050 3$1,144
17-Sep-2221$8,352.30 1232015$4,759.60 6$3,592.70
10-Sep-2215$19,853.50 1012613$19,403.60 2$450
3-Sep-229$2,312 9629$2,312 00
27-Aug-2216$30,891.70 1013515$30,666.40 1227.7
20-Aug-2212$1,977 815299253$1,052
13-Aug-2218$8,004.70 1124211$2,844.70 7$5,160
6-Aug-2224$7,948.90 1224017$3,577 7$4,371.90
30-Jul-228$6,941 9787$6,839 1$102
23-Jul-2211$801 119210$801 10
16-Jul-2214$3,650 1012214$3,650 00
9-Jul-2210$3,557.70 7689$3,557.70 10
2-Jul-2218$8,609.40 1315215$2,754.40 3$5,855
25-Jun-2215$6,142 131469$2,017 6$4,125
18-Jun-2217$11,890.10 1422815$11,410 2479.7
11-Jun-2217$7,600 1212310$2,300 7$5,300
4-Jun-2212$2,937 101279$692 3$2,245
28-May-229$3,197.60 11869$3,197.60 00
21-May-2214$7,284.50 1218511$6,609 3$675.50
14-May-2211$306.60 98010$306.60 1$225
7-May-2216$10,451.75 1210812$1,827 4$8,624.75
30-Apr-2216$2,296.50 1615712$895.50 4$1,401
23-Apr-2210$2,241 11588$1,641 2$600
16-Apr-2211$6,643 71568$2,359 3$4,284
9-Apr-2217$4,429 1418411$1,690 6$2,739
2-Apr-2213$1,755 88410$1,145 3$610
26-Mar-2211$3,205 8656$200 5$3,005
19-Mar-2213$2,239.17 910613$2,239.17 00
12-Mar-2218$12,016 1123915$11,965 2$51.35
5-Mar-2217$6,786 1313713$5,161 4$1,625
26-Feb-2212$5,095 81499$4,437.50 3$658
19-Feb-2217$22,229 1717414$21,354 3$875
12-Feb-2212$2,344.70 10738$641.70 4$1,703
5-Feb-2211$2,503 89911$2,503 00
29-Jan-2211$3,872 1210112$3,872 00
22-Jan-2213$5,143.50 109912$4,842.50 1$301
15-Jan-2212$7,605 91559$6,480 3$1,025
8-Jan-2213$8,256.20 1110213$8,256.20 00
1-Jan-229$1,273.80 6509$1,273.80 00
25-Dec-2121$4,734.75 1117616$3,410 5$1,324.75
18-Dec-2126$7,325.20 1519318$3,640.20 8$3,685.20
11-Dec-2116$5,017 1010913$1,417 3$3,600
4-Dec-2114$2,310 8868$2,310 6$1,882.05
27-Nov-219$3.460.1101016$1,758 3$1,702.60
20-Nov-2120$22,792 1515712$18,864.50 8$3,928
13-Nov-2121$26,729 1217813$11,822 8$14,907
6-Nov-2112$8,303 1315710$6,682 3$1,621
30-Oct-2121$10,368 1521815$9,24.46$1,103.00
23-Oct-2121$18.783.11522211$12,314 10$6,468.60
16-Oct-2115$3,868 1111815$2,293 2$1,575
9-Oct-2120$8,610 1617516$7,795 4$815
2-Oct-2114$6,250 1113710$5,200 4$1,050
25-Sep-2111$11,460 9937$10,200 4$1,250
18-Sep-2111$16,603 8998$15,084 3$1,519
11-Sep-2117$10,653 1110313$8,503 4$2,150
4-Sep-2113$7,222 108911$6,715 2$507
28-Aug-2112$763 96311$663 1$100
21-Aug-2112$29,659 77911$29,579 1$80
14-Aug-2122$17,845 1119912$12,805 10$5,04
7-Aug-2117$13,670 1213915$11,766 2$1,904
31-Jul-2121$8,160 1113410$3,574 10$4,586
July 24,202121$6,367 1113915$3,712 6$2,655
17-Jul-2114$4,009 1112412$2,015 2$1,994
10-Jul-2116$3,997 1314311$1,597 4$2,4
3-Jul-2124$7,492 139416$3,769 8$3,722
26-Jun-2110$4,995 7858$3,847 2$1,148
19-Jun-2128$16,830 82289$1,861 19$14,968
12-Jun-2126$27,238 1520919$25,602 7$1,636
5-Jun-2115$15,539 1310013$14,709 2$600
29-May-2135$20,279 1114528$18,647$1,639
22-May-2124$53,208 1417417$51,047 7$2,161
15-May-2118$10,620 1322011$5,870 7$4,809
8-May-2117$10,400 1115615$8,386 2$2,500
1-May-2121$7,200 1611512$3,808 9$3,392
24-Apr-218$20,200 9318$20,200 00
17-Apr-2114$6,270 810211$40,180 3$2,260
10-Apr-2115$8,940 1312914$7,990 1$950
3-Apr-2118$19,513 1015112$16,923 6$2,590
27-Mar-2127$13,942 1524414$4,300 13$9,633.50
20-Mar-2111$2,046 41023$270 8$1,776
13-Mar-2115$3,270 91096$538 9$2,732
6-Mar-2124$13,617 1019613$10,395 11$3,222
27-Feb-2119$8,105 1213915$4,970 4$3,135
20-Feb-219$8,820 91538$8,520 1$300
13-Feb-2112$4,852.60 78172,7665$2,086.60
6-Feb-2118$9,752 1315314$5,222 4$4,530
30-Jan-2118$9,449 918215$8,753.80 3$695.30
23-Jan-2114$8,150 81186$4,000 8$4,150
16-Jan-2117$6,783 1313811$2,400 6$4,382.90
9-Jan-2122$6,829 1413518$3,139.30 4$3,690
2-Jan-217$1,466 7607$1,466 00
26-Dec-2018$15,900 1216316$5,300 1$600
19-Dec-2018$9,769 1411014$8,426 4$1,343
12-Dec-2010$7,200 91009$3,325 1$3,830
5-Dec-2015$4,261 91229$2,780 6$1,481
28-Nov-2019$7,758 1011013$4,003 6$3,755
14-Nov-2014$864.10 1415712$289.10 2$575
7-Nov-2013$6,332 91299$2,483.50 4$3,849
31-Oct-2010$3,995.80 81036$3,231.10 4$754.70
24-Oct-206$18,100 6585$17,709 1$350
17-Oct-208$351.90 5558$351.90 00
10-Oct-207$5,229 3504$735 3$4,494
3-Oct-2014$21,428 91739$17,535 5$3,893
26-Sep-2010$12,770 8935$10,300 5$2,470
19-Sep-2014$8,365 91016$1,020 8$7,345
12-Sep-206$4,406 8593$1,270 3$3,136
5-Sep-2011$5,191 81179$4,061 2$1,130
29-Aug-2011$2,531 9945$1,130 6$1,401
22-Aug-2018$6,574 121407$1,930 11$4,644
15-Aug-2013$4,991 10977$1,216 6$3,775
8-Aug-2012$32,092 111129$30,457 3$1,635
1-Aug-207$5,287 8765$3,687 2$1,600
25-Jul-209$18,751 6677$18,403 2$348
18-Jul-206$1,982.50 5504$1,407.50 2$575
11-Jul-2011$565.10 127510$65.10 1$500
4-Jul-2010$8,889 8989$8,788 1$100.30
27-Jun-208$6,874 10505$4,972.50 3$2,081.50
20-Jun-2012$4,444 91157$2,829 5$1,615
13-Jun-206$3,582 4372$350 4$3,232
6-Jun-2011$3,213.70 8657$470 4$2,743.70
30-May-208$7,335 7486$4,639 2$2,697
23-May-204$432.40 4343$432.40 10
16-May-206$310 6345$310 10
9-May-2018$5,630 1612414$3,180 4$2,450
2-May-201510,40010908$1,900 7$,8,500
25-Apr-208$3,400 9365$1,000 3$2,450
18-Apr-2019$9,500 14928$185.70 11$9,360
11-Apr-2012$6,000 9405$190 7$5,800
4-Apr-2014$8,200 116810$2,200 4$6,000
28-Mar-2016$6,500 139610$3,700 6$2,800
21-Mar-2011$11,910 7337$2,250 4$9,960
14-Mar-207809.86346684.81125
7-Mar-2016$2,500 157013$669 3$1,400
29-Feb-2013$15,260 1312811$11,760 2$3,500
22-Feb-2012$3,700 109210$2,560 2$1,130
15-Feb-2016$1,250 108412$35 4$1,222
8-Feb-2018$6,080 1412314$2,595 4$3,485
1-Feb-2021$20,900 1210114$17,860 7$3,060
25-Jan-2013$7,430 136212$6,430 1$1,000
18-Jan-2023$9,580 1512019$6,580 4$3,000
11-Jan-2021$14,200 1819916$1,020 5$13,200
4-Jan-2022$6,400 1111916$3,204 6$3,245
28-Dec-1922$7,150 1917518$6,800 4$327.40
14-Dec-1924$36,300 2316719$9,500 5$26,800
7-Dec-1911$10,400 11557$1,082 4$9,370
November 30. 201914$2,450 1212612$1,760 2$692.50
23-Nov-1916$1,995 104111$615 5$1,380
16-Nov-1915$3,820 1313511$2,500 4$1,271
9-Nov-1925$12,900 1718223$12,200 2$575
2-Nov-1910$2,470 126192,4503$22
26-Oct-1912$5,560 147011$3,860 1$1,700
19-Oct-198$6,600 81388$6,600 00
12-Oct-1919$4,300 145516$3,800 3$500
5-Oct-1918$14,500 1916615$11,100 3$3,400
28-Sep-1919$8,100 1813218$7,560 1$550
21-Sep-1914$6,300 166611$2,160 3$4,170
14-Sep-1915$23,800 125611$21,250 4$2,570
7-Sep-1917$3,500 159814$1,900 3$1,600
31-Aug-195$8,700 6505$8,700 00
24-Aug-1916$10,000 148215$4,250 1$5,750
16-Aug-1910$1,680 5527$650 3$950
9-Aug-1917$17,700 156814$3,900 3$13,800
2-Aug-1913$5,760 1210813$5,760 NANA
27-Jul-1911$7,300 13768$6,570 3$730
20-Jul-1913$11,800 1312511$5,300 2$6,500
13-Jul-1910$775 7468$542.50 2$233
6-Jul-197$2,500 9857$2,500 00
29-Jun-1923$8,290 1515417$2,300 6$5,970
22-Jun-1917$10,700 1013914$7,700 3$3,000
15-Jun-1911$13,500 1416011$13,500 NANA
8-Jun-1913$2,870 175511$1,570 2$1,300
1-Jun-1910$4,460 11608$4,140 2$315
25-May-1917$4,360 147914$3,700 3$612
18-May-1922$9,000 1715016$3,400 6$5,600
11-May-1918$19,800 1717715$18,300 3$1,500
4-May-1910$7,075 6328$6,900 2$175
27-Apr-1915$3,200 1411714$3,160 1$40
20-Apr-1913$13,500 10909$12,200 4$1,300
13-Apr-1916$38,900 149114$37,800 2$1,100
6-Apr-1912$6,870 119410$6,730 2$50
30-Mar-1915$6,470 128410$7,91.55$5,677
23-Mar-1918$6,450 149114$5,042 4$1,408
16-Mar-1914$10,180 1211511$8,800 3$1,300
9-Mar-199$1,800 6498$1,300 1$500
2-Mar-1920$3,033 1610714$1,817 6$1,262
23-Feb-1912$2,040 8699$614.60 3$1,430
16-Feb-1916$9,970 187716$9,970 00
9-Feb-1914$6,400 1011014$6,400 00
2-Feb-1918$6,740 159916$5,720 2$950
26-Jan-1913$2,770 116711$918.95 2$1,850
19-Jan-1915$3,819 167612$2,594 3$1,225
12-Jan-1918$7,283 149215$1,683 3$5,600
5-Jan-1910$529 125010$529 00
22-Dec-1817$2,570 138714$941 3$1,629
15-Dec-1810$2,860 8268$264 2$2,600
8-Dec-1815$1,819 166512$552 3$1,267
1-Dec-1812$7,500 10909$1,200 3$6,200
28-Nov-1815$4,500 1110714$4,000 1$500
19-Nov-1818$6,137 139813$2,142 5$3,995
14-Nov-1818$9,200 1315215$8,500 3$694
6-Nov-1816$17,300 1618314$16,361 2$950
29-Oct-1814$14,400 1812717$13,800 1$600
24-Oct-1813$6,140 1312611$5,122 2$1,018
17-Oct-1818$18,390 1512514$12,292 4$6,098
10-Oct-1829$3,149 1810420$1,647 9$819
2-Oct-1818$9,300 116714$7,300 4$2,000
25-Sep-1813$7,000 117510$6,000 3$995
18-Sep-189$3,570 7449$3,570 00
11-Sep-1813$5,900 1013213$5,900 00
7-Sep-1814$5,000 158611$4,000 3$1,000
29-Aug-1815$20,700 147913$4,700 2$16,000
20-Aug-1810$12,400 11538$11,380 3$1,057
14-Aug-1812$19,900 121329$18,889 3$1,011
7-Aug-1816$68,600 1110613$67,259 3$1,340
31-Jul-1815$15,100 159511$13,060 4$2,060
23-Jul-1813$2,130 156010$1,804 3$1,100
17-Jul-1814$5,370 17989$4,310 5$1,100
9-Jul-1816$11,200 157410$11,080 6$862
3-Jul-1813$7,000 78112$6,330 1$750
25-Jun-1815$8,800 13979$4,970 6$3,930
18-Jun-1813$14,200 14807$221 6$14,290
11-Jun-1812$6,300 8968$5,910 4$803
6-Jun-1813$14,500 10888$14,154 5$579
31-May-1811$4,890 10638$3,240 3$1,790
22-May-1815$20,400 11639$19,808 6$885
15-May-1815$4,700 1510610$3,900 5$643
9-May-1811$1,400 13889$1,300 2$560
1-May-188$14,250 7887$13,400 1$450
24-Apr-1812$5,300 66111$4,470 1$800
17-Apr-189$1,800 10447$2,330 2$1,434
11-Apr-1811$2,500 8326$1,690 5$809
3-Apr-1815$13,400 111219$12,020 6$1,090
28-Mar-1810$4,000 10927$3,870 3$215
19-Mar-1817$5,800 135110$590 7$5,165
12-Mar-1815$3,130 114311$2,360 4$788
6-Mar-1819$5,400 1311610$1,530 9$4,860
27-Feb-1820$6,600 136914$5,530 6$1,030
19-Feb-1815$5,500 1411110$3,990 6$1,980
12-Feb-1823$10,900 1715712$7,110 11$3,840
5-Feb-1816$8,600 131007$1,330 9$7,800
30-Jan-1811$12,600 11685$7,300 6$4,982
24-Jan-1819$9,400 151295$2,010 14$7,337
18-Jan-1810$6,280 8492$2,100 8$4,188
9-Jan-1812$16,500 12929$15,890 3$475
3-Jan-1810$2,500 9478$2,350 2$150
27-Dec-1715$9,000 151139$7,568 6$1,784
18-Dec-1715$13,800 161649$13,010 7$1,118
11-Dec-1714$9,700 1012612$2,940 4$8,500
4-Dec-176$1,800 6315$1,510 1$300
28-Nov-177$3,850 8764$3,260 3$285
16-Nov-1710$2,700 10486$1,840 4$856
8-Nov-1715$2,380 179110$1,860 5$516
1-Nov-1712$4,700 17949$3,400 4$1,300
23-Oct-1715$10,500 106710$9,780 4$1,530
18-Oct-176$2,000 373$225 3$1,820
10-Oct-1712$6,570 1009$3,880 3$3,360
2-Oct-178$3,100 11193$1,630 5$1,750
25-Sep-178$4,880 8795$2,660 5$2,070
18-Sep-179$4,770 3$300 6$4,470
12-Sep-1711$4,430 8$2,030 3$2,400
1-Sep-174$1,310 3$317 1$1,000
23-Aug-1711$13,640 98$11,840 3$1,800

There were nine M&A/private equity/venture capital deals worth $12.2 billion and four capital markets transactions valued at $1.3 billion. Ten law firms and 90 Texas attorneys were involved in all of the action.

M&A/PRIVATE EQUITY/VENTURE CAPITAL DEALS

Simpson aids Waste Management on $4.9B Advanced Disposal purchase

Lawyers from Simpson Thacher & Bartlett’s Houston office represented North America’s biggest trash hauler, Waste Management Inc., on its purchase of Advanced Disposal Services Inc. for $33.15 per share, or $4.9 billion, the company’s largest acquisition in its history.

The team was led in part by Houston partner Chris May and included associates Jacqui N. Bogucki, Nathaniel K. Bascom and Justin Thekkekara. Capital markets partner Brian E. Rosenzweig and associate Brian Mathes pitched in.

Vedder Price also provided legal advice to Houston-based Waste Management, which used Centerview Partners as its financial advisor.  Shearman & Sterling and Mayer Brown counseled Advanced Disposal, which tapped UBS Investment Bank as its financial advisor.

Waste Management’s in-house team was led by John Tsai, the company’s general counsel for corporate and transactions. Other members were chief legal officer Charles (Chuck) Boetther, general counsel for environmental law and policy Chris Ball, senior director of tax legal services Chris Craig, senior legal counsel for M&A Kristen Ford, general counsel for litigation Ashley Harper, general counsel for employment and benefits Kim Stith, general counsel for securities and governance Courtney Tippy and senior legal counsel for employment and benefits Jared Whalen.

Before joining the company in 2017, Boettcher was executive VP, CFO and general counsel of Dallas-based Oilfield Water Logistics, a water gathering, transportation and disposal company backed by private equity firm Natural Gas Partners. 

The Texas Tech-educated lawyer previously was senior VP, general counsel, chief compliance officer and corporate secretary of Houston-based Eagle Rock Energy Partners for eight years and a partner at Thompson & Knight in Dallas for almost eight years.

The acquisition will expand Waste Management’s footprint and allow Advanced Disposal customers access to other waste management and recycling services. 

The parties expect to close the transaction by the first quarter of 2020 if it clears regulators and a majority of the holders of Advanced Disposal’s outstanding common shares.

Waste Management said it provides comprehensive waste management environmental services, including collection, transfer and disposal services and recycling and resource recovery. It’s also a developer, operator and owner of landfill gas-to-energy facilities in the U.S.

The industry has been consolidating over the last 10 years or so, with Oppenheimer reporting that nearly one-fifth of the sector consists of private companies with annual sales of less than $100 million.

EIG’s Chrysaor pays $2.67B for ConocoPhillips’ North Sea business

ConocoPhillips said April 18 that it sold its oil and gas exploration and production business in the U.K. part of the North Sea to Harbour Energy-backed Chrysaor for $2.675 billion.

The deal is the largest transaction in the E&P industry this year outside of the U.S., according to Jefferies, which was Chrysaor’s financial advisor.

Clifford Chance advised Chrysaor with lawyers out of London. A ConocoPhillips spokesman wouldn’t provide in-house or outside legal or financial advisors on the deal, but a source said Joe Farrell, manager of legal at ConocoPhillips, and CMS corporate partner Frank Fowlie represented the company, both out of Aberdeen.

Kelly Rose is general counsel of Houston-based ConocoPhillips, which she joined last year after a 27-year career at Baker Botts.

Chrysaor, which is led by CEO Phil Kirk, claims the acquisition will make it one of the largest net oil and gas producers in the U.K. North Sea and accelerates its strategy to become one of Europe’s leading independent, full cycle exploration and production companies. 

The buyer is already one of the biggest operators in the North Sea after acquiring assets from Royal Dutch Shell in 2017 for $3.8 billion. The ConocoPhillips assets produced 72,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day last year.

The parties expect to close the deal in the fourth quarter. Chrysaor plans to fund the acquisition from existing cash and an upsized $3 billion reserve-based lending debt facility.

Harbour Energy is a permanent capital energy investment company managed by EIG Global Energy Partners. 

ConocoPhillips CEO Lance Ryan said in a statement that the sale is part of the company’s ongoing effort to hone its portfolio and focus its investments across “future low cost-of-supply” opportunities. 

The sale is thought to be the company’s last divestiture as part of its portfolio restructuring. It sold $1.1 billion in assets last year.

The company is keeping its commercial trading business in London and 40% interest in the Teesside oil terminal, which it operates. The terminal receives oil and gas from North Sea fields.

BMO Capital Markets also advised Chrysaor on the deal, according to Reuters. Other bidders were thought to include British billionaire Jim Ratcliffe’s energy and chemicals company Ineos and energy-focused private equity group HitecVision.

S&P Global previously noted the steady departure of U.S. companies from the North Sea, a process that hasn’t been easy. It noted Chevron trying to sell most of its U.K. portfolio since at least last summer. Israel’s Delek via its North Sea unit Ithaca Energy is a front-runner for the portfolio, Reuters reported, citing industry sources.

Marathon Oil sold its U.K. business to RockRose Energy plc in February for about $140 million to focus on its higher-return U.S. business.

Baker Botts aids Liberty Expedia on $2.6B sale to Expedia Group

Baker Botts said April 16, it counseled Liberty Expedia Holdings Inc. on its sale to Expedia Group Inc. for $2.6 billion in stock.

The team included corporate partner Samantha Crispin in Dallas, tax partner Jon Lobb in Houston, employee benefits partner Rob Fowler and associate Gabriela Alvarez, both of Houston, and finance associates Sarah Christian and Grace Matthews, both of Austin.

Baker Botts has represented Liberty Expedia since in its split-off from Qurate Retail Inc. in 2016.

Liberty Expedia’s principal asset is 23.9 million shares of Expedia Group, including 11.1 million shares of common stock and 12.8 million shares of class B common stock.

Liberty Expedia shareholders will receive 0.36 of a share of Expedia Group common stock for each of their shares of either stock.

The parties expect to close the deal this summer if it clears regulators and Liberty Expedia stockholders.

The deal is part of a plan by media moguls Barry Diller and John Malone to simplify the online travel company’s corporate structure. Diller will end up with 29% voting power at Expedia, which will retire 3.1 million shares as a result of the transaction. 

Expedia is buying Liberty Expedia for a roughly 3% discount to its net asset value, which consists of the Expedia stake and about $300 million of net debt. 

The two disclosed in February that Expedia made a proposal to buy Liberty Expedia and that Liberty Expedia made a counter offer. Evercore/ISI analyst James Ratcliffe said in a note that the companies are “splitting the difference” between the two offers.

“Following this transaction, Expedia will no longer have a controlling shareholder, removing a modest overhang, while LEXEA [Liberty Expedia] holders will get liquidity and Expedia Chairman Barry Diller gets a 29% voting stake in Expedia that would not revert to Liberty in the event of Diller’s death,” he wrote.

Expedia CEO Mark Okerstrom said in a statement that the transaction simplifies and improves the company’s corporate and governance structure and effects a “meaningful reduction” in its share count.

AT&T sells stake back to Hulu for $1.43B

Dallas-based AT&T said April 15 it’s selling its 9.5% stake in Hulu back to the streaming video service for $1.43 billion, giving Hulu a $15 billion valuation.

Sullivan & Cromwell was AT&T’s outside counsel with an attorney in Los Angeles.

AT&T’s in-house counsel on the deal included general attorney David Welsch and senior VP and assistant general counsel Brant Wischnewsky. 

David McAtee is AT&T’s general counsel, having joined the company in 2012 as assistant general counsel. Before that he was a partner at Haynes and Boone and administrative partner of its Dallas office. The UT Law graduate previously was senior law clerk to U.S. District Judge Jerry Buchmeyer, then chief judge of the Northern District of Texas.

AT&T picked up the Hulu interest through its purchase of Time Warner. It expects to use the proceeds to pay down that deal’s related debt. The company is planning its own streaming service.

Husch Blackwell, Baker Botts aid on Austin Energy’s $460M plant purchase from Southern

City-owned Austin Energy agreed to buy the Nacogdoches Generating Facility, a wood waste biomass-fueled power plant in East Texas, from a unit of Southern Co. for $460 million. 

Husch Blackwell counseled Austin Energy with a team led out of Kansas City, Missouri, that included Austin associates Jessica Morgan and Brian Pullin. JP Morgan was Austin Energy’s financial advisor.

Baker Botts counseled Southern, including partner Jonathan Bobinger in Houston and associates Allison Lancaster, Brian Garrott and Grace Matthews in Austin. Others were employment benefits special counsel Chris Pratt in Houston, real estate special counsel Joel Overton in Dallas and environmental partner Eileen Hooks in Austin.

The 115-megawatt plant, which began commercial operation in 2012, provides 100 megawatts of renewable power to Austin Energy under a 20-year power purchase agreement. 

The parties expect to close the transaction in mid-2019, allowing Austin Energy to avoid $275 million in additional costs over the remaining term of the agreement.

Austin Energy general manager Jackie Sargent said acquiring the biomass plant relieves its obligation to make escalating capacity payments to a third party and, over time, reduces the associated cost impacts to its customers.

“This transaction is consistent with our efforts to manage our portfolio of generation resources in a responsible and cost-effective manner,” she said.

Austin Energy has a target of offsetting 65% of its customers’ energy needs with renewable resources by 2027. In 2018, wind, solar and biomass energy offset 38% of the energy needed to serve Austin Energy’s customers.

Shearman, Gibson Dunn aid on Frontier’s $132M JV with Concho

Shearman & Sterling said April 15 it advised Energy Spectrum Capital-backed Frontier Midstream Solutions IV on its midstream joint venture with Concho Resources to create Beta Crude Connector, with Frontier serving as operator.

Partner Omar Samji and associate Monica Raspino led the deal team, which included partner Todd Lowther and associate Devon Yamauchi on tax. All are in the firm’s Houston office.

Concho Resources affiliate COG Operating LLC was represented by a Gibson Dunn & Crutcher team led by Houston oil and gas partner Michael P. Darden.

Others in the group were oil and gas partner Justin Stolte, oil and gas associates Matt Savage and Jordan Silverman, corporate associate Danny Nordstrom and tax partner James Chenoweth, all of Houston.

Concho’s general counsel is Travis Counts, who previously was deputy general counsel at Halcón Resources Corp. and associate general counsel of corporate at Petrohawk Energy Corp. Before that he practiced at the Hinkle Elkouri Law Firm.

Beta Crude Connector will build, own and operate a crude oil gathering and transportation pipeline system in the Permian Basin. It’s expected to include more than 100 miles of pipe and have storage capacity of over 100,000 barrels.

Frontier has committed a minimum of $66 million in initial capital toward the joint venture, after which Frontier and Concho will each contribute capital on a 50/50 basis. 

Frontier is headquartered in Tulsa and focuses on providing midstream services and developing midstream oil and natural gas assets in the U.S.

President Jack Harper led the deal from Concho. Dave Presley is Frontier’s CEO.

Founded in 1995, Dallas-based Energy Spectrum Capital has raised $4.4 billion in equity capital across eight funds.

Egan Nelson represents Innovapptive on $16.3M in Tiger funding

Innovapptive said April 17 that it raised $16.3 million in series A funding from billionaire New York investor Julian Robertson’s Tiger Global Management.

Egan Nelson represented Houston-based Innovapptive, including partners José Ancer and Aaron Barker in Austin. Gunderson Dettmer represented Tiger out of San Francisco.

Innovapptive, which is led by CEO Sundeep Ravande, said it connects field workers with back office and company leaders to help customers minimize plant outages by reducing maintenance backlogs, thus improving inventory accuracy, workforce capacity and data accuracy.

The company plans to use the financing to fund its continued global expansion and for further investment in its platform. The funding brings the company’s valuation to more than $65 million.

Scott Shleifer led the deal from Tiger Global Management, which was founded in 2001. Its past investments have included Spotify, Harry’s, Warby Parker, Peloton, JD.com, Facebook, LinkedIn, Yandex, Mail.ru Group, Despegar, Ola and Flipkart.

V&E advises Vyze on sale to Mastercard 

Vinson & Elkins said April 18 it advised Austin-based Vyze on its sale to Mastercard.

Terms weren’t disclosed but Vyze said it had raised around $47 million in venture funding from investors, including Austin Ventures and Starvest Partners.

V&E partner Paul Tobias, counsel Wes Watts and associate Vaughn Miller led the deal.

Other Texas team members were partner Shane Tucker and associate Carolyn Exnicios on executive compensation/benefits; senior associate Allyson Seger on tax; partner Sean Becker and senior associate Christie Alcalá on labor/employment; and associate Ben Cukerbaum on intellectual property/technology.

Vyze connects merchants with lenders to offer customers credit options online and in stores through a point-of-sale technology platform.

Purchase, N.Y.-based Mastercard said consumers are increasingly seeking alternative financing options, leaving merchants and financial institutions with a need to deliver those services when customers check out.

In the U.S. alone, those solutions represent a more than $1.8 trillion opportunity, Mastercard said, citing Accenture.

Blake Rosenthal, Mastercard’s executive VP of global acceptance, said Vyze adds to the company’s ability to empower banks and other lending partners to participate in the growing trend of retail financing. “The combination of their platform with our technology and network complements our existing payments programs,” he said.

Vyze CEO Keith Nealon said that Mastercard’s relationships and scale will help it reach more partners and consumers.

Neiman Marcus acquires Fashionphile stake

Dallas-based luxury department store chain Neiman Marcus Group Ltd. said April 17 it agreed to acquire a minority stake in Fashionphile, a pre-owned e-commerce company focused on ultra-luxury handbags and accessories. Terms weren’t disclosed.

Neiman Marcus said it’s the first major luxury retailer to directly invest in the pre-owned segment, an attractive and fast-growing part of the business that’s projected to grow to $23 billion by 2023.

Kirkland & Ellis advised Neiman Marcus and Latham & Watkins advised Fashionphile, both with lawyers in California. DCS Advisory provided financial advice to Fashionphile.

Neiman’s in-house team included vice president and assistant general counsel Michael Sullivan and senior counsel Ryan Parley. 

Neiman’s general counsel is Tracy Preston, who has been with the company for six years. She previously was chief counsel of global human resources, litigation and global supply chain and chief compliance officer at Levi Strauss & Co. in the San Francisco area. 

The University of Virginia-educated lawyer also was in private practice at Orrick, Latham & Watkins, Sedgwick Detert Moran & Arnold and Baker McKenzie.

Neiman Marcus and Fashionphile plan to create an elevated pre-owned experience for their consumers by matching the physical footprint and loyal customer base of Neiman Marcus with Fashionphile’s digital inventory of 15,000 ultra-luxury items. 

With limited overlap between buyers and sellers in the pre-owned luxury market, the exclusive partnership will serve as a catalyst for Neiman Marcus to enable its existing customers to participate in the pre-owned market while also reaching new, younger shoppers ahead of their peak spending years.

CEO Geoffroy van Raemdonck said the investment is an “exciting step” in the company’s transformation into a luxury customer platform as it works to better serve its customers, continue to shape the future of luxury and position the company for long-term and sustainable growth.

Founded in 1999, Fashionphile claims it was ranked as one of the top most-searched fashion brands on Google last year. It’s run by co-founder and president Sarah Davis and co-founder and CEO Ben Hemminger.

As part of the partnership, Neiman Marcus and Fashionphile will be launching new ways for buyers and sellers to more easily participate in pre-owned merchandise. 

For instance, at some Neiman Marcus stores, customers will be able to receive an immediate quote for their items from Fashionphile as well as immediate payment they can use to buy new luxury fashion items.

CAPITAL MARKETS

Latham, Hunton AK aid on Energy Transfer’s $700M unit issue

Latham & Watkins said April 19 it advised Dallas-based Energy Transfer Operating, or ETO, on a $700 million Series E preferred unit offering.

Houston partners Bill Finnegan and Debbie Yee led the team with associates Kevin Richardson, Madeleine Neet, Caroline Ellerbe and Kate Wang. 

Specialists included Houston partners Tim Fenn and Bryant Lee with associate Mike Rowe on tax matters and Houston partner Joel Mack on environmental matters.

Hunton Andrews Kurth represented the underwriters, who were led by Merrill Lynch. 

Houston corporate partner Jordan Hirsch led the team, which included corporate partners Mike O’Leary and Phil Haines and corporate associates Chris Adcock, Erin Kaufman and Michael Wright, all of Houston. Houston tax partners Robert McNamara and Tom Ford and environmental partner Lisa Shelton in Austin also worked on the issue.

Tom Mason is Energy Transfer’s general counsel. Before joining the company in 2007, the UT Law graduate was a partner at V&E in Houston.

The offering involved 28 million of the company’s 7.6% Series E fixed-to-floating rate cumulative redeemable perpetual preferred units at $25 per unit. The underwriters have a 30-day option to purchase up to 4.2 million more units.

The offering is expected to close by April 25. ETO plans to use the net proceeds to repay amounts outstanding under its revolver and for general partnership purposes.

HuntonAK, V&E advise on NGL’s $450M private debt offering

Hunton Andrews Kurth said April 18 that it was issuer’s counsel on a private debt offering of senior notes by NGL Energy Partners and unit NGL Energy Finance Corp. worth $450 million.

Partners Mike O’Leary and Henry Havre led the team, which included corporate associates Chris Adcock and Oliver Fankhauser, tax partner Tom Ford, corporate associates Marshall Heins, Garrett Hughey and Erin Kaufman, tax partner Robert McNamara and corporate partner Rob Taylor.

Vinson & Elkins counseled the banks on the notes, which are due in 2026. The team included partners Mike Telle and David Stone and associates Connor Long and David Bumgardner.

The banks include RBC Capital Markets and Mizuho Securities USA. The offering closed April 9.

Tulsa-based NGL expects to use the net proceeds to repay debt under its revolver, which it may tap in the future for general partnership purposes.

KCI Holdings files for $100M IPO

KCI Holdings, a San Antonio provider of wound care and specialty surgical products, filed for a $100 million initial public offering with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Simpson Thacher & Bartlett is counseling KCI out of New York while Latham & Watkins is assisting the underwriters, led by JP Morgan, out of Washington, D.C. 

KCI’s general counsel is John T. Bibb, who joined the company in 2003 after practicing at Baker Botts and Cox Smith Matthews.

KCI plans to trade on the New York Stock Exchange. It doesn’t expect to receive any proceeds from the offering by the selling shareholders. Its investors include Apax Partners, CPP Investment Board and PSP Investments.

The company recorded a $138 million net loss on $1.47 billion in sales last year.

Hunton AK, Fenimore aid on South Plains’ $50M IPO

Lubbock commercial bank South Plains Financial filed for a $50 million IPO.

Hunton Andrews Kurth is counseling South Plains, including Peter G. Weinstock and Heather A. Eastep in Dallas. Chet A. Fenimore and Derek W. McGee at Fenimore, Kay, Harrison & Ford in Austin are assisting the underwriters, who are led by Keefe Bruyette & Woods.

The bank plans to list on the Nasdaq under the symbol SPFI. It doesn’t expect to receive any proceeds from the offering by the selling shareholders. Its owner is City Bank.

UPDATE/OTHER:

Warburg Pincus-backed oil and gas company Brigham Minerals ending up raising $261 million in an upsized IPO of 14.5 million shares priced at $18. Credit Suisse and Goldman Sachs were the underwriters. Brigham Minerals granted the underwriters a 30-day option to purchase up to an additional 2.175 million shares of its common stock. The offering is expected to close April 23.

V&E said its representation of Brigham Minerals continues its leading market position in energy capital markets. It has represented six of the seven U.S. upstream companies that have completed IPOs since the beginning of 2016. 

The team was led by partners Doug McWilliams and Thomas Zentner with assistance from associates Bo Shi and Luke Thomas. Also advising were partner Jason McIntosh and senior associate Allyson Seger on tax and partner David D’Alessandro and counsel Dario Mendoza on executive compensation/benefits.

Latham & Watkins represented the underwriters, including partner David Miller with associates Monica White, Patrick Sanford, Erin Lee and Ashlyn Royall; tax partner Tim Fenn with associate Jim Cole; and Houston environmental partner Joel Mack.

***

The $30 billion Texas County & District Retirement System has committed $341 million to private equity funds so far this year, according to a post on its website. The funds include EIV Capital’s Co-Invest 1 ($10 million); Spark Capital VI ($20 million); Spark Caital Growth Fund III ($40 million); Genstar Capital Partners IX ($76 million); Summit Partners Growth Equity Fund X-A ($100 million); Nautic Partners IX ($50 million); and DCVC V ($45 million). Ann McGeehan is the system’s general counsel.

***

Finally, Centerbridge Partners may be putting Dallas-based ice maker Reddy Ice Holdings on the auction block, according to a Bloomberg report last week. The news agency said the New York private equity firm is looking at a possible sale process in the second half of the year, citing sources. Centerbridge and Reddy Ice both declined comment. Centerbridge invested in Reddy Ice as part of a recapitalization after the company filed for bankruptcy in 2012. Reddy Ice’s general counsel is Kenneth Fernandez, who joined in 2010 after 11 years at Lennox International.

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