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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, 13 Firms, 62 Lawyers, $7.43B

January 28, 2020 Claire Poole

Haynes and Boone released its updated report on bankruptcies involving the North American oil and gas industry since the beginning of 2015, and for some parts of the sector, the picture wasn’t exactly pretty.

After the initial wave in the first two years of more than 100 bankruptcy filings, the number decreased substantially in 2017 (to 24 filings) and 2018 (to 28). But after a steep drop in oil prices in the fourth quarter of 2018, there was a sharp increase in the number of filings this past year to 42.

Among oil and gas producers, 208 filed for bankruptcy over the five-year period with around $121.7 billion in debt, the firm said. But since its Sept. 30 report, an additional nine producers filed bankruptcy with total debt in excess of $12.6 billion. 

“This increase in year-over-year filings indicates that the reverberations of the 2015 oil price crash will continue to be felt in the industry through at least the first half of 2020,” Haynes and Boone said.

Entering 2020, commodity prices appear to remain challenged for producers despite geopolitical events, the firm said, including the September attack on Saudi Aramco’s oil facilities and the heightened tensions following the Jan. 7 drone killing of Iranian major general Qasem Soleimani. Natural gas prices fell by over half last year compared with 2018.

Haynes and Boone said the midstream sector hasn’t suffered the same level of distress experienced by producers. Since 2015, there have been 28 midstream companies that filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the U.S. involving around $21.6 billion in secured and unsecured debt. 

Could more be around the corner? In early January, a midstream gatherer affiliated with the debtor producer Alta Mesa Resources – Kingfisher Midstream – filed for bankruptcy, the firm noted. Bayou City Energy Management and Mach Resources recently won the bankruptcy auction for Alta Mesa and Kingfisher with a sweetened bid of $320 million.

When looking at oilfield services, or OFS, the total debt involved in bankruptcies during the five-year period was about $66 billion, the firm estimates. But over the last two years, oilfield service bankruptcy filings decreased in number (33) and debt ($11.9 billion) compared with 2017’s 40 filings and debt of $35 billion. 

Haynes and Boone did note a large bankruptcy in July of last year by Weatherford International, which attributed its insolvency in part to reduced drilling activity by producers who have been dramatically affected by the commodity price slump since 2015. 

“Investors’ pressure on producers to ‘live within cash flow’ is further reducing demand for OFS services and supplies, leaving the OFS sector with little near-term hope for a turnaround in prospects,” the firm said.

Meanwhile, dealmaking among Texas lawyers slid last week to 13 transactions valued at $7.43 billion compared with 23 deals worth $9.58 billion the week before, maybe due to the Martin Luther King holiday. Year-on-year, the week was flat on a count basis but up on a value basis, with 13 transactions valued at $2.77 billion during the same period 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

Thirteen firms and 62 Texas lawyers were active in last week’s dealmaking, which involved 12 M&A/private equity/venture capital deals valued at $6.43 billion and one capital markets transaction worth $1 billion.

M&A/PRIVATE EQUITY/VENTURE CAPITAL

Kirkland advises on Rhône, Chatterjee’s $2.725B purchase of Lummus

Oil and gas engineering and construction services provider McDermott International filed for bankruptcy last week but also announced it was selling unit Lummus Technology to the Chatterjee Group and the Rhône Group for $2.725 billion.

McDermott will use the proceeds to repay the $2.81 billion in debtor-in-possession financing facility as part of the Chapter 11 filing as well as fund emergence costs and provide cash to the balance sheet.

Kirkland advised McDermott on the sale, including partners Adam Larson and Ahmed Sidik and associate Bryan Jones. Paul Weiss counseled the buyers (partner Brian C. Lavin and counsel Chaim P. Theil in New York).

Lummus is a Bloomfield, N.J.-based provider of chemical processing technologies for the hydrocarbon industry.

Chatterjee’s and Rhône’s partnership will serve as the “stalking-horse bidder” in a court-supervised sale process for Lummus. McDermott will have the option to keep or purchase a 10% common equity ownership interest in the entity purchasing its unit.

McDermott said it expected to hold an auction in 45 days to solicit higher or better bids for Lummus. Any deal has to clear the bankruptcy court as well as regulators, if applicable.

Winston aids Danfoss on purchase of Eaton’s hydraulics unit for $3.3B

Winston & Strawn said Jan. 22 it represented Denmark’s Danfoss on its acquisition of Eaton’s hydraulics business for $3.3 billion in cash.

The team was led out of New York but included partner Doug Yeager in Houston.

The business provides products for customers in agriculture, construction and industrial markets. It had sales last year of $2.2 billion and employs 11,000.

Danfoss said the acquisition, which will increase the company’s size by a third and double its hydraulics business, is in line with its strategy to strengthen its core businesses and enhance customer value. 

“Today, we take a significant and transformational step in creating a global leader in mobile and industrial hydraulics,” CEO Kim Fausing said in a statement.

The transaction has to clear regulators but is expected to close by the end of the year. 

Kirkland, Baker Botts, Bracewell work on Bristow-Era all-stock combination

Houston helicopter service providers Bristow Group Inc. and Era Group Inc. announced plans Jan. 24 to combine in an all-stock deal.

The value of the stock involved in the transaction and the enterprise value of the combined entity weren’t revealed. But the combination is expected to generate $240 million in annual EBITDA on sales of $1.5 billion with at least $35 million in annual cost reductions through the elimination of redundant corporate expenses and enhanced operational efficiencies.

Kirkland & Ellis represented Bristow, including corporate partners Doug Bacon, Debbie Yee and Cephas Sekhar in Houston and associate Jack Shirley in Dallas and capital markets partner Michael Rigdon and associate Christopher Fox in Houston.

Baker Botts worked on the financing, including partner Rachael Lichman in Houston, special counsel Lyman Paden in Houston and Shelley Austin in Austin and associates Sean McClay in Austin and Malory Weir, Keegan Bobholz and Dillon Sebasco in Houston. 

Also working the deal were corporate partner A.J. Ericksen and associate Emmie Proctor, both of Houston, and employee benefits and executive compensation partner Gail Stewart, special counsel Chris Pratt and associate Christian Ryholt, all of Houston.

Bracewell counseled Bristow on due diligence, including partners Lytch Gutmann, Troy Harder and Jeff Vaden and associates Kate Barrington McGregor and Andy Monk, all of Houston.

Milbank was legal counsel to Era, which used Centerview Partners as its financial advisor. Ducera Partners and Houlihan Lokey were financial advisors to Bristow.

Crystal Gordon is Era’s general counsel. She joined the company last year after seven years as general counsel at Air Methods Corp., an emergency air medical company operating more than 400 aircraft in the U.S. 

Victoria Lazar is general counsel of the Bristow Group, which she joined last summer after 11 years at General Electric, most recently as executive counsel for M&A.

The deal – which involved a reverse triangular merger in which Era will issue shares to Bristow stockholders – is expected to close in the second half of this year. Era shares will continue to trade but the new company will operate under the Bristow name.

Shareholders of Bristow – which emerged from bankruptcy this past November – will end up with 77% of the new company and Era shareholders will hold 23%. 

Era CEO and president Chris Bradshaw will head the combination, whose board will consist of seven members from Bristow and two from Era, including Bradshaw. Bristow will determine the chairman and vice chairman positions later.

“We believe this merger will create substantial value for the stakeholders of both companies,” Bradshaw said in the statement. “The identified cost synergies are significant and, combined with the strong pro forma balance sheet and absence of capital commitments, support robust free cash flow generation.”

The two companies said the deal will create a leader in offshore oil and gas transportation as well as search and rescue and aircraft support services to government and civil organizations. It will have operations in the Americas, Nigeria, Norway, the U.K. and Australia and more than 300 aircraft, 80% of which will be owned and the rest leased.

Amol Joshi, Moody’s VP and senior credit officer, said Era’s combination with Bristow will be credit positive, substantially increasing Era’s size and scale while diversifying its heavy reliance on activity levels in the Gulf of Mexico. And while the transaction shouldn’t increase combined debt balances, he said it has significant risks. 

“Era is combining with a company that is multiple times its size and integrating the two companies’ assets and operations entails high execution risk,” he said. “It will also significantly increase Era’s capital structure complexity due to combining with Bristow’s complex structure and the company will face several debt maturities over the next few years.”

Joshi said that with its senior management team to be named at a future date and its nine-member board largely comprised of existing Bristow board members, there could be uncertainty regarding corporate strategy, leverage policy and capital allocation “along with the inherent integration risks in a combination of this size with global operations.”

Buckeye acquires Marine Terminals from Magellan Midstream

Houston-based Buckeye Partners has agreed to purchase three marine terminals from Magellan Midstream Partners for $250 million. 

Buckeye didn’t respond to requests for its legal counsel on the deal. Its general counsel is Todd Russo, who works out of Pennsylvania, but its deputy general counsel Evan Hofman and its assistant general counsel Jayne Wabeke are in Houston.

GableGotwals was Magellan’s legal counsel (shareholders Stephen W. Lake and Thomas J. Hutchison in Tulsa) and Jefferies was its financial advisor.

The sale is expected to close by late in the first quarter or early in the second quarter of this year.

The terminals are in New Haven, Conn., Wilmington, Del., and Marrero, La. Magellan is keeping its Texas terminals. 

V&E aids Vapor IO on Berkshire Partners, Crown Castle funding, bringing total to $90M

Austin-based Vapor IO, a provider of edge computing infrastructure, said Jan. 22 it raised an additional investment from Berkshire Partners and Crown Castle, bringing its total to $90 million.

Vinson & Elkins counseled Vapor IO, including counsel Andy Smetana with assistance from partner Wes Watts and associate Chris Kirby.

Vapor IO already has deployed its technology in Chicago, Atlanta, Pittsburgh and Dallas and has another 16 markets in pre-construction, most of which the company expects to build out this year. It plans to deliver its Kinetic Edge platform to the top 36 U.S. metropolitan markets by the end of 2021.

Cole Crawford is founder and CEO of Vapor IO. Josh Johnson led the investment from Berkshire. 

V&E counsels FlashParking on $60M funding from L Catterton

Vinson & Elkins also advised Austin-based parking tech startup FlashParking on its $60 million capital raise from the growth fund of L Catterton.

Austin partner Paul Tobias led that deal. L Catterton used Barack Ferranzzano out of Chicago. BofA Securities was FlashParking’s financial advisor.

FlashParking plans to use the investment to scale its cloud-based parking system. 

Co-founded by Juan Rodriguez, FlashParking said its mobility platform is being used in the Texas Medical Center, where it controls 30,000 parking spaces via 230 lanes across 34 facilities. It said its system simplifies parking, reduces congestion and improves traffic flow for the 10 million patients, visitors, staff and students who visit the medical center every year.

FlashParking said it helps more than 6 million parkers per month and processing $1 billion in transactions at more than 1,300 locations worldwide.

Michael Farello led the deal from L Catterton Growth Fund, which has invested in other technology-enabled marketplaces and businesses, including ClassPass, Artsy, Vroom, Get Your Guide and Enjoy. It was formed through the partnership of Catterton, LVMH and Groupe Arnault. 

Rudy Garza, founder and managing partner at Austin-based G-51 Capital Management, has been a board observer at FlashParking since 2012.

Roberts Zimmerman advises Dottid on $3.85M seed funding round

Dottid, a Dallas-based commercial real estate SaaS technology platform developer, said Jan. 13 it raised $3.85 million in a seed round of funding.

Founder CEO Kyle Waldrep told The Texas Lawbook that he used Ryan Roberts of Roberts Zimmerman in Southlake for legal counsel.

The investors included David Ridley, founder and former CEO of Invesco Real Estate; Laurie Dotter, who is on the investment advisory board of Employee Retirement System of Texas; and David Farmer, the former COO of Invesco Real Estate.

Dottid claims its technology platform is the first-of-its-kind to offer efficiencies and savings in time and costs to all parties in a commercial real estate transaction. Waldrep set out to create the technology after turning down a job as a leasing agent due to the antiquated nature of the commercial real estate industry. 

Waldrep’s advisors include Jonathan Crowder, a partner at Intelis Capital; Don Goldstein, former CIO and CISO of CBRE; Brian Liikala, former portfolio manager for the State of Michigan Retirement Systems; and Catherine Rodewald, former president of Prudential Asset Resources Inc.

“The CRE industry is valued at $1.5 trillion in the U.S. alone and Dottid is the answer to what real estate owners have needed for many years,” Goldstein said.

Dottid said Dallas is the second-largest commercial real estate investment market in the country.

Dottid recently hired Senecca Miller as its chief technology officer. He previously was a senior cloud engineer at Toyota Connected North America in Plano.

DMC counsels TeleVet on $2M seed funding from Dundee, Mercury Fund

TeleVet, an online platform in Austin that connects veterinary clinics to clients, announced Jan. 7 that it closed a seed funding round of $2 million from Dundee Venture Capital, the Mercury Fund and GAN Ventures, bringing its total raised to $2.3 million.

Dwyer Murphy Calvert counseled TeleVet, including partner Billy Murphy and associate Audra May. Dundee used Koley Jessen in Omaha.

TeleVet said the funding will help it invest in key hires and product innovation to meet growing demand for its telemedicine platform and apps.

Founded in 2015 and led by co-founder and CEO Steven Carter, the company said veterinarians can integrate TeleVet into their existing office workflow, instantly receiving and scheduling virtual consultations, online appointment scheduling and digital prescriptions.

The company has partnerships with Embrace pet insurance, Vetsource for home prescription delivery and Covetrus’ practice management software.

Dundee’s Allie Esch said the firm is bullish on the pet technology space, particularly solutions like TeleVet that serve both sides of the market. 

“Pet owners have spent roughly $18 billion annually on veterinary care in the last two years, making veterinary care the fastest-growing category in pet tech,” she said. “TeleVet will power the next generation of veterinarians who are quick to adopt digital technology, recognizing that revenue, retention rates and care can improve through tech adoption.”

TeleVet estimates that there are 160 million pet owners in the U.S.

Blair Garrou, managing director at Houston-based Mercury Fund, said with more than 30,000 veterinary practices in the U.S., “There’s a huge opportunity ahead for TeleVet.”

Founded in 2010, Dundee has made 50 investments across 19 non-coastal cities in the enterprise, consumer and frontier sectors. The Mercury Fund, which has more than $275 million under management, focuses on investments in the middle of the country.

Sidley, STB, JW assist on TPG Capital’s strategic partnership with Kelsey-Seybold

Kelsey-Seybold Clinic said Jan. 21 it had struck a strategic partnership with TPG Capital that will result in the private equity firm making a non-controlling, undisclosed investment in Kelsey-Seybold Management Services, Kelsey-Seybold Medical Group’s management services organization.

Kelsey’s physician leadership is keeping local control of the organization in the partnership.

Sidley Austin counseled TPG Capital led by Dallas transactional partner Scott Parel. Partner Sara Duran and associates Courtney Gilberg and Julie Westbrook in Dallas also worked on the deal. 

Simpson Thacher & Bartlett counseled Kelsey with a team that included partner Matt Einbinder and associate Evan West in Houston. Jackson Walker pitched in, including San Antonio partners Edgar “Jed” Morrison and Patrick Tobin. Mintz and Proskauer also provided legal advice to the clinic.

Evercore was Kelsey’s financial advisor and William Blair and J.P. Morgan assisted TPG Capital.

Kelsey is the country’s first accredited accountable care organization recognized by the National Committee for Quality Assurance. TPG Capital is the private equity platform of global alternative asset firm TPG.

Kelsey said the partnership provides it with additional capital and strategic expertise to help accelerate the growth and expansion of its care delivery model to more geographic locations and partners in the Houston area. 

“It was important to find the right partner to help us grow our accountable care model while valuing the aspects of our culture and legacy that have led us to be one of the leading accountable care organizations in the nation,” said Dr. Tony Lin, Kelsey’s chairman and managing director.

Since 2013, Kelsey has added or expanded 16 clinic locations. It has several expansions and openings planned for this year, including recent openings in January in Houston’s downtown Esperson Tunnel and in Kingwood. 

TPG Capital’s Jeff Rhodes said Kelsey has demonstrated it can provide comprehensive, personalized care at a lower total medical cost through the accountable care model. Kendall Garrison also worked on the deal from TPG, which is headquartered in San Francisco and Fort Worth.

Jones Day counsels Flat River on investment from Guardian Capital

Jones Day said Jan. 23 that Houston partner Stephen Olson advised Flat River Group on an undisclosed investment from Guardian Capital Partners. 

Morgan Lewis advised Guardian. CIBC Bank USA provided senior financing and Centerfield Capital Partners provided additional financing and minority equity. The Gulfstar Group counseled Flat River.

The deal, announced Jan. 9, will result in Guardian partnering with Flat River’s executive management team, which will continue to operate the company.

Co-founded and led by Matt Stahlin, Belding, Mich.-based Flat River is an e-commerce distributor, marketer and service provider. It offers product sourcing, inventory management and high volume direct-to-consumer drop-shipping for consumer products companies and retail channels. 

Guardian and Flat River aim to expand the company through further investments in infrastructure, capabilities and add-on acquisitions.

Ryan Northington led the deal from Guardian, a private equity firm based in suburban Philadelphia that invests in lower middle market consumer products, niche manufacturing and specialty service companies. 

Sidley represents Stone Point-backed SitusAMC on Alan King acquisition

Sidley Austin said Jan. 21 it represented Stone Point Capital-based SitusAMC on its acquisition of Alan King and Co. Inc., or AKC, a mortgage industry software company. 

The team was led out of New York but included M&A and private equity associate Ashley Moulder in Houston. Sheppard Mullin counseled the seller (partner Josh Dean in Orange County).

SitusAMC, a service provider to the real estate finance industry, said the addition of Alan King’s master servicing and loan accounting software solution SBO 2000 will expand its technology offerings. 

The buyer is led by CEO Michael Franco and chief technology officer Chris Consoli. AKC’s founder, Alan King, is staying on as managing director and will focus on expanding SBO 2000’s reach within the industry.

SBO 2000 combines cashiering, data entry, accounting and investor reporting functions into one platform. It supports many of the largest banks in the U.S. with more than 2 million mortgages on the platform.

Winston advises Diversis Capital on WorldAPP acquisition

Winston & Strawn said it represented lower middle market private equity fund Diversis Capital Partners I on its acquisition of WorldAPP for undisclosed terms.

The team included Houston partner Jeff Smith and Dallas associate Victoria Acuff.

Madison Park Group was WorldAPP’s financial advisor.

WorldAPP provides enterprise-grade mobile workflow and data capture technology with its Form.com and Key Survey products, which are used by more than 600 customers across several countries.

WorldAPP CEO Oleg Matsko said in the release that Diversis will provide the operational expertise and growth capital the company needs to take its business “to the next level.” Cal Brown is WorldAPP’s co-founder.

Kevin Ma led the deal from Los Angeles-based Diversis, which was founded in 2013 and focuses on software and technology investments.

CAPITAL MARKETS/FINANCINGS

Akin Gump, Paul Hastings advise on Laredo Petroleum’s $1B senior notes offering

Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld said Jan. 22 it advised Laredo Petroleum on a $1 billion senior notes offering.

The team included partners Chris LaFollette, Chris Centrich, Chip Cowell and Eric Muñoz, counsel Paul Monsour and Kevin Schott and tax partner Jocelyn Tau.

Paul Hastings represented BofA Securities, Wells Fargo Securities, BMO Capital Markets, Goldman Sachs, Barclays and Capitol One as the joint book-running managers on the issue and BofA Securities as the dealer manager for concurrent tender offers.

The Houston-based Paul Hastings team was led by corporate partners Doug Getten and Will Burns and included associates Stephen Perry, James Edmonds and JD Hess.

The company placed $600 million in debt with a 9.5% yield due in 2025 and $400 million in debt with a 10.125% yield due in 2028. Laredo plans to use the proceeds to retire $450 million in debt with a 5.625% yield due in 2022 and $350 million in debt with a 6.25% rate due in 2023. It also plans to repay part of the borrowings outstanding under its senior secured credit facility.

Analysts at Tudor, Pickering, Holt noted in a report Jan. 13 that the upsized bond deal carries significantly higher rates than previous issuances – much like Range Resources’ recent debt offering – while extending the company’s overall maturity timeline.

“The high yield market appears to be providing some additional liquidity runway for some operators,” they said. “But we think the rising cost of capital highlights the importance of reducing absolute leverage through free cash flow generation to more appropriate levels in order to reduce the interest burden and increase investor interest in SMID [small to medium) cap names.”

TPH thinks companies with balance sheet leverage of more than two times should be moving toward maintenance capital to maximize near-term free cash flow while moderating base declines for a period of “balance sheet repair.”

UPDATE/OTHER

Camber Energy Inc. and Viking Energy Group Inc. said Jan. 24 that they signed a non-binding letter of intent to merge. No word on who is counseling either company and Viking didn’t respond to requests for comment. The proposed merger contemplates Camber issuing new shares of common stock to Viking equity holders. The deal would be in the form of a reverse triangular merger in which a newly formed unit of Camber would merge with and into Viking, with Viking continuing as the surviving corporation and part of Camber. Viking stockholders would end up with 85% of the merged company and Camber’s shareholders would have 15%. Westport, Conn.-based Advisory Group Services Ltd., which does business as RHK Capital, is advising Viking on the transaction. Viking focuses on the acquisition and development of oil and natural gas properties in the Gulf Coast and Mid-Continent while Camber develops crude oil, natural gas and natural gas liquids in Texas. Both are based in Houston.

***

Kirkland & Ellis said Jan. 23 that it advised Cresta Fund Management-backed Sentinel Midstream on the negotiation and execution of agreements with Freepoint Commodities as part of Sentinel’s construction, operation and use of deepwater crude oil export facility Texas GulfLink. Terms weren’t disclosed. The Kirkland team was led by corporate partners Kevin Crews and Thomas Laughlin and included corporate associates Scott Delaney, Alex Poor and Mike Pangrac and tax partner David Wheat. All are based in the firm’s Dallas office. Vinson & Elkins represented Freepoint, including partner Doug Bland in Houston along with associates Caroline Kuehn and Michael Zarcaro, senior associate Megan Menniti and associates Ellen Hense and Zach Parker (transactional); partner Todd Way and associates Christine Mainguy and David Gilbert (tax); and partner Matt Dobbins (environmental). The facility will be located off the coast of Freeport, Texas, and be capable of fully loading what are known in the industry as “Very Large Crude Carrier,” or VLCC, vessels.

***

Deal catch-up: Sidley Austin confirmed last week that it advised Denbury Resources on the sale of half of its nearly 100% working interest in four southeast Texas conventional oil fields to Israel’s Navitas Petroleum for $50 million in cash. The deal also includes a carried interest in 10 wells Navitas will drill. Denbury announced the transaction Dec. 23 and expects to close it by early March, using the proceeds to fund operations, enhance liquidity and/or cut debt. Dallas and Houston partner Marc Rose led the deal team, which included Dallas associates Jeremy Pettit and Julie Westbrook from the energy group, Houston partner Zack Pullin from the tax group and Houston partner Heather Palmer from the environmental group. Navitas was represented by partner Curt Hearn and others at Jones Walker in New Orleans. Denbury’s general counsel is Jim Matthews, who previously was in private practice at Vinson & Elkins for 11 years.

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