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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: 14 Deals, 18 Law Firms, 134 Texas Lawyers, $14.4B

October 29, 2018 Claire Poole

The stocks of oil and gas exploration and production companies have been selling off recently, with one index down by around 18 percent so far this month. That’s led some pundits to think that mergers could begin to accelerate.

According to a report last week from Tudor, Pickering, Holt, 2019 could be a busy year for mergers as the industry moves toward public market consolidation after years of private-to-public transactions in oil and gas basins like the Permian.

Cost savings when combining assets make sense as size and scale allow operators to improve operating efficiencies, the firm said. It noted the wide variance in general and administrative expenses, from 1 percent of market capitalization and 3 to 5 percent of EBITDA for low cost operators to 7 percent of market cap and 15 to 20 percent of EBITDA for higher cost ones.

TPH believes if equities continue to lag over time, investors could push for greater consolidation to try and squeeze less efficient operators out of the system, in particular large cap companies acquiring smaller cap peers.

The report comes at a time when some are predicting $100 per barrel oil in the not-so-distant future. Those include Transocean chairman Pete Miller, who spoke at an Association for Corporate Growth luncheon in Houston (he wouldn’t guess on the timing), and analysts at Raymond James, who predict triple-digit prices by the end of 2019 due to supply issues from Venezuela and Iran, among other things.

“We now believe that oil prices over the next two years must increase to levels that are high enough to materially slow down global demand growth,” the analysts said.

For Texas lawyers, there was an uptick in deal activity this past week. They worked on 14 deals worth $14.4 billion, versus 13 transactions valued at $6.14 billion the week before. Eighteen law firms and 134 lawyers were involved, versus 13 firms and 126 lawyers the week before. That includes 13 M&A deals valued at $13.8 billion and only one $600 capital markets deal.

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
28-Jun-202513$7,77781387$2,0316$5,746
21-Jun-202516$5,9841011311$3,0875$2,897
14-Jun-20259$4788133603$478
07-Jun-202516$26,2101119611$24,7445$1,466
31-May-202519$23,3811116612$18,6657$4,717
24-May-202515$24,0331112113$23,6242$409
17-May-202516$21,7601214511$18,6155$3,145
10-May-202524$33,1751620619$30,7655$2,410
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

The biggest deal involved a water utility buying a natural gas one. Midstream energy and oil services deals dominated the activity, with some technology and medical transactions sprinkled in. There was only one capital markets transaction worth $600 million.

M&A AND PRIVATE EQUITY INVESTMENTS

Simpson advises Aqua America on $5.57B Peoples acquisition

Simpson Thacher & Bartlett said Oct. 24 it worked on the biggest deal of the week, advising Aqua America Inc. on its purchase of SteelRiver Infrastructure Partners-backed Peoples for $4.275 billion in cash and $1.3 billion in debt assumption.

The transaction signaled the water utility’s entry into the natural gas industry. The two will serve 5 million people and have $10.8 billion in assets and an expected U.S. regulated rate base of $7.2 billion.

The New York-based team included lawyers in the firm’s Houston office: partner Matt Einbinder, counsel Erland Modesto and associates Andrew Lanius and Brandon Barton on banking and credit and associate Matt Hart on capital markets. Winston & Strawn counseled Peoples with attorneys outside of Texas.

Moelis, Goldman Sachs and RBC Capital Markets are providing financial advice to Aqua and Goldman Sachs Bank and Royal Bank of Canada are providing a fully committed bridge facility. Morgan Stanley assisted Peoples.

U.S. utilities have used M&A to build scale, cut costs and generate funds to help rebuild the country’s infrastructure.

The 133-year-old Peoples is the largest natural gas distributor in Pennsylvania providing service to 740,000 customers in the western part of the state. SteelRiver bought it from Dominion Resources in 2010 for $780 million.

Over the last seven years, Peoples purchased the T.W. Phillips Gas & Oil Co. and Equitable Gas, adding service territories in West Virginia and Kentucky, and Delta Natural Gas in Winchester, Kentucky.

Bryn Mawr, Pa.-based Aqua America is a 132-year-old regulated water and wastewater utility with 1,600 employees. It serves 3 million people in Pennsylvania, Ohio, North Carolina, Illinois, Texas, New Jersey, Indiana and Virginia.

The deal has to clear federal and state regulators, including in Pennsylvania, Kentucky and West Virginia.

Baker Botts aids WorleyParsons on $3.3B purchase of Jacobs unit

As The Texas Lawbook previously reported, Jacobs Engineering Group Inc. of Dallas announced Oct. 22 that it agreed to sell its energy, chemicals and resources segment to Australia-traded WorleyParsons Ltd. for $3.3 billion.

The deal includes $2.6 billion in cash and 58.2 million WorleyParsons shares worth around $700 million, which will give Jacobs an 11 percent stake in the company.

Jacobs will have to hold the shares for six months after the transaction’s closing. The parties expect to close the deal in the first half of next year.

The transaction value represents a multiple of more than 11.5 times trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA or 8.5 times after $92.5 million in expected cost synergies.

Jacobs senior VP and general counsel Mike Tyler turned to New York firms Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson and Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz for outside counsel.

Tyler’s in-house team included VP of legal Michael Bante and deputy general counsel and VP of corporate/securities Justin Johnson.

Larry Kalban is WorleyParsons’ general counsel and based at its U.S. headquarters in Houston.

Kalban tapped Baker Botts for outside counsel, including partner Efren Acosta, senior associate Laura Katherine Mann and associates Katie Belleville, Steven Lackey, Sunil Jamal and Ieuan List, all of Houston.

Baker Botts specialists included tax partner Ron Scharnberg; employee benefits special counsel Chris Pratt; intellectual property partner Robinson Vu and associate Steve Maule; global projects partner Chris Wilson; and environmental partner Scott Janoe.

Jacobs said the deal will help it focus on its two higher growth, higher margin lines of business: aerospace, technology, environmental and nuclear; and buildings, infrastructure and advanced facilities.

The company plans to use the proceeds to pay down its floating-rate debt.

The asset sale follows Jacobs’ purchase of CH2M Hill Cos. Ltd. in August of last year for $3.3 billion. WorleyParsons approached it about acquiring the business about 10 months ago.

For WorleyParsons, the transaction – which Bloomberg called “audacious” – will double its market capitalization and earnings, making it the world’s biggest provider of professional services in energy and resources.

WorleyParsons is a quarter-owned by Dubai-based engineering company the Dar Group, which offered to buy the company in 2016 for $2.2 billion. WorleyParsons rebuffed it.

The buyer plans to fund the deal with a $2 billion entitlement offer and new debt, which will more than double its liabilities to $1.07 billion.

UBS, which is leading the share sale along with Macquarie Capital, provided financial advice to WorleyParsons. Herbert Smith Freehills is issuer’s counsel on the entitlement offer. Perella Weinberg Partners and Centerview Partners were Jacobs’ financial advisors.

EnLink buys EnLink Midstream Partners for $3.05B

In yet another simplification transaction in the energy infrastructure space, EnLink Midstream announced Oct. 22 it was acquiring EnLink Midstream Partners for $3.05 billion in stock.

The transaction values the combined entities at $13 billion.

EnLink Midstream Partners common unitholders will get 1.15 of a common unit of Enlink for each common unit they own. That values EnLink Midstream Partners units at $18.46 per unit, or a 1.1 percent premium over the previous day’s close and a 3.5 percent premium over the last 30 days.

EnLink’s incentive distribution rights in EnLink Midstream Partners will be eliminated.

The parties expect to close the transaction in the first quarter if it clears EnLink Midstream Partners unitholders.

Baker Botts represented EnLink. The team included partners Preston Bernhisel, Joshua Davidson and Jon Platt along with associates Rachel Ratcliffe, Rosemary Maberry, Michelle Matthews, Allison Lancaster and Sumair Sangha. Partners Steve Marcus and Eric Winwood worked on tax matters.

EnLink’s in-house counsel included executive VP and chief legal and administrative officer Alaina Brooks and deputy general counsel Kendall Talbott.

Gibson Dunn & Crutcher was outside counsel to EnLink Midstream Partners, including partners Doug Rayburn and Jonathan Whalen and associates Eric Pacifici and Lindsay Ellis. Dallas partner David Sinak handled the tax aspects.

Latham & Watkins counseled GIP, which owns a majority of outstanding EnLink’s common units. The team members in Texas included partners Bill Finnegan and Debbie Yee and Houston associate A.J. Million.

Delaware counsel included Richards, Layton & Finger for EnLink and Potter Anderson & Corroon for EnLink Midstream Partners.

Vinson & Elkins advised TPG, a majority holder of EnLink Midstream Partners’ $750 million Series B cumulative convertible preferred units.

That team was led by partners Keith Fullenweider and David Oelman and associates Claire Campbell and Jordan Fossee. Assisting were partner Ramey Layne and senior associate Brittany Sakowitz and partner Ryan Carney and associate Allyson Seger on tax.

Bracewell represented Evercore, which advised EnLink Midstream Partners’ conflicts committee. The attorneys were partner Will Anderson and associate Charlotte Keenan.

Citi was EnLink’s financial advisor while Barclays assisted EnLink’s conflicts committee. Intrepid Partners advised GIP.

The entities said the transaction will simplify their organizational structure; increase the public float and enhance trading liquidity; improve project returns with a lower cost of capital; and deliver immediate accretion to distributable cash flow per unit for unitholders.

The deal also is expected to provide improved, low double-digit, distributable cash flow-per-unit growth through 2021 and reflects EnLink’s commitment to investment-grade-style credit metrics. Management expects sustainable distribution growth of 5 percent per year for at least three years.

EnLink Midstream CEO Michael J. Garberding said in a statement that the combination will strengthen its ability to achieve greater returns on the capital it deploys to create lasting value for all of its stakeholders.

Tudor, Pickering, Holt said the “well-telegraphed” transaction comes as little surprise given the wave of midstream consolidation transactions and management messaging that corporate restructuring was on its near-term priority list. They think Western Gas might be next to consolidate.

Jefferies analyst Christopher Sighinolfi thinks DCP Midstream and EQT Midstream could be next to consolidate and that Andeavor Logistics and MPLX could merge in the wake of Marathon Petroleum Corp.’s recent $23 billion acquisition of Andeavor.

Blackstone buys oil services firm Ulterra for reported $700M

Blackstone Group affiliate Blackstone Energy Partners agreed to acquire a controlling, majority interest in Ulterra Drilling Technologies from New York private equity firm American Securities for an undisclosed sum.

Reuters reported the price tag was around $700 million. American Securities and members of management are keeping a minority interest. The deal should close by year-end.

Intervale Capital sold the Fort Worth-based drill bit and downhole tool maker to Esco in 2012 for $325 million, and four years later, Esco sold it to American Securities for an undisclosed sum.

Kirkland & Ellis counseled Blackstone, including partners Rhett Van Syoc and Cyril Jones and associates Adam Garmezy, Leslie Vaughn, Andrew Lombardo and Daniel Cadis.

Others on the team were tax partner Mark Dundon and associate William Dong and debt finance partners Melissa Hutson, Lucas Spivey and Yuli Wang and associate Cecilia Liu.

Weil Gotshal & Manges represented American Securities and Ulterra with lawyers out of New York.

Barclays was Blackstone’s financial advisor. Piper Jaffray unit Simmons & Co. International and Wells Fargo Securities assisted American Securities and Ulterra.

Ulterra claims to be the largest pure-play, independent supplier of polycrystalline diamond compact drill bits to the oil and gas industry and one of the fastest growing, doubling its revenues since 2016. It has a position in many of the most active U.S. onshore basins, including the Permian and Eagle Ford, and a growing presence internationally.

CEO John Clunan and CFO Maria Mejia are staying on. The company employs 600 in the U.S. and Canada as well as in Oman, Colombia, Argentina, Kurdistan and soon Saudi Arabia.

Blackstone Energy Partners senior managing director Eric Liaw said high-quality equipment manufacturers such as Ulterra will continue to represent attractive investments, including potential add-on acquisitions for Ulterra.

Kevin Penn and Michael Sand led the investment from American Securities, which invests in market-leading North American companies with annual sales ranging from $200 million to $2 billion and EBITDA of $50 million to $250 million.

Gibson Dunn aids Enable Midstream on $442M Velocity acquisition

Gibson Dunn & Crutcher said it advised CenterPoint Energy- and OGE Energy-owned Enable Midstream Partners on its $442 million acquisition of Velocity Holdings.

The deal team included Houston partner Gerry Spedale and associate Eric Haitz and tax partner James Chenoweth along with attorneys in the firm’s other offices.

Paul Hastings represented Velocity, including partner Jimmy Vallee along with litigation partner Sam Cooper, tax partner Greg Nelson and energy M&A associates Monica Diddell, Stephen Perry and Chris Cottrell.

Velocity is an integrated crude oil and condensate gatherer and transporter in the Scoop and Merge plays in Oklahoma. It has 150 miles of pipeline capable of flowing 225,000 barrels per day along with 400,000 barrels of storage and 26 truck bays capable of unloading 100,000 barrels per day.

The target also has a 60 percent interest in a 26-mile pipeline system joint venture with a third party that owns and operates a refinery connected to the Velocity system. Velocity’s operations are backed by large area dedications and long-term, fee-based contracts.

Enable Midstream president and CEO Rod Sailor said in a statement that the Velocity acquisition builds on Enable’s market-leading Anadarko Basin midstream platform that now offers customers complete wellhead-to-market solutions for natural gas and crude.

Tudor, Pickering, Holt estimates that Enable paid a high-teen multiple for Velocity.

Enable expects to close the acquisition by Nov. 1.

Munsch Hardt Kopf & Harr closes three M&A deals worth $280M

Munsch Hardt Kopf & Harr said Oct. 25 that its M&A team closed three middle-market transactions in the past couple of weeks totaling more than $280 million.

Dallas shareholder Mike Hainsfurther led all three deals.

Munsch Hardt represented Forte Payment Systems founder and CEO Jeff Thorness on his sale of the Allen, Texas-based company to publicly traded CSG for $85 million. The deal team included finance shareholder Jeffrey D. Dunn, corporate shareholder Peter C. Lorenzen and tax shareholder Christopher D. Speer.

The firm also counseled Pediapharm Inc. on its acquisition of Medac Pharma from Germany’s Medac for $50 million in cash and stock. That team included Lorenzen, Speer and corporate shareholder Mark A. Kopidlansky.

Finally, Munsch Hardt aided the conflicts committee of the board of Martin Midstream Partners’ general partner on the drop-down transaction, or sale, of Martin Transport Inc. to Martin Midstream Partners for $135 million plus a potential $10 million earn-out. The transaction is expected to close in 2019.

That deal team included Lorenzen and Speer as well as corporate shareholder Layne A. Deutscher and associate Fareed Kaisani.

Carol Glendenning, a member of the Dallas office of Clark Hill Strasburger, advised Martin Midstream Management Corp. Locke Lord partner Kevin Peter assisted Martin Midstream Partners.

Stephens Inc. provided a fairness opinion to the conflicts committee of the partnership’s general partner and to Martin Midstream Management Corp.’s board. Houlihan Lokey Capital Inc. did so for the board of Martin Midstream Partners’ general partner.

Sidley aids Carlyle on CSL JV to buy Weatherford lab business

Sidley Austin said it advised Carlyle Energy Mezzanine Opportunities Fund II on its formation of a joint venture with CSL Capital Management to acquire the laboratory services business of Weatherford for $205 million.

The team was led by Houston energy partner Cliff Vrielink and included Dallas M&A partner Marc Rose and Houston M&A associate Adam Prestidge.

Baker McKenzie partners Jonathan Newton and Steve Park in Houston counseled Weatherford.

Winston & Strawn assisted CSL, including partner Matt Stockstill in Dallas along with Andrea Scheder, Matt Olson, Yang Wang and Patrick Luthen on the corporate side; Andrew Betaque and Danielle Marr on tax; and Doug Yeager and Masae Ellis on real estate.

Kent Jamison is general counsel of CSL as well as CSL-backed Sentinel Energy Services. He previously was a partner at Locke Lord.

Christina Ibrahim is general counsel of Weatherford. She previously was VP, chief global commercial counsel and corporate secretary of Halliburton and a litigation attorney at Wickliff and Hall.

Carlyle will provide minority common equity and growth capital to the joint venture.

The deal involves Weatherford’s laboratory and geological analysis business, including personnel and associated contracts. Weatherford will continue to collaborate with CSL to provide services to their joint customers.

The transaction is expected to close before year-end if it clears regulators. Weatherford will use the proceeds to reduce debt.

Weatherford CEO Mark McCollum said in a statement that he believes the deal will unlock the full potential of the business for its customers and employees. CSL founding partner Charlie Leykum said the firm intends to invest in and grow the business.

Weatherford said the transaction is one in a series of planned divestitures aimed to maximize its shareholder value by refocusing its portfolio on core businesses most closely aligned with its long-term strategy and reduce its debt.

Locke Lord represents Motley on sale to KLX for $148M

Locke Lord said it counseled District 5 Investments-backed Motley Services on its sale to KLX Energy Services Holdings for $139 million in cash and $9 million in KLX stock.

The team was led by partner Joe Perillo in Houston. Other members were Lauren Corbeil, Michael Blankenship, Jerry Higdon, Sara Longtain, Paul Pruett, Ed Razim, Buddy Sanders, Kerstie Moran, Emily Self and Ben Smolij, all of Houston; and Van Jolas and Brooks Vanlandingham, both of Dallas.

Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer US counseled KLX. Piper Jaffray’s Simmons & Co. International was Motley’s financial advisor.

Motley Services provides well completion services, including large diameter coiled tubing for longer lateral horizontal wells, to customers primarily in the southwestern U.S.

KLX chairman Amin J. Khoury said in a statement that the acquisition represents the company’s entry into the coiled tubing market and strengthens its portfolio of well completion services. It came at a 3.2 times EBITDA multiple.

The transaction is expected to close in late October or early November and add to KLX’s earnings this year and next. The buyer plans to fund the cash portion of the purchase price with the net proceeds of a $250 million debt offering of senior secured notes due 2025.

Latham advises Hi-Crush committee on $96.25M proppants purchase

Latham & Watkins said it advised the conflicts committee of Hi-Crush Partners on its purchase of its general partner through the acquisition of Hi-Crush Proppants for $96.25 million in stock.

Latham’s team included partner Bill Finnegan with associates Nick Dhesi, Eric Schoppe and Denny Lee along with partner Tim Fenn and associate Bryant Lee on tax.

Vinson & Elkins advised the owners of the general partner of Hi-Crush Partners, including partner Ramey Layne with senior associate Doug Lionberger and associates Aaron Carpenter and Greg Henson. Partner Ryan Carney and associate Neil Clausen provided tax advice.

Hi-Crush, which provides proppant and logistics solutions to North American oil and gas companies, said the deal simplifies its corporate structure by eliminating its incentive distribution rights, or IDR’s, and associated reset provisions and acquiring the non-economic general partner interest in the partnership.

Six members of the board’s general partner resigned, including those seats previously held by Avista Capital Partners and its designees. The current board consists of the three independent directors and Hi-Crush CEO Robert E. Rasmus, who was elected chairman.

Rasmus said in a statement that the transaction advances its progress toward conversion from a master limited partnership to a C-Corp sooner than alternate paths, will lower its cost of capital and increase its appeal to a wider range of investors.

Hi-Crush CFO Laura C. Fulton expects the company’s conversion to a C-Corp in the first half of next year.

Fulton noted that the market for frac sand has been soft since August due to a decrease in completions activity but the company expects to generate strong cash flow in the first half of 2019 and beyond.

Weil advised Lindsay Goldberg on Bain’s investment in Dealer Tire

Weil said it counseled Lindsay Goldberg on Bain Capital Private Equity’s investment in Dealer Tire, which will result in Lindsay Goldberg exiting the company. Terms weren’t disclosed.

The deal team from Texas included Dallas private equity partners David Gail and Glenn West and associate Rob Martin and tax partner Jonathan Macke and associate Adam Arikat.

Kirkland & Ellis advised Bain while Debevoise & Plimpton assisted Dealer Tire.

J.P. Morgan and Moelis were financial advisors to Dealer Tire while Cowen assisted Bain.

Cleveland-based Dealer Tire is a replacement tire and parts distributor for automotive dealerships. Bain’s investment in the company will help it accelerate growth and expansion under current CEO Scott Mueller and president Dean Mueller.

The transaction is expected to close in December.

Lindsay Goldberg invested in Dealer Tire in 2014. This year the company has invested in SimpleTire, an online marketplace with a virtual inventory model that facilitates web-based tire sales, and Tyrata, a tire sensor and data management company.

Joseph Robbins led the investment from Bain, which has backed other companies in the industry, including Asimco, American Trailer World, Autodistribution, BRP, Diversey, European finTyre Distribution, Genpact, MSX International, Sensata Technologies and TI Automotive.

Ruths Analytics raises funding from SCF Ventures

Ruths Analytics and Innovation, a Houston provider of service and productivity efficiency software for oil and gas operators, raised an undisclosed amount of growth equity funding from SCF Ventures.

Norton Rose Fulbright partner Brian Fenske and associate Chen Zhang in Houston represented SCF. Billy J. Murphy of Dwyer Murphy Calvert in Austin counseled Ruths.

SCF said oil and gas operators are collecting more data than ever to boost service efficiency and well productivity and Ruths allows industry users to visualize and learn from disparate data sources using analytics and industry expertise.

Troy Ruths founded the company in 2013, expanding it across the U.S. and Canada, analyzing reserves, drilling, completions and production data.

“With this investment, we will be able to accelerate the deployment of Petro.ai, a seamless combination of big data, data science and chat into one cohesive interface,” Ruths said in a statement.

SCF managing director Hossam Elbadawy said the analytics-powered digital oilfield is the fastest growing part of the oil and gas industry and the firm has been looking at the space as it has developed.

SCF Ventures is an early stage investment vehicle within SCF Partners, a Houston-based private equity firm that focuses on oilfield services. SCF has completed 400 energy services investments and helped build 17 public companies over its 30-year history.

Its current investments from active funds include Nine Energy Service, Select Energy Services, Forum Energy Technologies, National Energy Services Reunited and Centurion Group.

CAPITAL MARKETS

HuntonAK represents Hilcorp on $600M senior notes offering

Hunton Andrews Kurth said Oct. 22 that it advised Hilcorp Energy I, Hilcorp Finance Co. and Hilcorp Alaska on a $600 million senior notes offering.

The team included Henry Havre, Robert McNamara, Lisa Shelton, Jerry Chandapillai, Garrett Hughey and Oliver Fankhauser.

The initial purchasers were led by J.P. Morgan Securities.

The transaction involved a Rule 144A offering of 6.25 percent senior notes due 2028.

UPDATE:

Austin-based cooler purveyor Yeti Holdings raised $288 million in an initial public offering of 16 million shares priced at $18, below expectations of 20 million shares being sold between $19 and $21. Its stock closed lower at $17 on its first day of trading.

Still, Yeti backer the Cortec Group stands to make 19.1 times its money on the issue including a dividend paid out in 2016, according to PEHub.

The underwriters included BofA Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley and Jefferies, who have the option to buy another 2.4 million shares.

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