What a difference a day makes.
As of Thursday of last week, year-to-date M&A activity in the energy and power sectors was lagging last year’s and even 2017’s figures, according to Refinitiv.
But then Friday morning came with a big announcement: That Chevron Corp. had agreed to buy Anadarko Petroleum for $33 billion. Including that transaction, deal value so far this year has surpassed the last high of 2007, which approached $200 billion, according to the data provider.
After the Chevron-Anadarko marriage was announced, the superlatives came gushing forth: The largest shale deal ever; the 11th biggest energy and power deal in history; and the largest oil and gas merger since 2015 (when Royal Dutch Shell bought the BG Group for $53 billion).
With some analysts contending that the deal was a “steal” for Chevron at $65 per share, news outlets reported that another bidder could come in – namely Occidental Petroleum, whose offer amounted to more than $70 per share but was rebuked because it didn’t have enough stock.
Oxy is considering its options, according to CNBC citing unnamed sources. But the break-up fee – 3% of the total transaction value, or around $1 billion – could be a deterrent.
Meanwhile, the equity and debt markets continue to be mostly closed for the oil and gas industry and the acquisition and divestiture, or A&D, market is down significantly over last year, as The Texas Lawbook has reported. What are companies to do if they need capital?
In a word (or two words smushed together): Drillcos. These are joint ventures in which capital providers agree to share drilling costs in exchange for an equity stake in the properties. Once the wells hit a certain return, much of the interest reverts back to the producer.
Drillcos aren’t new: They tend to pop out at times of tight liquidity.
Austin Elam, a newly minted partner at Haynes and Boone in Houston, spoke about drillcos’ rise and mechanics last week at a luncheon in Houston hosted by the Independent Petroleum Association of America. “Equity markets remain quiet, and with borrowing bases not rising, there’s not a lot of liquidity in the market,” he said.
After his address, Elam said he’s working on two drillcos right now, both of which involve private companies operating in the Permian. He’s also working on two deals involving volumetric production payments, or VPPs – which give the capital provider the right to part of a company’s oil and gas production in exchange for financing its drilling costs. It’s another resurrected structure from previous tight times.
In other deal news, last week Preqin released its private equity update, which found that first quarter buyout deals globally had fallen to 1,100 worth $101 billion versus the $130 billion record in the same period of last year.
Fundraising did a bit better, with 219 funds pulling in $100 billion in the first quarter, slightly surpassing the $95 billion secured in the same period of last year. The firm said investors are mostly flocking to large and experienced fund managers.
Back in the Lone Star state, dealmaking by Texas lawyers was up last week, not just in terms of value (thanks Chevron) but also in volume. There were 16 deals worth $38.9 billion, versus 12 the week before worth $6.87 billion and 11 in the same week last year valued at $2.5 billion.
Weekly Corporate Deal Tracker Roundup Stats
A compilation of weekly stats from The Lawbook's CDT Weekly Roundup
(Deal Values in Millions)
(Deal Values in Millions)
Deal Count | Amount | Firms | Lawyers | M&A Count | M&A Value $M | CapM Count | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
09-Nov-24 | 14 | $2,110 | 12 | 139 | 12 | $1,410 | 2 | $700 |
02-Nov-24 | 12 | $52,788 | 11 | 107 | 11 | $52,738 | 1 | $50 |
26-Oct-24 | 8 | $3,160 | 8 | 65 | 7 | $3,065 | 1 | $75 |
19-Oct-24 | 12 | $5,304 | 11 | 136 | 11 | $4,554 | 1 | $750 |
12-Oct-24 | 17 | $8,438 | 12 | 150 | 15 | $8,116 | 2 | $322 |
05-Oct-24 | 22 | $23,181 | 12 | 189 | 15 | $19,980 | 7 | $3,201 |
28-Sep-24 | 11 | $2,356 | 7 | 144 | 7 | $53 | 4 | $2,303 |
21-Sep-24 | 12 | $9,568 | 10 | 169 | 5 | $4,101 | 7 | $5,467 |
14-Sep-24 | 24 | $10,988 | 12 | 235 | 16 | $7,175 | 8 | $3,813 |
7-Sep-24 | 12 | $20,420 | 16 | 168 | 11 | $20,307 | 1 | $112.9 |
31-Aug-24 | 13 | $20,631 | 9 | 134 | 12 | $14,775 | 1 | $5,856 |
24-Aug-24 | 19 | $8,452 | 21 | 325 | 16 | $7,102 | 3 | $1,350 |
17-Aug-24 | 25 | $49,196 | 16 | 304 | 11 | $39,386 | 14 | $9,810 |
10-Aug-24 | 20 | $12,264 | 15 | 312 | 16 | $9,794 | 4 | $2,470 |
03-Aug-24 | 26 | $16,498 | 16 | 334 | 18 | $8,137 | 8 | $8,361 |
27-Jul-24 | 19 | $16,442 | 21 | 271 | 15 | $13,838 | 4 | $2,604 |
20-Jul-24 | 15 | $16,016 | 14 | 184 | 10 | $14,232 | 5 | $1,784 |
13-Jul-24 | 20 | $17,220 | 14 | 265 | 18 | $7,146 | 2 | $10,074 |
6-Jul-24 | 11 | $3,941 | 11 | 95 | 8 | $2,650 | 3 | $1,291 |
29-Jun-24 | 14 | $6,296 | 15 | 224 | 8 | $6,296 | 6 | $1,927 |
22-Jun-24 | 12 | $5,679 | 8 | 137 | 5 | $210 | 7 | $5,469 |
15-Jun-24 | 13 | $9,895 | 16 | 214 | 10 | $5,280 | 3 | $4,615 |
8-Jun-24 | 19 | $23,859 | 13 | 239 | 12 | $19,436 | 7 | $4,423 |
1-Jun-24 | 12 | $34,510 | 11 | 147 | 9 | $26,110 | 3 | $8,400 |
25-May-24 | 13 | $9,684 | 15 | 171 | 10 | $4,434 | 3 | $5,250 |
18-May-24 | 11 | $5,490 | 11 | 173 | 8 | $3,129 | 3 | $2,361 |
11-May-24 | 22 | $14,855 | 14 | 227 | 16 | $11,105 | 6 | $3,750 |
4-May-24 | 13 | $3,139 | 9 | 87 | 10 | $1,297 | 3 | $1,842 |
27-Apr-24 | 10 | $6,684 | 6 | 28 | 10 | $6,684 | 0 | 0 |
20-Apr-24 | 19 | $15,989 | 11 | 147 | 9 | $5,208 | 10 | $10,781 |
13-Apr-24 | 13 | $8,952 | 9 | 76 | 10 | $1,652 | 3 | $7,300 |
6-Apr-24 | 22 | $22,616 | 14 | 222 | 14 | $13,501 | 8 | $13,116 |
30-Mar-24 | 12 | $9,286 | 8 | 136 | 8 | $4,299 | 4 | $4,987 |
23-Mar-24 | 18 | $5,451 | 17 | 266 | 16 | $4,759 | 2 | $692 |
16-Mar-24 | 21 | $11,437 | 13 | 186 | 14 | $9,316 | 6 | $2,070 |
9-Mar-24 | 23 | $4,695 | 21 | 218 | 19 | $2,723 | 4 | $1,972 |
2-Mar-24 | 20 | $9,108 | 19 | 372 | 14 | $4,558 | 6 | $4,550 |
24-Feb-24 | 19 | $16,382 | 12 | 248 | 15 | $9,507 | 4 | $6,875 |
17-Feb-24 | 16 | $29,932 | 15 | 157 | 12 | $29,216 | 4 | $716 |
10-Feb-24 | 25 | $10,750 | 17 | 196 | 19 | $5,372 | 6 | $5,379 |
3-Feb-24 | 12 | $8,416 | 18 | 125 | 9 | $3,416 | 3 | $5,000 |
27-Jan-24 | 9 | $8,165 | 9 | 87 | 8 | $7,815 | 1 | $800 |
20-Jan-24 | 14 | $4,084 | 12 | 109 | 12 | $3,219 | 2 | $865 |
13-Jan-24 | 17 | $33,588 | 12 | 256 | 12 | $26,765 | 5 | $6,823 |
6-Jan-24 | 8 | $7,915 | 8 | 84 | 6 | $7,265 | 2 | $650 |
30-Dec-23 | 17 | $14,599 | 12 | 99 | 15 | $2,714 | 2 | $11,885 |
23-Dec-23 | 23 | $4,182 | 13 | 219 | 16 | $1,813 | 7 | $2,370 |
16-Dec-23 | 13 | $16,436 | 13 | 280 | 7 | $15,150 | 5 | $1,286 |
9-Dec-23 | 26 | $14,633.90 | 17 | 244 | 16 | $8,095 | 10 | $6,538.90 |
2-Dec-23 | 13 | $6,720 | 9 | 57 | 12 | $6,630 | 1 | $90 |
25-Nov-23 | 9 | $4,835 | 9 | 131 | 6 | $1,785 | 3 | $3,050 |
18-Nov-23 | 22 | $6,568.70 | 17 | 184 | 14 | $4,709.20 | 8 | $1,859.50 |
11-Nov-23 | 15 | $9,825 | 13 | 179 | 12 | $6,581 | 3 | $3,244 |
4-Nov-23 | 15 | $20,582.50 | 14 | 193 | 12 | $19,417.50 | 3 | $1,165 |
28-Oct-23 | 18 | $68,419.10 | 18 | 152 | 15 | $66,646 | 3 | $1,773.10 |
21-Oct-23 | 16 | $6,755.90 | 16 | 165 | 15 | $6,755.90 | 1 | $3 |
14-Oct-23 | 14 | $67,851.20 | 13 | 125 | 9 | $61,998.50 | 5 | $5,852.70 |
7-Oct-23 | 17 | $6,595.50 | 13 | 228 | 16 | $5,995.50 | 1 | $600 |
30-Sep-23 | 17 | $1,896.45 | 13 | 189 | 14 | $806.45 | 3 | $1,090 |
23-Sep-23 | 23 | $6,432.70 | 17 | 230 | 16 | $1,402.80 | 7 | $5,029.90 |
16-Sep-23 | 25 | $23,226.70 | 23 | 353 | 16 | $17,239 | 9 | $5,987.70 |
9-Sep-23 | 12 | $6,369 | 8 | 102 | 7 | $4,311 | 5 | $2,058 |
2-Sep-23 | 14 | $2,522 | 6 | 92 | 13 | $1,322 | 1 | $1,200 |
26-Aug-23 | 17 | $12,160.25 | 13 | 202 | 15 | $6,573.25 | 2 | $5,587.00 |
19-Aug-23 | 19 | $11,505 | 13 | 213 | 15 | $11,255 | 4 | $250 |
12-Aug-23 | 19 | $9,698.80 | 13 | 184 | 7 | $3,270 | 12 | $6,428.80 |
5-Aug-23 | 13 | $5,201 | 12 | 118 | 12 | $5,051 | 1 | $150 |
29-Jul-23 | 15 | $21,031.60 | 13 | 196 | 11 | $18,292.00 | 4 | $2,739.60 |
22-Jul-23 | 18 | $3,992 | 12 | 130 | 13 | $2,808 | 5 | $1,184 |
15-Jul-23 | 13 | $8,254.95 | 13 | 81 | 13 | $8,254.95 | 0 | 0 |
8-Jul-23 | 16 | $5,441.45 | 12 | 172 | 11 | $2,443 | 5 | $2,998.45 |
1-Jul-23 | 16 | $6,872 | 10 | 105 | 12 | $5,474 | 4 | $1,398 |
24-Jun-23 | 13 | $10,914 | 16 | 201 | 10 | $7,874 | 3 | $3,040 |
17-Jun-23 | 17 | $5,880.70 | 15 | 151 | 15 | $4,705.70 | 2 | $1,175 |
10-Jun-23 | 19 | $8,516.10 | 13 | 111 | 16 | $6,252.40 | 3 | $2,263.70 |
June 3 2023 | 12 | $6,104.42 | 12 | 138 | 8 | $4,256.92 | 4 | $1,847.50 |
27-May-23 | 17 | $12,200 | 10 | 67 | 11 | $6,165 | 6 | $6,035 |
20-May-23 | 11 | $22,458.10 | 8 | 103 | 4 | $19,455 | 7 | $3,003 |
13-May-23 | 12 | $7,034 | 10 | 101 | 8 | $5,460 | 4 | $1,574 |
6-May-23 | 20 | $3,297.60 | 18 | 196 | 17 | $2,985.60 | 3 | $312 |
29-Apr-23 | 23 | $3,691.20 | 18 | 135 | 17 | $1,969.70 | 6 | $1,721.50 |
22-Apr-23 | 16 | $5,570 | 14 | 104 | 14 | $4,750 | 2 | $1,000 |
15-Apr-23 | 12 | $23,818.10 | 9 | 59 | 10 | $21,618.10 | 2 | $2,200 |
8-Apr-23 | 16 | $7,949 | 9 | 173 | 9 | $5,472 | 7 | $3,477 |
1-Apr-23 | 21 | $18,676.70 | 12 | 175 | 11 | $10,926.70 | 10 | $7,750 |
25-Mar-23 | 15 | $8,779.50 | 10 | 141 | 5 | $2,362 | 10 | $6,416.50 |
18-Mar-23 | 7 | $14,048.80 | 6 | 69 | 5 | $13,345 | 2 | $703.80 |
11-Mar-23 | 21 | $11,576 | 16 | 165 | 16 | $8,131 | 5 | $3,445 |
4-Mar-23 | 20 | $9,668 | 11 | 228 | 16 | $8,209 | 4 | $1,459 |
25-Feb-23 | 13 | $5,335 | 13 | 130 | 12 | $4,235 | 1 | $1,200 |
18-Feb-23 | 14 | $5,743.70 | 13 | 158 | 8 | $898.70 | 6 | $4,845 |
11-Feb-23 | 16 | $12,088 | 12 | 137 | 12 | $9,965 | 4 | $2,123 |
4-Feb-23 | 17 | $8,066 | 15 | 140 | 13 | $5,614 | 4 | $2,452 |
28-Jan-23 | 7 | $2,180 | 7 | 75 | 5 | $1,692.75 | 2 | $488 |
21-Jan-23 | 17 | $5,768 | 16 | 174 | 12 | $1,918 | 5 | $3,850 |
14-Jan-23 | 11 | $2, 800 | 10 | 102 | 8 | $421 | 3 | $2,400 |
7-Jan-23 | 18 | $8,296 | 11 | 167 | 14 | $6,461 | 3 | $1,835 |
31-Dec-22 | 14 | $2,732 | 11 | 99 | 12 | $2,092 | 2 | $640 |
17-Dec | 14 | $7,919 | 13 | 115 | 12 | $7,419 | 1 | $500 |
10-Dec-22 | 14 | $10,093 | 12 | 88 | 11 | $7,093 | 3 | $3,000 |
3-Dec-22 | 26 | $12,800.90 | 11 | 172 | 20 | $4,141 | 6 | $8,659.90 |
26-Nov-22 | 8 | $2,266.70 | 8 | 5 | 3 | $76 | 5 | $2,190.70 |
19-Nov-22 | 21 | $2,886 | 15 | 212 | 19 | $2,550 | 2 | $336 |
12-Nov-22 | 13 | $15,093.70 | 9 | 81 | 9 | $14,200 | 4 | $893.70 |
5-Nov-22 | 25 | 19,337.20 | 16 | 509 | 22 | $8,267.20 | 3 | $11,070 |
29-Oct-22 | 15 | $7,805.30 | 9 | 116 | 14 | $7,180.30 | 1 | $625 |
22-Oct-22 | 20 | $8,193.50 | 13 | 253 | 13 | $5,442 | 7 | $2,751.50 |
15-Oct-22 | 9 | $3,046.10 | 9 | 139 | 7 | $2,588.30 | 2 | $457.80 |
8-Oct-22 | 19 | $2,011.80 | 12 | 114 | 16 | $833.80 | 3 | $1,178 |
1-Oct-22 | 23 | $5,532.90 | 16 | 156 | 18 | $4,952.30 | 5 | $580.60 |
24-Sep-22 | 18 | $5,194 | 14 | 216 | 15 | $4,050 | 3 | $1,144 |
17-Sep-22 | 21 | $8,352.30 | 12 | 320 | 15 | $4,759.60 | 6 | $3,592.70 |
10-Sep-22 | 15 | $19,853.50 | 10 | 126 | 13 | $19,403.60 | 2 | $450 |
3-Sep-22 | 9 | $2,312 | 9 | 62 | 9 | $2,312 | 0 | 0 |
27-Aug-22 | 16 | $30,891.70 | 10 | 135 | 15 | $30,666.40 | 1 | 227.7 |
20-Aug-22 | 12 | $1,977 | 8 | 152 | 9 | 925 | 3 | $1,052 |
13-Aug-22 | 18 | $8,004.70 | 11 | 242 | 11 | $2,844.70 | 7 | $5,160 |
6-Aug-22 | 24 | $7,948.90 | 12 | 240 | 17 | $3,577 | 7 | $4,371.90 |
30-Jul-22 | 8 | $6,941 | 9 | 78 | 7 | $6,839 | 1 | $102 |
23-Jul-22 | 11 | $801 | 11 | 92 | 10 | $801 | 1 | 0 |
16-Jul-22 | 14 | $3,650 | 10 | 122 | 14 | $3,650 | 0 | 0 |
9-Jul-22 | 10 | $3,557.70 | 7 | 68 | 9 | $3,557.70 | 1 | 0 |
2-Jul-22 | 18 | $8,609.40 | 13 | 152 | 15 | $2,754.40 | 3 | $5,855 |
25-Jun-22 | 15 | $6,142 | 13 | 146 | 9 | $2,017 | 6 | $4,125 |
18-Jun-22 | 17 | $11,890.10 | 14 | 228 | 15 | $11,410 | 2 | 479.7 |
11-Jun-22 | 17 | $7,600 | 12 | 123 | 10 | $2,300 | 7 | $5,300 |
4-Jun-22 | 12 | $2,937 | 10 | 127 | 9 | $692 | 3 | $2,245 |
28-May-22 | 9 | $3,197.60 | 11 | 86 | 9 | $3,197.60 | 0 | 0 |
21-May-22 | 14 | $7,284.50 | 12 | 185 | 11 | $6,609 | 3 | $675.50 |
14-May-22 | 11 | $306.60 | 9 | 80 | 10 | $306.60 | 1 | $225 |
7-May-22 | 16 | $10,451.75 | 12 | 108 | 12 | $1,827 | 4 | $8,624.75 |
30-Apr-22 | 16 | $2,296.50 | 16 | 157 | 12 | $895.50 | 4 | $1,401 |
23-Apr-22 | 10 | $2,241 | 11 | 58 | 8 | $1,641 | 2 | $600 |
16-Apr-22 | 11 | $6,643 | 7 | 156 | 8 | $2,359 | 3 | $4,284 |
9-Apr-22 | 17 | $4,429 | 14 | 184 | 11 | $1,690 | 6 | $2,739 |
2-Apr-22 | 13 | $1,755 | 8 | 84 | 10 | $1,145 | 3 | $610 |
26-Mar-22 | 11 | $3,205 | 8 | 65 | 6 | $200 | 5 | $3,005 |
19-Mar-22 | 13 | $2,239.17 | 9 | 106 | 13 | $2,239.17 | 0 | 0 |
12-Mar-22 | 18 | $12,016 | 11 | 239 | 15 | $11,965 | 2 | $51.35 |
5-Mar-22 | 17 | $6,786 | 13 | 137 | 13 | $5,161 | 4 | $1,625 |
26-Feb-22 | 12 | $5,095 | 8 | 149 | 9 | $4,437.50 | 3 | $658 |
19-Feb-22 | 17 | $22,229 | 17 | 174 | 14 | $21,354 | 3 | $875 |
12-Feb-22 | 12 | $2,344.70 | 10 | 73 | 8 | $641.70 | 4 | $1,703 |
5-Feb-22 | 11 | $2,503 | 8 | 99 | 11 | $2,503 | 0 | 0 |
29-Jan-22 | 11 | $3,872 | 12 | 101 | 12 | $3,872 | 0 | 0 |
22-Jan-22 | 13 | $5,143.50 | 10 | 99 | 12 | $4,842.50 | 1 | $301 |
15-Jan-22 | 12 | $7,605 | 9 | 155 | 9 | $6,480 | 3 | $1,025 |
8-Jan-22 | 13 | $8,256.20 | 11 | 102 | 13 | $8,256.20 | 0 | 0 |
1-Jan-22 | 9 | $1,273.80 | 6 | 50 | 9 | $1,273.80 | 0 | 0 |
25-Dec-21 | 21 | $4,734.75 | 11 | 176 | 16 | $3,410 | 5 | $1,324.75 |
18-Dec-21 | 26 | $7,325.20 | 15 | 193 | 18 | $3,640.20 | 8 | $3,685.20 |
11-Dec-21 | 16 | $5,017 | 10 | 109 | 13 | $1,417 | 3 | $3,600 |
4-Dec-21 | 14 | $2,310 | 8 | 86 | 8 | $2,310 | 6 | $1,882.05 |
27-Nov-21 | 9 | $3.460.1 | 10 | 101 | 6 | $1,758 | 3 | $1,702.60 |
20-Nov-21 | 20 | $22,792 | 15 | 157 | 12 | $18,864.50 | 8 | $3,928 |
13-Nov-21 | 21 | $26,729 | 12 | 178 | 13 | $11,822 | 8 | $14,907 |
6-Nov-21 | 12 | $8,303 | 13 | 157 | 10 | $6,682 | 3 | $1,621 |
30-Oct-21 | 21 | $10,368 | 15 | 218 | 15 | $9,24.4 | 6 | $1,103.00 |
23-Oct-21 | 21 | $18.783.1 | 15 | 222 | 11 | $12,314 | 10 | $6,468.60 |
16-Oct-21 | 15 | $3,868 | 11 | 118 | 15 | $2,293 | 2 | $1,575 |
9-Oct-21 | 20 | $8,610 | 16 | 175 | 16 | $7,795 | 4 | $815 |
2-Oct-21 | 14 | $6,250 | 11 | 137 | 10 | $5,200 | 4 | $1,050 |
25-Sep-21 | 11 | $11,460 | 9 | 93 | 7 | $10,200 | 4 | $1,250 |
18-Sep-21 | 11 | $16,603 | 8 | 99 | 8 | $15,084 | 3 | $1,519 |
11-Sep-21 | 17 | $10,653 | 11 | 103 | 13 | $8,503 | 4 | $2,150 |
4-Sep-21 | 13 | $7,222 | 10 | 89 | 11 | $6,715 | 2 | $507 |
28-Aug-21 | 12 | $763 | 9 | 63 | 11 | $663 | 1 | $100 |
21-Aug-21 | 12 | $29,659 | 7 | 79 | 11 | $29,579 | 1 | $80 |
14-Aug-21 | 22 | $17,845 | 11 | 199 | 12 | $12,805 | 10 | $5,04 |
7-Aug-21 | 17 | $13,670 | 12 | 139 | 15 | $11,766 | 2 | $1,904 |
31-Jul-21 | 21 | $8,160 | 11 | 134 | 10 | $3,574 | 10 | $4,586 |
July 24,2021 | 21 | $6,367 | 11 | 139 | 15 | $3,712 | 6 | $2,655 |
17-Jul-21 | 14 | $4,009 | 11 | 124 | 12 | $2,015 | 2 | $1,994 |
10-Jul-21 | 16 | $3,997 | 13 | 143 | 11 | $1,597 | 4 | $2,4 |
3-Jul-21 | 24 | $7,492 | 13 | 94 | 16 | $3,769 | 8 | $3,722 |
26-Jun-21 | 10 | $4,995 | 7 | 85 | 8 | $3,847 | 2 | $1,148 |
19-Jun-21 | 28 | $16,830 | 8 | 228 | 9 | $1,861 | 19 | $14,968 |
12-Jun-21 | 26 | $27,238 | 15 | 209 | 19 | $25,602 | 7 | $1,636 |
5-Jun-21 | 15 | $15,539 | 13 | 100 | 13 | $14,709 | 2 | $600 |
29-May-21 | 35 | $20,279 | 11 | 145 | 28 | $18,64 | 7 | $1,639 |
22-May-21 | 24 | $53,208 | 14 | 174 | 17 | $51,047 | 7 | $2,161 |
15-May-21 | 18 | $10,620 | 13 | 220 | 11 | $5,870 | 7 | $4,809 |
8-May-21 | 17 | $10,400 | 11 | 156 | 15 | $8,386 | 2 | $2,500 |
1-May-21 | 21 | $7,200 | 16 | 115 | 12 | $3,808 | 9 | $3,392 |
24-Apr-21 | 8 | $20,200 | 9 | 31 | 8 | $20,200 | 0 | 0 |
17-Apr-21 | 14 | $6,270 | 8 | 102 | 11 | $40,180 | 3 | $2,260 |
10-Apr-21 | 15 | $8,940 | 13 | 129 | 14 | $7,990 | 1 | $950 |
3-Apr-21 | 18 | $19,513 | 10 | 151 | 12 | $16,923 | 6 | $2,590 |
27-Mar-21 | 27 | $13,942 | 15 | 244 | 14 | $4,300 | 13 | $9,633.50 |
20-Mar-21 | 11 | $2,046 | 4 | 102 | 3 | $270 | 8 | $1,776 |
13-Mar-21 | 15 | $3,270 | 9 | 109 | 6 | $538 | 9 | $2,732 |
6-Mar-21 | 24 | $13,617 | 10 | 196 | 13 | $10,395 | 11 | $3,222 |
27-Feb-21 | 19 | $8,105 | 12 | 139 | 15 | $4,970 | 4 | $3,135 |
20-Feb-21 | 9 | $8,820 | 9 | 153 | 8 | $8,520 | 1 | $300 |
13-Feb-21 | 12 | $4,852.60 | 7 | 81 | 7 | 2,766 | 5 | $2,086.60 |
6-Feb-21 | 18 | $9,752 | 13 | 153 | 14 | $5,222 | 4 | $4,530 |
30-Jan-21 | 18 | $9,449 | 9 | 182 | 15 | $8,753.80 | 3 | $695.30 |
23-Jan-21 | 14 | $8,150 | 8 | 118 | 6 | $4,000 | 8 | $4,150 |
16-Jan-21 | 17 | $6,783 | 13 | 138 | 11 | $2,400 | 6 | $4,382.90 |
9-Jan-21 | 22 | $6,829 | 14 | 135 | 18 | $3,139.30 | 4 | $3,690 |
2-Jan-21 | 7 | $1,466 | 7 | 60 | 7 | $1,466 | 0 | 0 |
26-Dec-20 | 18 | $15,900 | 12 | 163 | 16 | $5,300 | 1 | $600 |
19-Dec-20 | 18 | $9,769 | 14 | 110 | 14 | $8,426 | 4 | $1,343 |
12-Dec-20 | 10 | $7,200 | 9 | 100 | 9 | $3,325 | 1 | $3,830 |
5-Dec-20 | 15 | $4,261 | 9 | 122 | 9 | $2,780 | 6 | $1,481 |
28-Nov-20 | 19 | $7,758 | 10 | 110 | 13 | $4,003 | 6 | $3,755 |
14-Nov-20 | 14 | $864.10 | 14 | 157 | 12 | $289.10 | 2 | $575 |
7-Nov-20 | 13 | $6,332 | 9 | 129 | 9 | $2,483.50 | 4 | $3,849 |
31-Oct-20 | 10 | $3,995.80 | 8 | 103 | 6 | $3,231.10 | 4 | $754.70 |
24-Oct-20 | 6 | $18,100 | 6 | 58 | 5 | $17,709 | 1 | $350 |
17-Oct-20 | 8 | $351.90 | 5 | 55 | 8 | $351.90 | 0 | 0 |
10-Oct-20 | 7 | $5,229 | 3 | 50 | 4 | $735 | 3 | $4,494 |
3-Oct-20 | 14 | $21,428 | 9 | 173 | 9 | $17,535 | 5 | $3,893 |
26-Sep-20 | 10 | $12,770 | 8 | 93 | 5 | $10,300 | 5 | $2,470 |
19-Sep-20 | 14 | $8,365 | 9 | 101 | 6 | $1,020 | 8 | $7,345 |
12-Sep-20 | 6 | $4,406 | 8 | 59 | 3 | $1,270 | 3 | $3,136 |
5-Sep-20 | 11 | $5,191 | 8 | 117 | 9 | $4,061 | 2 | $1,130 |
29-Aug-20 | 11 | $2,531 | 9 | 94 | 5 | $1,130 | 6 | $1,401 |
22-Aug-20 | 18 | $6,574 | 12 | 140 | 7 | $1,930 | 11 | $4,644 |
15-Aug-20 | 13 | $4,991 | 10 | 97 | 7 | $1,216 | 6 | $3,775 |
8-Aug-20 | 12 | $32,092 | 11 | 112 | 9 | $30,457 | 3 | $1,635 |
1-Aug-20 | 7 | $5,287 | 8 | 76 | 5 | $3,687 | 2 | $1,600 |
25-Jul-20 | 9 | $18,751 | 6 | 67 | 7 | $18,403 | 2 | $348 |
18-Jul-20 | 6 | $1,982.50 | 5 | 50 | 4 | $1,407.50 | 2 | $575 |
11-Jul-20 | 11 | $565.10 | 12 | 75 | 10 | $65.10 | 1 | $500 |
4-Jul-20 | 10 | $8,889 | 8 | 98 | 9 | $8,788 | 1 | $100.30 |
27-Jun-20 | 8 | $6,874 | 10 | 50 | 5 | $4,972.50 | 3 | $2,081.50 |
20-Jun-20 | 12 | $4,444 | 9 | 115 | 7 | $2,829 | 5 | $1,615 |
13-Jun-20 | 6 | $3,582 | 4 | 37 | 2 | $350 | 4 | $3,232 |
6-Jun-20 | 11 | $3,213.70 | 8 | 65 | 7 | $470 | 4 | $2,743.70 |
30-May-20 | 8 | $7,335 | 7 | 48 | 6 | $4,639 | 2 | $2,697 |
23-May-20 | 4 | $432.40 | 4 | 34 | 3 | $432.40 | 1 | 0 |
16-May-20 | 6 | $310 | 6 | 34 | 5 | $310 | 1 | 0 |
9-May-20 | 18 | $5,630 | 16 | 124 | 14 | $3,180 | 4 | $2,450 |
2-May-20 | 15 | 10,400 | 10 | 90 | 8 | $1,900 | 7 | $,8,500 |
25-Apr-20 | 8 | $3,400 | 9 | 36 | 5 | $1,000 | 3 | $2,450 |
18-Apr-20 | 19 | $9,500 | 14 | 92 | 8 | $185.70 | 11 | $9,360 |
11-Apr-20 | 12 | $6,000 | 9 | 40 | 5 | $190 | 7 | $5,800 |
4-Apr-20 | 14 | $8,200 | 11 | 68 | 10 | $2,200 | 4 | $6,000 |
28-Mar-20 | 16 | $6,500 | 13 | 96 | 10 | $3,700 | 6 | $2,800 |
21-Mar-20 | 11 | $11,910 | 7 | 33 | 7 | $2,250 | 4 | $9,960 |
14-Mar-20 | 7 | 809.8 | 6 | 34 | 6 | 684.8 | 1 | 125 |
7-Mar-20 | 16 | $2,500 | 15 | 70 | 13 | $669 | 3 | $1,400 |
29-Feb-20 | 13 | $15,260 | 13 | 128 | 11 | $11,760 | 2 | $3,500 |
22-Feb-20 | 12 | $3,700 | 10 | 92 | 10 | $2,560 | 2 | $1,130 |
15-Feb-20 | 16 | $1,250 | 10 | 84 | 12 | $35 | 4 | $1,222 |
8-Feb-20 | 18 | $6,080 | 14 | 123 | 14 | $2,595 | 4 | $3,485 |
1-Feb-20 | 21 | $20,900 | 12 | 101 | 14 | $17,860 | 7 | $3,060 |
25-Jan-20 | 13 | $7,430 | 13 | 62 | 12 | $6,430 | 1 | $1,000 |
18-Jan-20 | 23 | $9,580 | 15 | 120 | 19 | $6,580 | 4 | $3,000 |
11-Jan-20 | 21 | $14,200 | 18 | 199 | 16 | $1,020 | 5 | $13,200 |
4-Jan-20 | 22 | $6,400 | 11 | 119 | 16 | $3,204 | 6 | $3,245 |
28-Dec-19 | 22 | $7,150 | 19 | 175 | 18 | $6,800 | 4 | $327.40 |
14-Dec-19 | 24 | $36,300 | 23 | 167 | 19 | $9,500 | 5 | $26,800 |
7-Dec-19 | 11 | $10,400 | 11 | 55 | 7 | $1,082 | 4 | $9,370 |
November 30. 2019 | 14 | $2,450 | 12 | 126 | 12 | $1,760 | 2 | $692.50 |
23-Nov-19 | 16 | $1,995 | 10 | 41 | 11 | $615 | 5 | $1,380 |
16-Nov-19 | 15 | $3,820 | 13 | 135 | 11 | $2,500 | 4 | $1,271 |
9-Nov-19 | 25 | $12,900 | 17 | 182 | 23 | $12,200 | 2 | $575 |
2-Nov-19 | 10 | $2,470 | 12 | 61 | 9 | 2,450 | 3 | $22 |
26-Oct-19 | 12 | $5,560 | 14 | 70 | 11 | $3,860 | 1 | $1,700 |
19-Oct-19 | 8 | $6,600 | 8 | 138 | 8 | $6,600 | 0 | 0 |
12-Oct-19 | 19 | $4,300 | 14 | 55 | 16 | $3,800 | 3 | $500 |
5-Oct-19 | 18 | $14,500 | 19 | 166 | 15 | $11,100 | 3 | $3,400 |
28-Sep-19 | 19 | $8,100 | 18 | 132 | 18 | $7,560 | 1 | $550 |
21-Sep-19 | 14 | $6,300 | 16 | 66 | 11 | $2,160 | 3 | $4,170 |
14-Sep-19 | 15 | $23,800 | 12 | 56 | 11 | $21,250 | 4 | $2,570 |
7-Sep-19 | 17 | $3,500 | 15 | 98 | 14 | $1,900 | 3 | $1,600 |
31-Aug-19 | 5 | $8,700 | 6 | 50 | 5 | $8,700 | 0 | 0 |
24-Aug-19 | 16 | $10,000 | 14 | 82 | 15 | $4,250 | 1 | $5,750 |
16-Aug-19 | 10 | $1,680 | 5 | 52 | 7 | $650 | 3 | $950 |
9-Aug-19 | 17 | $17,700 | 15 | 68 | 14 | $3,900 | 3 | $13,800 |
2-Aug-19 | 13 | $5,760 | 12 | 108 | 13 | $5,760 | NA | NA |
27-Jul-19 | 11 | $7,300 | 13 | 76 | 8 | $6,570 | 3 | $730 |
20-Jul-19 | 13 | $11,800 | 13 | 125 | 11 | $5,300 | 2 | $6,500 |
13-Jul-19 | 10 | $775 | 7 | 46 | 8 | $542.50 | 2 | $233 |
6-Jul-19 | 7 | $2,500 | 9 | 85 | 7 | $2,500 | 0 | 0 |
29-Jun-19 | 23 | $8,290 | 15 | 154 | 17 | $2,300 | 6 | $5,970 |
22-Jun-19 | 17 | $10,700 | 10 | 139 | 14 | $7,700 | 3 | $3,000 |
15-Jun-19 | 11 | $13,500 | 14 | 160 | 11 | $13,500 | NA | NA |
8-Jun-19 | 13 | $2,870 | 17 | 55 | 11 | $1,570 | 2 | $1,300 |
1-Jun-19 | 10 | $4,460 | 11 | 60 | 8 | $4,140 | 2 | $315 |
25-May-19 | 17 | $4,360 | 14 | 79 | 14 | $3,700 | 3 | $612 |
18-May-19 | 22 | $9,000 | 17 | 150 | 16 | $3,400 | 6 | $5,600 |
11-May-19 | 18 | $19,800 | 17 | 177 | 15 | $18,300 | 3 | $1,500 |
4-May-19 | 10 | $7,075 | 6 | 32 | 8 | $6,900 | 2 | $175 |
27-Apr-19 | 15 | $3,200 | 14 | 117 | 14 | $3,160 | 1 | $40 |
20-Apr-19 | 13 | $13,500 | 10 | 90 | 9 | $12,200 | 4 | $1,300 |
13-Apr-19 | 16 | $38,900 | 14 | 91 | 14 | $37,800 | 2 | $1,100 |
6-Apr-19 | 12 | $6,870 | 11 | 94 | 10 | $6,730 | 2 | $50 |
30-Mar-19 | 15 | $6,470 | 12 | 84 | 10 | $7,91.5 | 5 | $5,677 |
23-Mar-19 | 18 | $6,450 | 14 | 91 | 14 | $5,042 | 4 | $1,408 |
16-Mar-19 | 14 | $10,180 | 12 | 115 | 11 | $8,800 | 3 | $1,300 |
9-Mar-19 | 9 | $1,800 | 6 | 49 | 8 | $1,300 | 1 | $500 |
2-Mar-19 | 20 | $3,033 | 16 | 107 | 14 | $1,817 | 6 | $1,262 |
23-Feb-19 | 12 | $2,040 | 8 | 69 | 9 | $614.60 | 3 | $1,430 |
16-Feb-19 | 16 | $9,970 | 18 | 77 | 16 | $9,970 | 0 | 0 |
9-Feb-19 | 14 | $6,400 | 10 | 110 | 14 | $6,400 | 0 | 0 |
2-Feb-19 | 18 | $6,740 | 15 | 99 | 16 | $5,720 | 2 | $950 |
26-Jan-19 | 13 | $2,770 | 11 | 67 | 11 | $918.95 | 2 | $1,850 |
19-Jan-19 | 15 | $3,819 | 16 | 76 | 12 | $2,594 | 3 | $1,225 |
12-Jan-19 | 18 | $7,283 | 14 | 92 | 15 | $1,683 | 3 | $5,600 |
5-Jan-19 | 10 | $529 | 12 | 50 | 10 | $529 | 0 | 0 |
22-Dec-18 | 17 | $2,570 | 13 | 87 | 14 | $941 | 3 | $1,629 |
15-Dec-18 | 10 | $2,860 | 8 | 26 | 8 | $264 | 2 | $2,600 |
8-Dec-18 | 15 | $1,819 | 16 | 65 | 12 | $552 | 3 | $1,267 |
1-Dec-18 | 12 | $7,500 | 10 | 90 | 9 | $1,200 | 3 | $6,200 |
28-Nov-18 | 15 | $4,500 | 11 | 107 | 14 | $4,000 | 1 | $500 |
19-Nov-18 | 18 | $6,137 | 13 | 98 | 13 | $2,142 | 5 | $3,995 |
14-Nov-18 | 18 | $9,200 | 13 | 152 | 15 | $8,500 | 3 | $694 |
6-Nov-18 | 16 | $17,300 | 16 | 183 | 14 | $16,361 | 2 | $950 |
29-Oct-18 | 14 | $14,400 | 18 | 127 | 17 | $13,800 | 1 | $600 |
24-Oct-18 | 13 | $6,140 | 13 | 126 | 11 | $5,122 | 2 | $1,018 |
17-Oct-18 | 18 | $18,390 | 15 | 125 | 14 | $12,292 | 4 | $6,098 |
10-Oct-18 | 29 | $3,149 | 18 | 104 | 20 | $1,647 | 9 | $819 |
2-Oct-18 | 18 | $9,300 | 11 | 67 | 14 | $7,300 | 4 | $2,000 |
25-Sep-18 | 13 | $7,000 | 11 | 75 | 10 | $6,000 | 3 | $995 |
18-Sep-18 | 9 | $3,570 | 7 | 44 | 9 | $3,570 | 0 | 0 |
11-Sep-18 | 13 | $5,900 | 10 | 132 | 13 | $5,900 | 0 | 0 |
7-Sep-18 | 14 | $5,000 | 15 | 86 | 11 | $4,000 | 3 | $1,000 |
29-Aug-18 | 15 | $20,700 | 14 | 79 | 13 | $4,700 | 2 | $16,000 |
20-Aug-18 | 10 | $12,400 | 11 | 53 | 8 | $11,380 | 3 | $1,057 |
14-Aug-18 | 12 | $19,900 | 12 | 132 | 9 | $18,889 | 3 | $1,011 |
7-Aug-18 | 16 | $68,600 | 11 | 106 | 13 | $67,259 | 3 | $1,340 |
31-Jul-18 | 15 | $15,100 | 15 | 95 | 11 | $13,060 | 4 | $2,060 |
23-Jul-18 | 13 | $2,130 | 15 | 60 | 10 | $1,804 | 3 | $1,100 |
17-Jul-18 | 14 | $5,370 | 17 | 98 | 9 | $4,310 | 5 | $1,100 |
9-Jul-18 | 16 | $11,200 | 15 | 74 | 10 | $11,080 | 6 | $862 |
3-Jul-18 | 13 | $7,000 | 7 | 81 | 12 | $6,330 | 1 | $750 |
25-Jun-18 | 15 | $8,800 | 13 | 97 | 9 | $4,970 | 6 | $3,930 |
18-Jun-18 | 13 | $14,200 | 14 | 80 | 7 | $221 | 6 | $14,290 |
11-Jun-18 | 12 | $6,300 | 8 | 96 | 8 | $5,910 | 4 | $803 |
6-Jun-18 | 13 | $14,500 | 10 | 88 | 8 | $14,154 | 5 | $579 |
31-May-18 | 11 | $4,890 | 10 | 63 | 8 | $3,240 | 3 | $1,790 |
22-May-18 | 15 | $20,400 | 11 | 63 | 9 | $19,808 | 6 | $885 |
15-May-18 | 15 | $4,700 | 15 | 106 | 10 | $3,900 | 5 | $643 |
9-May-18 | 11 | $1,400 | 13 | 88 | 9 | $1,300 | 2 | $560 |
1-May-18 | 8 | $14,250 | 7 | 88 | 7 | $13,400 | 1 | $450 |
24-Apr-18 | 12 | $5,300 | 6 | 61 | 11 | $4,470 | 1 | $800 |
17-Apr-18 | 9 | $1,800 | 10 | 44 | 7 | $2,330 | 2 | $1,434 |
11-Apr-18 | 11 | $2,500 | 8 | 32 | 6 | $1,690 | 5 | $809 |
3-Apr-18 | 15 | $13,400 | 11 | 121 | 9 | $12,020 | 6 | $1,090 |
28-Mar-18 | 10 | $4,000 | 10 | 92 | 7 | $3,870 | 3 | $215 |
19-Mar-18 | 17 | $5,800 | 13 | 51 | 10 | $590 | 7 | $5,165 |
12-Mar-18 | 15 | $3,130 | 11 | 43 | 11 | $2,360 | 4 | $788 |
6-Mar-18 | 19 | $5,400 | 13 | 116 | 10 | $1,530 | 9 | $4,860 |
27-Feb-18 | 20 | $6,600 | 13 | 69 | 14 | $5,530 | 6 | $1,030 |
19-Feb-18 | 15 | $5,500 | 14 | 111 | 10 | $3,990 | 6 | $1,980 |
12-Feb-18 | 23 | $10,900 | 17 | 157 | 12 | $7,110 | 11 | $3,840 |
5-Feb-18 | 16 | $8,600 | 13 | 100 | 7 | $1,330 | 9 | $7,800 |
30-Jan-18 | 11 | $12,600 | 11 | 68 | 5 | $7,300 | 6 | $4,982 |
24-Jan-18 | 19 | $9,400 | 15 | 129 | 5 | $2,010 | 14 | $7,337 |
18-Jan-18 | 10 | $6,280 | 8 | 49 | 2 | $2,100 | 8 | $4,188 |
9-Jan-18 | 12 | $16,500 | 12 | 92 | 9 | $15,890 | 3 | $475 |
3-Jan-18 | 10 | $2,500 | 9 | 47 | 8 | $2,350 | 2 | $150 |
27-Dec-17 | 15 | $9,000 | 15 | 113 | 9 | $7,568 | 6 | $1,784 |
18-Dec-17 | 15 | $13,800 | 16 | 164 | 9 | $13,010 | 7 | $1,118 |
11-Dec-17 | 14 | $9,700 | 10 | 126 | 12 | $2,940 | 4 | $8,500 |
4-Dec-17 | 6 | $1,800 | 6 | 31 | 5 | $1,510 | 1 | $300 |
28-Nov-17 | 7 | $3,850 | 8 | 76 | 4 | $3,260 | 3 | $285 |
16-Nov-17 | 10 | $2,700 | 10 | 48 | 6 | $1,840 | 4 | $856 |
8-Nov-17 | 15 | $2,380 | 17 | 91 | 10 | $1,860 | 5 | $516 |
1-Nov-17 | 12 | $4,700 | 17 | 94 | 9 | $3,400 | 4 | $1,300 |
23-Oct-17 | 15 | $10,500 | 10 | 67 | 10 | $9,780 | 4 | $1,530 |
18-Oct-17 | 6 | $2,000 | 37 | 3 | $225 | 3 | $1,820 | |
10-Oct-17 | 12 | $6,570 | 100 | 9 | $3,880 | 3 | $3,360 | |
2-Oct-17 | 8 | $3,100 | 11 | 19 | 3 | $1,630 | 5 | $1,750 |
25-Sep-17 | 8 | $4,880 | 8 | 79 | 5 | $2,660 | 5 | $2,070 |
18-Sep-17 | 9 | $4,770 | 3 | $300 | 6 | $4,470 | ||
12-Sep-17 | 11 | $4,430 | 8 | $2,030 | 3 | $2,400 | ||
1-Sep-17 | 4 | $1,310 | 3 | $317 | 1 | $1,000 | ||
23-Aug-17 | 11 | $13,640 | 9 | 8 | $11,840 | 3 | $1,800 |
M&A ruled the day, with 14 deals amounting to $37.8 billion and two capital markets transactions amounting to $1.1 billion.
M&A/PRIVATE EQUITY/VENTURE CAPITAL DEALS
V&E aids Anadarko on $33B Sale to Chevron
As The Texas Lawbook previously reported, Chevron Corp. of San Ramon, California, announced that it had agreed to buy Anadarko Petroleum Corp. of The Woodlands for $33 billion in cash and shares.
If it goes through, the combination would produce more cash flow than Exxon Mobil — and help Chevron to produce more oil than its competitor.
Analysts say the transaction is a sign that the majors are ready to make large acquisitions at a time of low valuations for oil and gas companies. Other possible targets mentioned include Diamondback Energy, Concho Resources, Pioneer Natural Resources and Noble Energy.
Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz and Vinson & Elkins advised Anadarko on the sale. Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison represented Chevron, which used Shearman & Sterling on antitrust elements of the deal.
Chairman Mark Kelly led the V&E team with assistance from partner Lande Spottswood. Partners Brian Bloom and David D’Alessandro and senior associate Steven Oyler advised on executive compensation/benefits issues.
V&E has done work for Anadarko before, including the sale of its remaining midstream assets to affiliate Western Gas Partners this past fall for $4 billion in cash and shares. Kelly also worked on a $1.25 billion investment grade offering of senior notes for the company.
Anadarko’s general counsel is Amanda M. McMillian, who replaced the retiring Robert K. Reeves as the company’s top legal officer at the end of last year. Before joining the company in 2004, the Duke-trained lawyer practiced at Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld.
Credit Suisse Securities (USA) is Chevron’s financial advisor. The team included Greg Weinberger in New York, Ricardo Concha in Houston and Jens Becker in New York. Anadarko tapped Evercore, including Dan Ward and Alex Jais in New York, and Goldman Sachs & Co., with Suhail Sikhtian in Houston.
The offer includes 0.3869 per share of Chevron and $16.25 per share in cash for each Anadarko share. The consideration values Anadarko at $65 per share, a 39% premium over the company’s closing price on the previous day and a 12% premium over its 12-month trailing average.
The deal consists of 75% stock and 25% cash and gives Anadarko an enterprise value of $50 billion, including $15 billion in estimated debt. The acquisition has to clear Anadarko shareholders and regulators and is expected to close in the second half of the year.
Chevron said the purchase would enhance its portfolio in shale, deepwater and natural gas, deliver $2 billion in annual operating cost and capital synergies and add to its free cash flow and earnings one year after it closes.
The buyer also noted that Anadarko’s interest in Western Midstream Partners is well aligned with the companies’ combined upstream positions and would further enhance their economics and execution capabilities.
Locke Lord, Polsinelli, Sidley grab a slice of $1.4B Chuck E. Cheese deal
Attorneys at Morgan Lewis & Bockius in New York attracted headlines for counseling Irving-based CEC Entertainment – owner of Chuck E. Cheese’s – on its combination with Leo Holdings Corp., a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, backed by Lion Capital.
However, Rudy Rodriguez, CEC’s chief legal officer, told The Lawbook that Texas lawyers at three different firms also got a piece of the action. He cited Don Glendenning of Locke Lord, Mike Pegues of Polsinelli and Yvette Ostolaza of Sidley Austin as working on different aspects of the deal.
Kirkland & Ellis counseled Leo Holdings with lawyers outside of Texas.
Citigroup Global Markets Inc. was Leo’s financial advisor, capital markets advisor and private placement agent. Jefferies was CEC’s financial and capital markets advisor.
Rodriguez joined CEC in 2014 as senior VP, general counsel and corporate secretary. In March he became chief legal as well as human resources officer. He previously was a partner at Gruber Hurst Johansen Hail Shank for six years and Godwin Gruber for three years.
Before that, the Harvard-trained lawyer was an attorney at American Airlines and at Locke Purnell Rain Harrell. Early in his career, he was a briefing attorney at the Supreme Court of Texas and interned in the Texas General Land Office.
The deal, announced April 8, involves Leo Holdings combining with Queso Holdings Inc., CEC’s parent whose controlling stockholder is an entity owned Apollo Global Management. The transaction will give CEC an initial enterprise value of around $1.4 billion.
As a result of the deal, Leo will change its name to Chuck E. Cheese Brands Inc. The company will trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol CEC.
Besides Chuck E. Cheese, CEC owns, operates and franchises Peter Piper Pizza restaurants.
CEC would be the first restaurant company to enter the U.S. public markets in four years – “or, in this case, re-enter,” Axios reported. Apollo took the company private in 2014 for $1.3 billion and was unsuccessful in selling it in 2017. It’s keeping a 51% stake in the new company.
Leo Holdings chairman and CEO Lyndon Lea said in a statement that it secured “an extremely attractive acquisition” in CEC, which he said is “a part of Americana.”
CEC CEO Tom Leverton and CFO Jim Howell will continue to run the business. Lea will join the company’s board as co-chairman with Andrew Jhawar of Apollo.
Kirkland advises Nesco on $1.1B combo with SPAC Capitol IV
Kirkland & Ellis said it advised Energy Capital Partners-backed Nesco Holdings I Inc. on its combination with SPAC Capitol Investment Corp. IV, giving it an enterprise value of $1.1 billion and a chance to go public.
Corporate partners Bill Benitez and Cyril Jones and associate Rob Goodin led the Kirkland team.
Specialists included capital markets partners Brooks Antweil and Christian Nagler and associate Mark Kam; debt finance partners Jason Kanner and Chad Nichols; and tax partner Mark Dundon and associate William Dong.
Latham & Watkins and Graubard Miller counseled Capitol with lawyers in Washington, D.C., and New York.
Daniel Blank at Morgan Stanley in New York provided financial advice to Nesco. Citigroup Global Markets Inc., Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. and J.P. Morgan Securities were Capitol’s financial and capital markets advisors.
Nesco provides specialty rental equipment to the electric utility, telecom and rail markets with a national fleet of 4,000 units. The company generated an adjusted EBITDA margin of 49% last year and a 24% compound annual EBITDA growth rate over the past two years.
Capitol is the fourth public investment vehicle of chairman and CEO Mark Ein and president and CFO Dyson Dryden. The management team claims it has the best track record of public investment vehicle sponsors with all three of its prior investments consistently beating the broader markets with an average annualized return of 17%.
Ein said in a statement that Nesco is positioned to benefit from the increased demand for its equipment as the result of growth in infrastructure spending in each of its core end-markets, which include electric utility transmission and distribution, 5G deployment and rail development.
Nesco’s chairman will be William Plummer, who was CFO of United Rentals Inc. from 2008 until he left the company in January. Jeffrey Stoops, CEO of SBA Communications Corp. in Florida, will join the board, as will ECP founder Doug Kimmelman and partner Rahman D’Argenio and Nesco CEO Lee Jacobson, who will continue to run the company with CFO Bruce Heinemann.
ECP and its affiliates will keep 70% of their investment in the combined company.
The parties expect to pay down Nesco’s existing debt with the net cash proceeds from the transaction plus $400 million from a debt commitment agreement with J.P. Morgan Chase Bank, Morgan Stanley Senior Funding Inc., Citigroup Global Markets Inc., Deutsche Bank and Fifth Third Bank.
Capitol also has secured commitments from lenders to provide a $350 million asset-based credit facility at closing, which is expected in the second quarter.
White & Case aids Delek on $965M Gulf of Mexico acquisition from Shell
White & Case said it advised Delek CT Investment, a unit of Israel’s Delek Group Ltd., on its acquisition of a 22.45% stake in the deepwater Caesar-Tonga oil field in the Gulf of Mexico from a unit of Royal Dutch Shell for $965 million.
Partners Steven Tredennick and Charlie Ofner led the deal out of Houston with a partner in the firm’s London office. Others who worked on the transaction were partners Chad McCormick, counsel Morgan Hollins and associates Peter Raish, Shawn Beloin, Joseph Castelli, Justin Synhorst and Janny Gandhi, all Houston.
Shell senior legal counsel Gary Walker in Houston handled the sale in-house.
The Caesar-Tonga project came online in 2012 and is considered one of the 10 largest deepwater resources in the Gulf of Mexico with a production horizon spanning 30 years or more. The field is operated by Anadarko Petroleum with Norway’s Equinor as another stakeholder.
As part of the deal, Delek will sign a long-term off-take agreement with Shell affiliate Shell Trading (US) Co. to purchase oil produced from the field for 30 years.
Delek is expanding internationally with a focus on high-potential opportunities in the North Sea and North America. Shell aims to sell $10 billion in non-core assets through 2020 to fund growth and share buybacks.
Delek’s purchase has to clear regulators and right-of-first refusal by the field’s co-owners and is expected to close by the end of the third quarter.
“This transaction represents our continued focus on strategically positioning our deep-water business for growth and is consistent with our upstream strategy of pursuing competitive projects that deliver value in the 2020s and beyond,” Shell upstream director Andy Brown said in a statement.
V&E, Bracewell counsel on Crestwood’s $485M Jackalope purchase
Crestwood Equity Partners said last week that its affiliate Crestwood Niobrara acquired the 50% it didn’t own of Jackalope Gas Gathering Services in Wyoming from Williams Cos. for around $485 million.
Investors in Crestwood Niobrara including Global Infrastructure Partners invested $235 million in preferred equity to help finance the deal.
Vinson & Elkins advised Crestwood, including partner Gillian Hobson with senior associate Daniel McEntee and associate Bo Shi.
Bracewell represented the investors. That team included partners Thomas M. Tomlinson and Lytch T. Gutmann.
Houston-based Crestwood, which is led by chairman, CEO and president Robert G. Phillips, said the transaction enables it to be one of the largest gas gathering and processing companies by volume in the high-growth Powder River Basin.
Crestwood expects the transaction to be leverage neutral to its balance sheet and add to distributable cash flow per unit this year with growing accretion after that based on current development activity by customer Chesapeake Energy.
PetroCap raises $300M for third fund
Dallas-based PetroCap Partners has raised more than $300 million for its third fund, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Its outside legal counsel couldn’t be determined by press time, but Thompson & Knight partners Wes Williams and Holt Foster advised it on its second fund, which amounted to $350 million fund. Neither Williams nor Foster responded to a request for comment.
The firm also has advised PetroCap on acquisitions and divestitures, including its purchase of Permian properties in 2011 as part of its Falcon E&P Opportunities Fund partnership with Highland Capital Management; and its sale of Permian properties with CP Exploration II to Resolute Natural Resources Southwest in 2017 for $160 million.
Haynes and Boone counsels Callon on $260M Permian sale
Haynes and Boone counseled Callon Petroleum on the sale of part of its oil and gas properties in the Midland Basin to an unnamed buyer for $260 million.
The agreement also provides for potential incremental cash payments of up to $60 million based upon future commodity prices with upside participation starting at $60 per barrel for West Texas Intermediate.
Haynes and Boone partner Kraig Grahmann and associate Matt Rountree counseled Callon. The firm has represented the company in the past on capital markets and financing transactions. Callon tapped Jefferies for financial advice.
Callon’s general counsel is Michol L. Ecklund, who joined the company in 2017. She previously was deputy general counsel for operations and commercial law at Marathon Oil Co., where she oversaw the legal team for global operations, acquisitions and divestitures. Before Marathon, the Harvard-trained lawyer practiced at Baker Botts.
Callon, which recently relocated to Houston from Natchez, Mississippi, sold the assets to pay down debt, retire its preferred stock, reduce its cash financing costs and focus on its three core areas in the Permian.
CEO and president Joe Gatto said in a statement that the company is driving enhanced capital efficiency by monetizing lower margin, non-core properties that haven’t competed for capital on a sustained basis. “We are actively optimizing our operations, which we believe will reduce capital intensity and increase returns on capital for our shareholders,” he said.
The divestiture involves the company’s Ranger operating area in the southern Midland Basin. It includes 9,850 net Wolfcamp acres (66% working interest), 80 producing horizontal wells that have been drilled since 2012 and 70 net, delineated locations. The properties produced 4,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in February, but the company didn’t plan any activity in the area for this year.
Callon also said it completed a strategic trade in the first quarter that expanded its contiguous position in northwest Howard County. The trade resulted in a net increase of 167 net acres to Callon’s Midland Basin leasehold position and generated $14 million in cash proceeds.
Shearman, Latham advise on $200M Layne Water funding
Post Oak Energy Capital and Genesis Park announced that they led a $200 million equity commitment to Layne Water Midstream Holdings, or LWM.
Post Oak and Genesis Park acquired LWM from Granite Construction with an additional commitment to continue to fund the company’s growth. LWM’s management team invested alongside Post Oak and Genesis Park.
Shearman & Sterling partner Sarah McLean in Houston represented Post Oak and Genesis Park with team members Todd Lowther, Monica Raspino and Devon Yamauchi.
Counseling LWM’s management team were Houston Latham & Watkins partners Thomas Brandt and Ryan Maierson, associate Samantha Seley and Rebecca Kendall and tax partner Bryant Lee.
LWM, which is based in The Woodlands and in Midland, is a water midstream business providing upstream oil and gas companies with water sourcing, gathering, disposal and recycling infrastructure and services in the Delaware and Midland Basins. It’s led by Michael Anderson.
The company began as a unit of Layne Christensen Co., a 136-year-old water management, infrastructure and drilling company that was acquired by Granite last year for $536 million.
LWM began operations in the Delaware Basin in 2017 and has grown its water infrastructure to more than one million barrels per day of water sourcing, gathering and disposal capacity that is online, under construction and in various stages of the permitting process.
The company also formed water infrastructure partnerships with the State of Texas General Land Office on its 88,000 acre position in Reeves and Culberson counties and with the State of Texas University Lands organization on its 160,000 acre position in Loving, Ward and Winkler counties.
Frost Cochran led the deal from Houston-based Post Oak, which has upstream investments in the Permian and is building out crude infrastructure at portfolio company Oryx Midstream Services.
Paul Hobby led the deal from Genesis Park, a Houston lower middle market buyout firm founded in 1999. That firm focuses on investments in the southern U.S., including IT, software, energy services, telecommunications, financial and healthcare industries.
Cooley advises LiveOak on raising $105M for second fund
Austin venture capital firm LiveOak Venture Partners has raised $105 million for its second fund from an expanded institutional limited partnership base.
Cooley represented LiveOak with a team led by special counsel Casey Schulte, who lists his office as being in Palo Alto but lives in Austin.
LiveOak was founded by former Austin Ventures principals Ben Scott, Krishna Srinivasan and Venu Shamapant. The firm closed its first fund in 2014 at $109 million.
The firm said the second fund will continue its strategy of partnering with Texas-based entrepreneurs to create “world-class category leaders.” It’s already made six investments, including Austin startups Eventador, Osano and Rollick and Dallas-based AmplifAI. “Texas is exploding with opportunity,” Srinivasan said in a statement.
The partners claim to have collectively created more than $2 billion in enterprise value across a spectrum of investments. The firm has led or co-led 24 investments, including Digital Pharmacist, which was acquired by K1 Investment Management for more than $100 million; and Opcity, which was acquired by News Corp for $210 million.
Other investments include CS Disco, which recently raised $83 million, and OJO Labs, which recently raised $45 million. It’s also invested in TrustRadius, Infocyte and Mavenir.
The fund’s focus will still be on first institutional funding for startups headquartered in Texas’ four largest tech hubs: Austin, Houston, Dallas and San Antonio. Initial investments range from $2 million to $4 million and scale up to $10 million over the full company life cycle, the firm said.
T&K counsels Dorchester on $43.8M acquisition
Thompson & Knight counseled Dorchester Minerals on acquiring oil and gas mineral, royalty and net profit interests from H. Huffman & Co., the Buffalo Co. and Huffman Oil Co. for $43.8 million.
Partner Jesse Betts led the deal team with assistance from Todd D. Keator, Stephen W. Grant, Jr., Jason P. Loden, Anthony J. Campiti, Gaye White Lentz, James C. Morriss III, Angela Herrington, Tonya Maksimenko and Kathleen Gerber.
McAfee & Taft in Oklahoma City counseled Huffman.
Dallas-based Dorchester is a publicly traded limited partnership that commenced operations in 2003 when it combined Dorchester Hugoton, Republic Royalty Co. and Spinnaker Royalty Co. It’s led by chairman and CEO Casey McManemin.
Locke Lord aids Pinnacle II on Energy Spectrum funding
Pinnacle Midstream II said it attracted a “significant” equity capital commitment from management and Energy Spectrum Partners VIII. It didn’t disclose terms.
Locke Lord counseled Pinnacle II, including Eric Larson, Bill Swanstrom, Freddy Feldman and Stefano Wach. Jackson Walker’s Dallas office represented Energy Spectrum, including lead partner Jeff Sone with assistance from partner Pete Hyndman.
Headquartered in Houston, Pinnacle II focuses on the development of energy midstream infrastructure for oil and gas producers in various basins across North America.
The commitment will be used to pursue organic greenfield projects, strategic producer partnerships and acquisition opportunities with a focus on Texas and the surrounding states.
T. Boone Pickens’ Dallas-based private equity fund, BP Energy Partners, backed the first Pinnacle, which was sold to I Squared Capital through its ISQ Global Infrastructure Fund II in 2017.
Pinnacle is led by founder and CEO J. Greg Sargent, CFO Jason Tanous, COO Michael Hillerman and chief commercial officer Drew Ward.
Dallas-based Energy Spectrum is led by managing partner Jim Benson. It raised more than $867 million for its eighth fund out of a $1.3 billion target, according to a recent SEC filing. It’s raised $4.4 billion since its founding in 1995.
Starwood buys two power plants from Calpine
Energy Capital Partners-owned Calpine sold two power plants to Starwood Energy Group Global for an undisclosed sum.
King & Spalding advised Starwood and White & Case counseled Calpine but both with attorneys outside of Texas.
Calpine’s chief legal officer is W. Thaddeus Miller, who joined the company in 2008. Last year he was named executive vice chairman of Calpine’s board.
The St. John’s School of Law graduate previously was chief legal officer of Texas Genco Inc., a consultant to private equity firm TPG and chief legal officer of Orion Power. He also was an officer in the U.S. Coast Guard.
The plants include the Garrison Energy Center, a 325 megawatt combined cycle plant in Dover, Delaware, and RockGen Energy Center, a 503 megawatt peaker in Madison, Wisconsin.
The parties expect to close the deal in mid-2019 if it clears regulators.
Starwood CEO Himanshu Saxena said the plants represent a combination of scale and risk-mitigation and complement the firm’s existing generation investments.
Starwood Energy Group Global focuses on energy infrastructure investments. It’s raised more than $3 billion in equity capital and has executed transactions totaling more than $7 billion in enterprise value, including $2.2 billion related to the development and construction of renewable assets such as wind farms, solar farms and biomass power plants.
Kirkland advises Maverick Natural Resources on acquisition
Kirkland & Ellis said it advised EIG Global Energy Partners-backed Maverick Natural Resources on its acquisition of producing properties in the Overton field in East Texas from unnamed sellers for an undisclosed sum.
The team was led by corporate partner Chris Heasley and associate Fraser Wayne. Others were debt finance partner Mary Kogut Brawley and associate Laura Bielinski; environmental transactions partner Jonathan Kidwell; and tax partner Mark Dundon and associate Ryan Phelps.
The sellers had in-house counsel and also used Nexus Ventures, including founder Sargon Daniel, who previously was a shareholder at Winstead in Dallas.
The acquisition, Maverick’s first, includes 7,600 net acres and 2,700 net barrels of oil equivalent per day, 28% of which is liquids. Maverick operates the field and has purchased the remaining 50 percent non-operated working interest.
Maverick CEO Chris Heinson said in a statement that the newly formed Houston-based company has restructured labor, shut-in uneconomic wells and initiated a 30-rig workover program on the properties. “We are now focused on applying automation and technology to further improve efficiency,” he said.
CFO John Brawley said the company is repositioning its portfolio, acquiring new properties and market testing certain non-core assets for divestiture. He added that the company also has a new $500 million reserve-based lending facility.
T&K represents BEXP general partner on fund formation
Thompson & Knight said it advised Brigham Exploration Co. on the closing of an undisclosed amount of equity commitments from institutional and private investors to BEXP I LP. Company founders also participated.
The deal team included Michael Titens, Dean Hinderliter, Roger Aksamit, James McKellar, Brandon Bloom, Jason Loden, Mitch Gibbons and Minator Azemi.
Founded by Ben “Bud” Brigham, BEXP is focused on acquiring and managing non-operated working interests in the Midland and Delaware Basins. It began assembling its team and acquiring those interests in 2017.
Bud Brigham previously founded Brigham Exploration, which was purchased by Statoil in 2011 for $4.7 billion; Brigham Resources, which was sold to Diamondback Energy for $2.6 billion; Brigham Minerals, one of the largest mineral & royalty companies in the U.S.; and Atlas Sand, which operates two sand mines in the Permian Basin.
CAPITAL MARKETS
Baker Botts aids purchasers on $600M Crestwood notes offering
Baker Botts said it advised the initial purchasers on an upsized notes offering of $600 million by Crestwood Equity affiliate Crestwood Midstream Partners.
The proceeds will repay part of the outstanding borrowings under the entity’s revolving credit facility, which includes $250 million of borrowings that were used to fund the Jackalope acquisition (see Crestwood item above).
The lawyers in the group were partner Mollie Duckworth in Austin, partner Josh Davidson in Houston, senior associate Jennifer Wu in Austin and associates Sunil Jamal, Leuan List and Jack Chadderdon, all of Houston. The finance team included partner Daniel Tristan and special counsel Lyman Paden, both of Houston.
The deal involves 5.625% senior notes due 2027 in a Rule 144A offering that is exempt from the registration requirements of the Securities Act. It was upsized from the originally proposed $500 million offering.
The notes are guaranteed on a senior unsecured basis by all of Crestwood Midstream’s units that guarantee its existing notes and the indebtedness under its revolver.
The book-running managers were Wells Fargo Securities, Citigroup Global Markets, J.P. Morgan Securities, Barclays Capital, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, RBC Capital Markets and SunTrust Robinson Humphrey.
Latham aids Waste Connections on $500M notes offering
Latham & Watkins said it aided Waste Connections Inc. on its $500 million senior notes offering.
Houston partner John Greer led the team with associates Ryan Lynch, Blake Berkey and Erin Lee.
The underwriters, which included BofA Merrill Lynch, J.P. Morgan, MUFG and Wells Fargo Securities, used Simpson Thacher & Bartlett lawyers outside of Texas.
The offering involves 3.50% senior notes due 2029 at a price to the public of 99.738% of their face value.
The company expects the net proceeds of $494 million will be used to repay part of its borrowings outstanding under its credit agreement and for general corporate purposes.
UPDATE:
Hunton Andrews Kurth caught up with The Lawbook with three deals it worked on over the last several months that closed recently.
One was advising the initial purchasers of a $2.5 billion unsecured debt/senior notes offering last month by Midwest Connector Capital Co. The leads were partners Jordan Hirsch and Mike O’Leary in Houston. Latham & Watkins was counsel to the other parties.
The other two transactions were counseling BankFirst Capital Corp. on its purchase of FNB Bancshares of Central Alabama Inc. for $47.35 million (partner Beth A. Whitaker in Dallas led the HuntonAK team while Jones Walker assisted FNB); and U.S. Energy Partners on its sale to Marble Arch for an undisclosed sum (Dallas partner Steven L. Leshin was the lead while Kirkland & Ellis assisted the other parties).
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Brigham Minerals, the Warburg Pincus- and Yorktown Partners-backed company that The Lawbook previously reported had filed for an IPO, said in an SEC filing that it hopes to sell 13.5 million shares at $15 to $18 per share. The Austin-based owner of oil and gas mineral royalty interests would have an initial market cap of $785 million at the pricing midpoint. Credit Suisse and Goldman Sachs are the lead underwriters. As we previously reported, Douglas E. McWilliams and Thomas G. Zentner at Vinson & Elkins are advising the company and David J. Miller at Latham & Watkins is assisting the underwriters.