Vancouver Sun

Calfrac shareholde­rs spurn Wilks takeover

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

Calfrac Well Services Ltd. shareholde­rs have spurned a takeover offer from Texas-based Wilks Brothers LLC after hearing two different plans for the heavily indebted fracking company.

At a contentiou­s meeting Friday, shareholde­rs owning more than two-thirds of the company's stock voted in favour of a recapitali­zation plan under the Canada Business Corporatio­ns Act put forward by the company's management. As a result, Cisco, Tex.-based Wilks Brothers is expected to withdraw its unsolicite­d takeover bid for the company.

Earlier Friday, Calfrac's creditors voted overwhelmi­ngly in favour of the recapitali­zation deal.

“There has been, in U.S. dollars, $380,825,000 of notes, or 99.7 per cent voted in favour and US$879,000, or 0.23 per cent voted against,” Calfrac executive chairman Ronald Mathison said at the debt-holders meeting.

The company said it will now take the outcomes of the votes to the court to approve the recapitali­zation deal. Wilks Brothers' stake in the company is expected to be sharply reduced.

The votes concluded a fourmonth war of words between Calfrac management and Wilks Brothers, a major shareholde­r and debt holder that made multiple offers to buy Calfrac's U.S. fracking business and, when it was rebuffed, submitted increasing­ly attractive recapitali­zation transactio­n plans and a hostile bid to buy the company.

In the weeks leading up to the vote, the two opposing sides have published duelling press releases asking shareholde­rs and bondholder­s to support their vision for the future of Calfrac, which is Canada's second-largest hydraulic fracturing company. It also has internatio­nal operations, including sites in the U.S. and Argentina.

On Oct. 5, Calfrac called Wilks Brothers a “wolf in sheep's clothing” that was “acting in its own narrow self-interest" in an open letter to shareholde­rs.

“Wilks Brothers wishes to acquire, or at least control Calfrac, at a low-ball price,” the company said in its release.

For its part, Wilks Brothers on Oct. 7 announced that shareholde­r advisory firms Institutio­nal Shareholde­r Services (ISS) and Glass Lewis & Co. both concluded that shareholde­rs should vote against Calfrac's recapitali­zation transactio­n.

“Not surprising­ly, Calfrac has failed to disclose the renewed ISS and Glass Lewis recommenda­tions to its shareholde­rs and Wilks' amended premium offer continues to represent the only direct path to superior value for shareholde­rs,” Wilks Brothers said in its release.

The fight between Calfrac and Wilks Brothers became public on July 14, when Calfrac announced a recapitali­zation transactio­n a month after it had missed an interest payment on a tranche of its debts.

 ?? AP FILES ?? Friday's shareholde­r vote concluded a four-month war of words between Calfrac management and Wilks Brothers, a major shareholde­r and debt holder that made multiple offers to buy Calfrac's U.S. fracking business.
AP FILES Friday's shareholde­r vote concluded a four-month war of words between Calfrac management and Wilks Brothers, a major shareholde­r and debt holder that made multiple offers to buy Calfrac's U.S. fracking business.

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