Houston Chronicle

2018’s top mergers and acquisitio­ns provided plenty of work for lawyers

- By Claire Poole THE TEXAS LAWBOOK

Most mergers and acquisitio­ns are aimed at increasing scale so companies can win a bigger chunk of their industry market.

That proved true in 2018, but many companies struck deals for other reasons: some to simplify their corporate structures; others to diversify their product mix or geographic reach; and still others for cash to pay down debt, boost shareholde­r return and plow money into lucrative prospects.

The deals, not surprising­ly, mostly came from the oil and gas sector, from upstream to midstream to downstream. But consumer products, utilities and entertainm­ent also shared the stage. We consulted with top M&A lawyers in the state for their takes on the most significan­t deals of the year. We added our own insights along with data from Mergermark­et, and herewith is the Texas Lawbook’s consensus list:

1. $62 billion blockbuste­r

No doubt, Energy Transfer Equity’s acquisitio­n of affiliate Energy Transfer Partners, which closed in November, was a blockbuste­r involving $27 billion in stock and $35 billion in debt assumption to create a $90 billion energy infrastruc­ture giant.

But the deal also was a continuati­on of those so-called simplifica­tions in which related midstream master-limited partnershi­ps merge to streamline structure and eliminate incentive distributi­on rights for some unitholder­s, which didn’t always please investors.

Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. said the long-awaited collapse of the limited partner/general partner structure of the Energy Transfer entities and the eliminatio­n of associated incentive distributi­on rights should “assuage investor concerns.”

2. Big refining buy

The refining industry has consolidat­ed over recent years, creating larger and larger companies. And Findlay, Ohio-based Marathon Petroleum Corp. crowned itself king with its $31.3 billion purchase of Andeavor Corp., which made it the largest refiner in the U.S. in terms of capacity. Andeavor was formerly known as Tesoro Corp.

Analysts at Jefferies applauded the strategy of scaling operations and reducing inefficien­cies, saying the deal would create a coast-to-coast network and one of the largest fuel distributo­rs in North America.

3. Hot drinks, cold drinks

As part of its desire to expand beyond coffee, New Englandbas­ed Keurig Green Mountain announced in January that it was picking up Dr Pepper Snapple for $23 billion, creating the world’s third-biggest beverage company with $11 billion in sales.

Analysts said the transactio­n — which closed in July — not only helps the companies cut expenses, it sets up better distributi­on channels for both, giving them a shot to better compete with goliaths Coca-Cola Co. and PepsiCo.

“Combined, the new company could have margins exceeding 30 percent by 2020, making them the industry leader and the only beverage company that manufactur­es cold and hot beverages,” S&P Global credit analysts Diane Shand and Chris Johnson said in a report.

4. Offshore combinatio­n

M&A typically happens in the beginning stages of an industry recovery. Then the offshore drilling sector must be on its way, with Ensco’s $2.3 billion purchase of Houston-based Rowan Cos. that was announced in October.

The transactio­n came just a year after Ensco picked up Atwood Oceanics for $863 million.

The all-stock deal — which is expected to close in the first half

of 2019 — creates the largest offshore driller in the industry with an enterprise value of $12 billion.

Analysts at Tudor, Pickering, Holt and Co. called the deal a “beautiful combinatio­n” from a strategic perspectiv­e, with Rowan gaining immediate scale and breadth in the ultradeep-water market and significan­t contract backlog while Ensco regains its position as a top global jackup player.

5. Deal for Permian acreage

As oil prices moved upward earlier in the year, so did a wave of mergers between oil and gas explorers and producers. Concho Resources’ $9.5 billion purchase of RSP Permian announced in March was the first big one out of the gate.

The combinatio­n, which closed in July, was also was the largest M&A deal in the history of the Permian Basin in West Texas and New Mexico — and created the largest unconventi­onal shale producer in the region.

Williams Capital Group analyst Gabriele Sorbara said the transactio­n made sense for Concho, expanding its Permian Basin position with contiguous core acreage that added $2 billion in synergies.

6. Utility expands its range

Houston natural gas utility CenterPoin­t Energy jumped across state lines as part of a continuing consolidat­ion of its sector, agreeing to pick up Indiana natural gas utility Vectren in April for $6 billion.

The combinatio­n, which is expected to close early next year, will have more than 7 million customers in eight states with $29 billion in assets and $27 billion in enterprise value.

Williams Capital Group analyst Chris Ellinghaus said Vectren makes sense for CenterPoin­t as a replacemen­t for the midstream assets it spun off and for the utility’s geographic diversity, with a reasonable premium that’s less than some for other deals in recent memory.

7. Cross-border buyout

Canadian oil and gas giant Encana reached across a national border in November when it announced it would pick up The Woodlands-based Newfield Exploratio­n Co. for $7.7 billion.

The deal — which was the third billion-dollar-plus oil and gas merger announced that week — will expand Encana’s access to the United States’ prolific oil and gas basins, including the Permian and Oklahoma’s Stack/Scoop play in the Anadarko Basin.

“We believe this combinatio­n is very favorable to the buyer, as the deal provides a core position in the Stack/Scoop play at an attractive valuation,” Williams Capital’s Sorbara said.

8. A giant in television

Second time was the charm for Nexstar, which agreed in early December to buy TV station owner Tribune Media for $6.4 billion.

The transactio­n will make Irvingbase­d Nexstar the nation’s largest TV station owner with 216 stations in 118 markets.

“We think this is a transforma­tive deal for Nexstar that should greatly increase its scale on financiall­y attractive terms,” RBC Capital Markets analyst Leo Kulp wrote in a note.

Nexstar initially bid for Tribune Media in May 2017, but Sinclair Broadcast Group ended up winning the auction with an offer of $3.9 billion.

Potential regulatory problems with the deal triggered a relaunch of the process by Tribune, and Nexstar, led by CEO Perry Sook, came in with the winning bid.

9. A seller becomes a buyer

Oklahoma oil and gas producer Chesapeake Energy Corp. surprised industry observers when it announced its $4 billion purchase of WildHorse Resource Developmen­t Corp. in October.

The reason? Chesapeake had lately been more of a seller than a buyer of assets, having struggled over the last several years with a heavy debt load accumulate­d from a land grab by late CEO Aubrey McClendon.

The company also had a heavy focus on natural gas, whose prices have been depressed for years given high supply from new discoverie­s around the U.S.

But Chesapeake had worked to turn the situation around, including eliminatin­g $12.2 billion in debt, reducing capital expenditur­es by $12 billion, removing $1 billion in capital costs, and erasing $10.3 billion in midstream and downstream commitment­s.

So, the seller became a buyer. The purchase of WildHorse will double Chesapeake’s oil production to 30 percent when it is completed, which is expected in the first half of next year.

10. Surprising energy deal

Another surprise deal in 2018 was Global Infrastruc­ture Partners’ $3.1 billion purchase in June of all of Devon Energy’s interests in publicly traded entities EnLink Midstream Partners and EnLink Midstream.

Tudor, Pickering, Holt and Co. was startled that Oklahomaba­sed Devon unloaded its entire EnLink position. But analysts there said the sale would raise a material amount of cash to buy back stock at a deep discount to intrinsic value.

Indeed, Devon said it planned to use the proceeds to boost the size of its stock repurchase program by $3 billion to $4 billion, or about 20 percent of its shares outstandin­g.

The purchase gave GIP 64 percent of EnLink Midstream and 23 percent of EnLink Midstream Partners.

Four months later, the two said they were combining in a $13 billion deal.

 ?? Wilson Ring / Associated Press file ?? Massachuse­tts-based Keurig Green Mountain snapped up Dr Pepper Snapple early in 2018 to create the world’s third-largest beverage company.
Wilson Ring / Associated Press file Massachuse­tts-based Keurig Green Mountain snapped up Dr Pepper Snapple early in 2018 to create the world’s third-largest beverage company.
 ?? J. Patric Schneider / Contributo­r ?? Energy Transfer Equity’s acquisitio­n of affiliate Energy Transfer Partners involved $27 billion in stock and $35 billion in debt assumption.
J. Patric Schneider / Contributo­r Energy Transfer Equity’s acquisitio­n of affiliate Energy Transfer Partners involved $27 billion in stock and $35 billion in debt assumption.
 ?? Staff file photo ?? Ensco’s and Rown Cos. announced their $2.3 billion deal in October. Rowan gained deep-water scale and breadth, and Ensco again became a top jack-up company.
Staff file photo Ensco’s and Rown Cos. announced their $2.3 billion deal in October. Rowan gained deep-water scale and breadth, and Ensco again became a top jack-up company.
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