Houston Chronicle

Conoco, Concho chiefs tout $9.7B deal

Consolidat­ion called ‘a structural change to our industry’ as companies pool resources

- By Paul Takahashi STAFF WRITER

ConocoPhil­lips has long eschewed mergers and acquisitio­ns in favor of discipline­d spending and steady, organic growth.

The Houston oil giant onMonday found itself advocating for the very thing it has cautioned investors about: a $9.7 billion takeover of a rival, Concho Resources. The acquisitio­n would create the largest independen­t oil and gas company nationally and a dominant operator in the Permian Basin of West Texas and southeaste­rn New Mexico.

“We believe that sector consolidat­ion is both necessary and inevitable; however, today’s transactio­n is not just another industry deal,” ConocoPhil­lips CEO Ryan Lance told analysts in a conference call Monday. “Neither of us needed to do a transactio­n to fill a gap in our portfolio or fix something. Instead, (ConocoPhil­lips and Concho) are jointly making a commitment to lead what we believe is a structural change to our industry.”

Oil and gas companies, mired in an industry downturn and facing a transition toward renewable energy, are increasing­ly looking to pool resources and cut redundanci­es. Earlier this month, Chevron Corp. completed its acquisitio­n of Houstonbas­ed Noble Energy, and in late September Devon Energy said it was buying Permian operator WPX Energy.

ConocoPhil­lips’ pursuit of Concho reflects the growing trend despite the risk of alienating investors concerned about company spending and dwindling returns during the downturn. Investors since 2018 have pulled out of the energy sector, the worst performer of the S&P 500 stock index.

Lance and Concho CEO Tim Leach sought to reassure investors Monday that consolidat­ion in their case was the most prudent decision for shareholde­rs. They said they remained committed to increasing shareholde­r dividends, returning 30 percent of free cash flow back to shareholde­rs.

They said the combined company, valued at $60 billion with access to 23 billion barrels of crude reserves, would create a force in the industry.

The consolidat­ion, they added, would save the combined company $500 million annually by 2022. They touted the new company’s balance sheet, with $7 billion in cash on hand and access to a $6 billion credit line. Combined, the two comanies would have $12 billion of debt with $2 billion coming due over the next two years.

“We share a consistent viewofwhat it takes to succeed in this exploratio­n and production business and bring investors back into this sector,” Lance said. “It’s about lowcost of supply, it’s about a really strong balance sheet, it’s about having a rational way to allocate capital that focuses on returns and doesn’t just chase growth, it’s about distributi­ons back to shareholde­rs. This transactio­nwe announced today greatly enhances that plan.”

“Concho is running a great business and hitting on all cylinders, but I think size and scale are the driving factors today,” Lynch told analysts Monday. “The size and scale we are today… it’s hard to distribute cash back to shareholde­rs as rapidly as we can in this new model.”

The acquisitio­n also will enhance ConocoPhil­lip’s shale plays in the Permian Basin, the Eagle Ford in South Texas and the Bakken in North Dakota.

Concho pumped 319,000 barrels in the Permian during the second quarter, about six times what Conoco produced there. The shale driller also has acreage in the Montney oil sands of Canada.

The transactio­n, subject to approval by ConocoPhil­lips and Concho shareholde­rs as well as regulators, is expected to close in the first quarter of 2021.

Under the terms of the deal, investors will get 1.46 Conoco shares for each Concho share.

The all- stock transactio­n represents a 15 percent premium over Concho’s closing price Oct. 13, the last trading session before Bloomberg broke news of negotiatio­ns between the two companies.

After closing, Leach will join ConocoPhil­lips’ board of directors and its executive leadership team as executive vice president and president of the company’s operations in the lower 48 states.

ConocoPhil­lips’ shares fell 3.2 percent to $32.70, while Concho shares fell 2.8 percent to $47.26 on Monday.

 ?? Melissa Phillip / Staff photograph­er ?? Ryan Lance, ConocoPhil­lips CEO, says the purchase of Concho will benefit their shareholde­rs.
Melissa Phillip / Staff photograph­er Ryan Lance, ConocoPhil­lips CEO, says the purchase of Concho will benefit their shareholde­rs.

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