幕后花絮:先锋埃克森美孚从 A 到 XOM 的交易

在决定将其出售给埃克森美孚之前,先锋公司是一个神秘勘探与生产项目的潜在买家。6月22日至10月10日期间,人们就2023年美国最大的石油和天然气合并的条款进行了辩论。

该交易于 10 月 10 日签署,并在 10 月 11 日开盘前宣布。该交易正在接受联邦贸易委员会的审查。(来源:Shutterstock)


根据向美国证券交易委员会提交的最新初步委托书,先锋自然资源公司去年春天曾考虑购买一个神秘的勘探与生产项目,然后于 6 月 22 日开始谈判退出埃克森美孚。

由此产生的 650 亿美元交易是 2023 年美国最大的交易,紧随其后的是雪佛龙以 600 亿美元收购 Hess 的交易

据先锋公司12 月 22 日报道,专注于米德兰盆地的先锋公司仅被称为“A 公司”,并就相关条款进行了“初步讨论”,例如 A 公司股东在交易完成后将拥有先锋公司的股份比例

但它补充说,尚未就该条款或其他条款达成协议。

它将目标描述为“在二叠纪盆地开展业务的上游公司”,但没有进一步说明,例如它是否是米德兰盆地的纯业务、二叠纪(米德兰和特拉华盆地)勘探与生产公司或多流域运营商。

摩根大通证券 (JP Morgan Securities) 分析师阿伦·贾亚拉姆 (Arun Jayaram) 在 6 月份报道称,先锋公司时任总裁、现任首席执行官里奇·迪利 (Rich Dealy)在最近的一次晚宴上表示,先锋公司对 Endeavor 很感兴趣,但“价格不合适”。

与此同时,先锋公司的委托书中的描述将排除完全收购专注于阿巴拉契亚天然气的Range Resources Corp。先锋公司被迫在二月份发表评论,以反驳彭博社有关该公司正在洽谈收购 Range 的报道。

盘中交易中,先锋股价从200多美元跌至180美元。为了平息谣言,该公司罕见地发表声明称,“并未考虑进行重大业务合并或其他收购交易。”

《华尔街日报》随后于 4 月 7 日援引身份不明的消息来源报道称,先锋公司和埃克森美孚就合并事宜进行了“初步谈判”,埃克森美孚也在考虑第二个潜在目标。

在先锋公司 4 月 27 日的财报电话会议上,时任首席执行官斯科特·谢菲尔德 (Scott Sheffield) 表示,他不会对新传闻发表评论

先锋公司确实在 12 月 22 日的委托书中表示,在过去几年中,该公司和埃克森美孚曾多次就交易可为双方带来什么进行“初步讨论”,但在去年夏天之前都没有提出建议。

土石?努力吗?

2023 年签署的公开持有的二叠纪合并交易包括专注于米德兰和特拉华盆地的Earthstone Energy 与专注于特拉华州的 Permian Resources 的合并

Earthstone 的委托书描述了该交易的背景,称其与 Permian Resources 已于 4 月 19 日开始签订保密协议 (CDA)。 Pioneer 在其 12 月 22 日的委托书中报告称,在与埃克森美孚交易之前,它尚未签署一份保密协议 (CDA)。 CDA 或“过去几年”的类似协议。

但该声明仅限于涉及潜在“收购”先锋的 CDA。它没有提及其是否在此期间作为潜在买家签署了 CDA。

二叠纪盆地运营商今年仍在谈判中,潜在卖家包括Endeavour Energy根据 Pioneer-Exxon 交易的估值指标,Hart Energy 估计该公司在市场上的售价可能高达 300 亿美元。

先锋公司 12 月 22 日报道称,由于“潜在的投资者反应”等原因,该公司最终没有进一步寻求与 A 公司达成交易。相反,它“得出结论,与埃克森美孚的交易将更有利。”

它没有提供做出该决定的时间表,只是通过表示在考虑是否保持独立并收购 A 公司时埃克森美孚的交易已经摆在桌面上来暗示这一点。

110天内

然而,6 月 22 日,埃克森美孚董事长兼首席执行官达伦·伍兹发起与谢菲尔德的对话。经过十月初的反复讨论,他们最终同意将先锋公司在德克萨斯州欧文和米德兰的办事处保留至少两年,并“寻求将先锋公司的大部分员工保留两年”。

在其他方面,谢菲尔德直到 9 月 6 日才告诉伍兹,他个人支持这两只股票的 9 月 5 日收盘价溢价 20%。

谢菲尔德表示,先锋公司还希望埃克森美孚董事会有两名成员。

9 月 19 日,伍兹向谢菲尔德提出了一份正式提案(日期为 9 月 18 日),其中包括基于当前股价的 9% 溢价和一个董事会席位。先锋公司董事会拒绝了这一提议。

伍兹于 9 月 26 日带着修改后的报价回来,先锋董事会同意在 10 月 15 日之前达成独家协议。

伍兹的新报价包括,如果先锋公司收到更好的提案,则有权终止交易;两名先锋董事会成员;交易完成时间最长为 18 个月。

走走费

新的要约还包括先锋公司在“某些情况下”必须支付的终止费,该费用为最终交易最终达到“约19亿美元”的595亿美元股权价值的3.25%。

埃克森美孚还希望,如果任何反垄断裁决要求其剥离资产或采取任何其认为对合并后公司不利的行为,埃克森美孚能够退出。

任何一方都不得在交易完成前考虑购买任何可能妨碍监管部门批准的东西。如果交易未能清除反垄断障碍,埃克森美孚将无需支付终止费。

先锋公司于 10 月 2 日进行了反击,支付了第一季度的基本股息和可变股息,之后支付了数额不详的股息。

此外,如果埃克森美孚没有获得反垄断许可,则必须支付反向终止费,交易将在 12 个月后结束,但如果仍等待监管部门批准,则还有 6 个月的时间。

10月5日,埃克森美孚拒绝了反向终止费。 会谈继续进行。

谢菲尔德告诉伍兹,先锋公司的股东应该拥有合并后公司 12% 的股份;伍兹出价11.75%。最终他们平分了差额并同意 11.875%。

随后,先锋公司要求在 4 月 1 日之前派发基数加可变股息,然后每季度派发股息不超过先锋股票 1.25 美元。此外,如果先锋公司没有完成交易,它会收取 3% 的终止费,但如果埃克森美孚没有赢得反垄断许可,它会收取 3% 的反向终止费。

埃克森美孚接受了终止费协议,但将第一季度股息限制为自由现金流的 75%,仅此而已。

先锋公司同意将 2023 年第四季度股息的可变部分限制为 75%,将当前季度的股息限制为 50%,然后将股息总额固定为 1.25 美元。

兑换比例为每 PXD 2.3234 XOM 股票。

该交易于 10 月 10 日签署,并在 10 月 11 日开盘前宣布。该交易正在接受联邦贸易委员会的审查。


有关的

独家:埃克森美孚、先锋预计联邦对 60B 美元交易进行严格审查

原文链接/hartenergy

Behind The Scenes: The Pioneer Exxon Deal from A to XOM

Pioneer was a potential buyer of a mystery E&P before deciding to sell to Exxon Mobil. Between June 22 and Oct. 10, terms of 2023’s largest U.S. oil and gas merger were debated.

The deal was signed Oct. 10 and announced before markets opened Oct. 11. The transaction is under scrutiny by the Federal Trade Commission. (Source: Shutterstock)


Pioneer Natural Resources was looking at buying a mystery E&P last spring before beginning talks on June 22 to exit to Exxon Mobil, according to an updated preliminary proxy statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The resulting $65-billion deal was the U.S.’ largest in 2023, closely followed by Chevron’s $60-billion bid for Hess.

Identified only as “Company A,” Midland Basin-focused Pioneer had “preliminary discussions” on terms, such as how much of Pioneer the Company A shareholders would own post-closing, Pioneer reported Dec. 22.

But no agreement was reached on that or other terms, it added.

It described the target as “an upstream company with operations in the Permian Basin,” but did not identify it further, such as whether it is a fellow Midland Basin pure play, a Permian (both Midland and Delaware Basin) E&P or a multi-basin operator.

J.P. Morgan Securities analyst Arun Jayaram reported in June that Rich Dealy, Pioneer’s president at the time and now CEO, said at a recent dinner that Endeavor was interesting to Pioneer but “at the right price.”

Meanwhile, the description in Pioneer’s proxy statement would exclude buying wholly Appalachian gas-focused Range Resources Corp. Pioneer was compelled to comment in February to rebut a report by Bloomberg that the company was in talks to buy Range.

Pioneer’s stock price fell from more than $200 to $180 in intra-day trading. To quell the rumors, it made a rare statement that “it is not contemplating a significant business combination or other acquisition transaction.”

The Wall Street Journal then reported on April 7, citing unidentified sources, that Pioneer and Exxon Mobil held “preliminary talks” to merge and that Exxon was looking at a second potential target as well.

During Pioneer’s April 27 earnings call, then CEO Scott Sheffield said he wouldn’t comment on the new rumor.

Pioneer did state in the Dec. 22 proxy that it and Exxon had “preliminary discussions” at times during the past several years about what a deal could bring to each, but none resulted in proposals before last summer.

Earthstone? Endeavor?

Publicly held Permian merger deals signed in 2023 included the combination of Midland- and Delaware Basin-focused Earthstone Energy with Delaware-focused Permian Resources.

Earthstone’s proxy describing the background of that deal stated that it and Permian Resources had already entered a confidentiality agreement (CDA) beginning April 19. Pioneer reported in its Dec. 22 proxy that, prior to the Exxon deal, it had not signed a CDA or similar agreement in the “past several” years.

But it limited that statement to CDAs involving a potential “acquisition of” Pioneer. It did not mention whether it had signed a CDA as a potential buyer during that timeframe.

Permian operators remaining in conversations this year as potential sellers include Endeavor Energy, which Hart Energy estimates could fetch up to $30 billion on the market based on the valuation metrics of the Pioneer-Exxon deal.

Pioneer reported Dec. 22 that it ultimately didn’t pursue a deal with Company A further because of “potential investor reaction,” among other reasons. Instead, it “concluded that the transaction with ExxonMobil would be more advantageous.”

It did not provide a timeframe of when that decision was made, except alluding to it via stating that the Exxon deal was already on the table when mulling over whether to remain independent and buy Company A.

In 110 days

On June 22, however, Exxon’s Chairman and CEO Darren Woods initiated a conversation with Sheffield. In a back and forth through early October, they ultimately agreed on keeping Pioneer’s Irving, Texas, and Midland offices for at least two years and to “seek to retain most of” Pioneer’s employees for two years.

On other points, Sheffield told Woods as late as Sept. 6 that he personally supported a 20% premium on the Sept. 5 closing prices of the two stocks.

Also, Pioneer wanted two members on Exxon’s board, Sheffield said.

On Sept. 19, Woods presented a formal proposal (dated Sept. 18) to Sheffield, including a 9% premium based on the current stock prices and one board seat. Pioneer’s board rejected the offer.

Woods returned on Sept. 26 with a revised offer and the Pioneer board agreed to an exclusivity agreement through Oct. 15.

Woods’ new offer included Pioneer the right to terminate the deal if it received a superior proposal; two Pioneer board members; and up to 18 months for deal completion.

Walk-away fee

The new offer also included a termination fee Pioneer would have to pay in “certain situations” of 3.25% of the $59.5 billion in equity value that the final deal ultimately came to — about $1.9 billion.

Exxon also wanted to be able to walk away if any antitrust ruling required it to divest assets or do anything it considered adverse to the combined companies.

Neither party would be allowed to look at buying anything before closing that could interfere with getting regulatory approval. And Exxon wouldn’t have to pay a termination fee if the deal failed to clear antitrust hurdles.

Pioneer countered on Oct. 2 by paying both its base and variable dividend for the first quarter and, after that, an unspecified amount.

Also, Exxon would have to pay a reverse termination fee if it didn’t get antitrust clearance and the deal would end after 12 months but have another six months if only still waiting for regulatory approval.

On Oct. 5, Exxon rejected the reverse termination fee. Talks continued.

Sheffield told Woods that Pioneer shareholders should own 12% of the combined company; Woods offered 11.75%. Eventually they split the difference and agreed to 11.875%.

Pioneer followed with an ask of a base-plus-variable dividend through April 1, then quarterly dividends of no more than $1.25 per Pioneer share. Also, it offered a 3% termination fee if Pioneer didn’t close the deal but a 3% reverse-termination fee if Exxon didn’t win antitrust clearance.

Exxon accepted the termination-fee deal but limited the first-quarter dividend to 75% of free cash flow and nothing more.

Pioneer agreed to limit the fourth-quarter 2023 variable part of the dividend to 75% and the current quarter to 50%, then a fixed $1.25 total dividend thereafter.

An exchange ratio of 2.3234 XOM share per PXD was settled.

The deal was signed Oct. 10 and announced before markets opened Oct. 11. The transaction is under scrutiny by the Federal Trade Commission.


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