Houston-based El Paso Corp. released some preliminary 2004 financial numbers and previewed its restatement of financial results from 1999 to 2003 following a review of its accounting for natural-gas hedges. El Paso previously announced plans to restate results because of downward revisions to its oil and natural-gas reserves and warned at the time that it likely would have to restate for its hedge accounting as well.
The company said that the revision to its reserves will cut the value of El Paso’s oil and gas assets by $2.7 billion and result in a corresponding after-tax reduction in shareholder equity. El Paso also announced that the restatement to eliminate hedge accounting will result in a $1 billion pretax cumulative charge on shareholder equity and will trigger an additional $1.6 billion in charges.
El Paso has yet to file its financial reports for 2003 or for the first two quarters of 2004. It warned that the 2004 figures it provided today are “subject to further review by El Paso and its independent auditor and, therefore, [are] subject to change.” Not exactly a statement brimming with confidence.
El Paso reduced its net debt by about $1.9 billion in the first six months of the year, finishing the second quarter with net debt of $18.6 billion. The company expects net debt to fall below $17 billion by the end of 2004, and to $15 billion by the end of 2005. In addition, El Paso’s businesses have been somewhat bolstered as high prices for oil and natural gas have been aiding the company’s rebound effort.
Despite the foregoing, El Paso remains a strong candidate for reorganization under chapter 11 as its high debt burden makes an acquisition outside of bankruptcy problematic.