Anadarko’s big deal

Anadarko_Corp_logo.jpgThe Woodlands, Texas-based Anadarko Petroleum Corp. announced this morning (NY Times story here) that it has agreed to buy Kerr-McGee Corp. and Western Gas Resources Inc. in separate all-cash deals totaling $21.1 billion, plus the assumption of $2.2 billion in debt, in a deal that will create America’s largest independent exploration and production company. The boards of each company have already approved the transaction, although Kerr-McGee shareholders and regulators must still approve the deals, which are expected to close by the end of the third quarter. Previous posts on Anadarko are here.
Gee, that’s pretty big news in the old hometown.
Anadarko will pay about $16.4 billion, or $70.50 a share, in an all-cash deal for Kerr-McGee and assume debt and other liabilities estimated at $1.6 billion, which works out to pay a premium of about 40% to Kerr-McGee shareholders over Thursday’s closing price of $50.30. Anadarko will also pay about $4.7 billion, or $61 a share, and assume about $560 million in debt for Western Gas, which translates to a premium of about 49% for Western shareholders over Western’s closing price on Thursday of $40.91. The Kerr-McGee deal includes a right to match competing offers and a break-up fee of $493 million while Anadarko’s agreement with Western Gas includes a right to match competing offers and a break-up fee of $154 million.
Anadarko will fund the entire deal with a $24 billion line of credit from UBS, Credit Suisse and Citigroup, and reasons that it expects to recover 3.8 billion barrels of oil equivalent from the acquired properties at less than $12 per barrel. Oil has traded near $70 per barrel for the past couple of months and Anadarko announced that will hedge 75% of the acquired production through late 2008.
Anadarko’s bold play follows other huge acquisitions in the oil patch, such as last year’s Chevron Corp. acquisition of Unocal Corp. for about $18 billion and ConocoPhillips’ purchase of Burlington Resources for $36.5 billion while more conservative industry players such as Exxon Mobil Corp. have held tight and plowed their huge profits over the past couple of years into share buybacks.
Never a dull moment in the oil and gas business, eh?

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