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Former Devon exec, Chesapeake target to attend Harvard Divinity School

Anadarko Petroleum Corp. Executive Chairman James Hackett plans to attend Harvard Divinity School later this year, the Wall Street Journal reported.

“Jim Hackett will be attending Harvard Divinity School to become better prepared to write, speak and teach about faith and leadership, which has been a long-held interest of Jim’s and one of the key reasons he is retiring from Anadarko,” Anadarko spokesman John Christiansen said.

Hackett, 59, was president and chief operating officer at Devon after its 2003 merger with Houston-based Ocean Energy Inc. He became CEO of Anadarko later that year, then led the company’s 2006 acquisition of Oklahoma City’s Kerr-McGee Corp.

Hackett, who retired as Anadarko CEO in May, reportedly turned down the opportunity to replace co-founder Aubrey McClendon at Chesapeake in January.

Chesapeake is expected to name McClendon’s successor before he leaves the company April 1.


TPG-Axon CEO: SandRidge board ‘has no shame’

The founder of TPG-Axon Capital said Sunday he was not surprised by a Delaware court’s ruling that barred SandRidge Energy Inc.’s board from soliciting votes in an ongoing proxy fight.

“This is just the latest in a pattern of this board of putting their own interests ahead of shareholders – this board simply has no shame,” TPG-Axon CEO Dinakar Singh said. “This is the second time during our solicitation that this board has chosen to waste the company’s resources in a useless court battle in a desperate attempt to entrench themselves.

However, this is hardly surprising, given their record of presiding over a truly singular degree of value destruction and mistreatment of shareholders.”

The New York-based hedge fund is asking SandRidge shareholders to oust the current board in favor of its own nominees. It blames CEO Tom Ward and other SandRidge leaders for the poor performance of the company’s stock, which has lost 80 percent of its value since its initial public offering in 2007.

The SandRidge board has refused to approve the TPG-Axon nominees to prevent a change in control at the company from potentially costing billions of dollars.

A Delaware chancery judge on Friday blocked the company from fighting TPG-Axon’s takeover bid until it acknowledges the hedge fund’s board nominees are qualified to lead a public company.

SandRidge has said its current board is best suited to run the company, urging shareholders to reject TPG-Axon’s efforts. It has not commented on Friday’s court ruling.

The board, led by Ward, has said a change in control like the one sought by TPG-Axon would  trigger a default in its credit agreement, forcing SandRidge to offer to buy back all of its outstanding senior notes. It initially put the price tag for such a development at about $4.3 billion, but later backed off that figure.

SandRidge shareholders have until Friday to decide if they want to stick with the current board or let Singh and TPG-Axon’s other nominees take over.


Chesapeake investors target Dell

 

Carl Icahn

Carl Icahn

Two activist Chesapeake Energy Corp. investors have teamed up again, this time targeting computer maker Dell Inc. 

Southeastern Asset Management and billionaire investor Carl Icahn led the effort last year to unseat a majority of the Chesapeake board and force changes that have led to CEO Aubrey McClendon agreeing to leave the company at the end of the month.

Shortly after winning its battle with Chesapeake, Southeastern moved its focus to Dell, which has fallen behind other computer makers.

Southeastern — which owns 8.4 percent of Dell — has challenged an effort by founder Michael Dell to buy up the company at a price the shareholder says is too low.

The Dell board has endorsed the takeover plan in a move Southeastern has said places “the interests of management above those of public shareholders.

“The board of directors appears to have dismissed better alternatives for public owners and selected a transaction, which has been public derided by shareholders as opportunistic and grossly undervalued, that favors management,” Southeastern wrote in a letter filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Southeastern also has asked the directors to borrow money to pay shareholders a large one-time dividend.

As with its fight against Chesapeake’s directors, Southeastern has found itself with a powerful ally.

CNBC reported Wednesday that Icahn has bought up about 6 percent of Dell over the past few weeks.


Aubrey McClendon falls off Forbes billionaire list

Outgoing Chesapeake Energy Corp. CEO Aubrey McClendon is no longer a billionaire, according to the latest Forbes list of the wealthiest people on the planet.

The magazine points out that McClendon was forced to sell nearly all his Chesapeake shares in a 2008 margin call.

Chesapeake announced last month that McClendon will leave the company he founded on April 1 with a severance package worth about $47 million.

McClendon is falling off the list as it has been revealed that he’s leveraged against his personally held oil and gas interests in the same way he did with Chesapeake leading up to 2008. Put another way, the guy has mounds of debt,” Forbes reported.

Five Oklahoma families remain on the list this year, led by Continental Resources Inc. CEO Harold Hamm, who ranked No. 90 overall with a net worth of $11.3 billion.

Hamm was followed by Tulsa oilman and Bank of Oklahoma Chairman George Kaiser at $10 billion and ranked No. 109 overall.

Hobby Lobby founder David Green is listed at No. 276 with an estimated net worth of $4.5 billion.

Oklahoma retailers Tom and Judy Love tied with Lynn Schusterman — widow of Samson Resources’ Charles Schusterman — to round out the state’s presence on the list at No. 384 with a net worth of $3.5 billion.

 

 


Report: Chesapeake selling Bakken Shale acreage

Chesapeake Energy Corp. prides itself on having a leading acreage position in most of the United States’ most productive oil and natural gas plays.

But the Oklahoma City-based company is apparently throwing in the towel in the oil-rich Bakken Shale in North Dakota and Montana.

Upstream, an international oil and gas newspaper, reports Chesapeake is selling its entire 427,000-acre position in the Bakken, acknowledging it used flawed geological concepts when it amassed its position there in 2010 and 2011. The article is available only to subscribers, but free two-week trials are available.

Chesapeake, which does not list its Bakken holdings on its website, did not respond to a request for comment from The Oklahoman on Friday.

Chesapeake’s acreage is concentrated in two counties along what is believed to be the southern edge of the Bakken and Three Forks plays, according to Upstream, but the company’s drilling in that area was not fruitful.

Chesapeake’s inability to find oil there has been called the biggest drilling failure in North Dakota since the 1980s, KXNews reported in January.

Chesapeake now acknowledges it does not have the time or money to continue drilling in its Bakken acreage, Upstream reported, citing its review of sales documents.

Chesapeake has been selling assets since last year to overcome a cash crunch. The company, raised more than $11 billion last year, this week announced a joint venture with China’s Sinopec that will bring in another $1 billion for a stake in acreage in northern Oklahoma’s Mississippi Lime play.


SandRidge executives discuss possible future Mississippian joint venture

SandRidge Energy Inc. CEO Tom Ward on Friday discussed the possibility of a joint venture in the Mississippi Lime in 2014 or 2015.

During a conference call with analysts, Ward said the Oklahoma City energy company is fully funded through 2014, but that the executives already are working to secure financing to support its drilling budget for 2015 and beyond.

The booming Mississippi Lime oil and natural gas field covers much of northern Oklahoma and western Kansas.

Without naming names, Ward said he expected SandRidge to claim a higher price for its joint venture than other parties in the play.

Ward’s former company, Chesapeake Energy Corp., was widely criticized on Wall Street this week when it announced a $1.02 billion Mississippi Lime joint venture that translates into $2,400 an acre, far less than the $7,000 to $8,000 an acre Chesapeake previously said it expected to receive.

Ward did not address Chesapeake specifically, but he said SandRidge is positioned to command one of the highest rates in the Mississippi Lime.

Ward pointed out that SandRidge has spent more than $450 million on pipeline, electrical and saltwater disposal infrastructure in the area over the past two years.

It requires you to have infrastructure, so if other parties don’t have the infrastructure that we have, obviously, that’s worth something,” he said.

Drilling costs also are a factor, Ward said.

We average about $1.1 million per well less than the average of our peers,” Ward said. “We will save over $300 million this year net to SandRidge just from the average of our peers in drilling wells.”

Ultimately, land — and even the oil and natural gas beneath it — is only one small part of the price operators can command for their producing acreage, Ward said.

When you’re selling acreage, you’re really not selling acreage, you’re selling an enterprise,” he said. “You’re selling the ability for a joint venture partner to come and work with us for decades.”


SEC upgrades Chesapeake inquiry, company reports

Chesapeake Energy Corp. on Friday revealed the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has upgraded its informal inquiry of the company into a formal investigation.

Chesapeake caught the eye of the SEC’s Fort Worth office last year after Reuters reported CEO Aubrey McClendon took more than $1 billion in shrouded personal loans to fund his stake in the company’s wells. It confirmed the SEC’s informal inquiry in May.

The company’s board, revamped last year amid shareholder unrest, announced last week its review of McClendon’s finances revealed no sign of intentional misconduct.

On Friday, Chesapeake filed its annual report, showing received notice Dec. 21 the SEC would continue its inquiry as an investigation.

“The company, including Mr. McClendon, is providing information to the SEC in connection with this matter. The company is also responding to related inquiries from other governmental and regulatory agencies and self- regulatory organizations,” according to Friday’s filing.

Chesapeake’s board still faces more than a dozen breach of fiduciary duty lawsuits filed by shareholders after news of McClendon’s loan deals emerged last year.

McClendon is leaving the company by April 1, but the board said its review had nothing to do with his departure.

The company also is being investigated by the U.S. Department of Justice for possible antitrust violations in Michigan, where Chesapeake and rival Encana Corp. have admitted to sharing information before lease auctions in 2010. Both companies have denied any wrongdoing.