| A cautionary tale 
 The hostile takeover of Grey Wolf Exploration provides a
 hard lesson for minority shareholders
 
 There have been a fair
 number of hostile
 takeovers in the oil patch
 in recent years, but the
 one involving
 Calgary-based Grey Wolf
 Exploration Inc. last
 summer takes the prize for
 weirdness. The junior gas
 producer, which owns land
 in the rich Ladyfern play of
 northeast BC, was
 targeted by Abraxas
 Petroleum Corp. of San
 Antonio, Tex. (AMEX:
 ABP) The strange part:
 Abraxas helped launch
 Grey Wolf, owned half its
 stock, and the two firms shared a top executive. It was a bizarre
 transaction that has some minority shareholders complaining of unfair
 treatment.
 
 The saga dates back to 1995, when Don Engle and Roger Bruton, a
 couple of oilmen active in Calgary, hooked up with Robert Watson, the
 smooth-talking Texan who runs Abraxas. Engle and Bruton had the
 expertise to start a new oil and gas company, but they lacked the money.
 Associates put them in touch with Watson, who was looking to invest in
 Canada. Abraxas subsequently acquired 48.3% of a Canadian shell
 called Cascade Oil & Gas Ltd. The name was changed to Grey Wolf,
 and the partners began building the company through a combination of
 acquisitions and exploration. Watson assumed the CEO mantle at Grey
 Wolf in 1996 and retained his title as president of Abraxas.
 
 Grey Wolf was successful. By last year it had pretax earnings of $6.7
 million on revenue of $26 million. But the story was different for its major
 shareholder during the same five-year period. Abraxas, which Watson
 had started in the late 1970s, had gone on an acquisition spree financed
 by high-yield debt—rarely a wise move in a volatile commodity business.
 By early 1999, Abraxas was on the verge of insolvency. Creditors forced
 the company to hedge its gas production to ensure it could meet interest
 payments. When gas prices soared last year, the hedging caused
 Abraxas to miss out on US$20 million in potential revenue.
 
 Watson and the Abraxas board apparently saw Grey Wolf’s healthy
 balance sheet as a way out. In August, the US firm offered 0.6 of an
 Abraxas share for every Grey Wolf share it didn’t already own. But a
 fairness opinion by Raymond James & Associates Inc. concluded it was
 a bad deal for Grey Wolf shareholders. The investment bank said Grey
 Wolf shares were worth considerably more (0.81 to 0.87 of an Abraxas
 share). It was also pointed out that Abraxas was in a precarious position
 because of its liabilities, and might not be able to refinance debt
 obligations in 2003 and 2004 without significant equity dilution.
 Questions were also raised about the value of proven undeveloped
 reserves held by Abraxas.
 
 Grey Wolf’s board was divided over the bid, so Abraxas went hostile,
 taking the matter directly to the shareholders. Because it already held
 roughly half the shares and because the stock was relatively illiquid,
 many Grey Wolf shareholders felt they had little choice but to tender.
 They’re not happy about it, though. “We got screwed,” says one former
 Grey Wolf investor. “It’s not even clear Abraxas will survive.” Abraxas was
 recently trading at US88¢, 84% off its 52-week high.
 
 ...cont'd
 
 The lowball offer by
 Abraxas was especially
 galling for investors
 because, at the time,
 Canadian natural gas
 producers were being
 snapped up by US firms at
 record prices. A Calgary
 analyst who was present
 at the final Grey Wolf
 annual meeting says
 Watson arrogantly
 dismissed concerns
 raised by shareholders. “It
 was a Gong Show,” says
 the analyst. “Watson
 brushed everything off by saying he couldn’t talk about it. His basic
 message was, ‘If you don’t like it, too bad. Sell the stock.’ The amazing
 thing is, Abraxas was essentially bankrupt. How the hell they got out of
 this one, I’ll never know.”
 
 At the end of September, about 90% of Grey Wolf’s outstanding shares
 had tendered to the Abraxas bid, and it’s not likely the disgruntled
 holders of the remaining 10% will get anywhere with their complaints. But
 they’ve learned an important lesson: never invest in a small company that
 is tightly controlled by one individual or company, unless you have
 complete confidence that your money is in good hands. As for Watson,
 he admits the combined company is still over-leveraged—and hopes a
 sale of assets will put the books in order.
 
 canadianbusiness.com
 
 Pretty sad eh ... i don't think the people we knew would have let this happen ... remember that December, i think it was '96, when Cascade got written up in the Globe and Mail ... those were the days eh ... cheers, e
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