Vintage Petroleum Assets Likely To Draw Private Equity Interest
17 Oct 14:00
By Shasha Dai Of LBO Wire NEW YORK -(Dow Jones)- Vintage Petroleum Inc. (VPI) will be putting some assets on the block as part of its acquisition by Occidental Petroleum Corp.
(OXY), and private equity firms are likely to take a look.
Occidental, Los Angeles, is buying Vintage, Tulsa, Okla., in a deal valued at $3.8 billion in cash and stock. Both companies are publicly traded oil and gas exploration concerns.
Occidental, also known by its ticker name Oxy, likes Vintage's operations in California, Latin America and the Middle East. Vintage's other assets, primarily in Texas and the Gulf Coast, are "nonstrategic," Oxy said.
Those assets include oil fields in East Texas and along the Gulf Coast, as well as unconventional gas reserves in the midcontinent region. Oxy said it also may sell some of the less attractive oil and gas fields in California.
It's hard to put a price tag on the assets because of their diversified nature, said an investment banker. As for the oil properties, a rule of thumb is the valuation of their proved reserved, according to the banker. Vintage has about 70 million barrels in proved reserves in those areas, which the market currently values at $13 to $20 per barrel, Oxy said. At that price, those oil assets could be worth as much as $1.4 billion.
"I'm sure we'll be interested in taking a look (at those assets)," said Jonathan Farber, a managing director at Lime Rock Partners, Westport, Conn., an energy-focused private equity firm. Though Lime Rock hasn't done any due diligence on Vintage, Farber said Lime Rock is reviewing more than a dozen potential deals each week. The firm recently teamed with Greenhill Capital Partners, another energy investor, to back Coronado Resources, which drills gas from unconventional resources.
Carneros Energy, a Bakersfield, Calif., oil and gas exploration business backed by Warburg Pincus, could be interested in Vintage's California assets, market participants say. Other possible buyers include First Reserve Corp. and Metalmark Capital.
More assets could be sold in divestitures as the industry continues to consolidate, said Mark Carmain at energy investment banking firm Petrie Parkman & Co., who was part of the team that advised on the Oxy-Vintage deal.
"Many of these large transactions are followed by portfolio rationalization," Carmain said.
(LBO Wire, published by Dow Jones Newsletters, covers buyouts and private equity.) -By Shasha Dai, Dow Jones Newsletters/LBO Wire; 201-938-4298; shasha.dai@dowjones.com (END) Dow Jones Newswires 10-17-05 1400ET Copyright (c) 2005 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. |