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Triton stock falls as buyout hopes fade
Firm sells project stake; CEO resigns, layoffs set
07/18/98
By Dianne Solis / The Dallas Morning News
Triton Energy Ltd.'s shares plunged as much as 35 percent Friday after the once highflying Dallas firm said it failed to get an acceptable buyout offer and announced that its chief executive had resigned.
Triton also said it will lay off a "significant" number of employees, although company officials wouldn't specify where the layoffs will occur or how many jobs will be cut. Triton also said it will take a $160 million after-tax charge, which is larger than its total 1997 revenue of nearly $150 million.
After seeking a buyer since March, Triton announced Friday that Atlantic Richfield Co. of Los Angeles will acquire half of Triton's interest in a major natural gas project in the Gulf of Thailand for $150 million in cash and provide an additional $180 million over the next seven years if development objectives are met. The deal clearly was a disappointment to Wall Street, which was betting that Triton would find a buyer for the entire company.
On the New York Stock Exchange on Friday, Triton's shares closed at $20.63, down nearly $10 from Thursday's close. In 1996, Triton's stock was trading at close to $60 a share.
"There are a lot of people who wanted to see the whole company sold," acknowledged Sheldon R. Erikson, a Triton board member since 1994 who was appointed chairman of the company Friday. Mr. Erikson is chairman, chief executive and president of Houston-based Cooper Cameron Corp., an oilfield services firm.
The company said Thomas G. Finck, Triton's chief executive and president, is leaving to "pursue other interests."
Mr. Finck joined Triton in 1992 as president. From 1992 through 1994, Triton racked up yearly losses. Among the problems was an investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission and U.S. Justice Department into allegations of corrupt practices in Indonesia before Mr. Finck joined the company. Without admitting or denying allegations, Triton and two former employees agreed to pay $385,000 in penalties.
In 1995 and 1996, Mr. Finck steadied Triton, placing it in the black. But Triton lost $9.3 million in 1997. Then last summer, the stock price began sliding with the genesis of the Asian economic crisis and incessant problems with guerrilla attacks on oil installations in Colombia, where Triton made a huge and celebrated discovery in 1991.
Triton may still find a buyer eager to go bottom fishing, said Fadel Gheit, an energy analyst with Fahnestock & Co. in New York. A takeover bid with a 50 percent premium would amount to only $30 a share, using Friday's closing share price, Mr. Gheit noted.
"It is a tremendous opportunity," he said.
Another energy analyst, Jim Wickland of Dain, Rauscher, Wessels Inc., said selling the company could get complicated. Arco as a partner in Malaysia and British Petroleum PLC as a partner in Colombia might dampen enthusiasm, Mr. Wickland said. British Petroleum, for example, has the right to top any bid for Triton's holdings in Colombia, he noted.
Triton's new chairman, Mr. Erikson, didn't rule out the possibility of the company still being sold.
"If there's somebody that's serious and wants to talk to us about a transaction, we're open to that," he said. Mr. Erikson said a "significant amount" of Triton employees will be cut but wouldn't elaborate.
Robert B. Holland II, Triton's senior vice president and general counsel, was appointed interim chief executive.
Triton will take a $140 million charge in the second quarter and a $20 million charge in the third quarter for restructuring costs, the company said. It will also write down the value of oil and natural gas holdings because of sagging crude oil prices.
"We expect to achieve major cost reductions quickly," Mr. Erikson said.
Exploration and production will continue "with no less emphasis" in Colombia, Triton's prime revenue generator, Mr. Holland said. Cutbacks will take place in other regions, where Triton leases properties but has announced no discoveries. Other Triton leases are in such farflung places as China, Guatemala and Madagascar.
Triton's new partner, Arco, the nation's seventh-largest oil and gas exploration concern, is already a significant player in Southeast Asia, especially Indonesia. Under terms of the agreement, Arco will pay $150 million and pay an additional $130 million in two payments if Triton meets certain production goals in 2002 and 2005. Arco will provide development capital of $377 million, which it termed a loan that it will recover once production begins.
The Malaysian government holds a 50 percent interest in the block. When Triton announced it was going on the auction block, it said it needed to pay $300 million over the next three years to fund the development of the two gas fields.
Arco's chairman and chief executive Mike R. Bowlin called its purchase a "world-class asset" and said, "We have the greatest respect for Triton and look forward to working with them as partners."
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