Joe tracked down the WSJ article on the oils--it is an excellent article--- and I copy andpaste it here for those studying the oil market-- September 11, 1998 Oil Patch Braces for Losses Amid Price Slump, Mergers
By CHRISTOPHER COOPER Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Continued low oil prices are straining the finances of energy producers, possibly leading to loan defaults and more oil-patch mergers, some bankers and analysts say.
With oil prices down about 40% from a year ago and no rebound in sight, revenue is sliding at many energy companies, which are beginning to feel a cash-flow squeeze. Particularly hard hit are small and mid-size producers that are more dependent on oil than natural gas.
In recent weeks, natural-gas prices also have turned soft, adding to the worries, although few expect those lower prices to persist.
"No one has defaulted yet, but conditions are poor and getting worse," says Josh Gonze, energy analyst at Standard & Poor's Ratings Services. "This is a time when banks and other lenders are on alert."
With oil prices stuck between $13 and $14 a barrel, S&P has slashed debt ratings on several energy companies, and banks are cutting back lending for exploration and production. In response, some independent producers are trying to sell assets to raise cash, and others have put themselves up for sale. (Although their earnings have declined, most major oil companies, with large refining, marketing and chemicals business, have the financial strength to muddle through the downturn.)
Humbled Highflier
Chesapeake Energy Corp. in some ways typifies the overleveraged oil-patch company. A one-time highflier, the Oklahoma City company said in July that it would look for a possible buyer. The company sold $711 million in new debt and preferred stock last spring, when analysts expected oil prices to recover by fall. It used the proceeds to go on a $200 million acquisition spree and to repay bank debt.
But with little hope for a price recovery, Chesapeake is groaning under $920 million in long-term debt. In the second quarter, it posted a loss of $235 million, after a $216 million write-down of oil and gas assets, on revenue of $188.8 million. "To go out and borrow money from a bank in this market is nearly impossible," says Marc Rowland, Chesapeake's chief financial officer.
Oil-producing properties, though still commanding reasonable prices, are starting to flood the market. Sellers include Pioneer Natural Resources Co., Dallas. One of the nation's largest independent producers, it hopes to sell about $550 million in assets by year end. The company, formed from the 1997 merger of Mesa Inc. and Parker & Parsley Petroleum Co., has cut capital spending this year by about 17% to $500 million, to conserve cash.
Tiny Garnet Resources Corp., Nacogdoches, Texas, has seen its revenue fall about 60% through the first half of this year. The company, which trades on the over-the-counter bulletin board, hasn't paid interest on its $15 million in debentures all year and is in technical default on a $7.6 million loan from Chase Bank of Texas, a unit of Chase Manhattan Corp. Garnet Resources has agreed to merge in a stock transaction with another small company, Aviva Petroleum Inc., Dallas, pending a stockholder vote this week. But Aviva isn't in much better shape; because of "significant losses," the company said it is in technical default on a $7.7 million bank note of its own.
Onerous Terms
Private investors and financiers have met the gloom with offers of cash-on onerous terms. The Dallas investment firm Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst Inc., hitherto shy of commodities investments, recently agreed to pay $250 million for 62% of Coho Energy Inc., a Dallas producer, and at least $180 million for a minimum 17% stake in Triton Energy Ltd., a cash-starved oil and gas concern. In return for getting a Triton stake for the equivalent of $17.50 a common share-above the current depressed price but well below the company's 52-week high of $45 -- Hicks Muse will get four seats on Triton's 10-member board.
Meanwhile, bankers are making loans for purchases of oil and natural gas reserves at the right prices, but fewer loans for exploration and production.
Loan Pricing Corp., a New York bank-consulting firm, said about $33 million in oil-patch loans were made in the first half of this year, down only slightly from last year. But this year, 40% of the loans were made for merger activity, up from 23% in the first half of last year.
"I fully expect to see more merger and acquisition activity," says Dennis Petito, managing director of energy lending for First Chicago NBD Corp., who oversees about $4 billion in energy lending. Still, he says he is comfortable with his current portfolio, largely because banks have been much more cautious this decade than they were in the 1980s.
More Conservative Lending
When prices fell in the mid-1980s to near $10 a barrel, oil companies went out of business, taking more than a few banks with them. In those days, Mr. Petito says, banks lent money based on companies' reserves, even if they weren't producing oil and gas from them. Now, most loans are based on actual production. "I like to sleep at night," Mr. Petito says.
Tom Foncannon, vice president and head of energy lending for Norwest Corp., Minneapolis, which has $200 million in energy loans, says that some banks, caught up last year in the glow of high oil prices and spurred by competition, may have begun lending at terms he considered too loose. "I haven't seen a lot of fallout yet," he says. "But I still think there were some excess. I think some banks loaned too much. I guess time will tell."
With credit harder to find, some companies are turning to lenders of last resort, such as Range Resources Corp. of Fort Worth, Texas. It has a six-year-old division that makes expensive short-term loans to high-risk oil-patch clients. Range, itself the product of an energy merger of Lomak Petroleum Inc. and Domain Energy Corp., loans money in return for a production royalty interest.
Hardy Murchison, a Range vice president, acknowledges the company's loans carry somewhat stiff terms -- 15% to 25% rates of interest. But it currently has loans outstanding of about $70 million, with another $50 million in loans under consideration. "Our backlog is the highest it's ever been," Mr. Murchison says. "You have guys out there who are frankly in a cash-flow crunch who need money up front just to keep going. These are people who can't get a loan anywhere else."
Format for printing
Copyright c 1998 Dow Jone |