Chesapeake Energy Floats Plan to Exchange $1.5B Worth of IOUs
On Wednesday Chesapeake Energy announced a “private exchange offer for senior notes.” Disclaimer right up front: We’re not high finance people here at MDN. Some of this stuff befuddles us. However, we’ll try to make sense of what Chessy is offering. If we can boil it all down, Chesapeake is offering to exchange senior notes, or IOUs that are coming due in the next few years, with something called second lien (or secured) notes. Second lien notes are, of course, lower in priority for payback (should there be a default) than more senior notes. Chesapeake is hoping to entice current unsecured (no guarantee of a payback) noteholders with notes currently due in 2017/2018 with secured notes due in 2022 with a more favorable interest rate. The secured notes, as we noted, are second-in-line to other notes and debt obligations. Chesapeake is hoping to exchange up to $1.5 billion of new 8% senior secured second lien notes due in 2022 for certain outstanding unsecured notes. Will they be successful?…
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Just last week we told you it’s getting so bad out there because of the low price of oil and gas, that even some law firms are closing down. We told you that Burleson LLP, headquartered in Houston but with a sizable office they opened in Pittsburgh six years ago, is shutting down all of their offices, including Pittsburgh (see
Yesterday National Fuel Gas Company, the utility giant headquartered in Buffalo, NY and parent of Marcellus driller Seneca Resources, announced that Seneca has partnered up with energy investor IOG Capital to essentially fund Seneca’s Marcellus drilling program in Elk, McKean and Cameron counties in north-central Pennsylvania. The outlines of the deal are thus: IOG will provide the cash and Seneca will do the drilling on up to 80 Marcellus wells on 10,500 acres in the Clermont/Rich Valley area of PA. IOG will get an 80% working interest in the wells. In addition to drilling the wells, National Fuel’s midstream subsidiary will connect the wells and get the gas to market. What this deal means is that Marcellus drilling activity in the Clermont/Rich Valley area will pick up over the few years. Here’s the details of this somewhat complicated deal…