Anadarko Petroleum Corp. Checks Out Risk

Strategic Visions, Merger Actions

John Seitz, president and chief operating office of Anadarko Petroleum Corp., outlined seven key elements to a successful merger or acquisition.

♦   Understanding and actively managing portfolio risk is a critical duty of senior E&P executives.

"Few executives have a clear vision of either upside or downside risk in their portfolio, including geologic risk, political risk, project time horizon, commodity price risk, macroeconomic risk or asset distribution in the life cycle," Seitz said. "Independents must balance a strong focus with the need for diversification."

Seitz highlighted two Anadarko acquisitions to illustrate his strategy:

  • Anadarko's deal for Union Pacific Resources -- the company sought to reduce the heavy reliance of its international portfolio on the enormous Algerian project. The acquisition established an asset base for Canadian operations.
  • The acquisition of Berkeley Petroleum -- it provided higher risk/reward projects to balance the low-risk opportunities gained through the UPR deal.

♦   A company must be able to clearly identify how a deal enhances the firm's competitive advantage.

"A murky strategy vision equals bad decisions," Seitz said. "Every deal should solve a problem, not provide a Band-Aid."

Also, he continued, management should be honest about the real motivation behind a deal.

"Do we want to get bigger, have we run out of good ideas, or does the market expect us to do a deal?"

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John Seitz, president and chief operating office of Anadarko Petroleum Corp., outlined seven key elements to a successful merger or acquisition.

♦   Understanding and actively managing portfolio risk is a critical duty of senior E&P executives.

"Few executives have a clear vision of either upside or downside risk in their portfolio, including geologic risk, political risk, project time horizon, commodity price risk, macroeconomic risk or asset distribution in the life cycle," Seitz said. "Independents must balance a strong focus with the need for diversification."

Seitz highlighted two Anadarko acquisitions to illustrate his strategy:

  • Anadarko's deal for Union Pacific Resources -- the company sought to reduce the heavy reliance of its international portfolio on the enormous Algerian project. The acquisition established an asset base for Canadian operations.
  • The acquisition of Berkeley Petroleum -- it provided higher risk/reward projects to balance the low-risk opportunities gained through the UPR deal.

♦   A company must be able to clearly identify how a deal enhances the firm's competitive advantage.

"A murky strategy vision equals bad decisions," Seitz said. "Every deal should solve a problem, not provide a Band-Aid."

Also, he continued, management should be honest about the real motivation behind a deal.

"Do we want to get bigger, have we run out of good ideas, or does the market expect us to do a deal?"

Going into the UPR acquisition Anadarko had identified a strategic need to increase cash flow to fund known opportunities. The Berkeley deal provided an exploration program that helped fill a gap in the middle of Anadarko's portfolio.

♦   Have a rigorous scientific analysis of assets and opportunities as well as realistic risking.

A company should take a simultaneous top-down and bottom-up approach when analyzing a deal -- and fail early if a project isn't doable, he said.

Also, management can play devil's advocate with the evaluation team: While evaluating the UPR deal, Anadarko:

  • Carried out an extremely intensive engineering and exploration effort to understand the asset base.
  • Had third parties confirm the results.
  • Built economic models that allowed valuations at multiple risk factors.

Anadarko's Canadian operations had previously identified Berkeley's assets as a desirable target and Anadarko's experience in executing large exploration programs increased confidence in the deal.

♦   Buy at the right price -- which relies largely on the discipline to reject creeping values.

"A good deal is accretive to the acquirer's net asset value," Seitz said. "When pursuing a merger or acquisition it's good to pursue multiple targets simultaneously, avoid prolonged bidding wars and be willing to quit deep into negotiations.

"Plus, convincing the other company shareholders of the wisdom of accepting a low upfront premium is helpful."

Accepting a modest initial premium made UPR shareholders the biggest winners to emerge from the merger process, and Anadarko's deal for Berkeley sought to take advantage of relatively cheap valuations for premium Canadian assets, he said.

♦   Buy when the timing is right.

"Chasing mergers during periods of high equity/commodity prices involves high risk," Seitz observed, "but stock as currency mitigates vulnerability, and hedging may lock in a rate of return. Good timing is unappreciated in the short-term, but may leverage value creation."

Anadarko's conviction in the strength of natural gas fundamentals led the company to initiate discussions with UPR when the gas price was $2.50.

"And," Seitz added, "Anadarko's deal for Berkeley sought to take advantage of relatively cheap valuations for premium Canadian assets."

♦   Sell the deal to Wall Street.

A deal must have external as well as internal logic.

  • The acquiring company must demonstrate detailed knowledge of the assets when a deal is announced.
  • Meetings should be scheduled with every major shareholder to answer questions.
  • And remember, large deals create opportunities to access new shareholder types.

"Initial reaction to the Anadarko-UPR deal was negative, but we were able to convincingly explain the merits of the deal, leading Anadarko's share price to more than double in six months," Seitz said. "Likewise, Anadarko was able to show investors the complementary fit of Berkeley with the existing asset base."

♦   Execute the business play.

"The act of merging per se does not create value," he warned. "It's important to maintain momentum through the merger process, but success can only be judged three to five years down the road. The lessons learned from each deal must be carried into future transactions."

Anadarko, he continued, hit the ground running on both the UPR and the Berkeley acquisitions.

"We were able to ramp up the rig count aggressively even during the due diligence and physical merger phases of the UPR deal," he said.

For example, Anadarko and UPR expertise working together have improved the outlook for the Austin Chalk play in East Texas, he said.

"The combined opportunity set of Anadarko and Berkeley will be high graded over the next few months, and we are accelerating the Berkeley drilling program for 2001."

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