Kerr-McGee Oil & Gas Defines Attributes

Strategic Visions, Merger Actions

Oklahoma City-based Kerr-McGee Oil & Gas has been among the busiest independent oil companies in the mergers and acquisitions market.

The result: The firm has grown to be a major player in several key producing regions around the world.

Jeffrey W. Lund, vice president of exploration and production for Kerr-McGee in Houston, pointed out that no industry or company, regardless of size, has been excluded from today's merger and acquisition frenzy -- and some of the largest of these transactions have occurred in the energy industry.

"The more visible mega-mergers (BP-Amoco-Arco, ExxonMobil) have created a new class of super majors, but they also, perhaps, triggered opportunities for additional transactions within the energy sector as the mega majors manage their portfolios to increase profitability, adopt new business models and control costs," Lund said.

Kerr-McGee has strictly adhered to several key principles for merger and acquisition transactions.

"In order to achieve value growth through these deals," Lund said, "there are a few attributes that we must get right:"

  • There must be a strategic purpose for the merger or acquisition.

    "Once this framework is set," he added, "you must be committed to adhering to those basic principles."

  • There must be up side opportunity that enhances the value of the acquired or merged assets.
  • There must be the ability to create financial and operating synergies -- and absolute dedication to achieving those synergies in a timely manner in order to make the surviving entity stronger than the separate pieces.
  • There must be creativity and flexibility.

    "In today's economy you must be capable and willing to think outside the box to structure a truly value enhancing transaction," he said.

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Oklahoma City-based Kerr-McGee Oil & Gas has been among the busiest independent oil companies in the mergers and acquisitions market.

The result: The firm has grown to be a major player in several key producing regions around the world.

Jeffrey W. Lund, vice president of exploration and production for Kerr-McGee in Houston, pointed out that no industry or company, regardless of size, has been excluded from today's merger and acquisition frenzy -- and some of the largest of these transactions have occurred in the energy industry.

"The more visible mega-mergers (BP-Amoco-Arco, ExxonMobil) have created a new class of super majors, but they also, perhaps, triggered opportunities for additional transactions within the energy sector as the mega majors manage their portfolios to increase profitability, adopt new business models and control costs," Lund said.

Kerr-McGee has strictly adhered to several key principles for merger and acquisition transactions.

"In order to achieve value growth through these deals," Lund said, "there are a few attributes that we must get right:"

  • There must be a strategic purpose for the merger or acquisition.

    "Once this framework is set," he added, "you must be committed to adhering to those basic principles."

  • There must be up side opportunity that enhances the value of the acquired or merged assets.
  • There must be the ability to create financial and operating synergies -- and absolute dedication to achieving those synergies in a timely manner in order to make the surviving entity stronger than the separate pieces.
  • There must be creativity and flexibility.

    "In today's economy you must be capable and willing to think outside the box to structure a truly value enhancing transaction," he said.

  • There must be timing that is beneficial from both an operational, functional and business cycle standpoint.
    "Many people believe that in the energy sector it helps a lot if you have the ability to achieve a merger when oil is $10 and natural gas is $2," Lund said, "but this is not the only environment in which successful transactions can occur. We believe that any transaction that is entered into with the expectation that price increases will validate the transaction will be doomed to failure."
  • There must be a willing buyer and seller.
    "Of course, there have been transactions consummated in a hostile environment," Lund said. "However, I believe that the maximum value is created for all participants when both parties are working toward a common goal."

'Some Serious Upside'

Kerr-McGee's recent merger and acquisition transactions have been consummated at various stages within the commodity price cycle.

"We certainly liked the timing of our deal with Oryx -- it was serious frosting on the cake," Lund said, "but the transaction was value creating for us even without the subsequent dramatic price rise.

"Our strategy is to profitably grow our worldwide exploration and production and build on our core E&P areas in the United States, the North Sea and selected deep-water basins."

This strategy has helped Kerr-McGee's transformation from a relatively small domestic integrated energy company with assets of $3.7 billion to total assets of more than $10 billion -- that includes divesting of refining, marketing and coal business as well as mergers and several strategic acquisitions.

Among the company's more important moves came in 1996, when Kerr-McGee merged with Devon Energy.

"A strategic decision was made to change the ownership structure of our North American onshore assets, which at that time represented a relatively small amount of reserves that were scattered throughout North America," Lund said. "The Devon transaction was a win/win divestiture, which adjusted both companies' portfolios to align with their specific strategies."

The company "employed a creative financial swap of properties for equity that was an innovative financial deal structure subsequently replicated by other companies," Lund said.

Another important Kerr-McGee deal came in 1998, when Gulf Canada's North Sea properties came on the market -- assets that meshed with Kerr-McGee's strategy to grow its core North Sea E&P operations.

Also, both firms had a common interest in the Gryphon property.

"We came to recognize that there was also an opportunity to develop an under-appreciated prospect 10 miles north of our Gryphon property," Lund recalled. "Our own mapping of the area revealed potential for as much as 100 million barrels of oil."

Less than two weeks after mobilizing the technical team, Kerr-McGee had a definitive purchase and sales agreement with Gulf Canada that helped them avoid a protracted public auction.

"And in February of last year we announced the Leadon discovery, exactly the prospect that we mapped at the time of the Gulf acquisition," he added.

Through some very creative lease work, Kerr-McGee now controls 100 percent of Leadon -- a 100+ million barrel discovery on a 100 percent Kerr-McGee leasehold.

"That," Lund said, "is some serious upside and synergy realized."

A Strategic Move

Also in 1998 Kerr-McGee announced its merger with Oryx Energy, the largest transaction in the company's history. The two firms had strong property overlays, giving the merged company critical mass in the deep-water Gulf of Mexico and the North Sea.

"The merger was a major strategic combination that had most all of our key ingredients for success -- core focus, synergy, friendly transaction and opportunity for upside," Lund said. "We were truly operating as one corporation within days of receiving stockholder approval of the merger."

Strategically, the assets fit together ideally. The combination created one of the largest leasehold positions in the deep-water Gulf of Mexico and allowed Kerr-McGee to assemble an experienced team and generate the financial strength to capitalize on the potential.

"The final result," Lund said, "is an entity that is much stronger than either of its parts."

Kerr-McGee, like so many independents, also has benefited from other mega-mergers. In January 2000, for example, the firm took advantage of the Repsol/YPF merger and Repsol's need to divest itself of certain non-core assets to reduce its overall debt by acquiring Repsol's North Sea assets.

That move added about 28,000 barrels of oil to the firm's daily production and 100 million barrels of oil equivalent of reserves to the UK unit -- solidifying Kerr-McGee's position as the largest U.S. independent oil producer in the North Sea.

These strategic assets were situated between and adjacent to the Gryphon development and the Leadon discovery, giving the company four additional fields in the immediate area and solidifying core operations in a cost-effective way.

Most recently, Kerr-McGee announced earlier this year its acquisition of HS Resources, valued at approximately $1.7 billion.

"This strategic acquisition ... fits our strategy to profitably grow our oil and gas operations while providing balance to our portfolio from virtually every aspect," Lund said. "It also provides significant upside opportunity to further add to our reserves."

The assets of HS Resources are primarily concentrated within Colorado's Wattenberg Field in the D-J Basin along the Front Range of the Rockies. The acquisition, Lund said, will:

  • Create a new core U.S. operating area with long-lived reserves and significant growth opportunities.
  • Add 1.3 trillion cubic feet of gas equivalent to Kerr-McGee's U.S. reserves at $1.10 per thousand cubic feet of gas equivalent.
  • Increase the firm's gas component by nearly 80 percent.

"Mergers and acquisitions are key business activities," Lund said. "They complement the drill bit in achieving strategic objectives."

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