TPG Pace Energy, a blank-check company, targets Eagle Ford- Re-post Scott Shields of Katy Texas

TPG Pace to Buy EnerVest Shale Assets for $2.7 Billion
By 
Matthew Monks and  Alex Nussbaum re-post by www.morganshields.com & www.. m-sconsulting.com 

March 20, 2018, 6:37 AM CDT Updated on March 20, 2018, 8:05 AM CDT
  • TPG Pace Energy, a blank-check company, targets Eagle Ford
  • Chazen to be CEO of newly formed company to be called Magnolia
Steve Chazen, who made Occidental Petroleum Corp. a heavyweight of the shale boom, is looking to replicate that success in south Texas with a $2.66 billion deal.
TPG Pace Energy Holdings Corp., a blank-check company formed by Chazen and private equity firm TPG, agreed to acquire about 360,000 net acres in the Eagle Ford shale from oil and gas investment firm EnerVest Ltd., according to a statementTuesday.
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Steve Chazen
Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg
TPG Pace, which raised $650 million in a public offering last May, plans to change its name to Magnolia Oil & Gas Corp. upon closing the deal by the end of June. Chazen will be chief executive officer of Magnolia while EnerVest will operate the assets and own about 51 percent of the company. TPG Pace investors will own 43 percent and TPG will own the rest, according to the statement.
Chazen, who stepped down as Occidental’s CEO in 2016 after more than 20 years at the company, is the latest high-profile oilman to stage a comeback at the helm of a so-called special purpose acquisition vehicle. SPACs raise money from investors with a mandate to spend most of it buying a company.
The 71-year-old said he isn’t ready to retire.
“What I enjoy doing is I enjoy capital allocation, or investing money,” Chazen said in an interview. “I plan to do it for a long time.”
Private Placement
TPG Pace is paying EnerVest about $1.2 billion in stock and $1.1 billion in cash. It plans to raise about $330 million of that cash through a private placement of shares to investors including Fidelity Management & Research Co., Capital Research and Management Co. and Davis Selected Advisers LP, according to the statement.
EnerVest CEO John Walker said the deal will enable the Houston-based private equity firm to go into business with a well-respected operator with a proven track record.
“We have a lot of confidence in Steve,” he said. “I have admired him for a long time. I think he does things the right way.”
Other oil industry veterans now leading companies that began as SPACs include James Hackett, the former head of Anadarko Petroleum Corp. Hackett helps run Alta Mesa Resources Inc., which last month closed the purchase of an explorer in the Stack region of Oklahoma. Mark Papa, the former head of EOG Resources Inc., runs Centennial Resource Development Inc., a SPAC that bought a company in a portion of the Permian Basin known as the Delaware two years ago.
“Steve has a longstanding reputation for driving strong financial results and accountability, traits that are becoming more important to investors,” said Michael MacDougall, senior partner of TPG and managing partner for TPG Pace.
Credit Suisse Group AG, Deutsche Bank AG and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. were advisers to TPG Pace, while Vinson & Elkins acted as legal counsel. Citigroup Inc. acted as financial adviser to EnerVest with Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP as legal counsel.


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Best,
Scott Shields Katy Texas
Principal
Morgan Shields Consulting, LLC

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