Chesapeake mulls spinoff, sale of oil field services division

Feb. 24, 2014
Chesapeake Energy Corp. reported it is considering a potential spin-off to Chesapeake shareholders or an outright sale of Chesapeake Oilfield Services (COS).

Chesapeake Energy Corp. reported it is considering a potential spin-off to Chesapeake shareholders or an outright sale of Chesapeake Oilfield Services (COS).

COS in 2013 reported revenues of $2.2 billion, offering services that include drilling, hydraulic fracturing, oil field rentals, rig relocation, and fluid handling and disposal.

COS’s operations are currently conducted through Chesapeake Oilfield Operating LLC, a wholly owned Chesapeake subsidiary.

Jerry Winchester, currently COS chief executive officer, previously served in the same position at publicly traded oil field services company Boots & Coots Inc.

As of Dec. 31, 2013, COS owned or leased 115 land drilling rigs. It also owned 9 hydraulic fracturing fleets with an aggregate of 360,000 horsepower; a diversified oil field rentals business; an oil field trucking fleet consisting of 260 rig relocation trucks; 67 cranes and forklifts used to move drilling rigs and other heavy equipment; and 246 fluid hauling trucks.

In addition to services performed for Chesapeake, 35% of COS’s marketable drilling rigs are currently working for third-party operators and COS intends to grow its third-party customer base as an independent provider of oil field services.

Doug Lawler, Chesapeake chief executive officer, commented on COS: “It has provided, and will continue to provide, superior service to Chesapeake’s upstream business, and we look forward to maintaining our close and valuable relationship with Jerry and his team as they pursue COS’s ventures outside of Chesapeake. A separation of COS is aligned with our strategies of financial discipline and profitable and efficient growth from captured resources.”

Chesapeake in 2012 made multiple agreements to sell most of its Permian properties, all of its midstream assets, and certain noncore leasehold for total net proceeds of $6.9 billion as it intended to pay down debt (OGJ Online, Sept. 17, 2012).

The following year, the company reported the sale of 50% stake in its Mississippi Lime oil and natural gas acreage in northern Oklahoma to Sinopec International Petroleum Exploration & Production Corp. for $1.02 billion (OGJ Online, Feb. 25, 2013).