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Re: eastunder post# 8714

Sunday, 09/16/2018 5:18:51 PM

Sunday, September 16, 2018 5:18:51 PM

Post# of 15568


Transocean Agrees to Acquire Ocean Rig UDW for $2.7 Billion

Cash-and-stock deal would strengthen buyer’s ultra-deepwater and harsh-environment drilling capabilities



Updated Sept. 4, 2018 1:14 p.m. ET



Transocean Ltd. RIG 2.17%? has agreed to buy fellow offshore-drilling contractor Ocean Rig ORIG 1.04%? UDW Inc., in a cash-and-stock transaction valued at roughly $2.7 billion and aimed at strengthening the company’s drillship fleet ahead of an expected market recovery.

Switzerland-based Transocean—among the world’s five biggest offshore operators, with revenue of $7.4 billion last year—will give Ocean Rig shareholders 1.6128 newly issued shares in the combined business plus $12.75 in cash per share of Ocean Rig’s common stock.


The agreement would value Ocean Rig’s shares at $32.28 apiece, representing a 20% premium over the 10-day volume-weighted average share price of the drilling contractor as of Aug. 31.


Transocean’s shareholders would own about 79% of the combined company, while Ocean Rig’s would own about 21%. No changes to the board of directors, executive management or corporate structure are expected.

Transocean intends to finance the deal through a combination of cash and fully committed financing from Citigroup Inc.

Offshore drilling has been one of the hardest-hit sectors in the shipping industry’s downcycle over the past four years. Rig daily leases, which once commanded as much as $800,000, dropped to about $200,000 over the period as cheap oil from U.S. shale drilling flooded the market, hitting finances at the field’s biggest competitors.


Ocean Rig completed a restructuring last October that wiped out $3.7 billion in debt and handed control of the company’s equity to investors in its senior debt, among them Avenue Capital Management II LP, BlueMountain Capital Management LLC and Elliott Associates LP.

Another major operator, Seadrill Ltd., filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last year and emerged from bankruptcy in April.

“The Transocean takeover shows that rig operators are betting on sustained higher oil prices going forward,” said Peter Sand, chief shipping analyst at Bimco, an industry research group. “They have also made a serious effort to cut their costs, which could make offshore drilling attractive once again.”

Transocean Chief Executive Jeremy Thigpen said the takeover will strengthen the company’s presence in key markets such as Brazil, West Africa and Norway ahead of what “we believe is an imminent recovery in the ultra-deepwater market.”

The deal will add nine drillships and two harsh-environment semisubmersibles to the Transocean fleet. Ocean Rig also has two drillships under construction and due for delivery by 2020. Altogether, the deal would boost Transocean’s fleet to 57.

Ocean Rig is the Swiss company’s second big acquisition in less than a year, after a $1.2 billion takeover of Songa Offshore completed in January.

The deal is subject to shareholders’ approval. The companies said in a written statement that shareholders representing 48% of Ocean Rig’s shares outstanding support the deal, as does Transocean’s third-largest shareholder

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