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Its more interesting then you know...I keep hearing stuff out of Oklahoma..corporate giants forget that "little" people work for them and hear stuff..Watch for investment capital to be already moving in on CHK ...with money from overseas backing it.
KKR..bought Samson (little chicken compared to CHK in size but big in value) with 1/4 investment from Japan.
Ichan would already have covered his bases on this.
So who going to own CHK besides the shrare holders? Might be months before we know what is going on..in meantime price of NG is way too low..but it will rise.
Chk as we know is is on way out. Debt ridden..kind of like Facebook..what's it value?
He is too far leveraged himself to exit gracefully. What was that popular movie last year -- There Will Be Blood? This is a guy who had to put up his wine collection as collateral for his personal stake in the WI's he elected. Blood!
Interesting article from FORBES on CHK's valuation. How much is CHK really worth??
http://www.forbes.com/sites/christopherhelman/2012/05/22/how-much-i...
from sesport's link.....
McClendon, who was allowed to take a 2.5 percent stake in almost every well the company drilled and was required to pay development costs proportionate to his stake, had amassed $846 million in loans as of Dec. 31 to cover his share of the costs.
Who has to pay back the $846 million if the company has to fire sale, McClendon or the share holders?
The wells he took an interest in have to pay out, at 2.40 an mcf I doubt a lot of them will pay out. Gas prices ruin the economics on shale wells and now with oil dropping economics are going south on the oil wells as well. Money in is not equal to money out.
I suspect $40-$50 would still be a profit. I remember when oil topped $50 everyone went out of their minds. The end was near!
For the Tuscaloosa Marine shale oil they are actually getting near the Brent price which is still over $100.
So, McClendon could possibly file personal bankruptcy, take a hostile position against CHK and force the company to absorb the losses he can't pay and let the share holders take on that load of debt?
Wonder how this might impact Chesapeake?
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(Excerpt)
Chesapeake Energy Corp. (CHK) said it drilled the largest oil gusher in the company’s 23-year history at a “significant” discovery in the Anadarko Basin of Texas and Oklahoma.
The Thurman Horn 406H well in the Hogshooter formation produced 5,400 barrels of crude a day during its first eight days of operation, Chesapeake said in a statement today. The well, which reaches a depth of 10,000 feet (3,000 meters), also pumped 4.6 million cubic feet of natural gas and 1,200 barrels of natural gas liquids daily.
<snip>
The explorer believes that Hogshooter may now yield 65 new drilling opportunities in the wake of the exploration successes.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-06-01/chesapeake-makes-significa...
The Hogshooter Wash is an oil field in the Granite Wash Oil Play. The Hogshooter formation was discovered by Apache Corp (APA) in October 2010 in which the company drilled two horizontal wells. These two Hogshooter oil wells averaged over 2,000 barrels per day in the first 30 days and then 700 for a month after they will drilled. Apache says the Hogshooter interval could be very large and they plan to drill additional wells in 2011. The Hogshooter formation is also known as the Missourian Wash/Horizontal Oil Play. The Hogshooter Wash oil field is located in Beckham County, Oklahoma and will most likely extend into other counties and even into Texas.
Shale drilling and lithium extraction are seemingly distinct activities, but there is a growing connection between the two as the world moves towards cleaner energy solutions. While shale drilling primarily targets…
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