The feeling is almost palpable among midstreamers: In a fast-changing energy industry, the companies that gather, transport, store and export hydrocarbons need to consolidate and augment — and be smart about how they get bigger. Scale, that’s the key. That — plus complementary assets that provide synergies, lower costs and increase free cash flow, a sizable portion of which can be returned to shareholders as dividends and buybacks — is what investors are looking for. Oh, and don’t forget this important M&A goal: gaining a larger footprint and a more prominent role in the Permian, the dominant U.S. production area. ONEOK, a midstream company heretofore primarily focused on moving NGLs and natural gas, earlier this week announced an $18.8 billion agreement to acquire Magellan Midstream Partners, which is best known for pipelines that transport refined products and crude oil. In today’s RBN blog, we and our friends at East Daley Analytics kick the tires, look under the hood, and give our thoughts on the deal’s pros and potential cons.
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For the past couple of years we’ve been monitoring — and blogging about — a cycle of consolidation in the U.S. midstream sector. In We Belong Together and our five-part Just the Two of Us series, we said that the COVID pandemic spurred midstreamers to scale back capital spending and instead focus on improving the efficiency of existing operations by teaming up with others that held adjoining, complementary assets — or gave the acquiring firm a strong foothold in a highly desirable production area. Among other deals, we discussed the now-implemented plan by Plains All American and Oryx Midstream to contribute assets to a new, Plains-operated crude oil pipeline joint venture in the Permian’s Delaware Basin. We also looked at Crestwood Equity Partners’ acquisition of Oasis Midstream, a combination that gave Crestwood more scale and sway in both the Bakken and the Delaware; the merger of Altus Midstream and BCP Raptor Holdco LP (the corporate parent of EagleClaw Midstream) into a new entity called Kinetik Holdings that is now the largest integrated midstreamer in the Delaware; Enterprise Products Partners’ acquisition of Navitas Midstream, which propelled Enterprise’s position in Midland Basin gas gathering and processing; Targa Resources’ acquisition of Lucid Energy Group, a large gas gatherer and processor in the northern Delaware; and, most recently, Energy Transfer’s planned acquisition of Lotus Midstream, which — we’re sensing a theme here — will give the acquiring company an even bigger footprint in the Permian.
Today, we and East Daley Analytics examine ONEOK’s recently announced plan to acquire Magellan Midstream Partners in a cash-and-stock deal valued at $18.8 billion. The deal will create the second-largest U.S. midstream company by market capitalization and the fifth-largest by enterprise value behind Energy Transfer, Enterprise Products Partners, Kinder Morgan and Williams. ONEOK will issue $8.8 billion in equity to unitholders of Magellan (a master limited partnership, or MLP), give them another $5.1 billion in cash, and assume Magellan’s $5.0 billion of debt. The $67.50/unit that Magellan unitholders will receive ($25 in cash and 0.667 ONEOK shares per unit) represents a healthy 22% premium to Magellan’s closing price last Friday. Assuming the deal secures all needed shareholder, unitholder and regulatory approvals, it is expected to close in Q3 2023.
About the song
“Tulsa Time" was written by Danny Flowers and appears as the fifth track on Don Williams’s eighth studio album, Expressions. Released as a single in October 1978, it went to #1 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs Singles chart. It also was the #1 Billboard Country Song of 1979. Eric Clapton released two versions of the tune, the first on his 1979 album, Backless, and the second on his 1980 live album, Just One Night. The live version was released as a single in 1980 and went to #30 on the Billboard Hot 100 Singles chart. Songwriter Danny Flowers wrote the song while a member of Williams’s band when they were snowed in at a Sheraton Hotel in Tulsa. Flowers said: “I was sitting in my room watching The Rockford Files, with some hotel stationary beside me, bored, and started writing.” He said he spent a total of a half-hour writing the song. Personnel on the record were: Don Williams (lead vocal, guitar, hambone), Danny Flowers (backing vocals, guitar, dobro), and unknown rhythm section players.
Expressions was recorded at former Sun Studio engineer Jack Clement's Sound Emporium in Nashville. It was released in August 1978 on ABC/Dot. One single was released from the LP.
Don Williams was an American country music singer and songwriter. Referred to as ”The Gentle Giant,” he amassed 17 #1 country hits in his career. His songs have been covered by artists such as Eric Clapton, Johnny Cash, Leon Russell, Alison Krauss, Charley Pride, and Pete Townshend. Williams released 25 studio albums, two live albums, 13 compilation albums, and 62 singles. He has won an ACM Award, a CMA Award and an Americana Music Honors Award, and was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2010. Williams died in Mobile, AL, in September 2017 at the age of 78.