Every Dog has his day! Shares of CHK fall through the floor!!

All the King's horses and all the King's men can't save this Dog.  The idea that Kirkland can save it is a joke.  All the White Shoe firms in the country can't save it.  Kirkland will get a nice payday.  More money wasted.  CHK raised wasting money to an art form.

  • Shares plunge record 51 percent to lowest since April 1999
  • Firm hired Kirkland & Ellis for restructuring, Debtwire says

Chesapeake Energy Corp., the U.S. natural gas driller that’s been slashing jobs and investor payouts to conserve dwindling cash flows, lost half its value after a report that it hired a restructuring law firm.

The shares dropped a record 51 percent after Debtwire reported that Chesapeake retained Kirkland & Ellis to help restructure a $9.8 billion debt load. The plunge triggered three circuit-breaker halts during the first half hour of trading and extended Chesapeake’s 12-month loss to about 93 percent. The free fall wiped out $838 million in market value in the first hour of trading on Monday.

Burdened with a debt load eight times larger than its market value, Chesapeake has been canceling drilling projects, trimming its workforce and closing offices to slow the rate at which it burns through cash. Gas, which accounts for about 80 percent of Chesapeake’s production, has averaged about $2.56 per million British thermal units during the past year, down 38 percent from a year earlier.

Chesapeake is the latest U.S. shale driller to flirt with collapse as a crushing glut of gas and crude renders companies increasingly desperate to avoid insolvency. Houston-based Halcon Resources Corp, retained the Weil, Gotschal law firm to explore bankruptcy, TheDeal.com reported on Feb. 5, citing a person it didn’t identify. Chesapeake and Halcon both suspended dividend payouts on preferred shares last month.

Cash Shorfall

Chesapeake, which pumps more U.S. gas than any driller other than Exxon Mobil Corp., has $1.3 billion in debts maturing by the end of 2017. Analysts expect Chesapeake to have a cash shortfall of more than $1 billion over the next two years.

The shares were trading at $1.51 at 10:59 a.m. for their biggest loss since they started trading in 1993, after touching $1.50. Chesapeake will post a second consecutive annual loss this year as an oversupply of North American gas weighs on prices and erodes cash flows the company needs to pay its debts, according to forecasts compiled by Bloomberg.

Chesapeake is scheduled to disclose fourth-quarter and full-year 2015 results on Feb. 24. A voice mail and e-mail left with the company’s media relations office weren’t immediately returned. Kate Slaasted and Olivia Clarke, spokeswomen for Kirkland & Ellis, didn’t immediately respond to messages seeking comments.

Bonds Plunge

The company’s bonds led losses among high-yield debt on Monday. Chesapeake’s notes due March 2016 tumbled by a record to 74.5 cents, from 95 cents last week, while its bonds maturing in 2017 fell to an all-time low at 34 cents.

Standard & Poor’s last month cut Chesapeake’s credit-rating to "CCC+" with a negative outlook on assumptions that oil and gas prices will remain weak. The company’s debt leverage is unsustainable, S&P said.

The company was the worst performer on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index on Monday.


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Paul, you obviously don't like CHK and that is fine; however think of the normal people who just work there and their families. They are the ones who will suffer through the layoffs. Anytime a company goes down it is sad as there is a huge ripple effect

I'm sorry, I have zero sympathy for the employees.  I consider them co-conspirators.  This couldn't have happened to a nicer bunch in my opinion.

By my reckoning, all of them should have been in the unemployment line years ago. 

The Shalies, taking up all of the industry money with their frauds, killed off the sand players years ago.  I feel sorry for them.

I grew up with a dad in oil and gas in Texas from the 1930s boom & forward when the sand plays were the only plays. The Shalies are just an evolution of the sand players. Technology changed the industry. Technology in early 1900s brought in the first oil wells. Workers changed with that technology too. Those CHK workers include independent contractors who were landmen, water haulers, solar panel providers. The list goes on and on. It also included people with just half ac who were dirt poor and got maybe $7500 to lease that half ac. The Shale revolution brought a lot of positive changes to small town economies for awhile too.

One has to assume you are not in oil and gas then??

You know what happens when you "assume."

What you seem to be ignoring is that the $7,500 was paid with someone else's money who is going to shoulder the burn/loss.  I feel sorry for them. 

Many kids won't get to college because the money was lost playing shale stocks that funded the Okies' dim witted boondoggles.

Do you have any sympathy for the people, nationwide, who have seen the value of their investments plunge to zero?

I don't consider any of the CHK people I know particularly altruistic.

I didn't necessarily "assume" you were in oil and gas--hence the ? mark.

You however are assuming that everyone who had shale money played the shale stocks and lost it. Not true. I know people who made very positive changes in their lives with those shale bonuses. I also know people who never got the bonuses they were due from CHK. That doesn't make all CHK employees responsible. It makes the people who were in charge who CHOSE not to make those pmts. responsible. From your postings, it is obvious you have had a really bad, very personal experience with CHK.  One doesn't have that much anger toward a company without having had a really bad experience.

Personally, I was never treated badly.

CHK bullied many landowners, landmen and materialmen I've run into.  I've heard many deeply disturbing stories and have read deeply disturbing stories in court pleadings I've been asked to review

I've got 30 years in the patch.

The hubris from the shale players was previously unseen, by me, in the industry.

Anytime you have hubris, a lack of knowledge and other peoples' money--you only get one thing: failure.

Failure is what we are seeing.

Paul, please delete your other duplicate discussion threads on the Main Page.

10-4.

Let me be clear on my intentions with my posts.  I'm not trying to hurt the oil & gas industry.

The problems the current  players are having were self inflicted and the people that made the mistakes need to exit "Stage Right."

I want to see new players and new players will arrive.

Hopefully, they will be more cautious and level headed.  I'd like to see Skip run one of the new companies.  Skip seems cautious and level headed.

I'm a hot head-- I know.  That's why I try to steer clear of people while doing my thing.

There is room for only so many discussions on the Main Page.  Duplicates bump other discussions off that otherwise would be available to members.

Paul, go to either of your earlier discussions and look for a button above and to the right of the discussion title that is labeled "Options".  If you've got one you can delete the duplicate discussions yourself.  Click the down arrow on the button and then click, "Delete Discussion".  If you don't have an Option button I can ask Keith to delete the duplicates.

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