Title: HEFG/IPAA Capital Markets Breakfast
1HEFG/IPAA Capital Markets Breakfast
2Summary of the Leveraged Bank Markets
Number of Active Bank Investors and Market Share
- With treasuries at historically low levels,
overall rates remain attractive though market
depth will likely be challenged over the next
several weeks. - While the market for larger financings that
require institutional participation for
successful execution is effectively closed,
financings that are distributed exclusively to
traditional bank investors remain viable. - Number of banks participating in the syndicated
loan market is at highest level since 1999. - Wachovia expects pricing on all bank or pro
rata deals to ultimately follow the broader
market however, we believe there may now be a
limited window for certain issuers to lock in
relatively attractive terms.
Source Wachovia Securities and SP/LCD
Pro Rata BB and B Pricing Averages
Source Wachovia Securities and SP/LCD
3Leveraged Loan Market Conditions
- The leveraged/non-investment grade loan market is
in the midst of an unprecedented technical
correction. - Fundamentals remain strong with default rates at
low levels. - The correction is driven primarily by a liquidity
crisis in the market for collateralized loan
obligations (CLOs), structured vehicles set up
to invest principally in floating rate, secured
bank debt. - Record leverage multiples for LBOs and aggressive
covenant-lite structures, as well as concerns
surrounding the sub-prime mortgage market, raised
doubts about the soundness of CLO/CDO financing
vehicles. - Rating agencies issued across the board
downgrades on the debt of many of these
structured vehicles. - CLO/CDO bond issuance to fund the purchase of
assets (bank loans, sub-prime mortgages, etc.)
has dried up and new issuance is expected to be
limited for the foreseeable future. - Underwriters of CLO paper have also hampered
liquidity by restricting the availability of
warehouse credit lines. - With little liquidity among institutional
investors and a record forward calendar, the
market is in a state of grid lock with widespread
uncertainty regarding the direction of the market
in the 4th quarter. - Underwriters have had to fund a large number of
underwritten financings on their own balance
sheets as they have been unable to attract any
meaningful interest from potential investors.
Institutional Loan Default Rate by Number of
Issuers
Source Wachovia Securities and SP/LCD
Loan Forward Calendar vs. CLO Issuance
Source Wachovia Securities and SP/LCD
4Leveraged Loan Market Conditions
LCDX Price / Spread
Discounted Spread
Source Wachovia Securities and Markit Index of
100 loan credit default swaps
Source Wachovia Securities and SP/LCD
Average Cash Loan Levels
Secondary Trading Levels
Source Wachovia Securities and SP/LCD
Source Wachovia Securities and SP/LCD
5High Yield Market Conditions
10-Year Treasury Yield
- The high yield market has also been pressured
with secondary spreads and new issue premiums
widening. - The secondary market was down for the 9th week in
a row with yields on BB and B indices widening 31
bps and 49 bps, respectively, last week. - Despite this, with treasuries at historically low
levels, overall rates remain historically
attractive though market depth will probably be
challenged over the next several weeks.
Source Bloomberg L.P.
BB High Yield Index
B High Yield Index
Source Merrill Lynch Global Index System
Source Merrill Lynch Global Index System
6High Yield Market Conditions
Historical Market Performance
Source Markit, Merrill Lynch Global Index System
and Wachovia Securities Analysis. Note LCDX
Index was launched on 5/22/2007.
7High Yield Market Conditions
Representative Upstream Bond Performance vs.
Broader Market
D YTW 6/1 7/27
145 bps
177 bps
110 bps
113 bps
117 bps
8High Yield Market Conditions
Representative Midstream Bond Performance vs.
Broader Market
D YTW 6/1 7/27
145 bps
101 bps
120 bps
98 bps
110 bps
130 bps
9High Yield RVA Upstream
Source Advantage Data Bloomberg
10High Yield RVA Midstream
Source Advantage Data Bloomberg
11Upstream MLP Yields Since IPO Date
- For upstream assets with the appropriate reserve
profile, an upstream MLP IPO offers a compelling
alternative for the monetization of oil and gas
assets. - C-corps are likely to face increasing competition
for long-lived reserves from tax-advantaged
flow-through vehicles. - Emergence is similar to historical trends in the
midstream market and in the Canadian EP market. - Wachovia has been involved in all but one
upstream MLP/LLC IPO completed to date.
Upstream MLP/LLC Distribution Yields Since
1/13/2006
12Upstream MLPs/LLCs Have Been Active Acquirers
- MLP/LLCs tend to purchase properties with high
reserve to production ratios and significant PDP
components. - The highlighted rows represent transactions where
the buyer is an MLP or has announced it is
contemplating an MLP formation.
Recent Upstream Acquisition Activity
13Volumetric Production Payment
Overview of a VPP
Transaction Description
- A VPP is a limited term overriding royalty
interest in oil and gas reserves. - The VPP entitles the purchaser to receive
scheduled production volumes over a specific time
period from specific lease interests. - The VPP guarantees first priority on a specific
volume of production from specific lease
interests. - A VPP is free and clear of all operating costs,
capital expenditures and taxes.
- The VPP Seller sells a VPP to a Wachovia entity.
In addition to the conveyance, the Wachovia
entity records a mortgage on the reserves. - The VPP Seller (or the existing operator)
continues to operate the properties.
VPP and related production
Wachovia
VPP Seller
Cash (VPP purchase price)
Acquisition VPP
Monetization VPP
- The VPP transaction can also be used in
conjunction with an acquisition. - The VPP is put in place with the seller of the
property before the property purchaser buys the
reserves (burdened by the VPP). - The VPP Seller (property purchaser) would book
the cushion reserves, LOE reserves, tail reserves
and all upside. - The VPP volumes would not be booked as Deferred
Revenue. - The Deferred Revenue account would only reflect
the present value of the LOE volumes.
- The VPP can be used as a monetization vehicle
through which the oil and natural gas producers
sells a term royalty in the reserves it already
owns. - The VPP Seller would not book the VPP reserves.
- The VPP would be disclosed in the footnotes to
the financial statements. - With a Monetization VPP, the VPP volumes would
most likely be reflected as Deferred Revenue.
14Agented VPP Lowest Cost VPP
VPP and related production
- The Seller would sell a VPP to the VPP Buyer, a
Wachovia administered entity. - The VPP purchase price will be based on the
forward prices hedged by the VPP Buyer. - The VPP Buyer raises 100 debt financing for its
acquisition of the VPP in the institutional
market. - Typical pricing is approximately LIBOR 50 to 75
bps (based on term of the VPP and the factors
listed below). - Class sizes will vary based upon
- Predictability and stability of the production
profile and operating cost profile - Well concentration
- Amount of capital raised against the underlying
reserves (i.e., size of cushion) - Operator / VPP seller
- Credit quality of the off-takers and basis
volatility - Hedging LOE
- Ability to effectively hedge basis
- Size of NGL component
- Typical transaction of minimum 300 million.
Floating Price
VPP Seller
VPP Buyer
Wachovia Bank, N.A.
Purchase Price
Fixed Price
Rated Debt
Cash
Institutional Debt Market
Comparison of VPP Structures
15Reversionary Interest Partnership Considerations
- A reversionary interest partnership structure can
be used to partially monetize and develop
existing properties or in conjunction with an
acquisition. - Wachovia would buy a portion of the property and
contribute its pro rata share of capital
expenditures required for development drilling as
well as operating, maintenance and COPAS
expenses. - The Seller and Wachovia can continue developing
the properties, thereby increasing the value of
the reserves. - Wachovias contribution to development costs
gives the Seller access to future proved
developed reserves with minimal upfront capital
commitment and reduces risk during the
exploitation period. - This product can be also be used for acquisitions
where Wachovia and the Seller can partner to
acquire large properties. - The Seller would have the opportunity to purchase
Wachovias portion of the property to achieve its
growth objectives.
Reversionary Interest Transaction Example
- The Seller sells its working interest in a 400
million property. The property is purchased by a
newly formed Partnership Co. in which the company
is the general partner (GP), with an interest
of 2 and a Wachovia-administered entity (WAE)
is the limited partner, with an interest of 98. - The partnership agreement entitles WAE and the GP
to receive their proportionate units of the net
revenue from the reserves until WAE achieves a
predetermined IRR target (cash on cash), which is
based on the property profile. At this time, WAE
will receive 65 of the net cashflows while the
GP receives 35. The IRR calculation will include
cashflows from production (including hedging) and
any proceeds from the sale of the property. - Net revenues will be calculated by taking COPAS,
capital expenditures, LOE and cash flow from
hedges into account. - This structure can be used as a complement to a
partial direct working interest purchase of a
property.
16Case Study EnerVest Management Partners, Ltd.
EnerVest Management Partners, Ltd.
170,000,000 Co-Investment through a Wachovia
Reversionary Interest Partnership Sole Arranger
- EnerVest Management Partners, Ltd. (EnerVest)
was founded on October 30, 1992, to acquire,
exploit, operate, and manage oil and gas
properties on behalf of institutional investors. - Currently operates approximately 11,500 wells in
11 states including Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana,
Michigan, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma,
Pennsylvania, Texas and West Virginia - Serves as the general partner or manager of
various institutional funds and partnerships,
including EV Energy Partners (EVEP), a publicly
traded master limited partnership - Has made over 2.0 billion in acquisitions,
including the 750 million acquisition from
Anadarko, and over 467 million in divestitures
since January 2005
Wachovias Role
Asset Description Acquisition Rationale
- April 16, 2007 EnerVest announced that EVEP and
certain institutional partnerships it manages
have signed an agreement to acquire oil and
natural gas properties in Central and East Texas
from Anadarko Petroleum Corp. for 728 million
(the Transaction). - 1,297 active wells (892 operated)
- 82 PDP
- 52 gas, 21 crude and 27 NGLs
- R/P of 8.1 years
- Estimated productive life of over 40 years
- Implied value of 2.48/Mcfe and 7,029/MMCfe/d.
- EVEP expects the acquisition to be 45 accretive
to distributable cash flow per unit in 2H 2007. - The acquisition closed on June 27, 2007.
- Wachovia co-invested in the Transaction through
its Reversionary Interest Partnership product. - Wachovia will be entitled to its proportionate
share of cash flows and will provide capital for
its share of the necessary capital expenditures,
thus reducing the developmental risk to EnerVest
and EVEP. - Wachovias initial interest in the partnership is
reduced as certain IRR targets are met - Through the Reversionary Interest Partnership and
EnerVests institutional funds, EnerVest and
Wachovia allowed EVEP to participate in an
acquisition that would have been too large to
conduct independently. - Wachovias participation also allowed EnerVest to
allocate its investment capital available to
other ventures and reduce any investment
concentration risks.
17Disclaimer
Wachovia Securities is the trade name for the
corporate and investment banking services of
Wachovia Corporation and its subsidiaries. Debt
and equity underwriting, trading, research and
sales, loan syndications agent services, and
corporate finance and MA advisory services are
offered by Wachovia Capital Markets, LLC, member
NASD, NYSE and SIPC. Mezzanine capital, private
equity, municipal securities trading and sales,
cash management, credit, international, leasing
and risk management products and services are
offered by various non-broker dealer subsidiaries
of Wachovia Corporation.
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