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Temasick to Lose USD 500 Million on Chesapeake?

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-...ms-as-board-switches-course-on-ceo-loans.html

[h=1]Chesapeake’s Outlook Dims Amid Board Reversal on CEO Loans[/h]
<CITE class=byline>By Joe Carroll - Apr 27, 2012 9:44 PM GMT+0800 <NOSCRIPT></NOSCRIPT></CITE>



Shareholder confidence in Chesapeake Energy Corp. (CHK) sank to its lowest point since the 2008 global economic meltdown as company directors reversed course on the need to examine Chief Executive Officer Aubrey McClendon’s personal financial transactions.

Chesapeake’s board, propelled by a plunging stock price and potential conflicts between McClendon’s personal finances and corporate duties, said yesterday it would end a program allowing its chairman and CEO to buy stakes in the company’s wells and review loans McClendon obtained by using those investments as collateral.

Enlarge image [h=3]Chesapeake Energy Corp. CEO Aubrey McClendon[/h]
ix5qZNCdeBZ4.jpg
F. Carter Smith/Bloomberg

Chesapeake Energy Corp. CEO Aubrey McClendon.



Chesapeake Energy Corp. CEO Aubrey McClendon. Photographer: F. Carter Smith/Bloomberg



“Simply letting the Founders Well Participation Program expire is too little, too late,” said New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli, who oversees 3.1 million Chesapeake shares held by the $140 billion New York State Common Retirement Fund. “Much more needs to be done to restore investor confidence.”
Chesapeake shares have tumbled 25 percent since the end of March, heading for the worst monthly performance since 2008. A growing number of investors are betting the stock will continue to drop.
One out of every 13 shares available for trading was sold short as of April 24, close to the 8.5 percent level reached last month that was the highest in 3 1/2 years, according to New York-based research firm Data Explorers. That’s more than double the average for energy producers in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index.
[h=2]Reviewing Personal Loans[/h]So-called short investors bet a stock will fall by selling borrowed shares with the expectation of repurchasing them at a lower price.
Seeking to counter criticism that its oversight was too lax, the company said in a statement yesterday its board would review all financing transactions between McClendon and “any third party that has had or may have a relationship with the company in any capacity.”
The U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission has opened an informal inquiry into the loans, Reuters reported yesterday, citing an unidentified source familiar with the matter. SEC spokesman Kevin Callahan declined to comment.
Jim Gipson, a Chesapeake spokesman, didn’t respond to a phone message or e-mail requesting comment.
[h=2]Turmoil Danger[/h]Controversy over McClendon’s personal portfolio has compounded the impact of collapsing gas prices on Chesapeake’s shares, Sean Sexton, managing director at Fitch Inc., the Chicago-based credit-rating company, said yesterday in an interview. U.S. natural-gas futures, pressured by a supply glut from new wells in shale formations, lost 54 percent of their value in the past year.
Chesapeake fell 1.5 percent to $17.29 at 9:42 a.m. in New York.
The turmoil could hamper Chesapeake’s ability to meet its “massive” funding requirements stemming from its aggressive spending and weak cash flow, Scott Sprinzen, a debt analyst at S&P in New York, said yesterday in a note to clients. Sprinzen lowered Chesapeake’s corporate credit and senior secured debt ratings to BB from BB+.
Chesapeake’s 4.5 percent convertible preferred shares tumbled more than 8 percent today, the biggest decline since December 2008, on concern the company’s ability to pay a quarterly dividend may be impaired.
Continued Role?
Questions about potential conflicts of interests involving McClendon’s personal finances stirred debate over his continued role at the company. Mark Hanson, a Chicago-based analyst at Morningstar Inc. (MORN), said the board should separate the chairman and CEO positions to minimize McClendon’s influence over a panel that is supposed to watch over him. Philip Weiss, an Argus Research analyst in New York, said McClendon and the entire board should be fired.
“The decision about whether Aubrey should go ought to be left to a board that is able to operate independently from him,” said Michael Garland, director of corporate governance for New York City Comptroller John C. Liu, said yesterday in an interview. “Given the litany of historic indications and most recent indications, this board appears to be incapable of doing that.”
The city comptroller’s office, which says it manages 1.57 million Chesapeake shares worth $28.4 million in pension funds, has proposed that the company allow large, long-term shareholders to nominate board candidates. A vote is scheduled at the company’s June 8 annual meeting in Oklahoma City.
[h=2]$846 Million in Loans[/h]For most of the past 23 years, McClendon has purchased as much as 2.5 percent in every well the company has drilled. The program was established to tie the CEO’s fortunes to company performance and requires McClendon to cover a proportionate share of each well’s expenses.
His share of such costs was $973 million for the 2009 to 2011 period, the company said in an April 20 filing.
McClendon got a $1 billion line of credit with EIG Management Co. LLC, according to a Nov. 18 deed filed in Brooke County, West Virginia. EIG Management is a unit of EIG Global Energy Partners LLC, which participated in a $1.2 billion preferred-shares purchase in a Chesapeake subsidiary on April 9.
McClendon said in a separate statement yesterday that he personally had $846 million in outstanding loans related to the well-participation program.
[h=2]Generally, Not Fully[/h]The directors yesterday backed away from last week’s endorsement of McClendon’s practice of using his stakes in company wells as collateral to secure those loans. Chesapeake General Counsel Henry J. Hood issued an April 18 statement that directors were “fully aware of the existence of Mr. McClendon’s financing transactions” and that they didn’t represent a conflict of interest.

By that, he meant directors were “generally aware” that McClendon had used his interests in company-operated wells as collateral for personal loans, and the board hadn’t reviewed or approved any of the individual transactions, Oklahoma City-based Chesapeake said in its statement yesterday.

“The board was aware of but neither approved or reviewed the loans. Where were they? They have an obligation to look deeper,” Garland said.
Under McClendon’s stewardship, Chesapeake is planning to sell $14.9 billion in assets by the end of next year to close a funding gap that Standard & Poor’s estimates could reach $9 billion in 2011. The company raised $2.6 billion earlier this month through the sales of preferred stock, gas fields and future production.
[h=2]2008 Free Fall[/h]The recent decline in Chesapeake’s stock price is reminiscent of late 2008, when McClendon was forced to sell almost all his stock in the company to meet margin calls. McClendon dumped millions of shares over the course of a few days, accelerating a freefall in October and November 2008 that wiped out more than half the company’s market value.

Andrew Behar, chief executive officer of As You Sow, a San Francisco-based corporate-activism group that has clashed with Chesapeake over environmental issues, doubted the latest controversy would cost McClendon his job.

“They’ll find some jiu-jitsu way of rationalizing his behavior,” Behar said “Aubrey McClendon operates that company in his own image.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Joe Carroll in Chicago at [email protected]
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Susan Warren at [email protected]
 

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-...s-part-of-1-2-billion-spent-on-resources.html

[h=1]Temasek Invests in Chesapeake as Part of $1.2 Billion Spent on Resources[/h]
<CITE class=byline>By Netty Ismail - May 12, 2010 12:57 PM GMT+0800 <NOSCRIPT></NOSCRIPT></CITE>



Temasek Holdings Pte’s $500 million investment in Chesapeake Energy Corp. caps more than $1.2 billion the Singapore state-owned company has spent on energy and resources from the U.S. to India in the past six months.
Temasek bought $500 million of convertible preferred shares of Oklahoma City-based Chesapeake, while Hopu Investment Management Co., a private-equity fund backed by the investment firm, purchased an additional $100 million on similar terms, Temasek said an e-mailed statement yesterday.

[h=3]Ho Ching, chief executive officer of Temasek Holdings[/h]
ihS.DWcC.bys.jpg
Charles Pertwee/Bloomberg

Ho Ching, chief executive officer of Temasek Holdings, speaks during a news conference in Singapore.



Ho Ching, chief executive officer of Temasek Holdings, speaks during a news conference in Singapore. Photographer: Charles Pertwee/Bloomberg



The Singapore company is making forays into resources as Asian demand increases. Temasek is “very interested” in investing in copper, platinum, iron ore and coking coal, Nagi Hamiyeh, managing director of investments, said in March. JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. have said demand for commodities is improving and a 6.5 percent drop in prices this year has created a buying opportunity.
“They’ve been very intent on maintaining a diversified portfolio and that’s a prudent investment strategy,” said David Cohen, director of Asian forecasting at Action Economics in Singapore. “Resources seem to offer prospects for better performance as the global economic recovery proceeds.”
Temasek’s investments in energy and resources accounted for 5 percent of its portfolio at the end of March last year, compared with 33 percent in financial services, according to its latest annual report.
Temasek in July aborted the appointment of former BHP Billiton Ltd. head Charles “Chip” Goodyear to replace Chief Executive Officer Ho Ching over differences in strategy.
[h=2]Energy[/h]The Singapore investment company, which manages about S$172 billion ($124 billion), said in a statement yesterday it remains “confident of the growth potential of the energy sector.”
Chesapeake, the third-largest U.S. natural-gas producer, also gave Temasek and Hopu a 30-day option to place as much as $500 million in additional preferred stock with investors in Asia, the U.S. firm said in a statement. Chesapeake said it will raise as much as $5 billion to reduce debt and achieve investment-grade credit ratings by selling preferred stock and a stake in a subsidiary.
Natural gas for June delivery has declined by about 25 percent this year in New York amid lower demand and a glut of gas from shale rock formations, according to Bloomberg data.
Temasek bought 382,000 additional shares in Phoenix-based Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc., the world’s largest publicly traded copper producer, in the first quarter, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission yesterday. Based on yesterday’s closing price of $70.24, that additional investment was worth about $27 million.
[h=2]‘Buying Opportunity’[/h]“There are structural reasons to be investing in selective resources at this juncture,” said Jason Wang, Singapore-based chief executive officer of Iridium Asset Management, which runs an Asian equity hedge fund that focuses on commodity-related industries. “Valuations are not only supportive at current mid- cycle assumptions, but present ample upside on a longer-term view, if you believe in a resource-constrained environment.”
The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of 19 raw materials lost 5.9 percent last week on speculation the debt crisis in Greece would spread to other European nations and threaten economic growth.
The drop in commodity prices is a “buying opportunity” Goldman Sachs said in a report May 10. The bank said it favors copper, crude oil and precious metals, and that commodities, as measured by the S&P GSCI Enhanced Total Return Index, should advance 17.6 percent in 12 months.
[h=2]Africa[/h]Temasek is “fairly bullish” about mining investments and is seeking opportunities in Africa, Mongolia and the rest of the world, Hamiyeh said in March.
The Singapore company invested $150 million in the last two months in Platmin Ltd., the South Africa-based platinum miner controlled by Brian Gilbertson’s Pallinghurst Resources Ltd.
It agreed to buy a $50 million stake in the January share sale in Hong Kong by SouthGobi Energy Resources Ltd., a coal producer operating in Mongolia.
In April, Temasek agreed to buy a stake for $200 million in India’s GMR Energy Ltd. to take advantage of growing demand for power in the world’s second-fastest growing major economy.
The sovereign wealth fund also provided funding for Niko Resources Ltd.’s $300 million acquisition of Black Gold Energy LLC. Temasek bought the C$310 million convertible bonds issued by Niko, the Calgary-based oil and natural-gas explorer said in a statement on Dec. 30.
Two Temasek subsidiaries agreed to pay $303 million for a 13.76 percent stake in Singapore-based agricultural commodities supplier Olam International Ltd. almost a year ago.
The Singapore state investment company’s profit fell a record 66 percent to S$6.2 billion in the 12 months to March 31, 2009, as a collapse in credit markets drove down the value of its stakes in Bank of America Corp. and Barclays Plc. Temasek sold its Bank of America and Barclays stakes at a loss as part of S$16 billion of divestments that fiscal year.
Temasek managed a portfolio of S$172 billion as of July 31, 2009, according to its website.
To contact the reporter on this story: Netty Ismail in Singapore [email protected]
 

Cruxx

Alfrescian
Loyal
jim_rogers1.jpg


"I know these people, and they have never given me the impression that they're smarter than anyone else"
 

batman1

Alfrescian
Loyal
The temasek CEO got the Midas touch,everything she touches turn to ashes.They claim she is a talent.Who are they bluffing ? small kids ? Should be talent in losing billions of taxpayers money !
 

pretender

Alfrescian
Loyal
you sells your own country utiltiy to others and buy the utility of other country.
are you saying you will make money because cost of electricity will be going up in other country
but it will remain the same here ?
or you can conveniently distant yourself from rising cost ?
 

johnny333

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
In the past I have bought and sold Chesapeake & made some $. However I'm not in the same calibre as Ho Ching, I try to make money & not lose it:p
 

longbow

Alfrescian
Loyal
Just raise the utility bill for your gas use and they can get back that 500M loss.

Funny how gas exploration companies are dropping like flies because of low natural gas price but yet my electric and gas bill keeps going up up up and away. By the way out power stations run on natural gas
 

Silent88scope

Alfrescian
Loyal
How come the company name looks like CHEAPSKATE ???

That's exactly what our "Sillypore warren buffett" Temasick CEO HC thought when she look at this company.
She thought that she has struck a Cheapskate deal and dump in tons of $$$ into this firm.

If she is so keen to invest in energy firm, at least dump our peasant's hard earn $$$ into Shell and BP will not lost so much.
 

johnny333

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Don't you find it strange that Temasek invest so much in a BB+ company?

Not really surprising, they have a track record of investing in 3rd world comanies: Thaksin, Indonesian companies, Chinese companies, etc. Many of these companies have less than stellar backgrounds I often wonder why Temasek doesn't just stick to respectable companies:confused:
 

ginfreely

Alfrescian
Loyal
Not really surprising, they have a track record of investing in 3rd world comanies: Thaksin, Indonesian companies, Chinese companies, etc. Many of these companies have less than stellar backgrounds I often wonder why Temasek doesn't just stick to respectable companies:confused:

I rather they put the money in Aussie dollars or Ringgit and earn the higher interest rate. Whatever they invest seem to end up as losses, are there any winners at all?
 

halsey02

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Not really surprising, they have a track record of investing in 3rd world comanies: Thaksin, Indonesian companies, Chinese companies, etc. Many of these companies have less than stellar backgrounds I often wonder why Temasek doesn't just stick to respectable companies:confused:

LONG TERM INVESTMENT, ' my daughter in law' the BEST!:rolleyes: I prefer when the old guards were around, they were much more careful with the monies entrusted to them. GREED had gone to their head these days...it will be a very LONG TIME we get to see our retiremnt money, even if we ever get them, they will come in drips! LONG TERM INVESTMENT.:p
 

johnny333

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
I rather they put the money in Aussie dollars or Ringgit and earn the higher interest rate. Whatever they invest seem to end up as losses, are there any winners at all?

I wonder if there's something else going on behind the scenes :confused: Maybe Ho Ching is not so incompetent & is draining tax dollars which is somehow ending up in someones account:eek:

With all the secrecy we might never know until the PAP is out of power & people start through the skeletons.
 
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