'Chapter 22' looms over some U.S. oil and
gas bankruptcy survivors
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[November 23, 2016]
By Jessica DiNapoli
(Reuters) - At Global Geophysical Services
LLC headquarters in a Houston suburb, a few employees are winding down
what is left of an oil and gas industry data provider that only three
years ago had a staff of more than 1,000 and offices around the world.
Global Geophysical is a "Chapter 22" company - a term coined by
restructuring experts for firms that return to bankruptcy court after
their first Chapter 11 overhaul failed to fix their problems.
A casualty of high debt and a cash crunch, the company filed for
bankruptcy in early 2014 before tumbling oil prices pushed scores of
other energy firms over the edge. Last year, it became one of nearly 20
companies that have already exited bankruptcy, but is now one of the
first to have filed for creditor protection again.
Restructuring specialists say companies, which like Global Geophysical
failed to wipe their balance sheets clean in a bankruptcy, are at a risk
of a relapse.
In Global Geophysical's first bankruptcy, a fight among creditors was in
part to blame for leaving it with more than $100 million in debt it
could not shed, according to people familiar with the matter. That
proved too much in a still volatile market and led to the company's
liquidation.
In other cases, creditors refused to swap all debt into shares, wary of
further damage from the slump, or approved plans that were too
optimistic. Some critics say bankruptcy judges too often focus on
hammering out an agreement without paying enough attention to companies'
chances of long-term survival.
"While a great deal is being done to fix balance sheets, the question
constantly becomes is it going to be enough," said Charles Beckham Jr, a
bankruptcy attorney at Haynes and Boone LLP in Houston and New York.
More than 200 energy companies have filed for creditor protection since
the beginning of 2015, according to Haynes and Boone LLP. Of those with
initial debt loads of at least $450 million, nearly 20 have exited
bankruptcy.
Some whittled their debt loads down to a fraction of their projected
earnings, according to a Reuters analysis of financial disclosures.
DEBT BURDENS
Those left with large debt compared to their estimated future earnings
may be at risk for a Chapter 22 scenario. Some companies have taken
steps to mitigate that risk, issuing debt that does not require cash
interest payments or that can eventually convert to equity.
"The companies that would have greater risk of a subsequent bankruptcy
would be those that emerge from reorganization with still high leverage
or insufficient ... cash on hand or committed revolver to sustain
themselves through the downturn," said Sharon Bonelli, a senior director
for leveraged finance at Fitch Ratings.
Three companies which have exited Chapter 11 - offshore driller Vantage
Drilling International <VTGGF.PK>, oil and gas explorers ETX Energy LLC
and Titan Energy LLC - share some of those characteristics.(Graphic:
http://tmsnrt.rs/2fViXks)
Moody's Investors Service said in August that Vantage, in the vulnerable
offshore sector, had an unsustainable debt load.
In ETX Energy's case, its debt and equity is held largely by the same
investors, making a second bankruptcy filing less likely, a person
familiar with the matter said.
Vantage Drilling, ETX Energy and Titan Energy did not return requests
for comment.
Hercules Offshore Inc <HEROQ.PK>, an offshore driller which emerged from
bankruptcy with $450 million debt - 12 times its projected earnings for
the following year - filed for "Chapter 22" in June after it burned far
more cash than projected.
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A pump jack is seen at sunrise near Bakersfield, California October
14, 2014. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
A spokesman for the company declined to comment beyond publicly
available information that pinned its "Chapter 22" on the decline in oil
prices, consolidation of its customer base and the addition of new
capacity in the market.
For Global Geophysical, a conflict between creditors, who lent it
around $150 million in its first bankruptcy filing in a so-called
"debtor-in-possession" loan, was its undoing.
The creditors considered converting more of the loan into equity,
according to people familiar with the matter. But they could not
agree on how to split the equity and one group demanded full
repayment, those people said.
To do that, the company borrowed from investment bank Morgan
Stanley, but ended up with too much debt and, like Hercules, chose
to liquidate its business.
Global Geophysical did not respond to requests for comment.
VIABLE VERSUS ACCEPTABLE
"Chapter 22" bankruptcies are neither new nor unique to the oil and
gas industry.
Nearly a fifth of all U.S. companies that exit bankruptcy as a going
concern seek creditor protection again within about five years,
according to Edward Altman, a professor emeritus at the Stern School
of Business at New York University.
One reason is that bankruptcy judges often focus more on forging an
agreement than ensuring it is viable, says Lynn LoPucki, a law
professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, and a critic
of the U.S. bankruptcy process.
"They say, some of them pretty openly, if the parties want the plan
confirmed, it's their money," he said.
Sometimes judges do reject reorganization plans if they believe they
could end in another bankruptcy as happened in the Chapter 11
proceedings of offshore oil services company Paragon Offshore PLC
<PGNPQ.PK> last month.
A group of secured lenders warned that Paragon's planned revamp that
left it with nearly $1.1 billion in debt relied on "highly
speculative and overly optimistic" assumptions that could require
another overhaul within a few years, a claim the company denied.
But the Delaware bankruptcy judge sided with the lenders, asking for
a new plan.
"The question before the court is simple - is the debtors' plan
feasible? It is not," the judge wrote in his opinion.
Paragon declined to comment.
Often, however, the courts will go with whatever gets agreed,
LoPucki said.
"The parties involved in a bankruptcy very often do not want to
solve the problem, it's easier to just get it confirmed, let it go
out and see how it does."
(Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli in New York; Editing by Greg
Roumeliotis and Tomasz Janowski)
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