Houston-based Conoco, the largest U.S. oil and gas producer
after Exxon Mobil Corp and Chevron Corp, has expressed interest
in participating in the sale process for privately held
CrownRock, which is valued between $10 billion and $15 billion,
the sources said.
CrownRock's investment bankers have asked interested parties to
submit initial offers next week, two of the sources added.
Diamondback Energy, Devon Energy, Marathon Oil and Continental
Resources are also studying potential bids for CrownRock, the
sources said.
No deal with any of these companies is certain and other bidders
could emerge, the sources added, asking not to be identified
because the matter is confidential.
Conoco, Devon, and Marathon Oil declined to comment. CrownRock,
Continental and Diamondback did not respond to requests for
comment.
Pressure on oil and gas producers to increase their size through
purchases intensified this month after Exxon clinched a $60
billion deal to buy Pioneer Natural Resources Co and Chevron
inked a $53 billion agreement to buy Hess Corp.
CrownRock owns about 86,000 net acres in the northern part of
the Midland basin in Texas, which is part of the Permian, the
largest U.S. oil producing region. The company is led by Texas
billionaire businessman Timothy Dunn and backed by private
equity firm Lime Rock Partners.
Conoco was the largest producer in the Permian behind Pioneer
and EOG Resources in the second quarter, with Diamondback and
Devon finishing sixth and seventh, respectively.
Bloomberg News reported last week that Devon was considering a
bid for CrownRock, and that Devon has also held preliminary
talks about a tie-up with Marathon.
Devon and Marathon engaged in deal negotiations in the summer,
the sources that spoke to Reuters said. The companies ended
talks in August because they could not agree on terms, the
sources added.
(Reporting by David French in New York; Editing by Greg
Roumeliotis and Christian Schmollinger)
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