UPDATE: Exxon: US Regulators Clear Merger With XTO Energy
16 Marzo 2010 - 2:37PM
Noticias Dow Jones
Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM) said Tuesday that U.S. antitrust
regulators have cleared the company's pending merger with U.S.
natural-gas producer XTO Energy Inc (XTO).
In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the
world's largest publicly traded oil company said the waiting period
for the merger under the Hart-Scott-Rodino antitrust act expired
Monday without further comment from U.S. authorities. The company
added that the Dutch Competition Authority cleared the transaction
March 9.
"Necessary clearance for the pending merger has been obtained
from the appropriate competition law regulators," Exxon Mobil
spokesman Alan Jeffers said in an emailed statement.
Exxon Mobil added that the closing of the deal remains subject
to approval by the shareholders of XTO Energy and of other
conditions provided in the merger agreement announced last
December.
The nod from the regulators opens the door for Exxon Mobil's
grand investment in U.S. gas shales--natural gas-rich rock
formations that so-called independent energy companies like XTO
have recently learned how to tap profitably. Other international
oil companies, ranging from BP PLC (BP) to Eni SpA (E), have
entered joint ventures or acquired acreage in U.S. shale areas.
Energy executives and analysts have said that the unexpected
abundance of shale gas is in the course of once-declining North
America into a treasure trove for the industry.
If XTO shareholders agree, this would be Exxon Mobil's largest
acquisition since Exxon merged with Mobil in 1999. That deal was
closely reviewed by anti-trust regulators, which sought to avoid
concentration in the U.S. refining and gasoline market. The merger
closed nearly a year after it was announced, after the company
agreed to divest thousands of gasoline stations, as well as
terminal operations, a California refinery, and other businesses in
order to quell the Federal Trade Commission's concerns.
In contrast, the ExxonMobil-XTO merger hasn't raised major red
flags with anti-trust regulators "because there's no competitive
overlap," said William Vigdor, a Vinson&Elkins attorney who
specializes in anti-trust law.
Exxon Mobil Chief Executive Rex Tillerson said last week that
the transaction is expected to close in the second quarter and that
he believes that while the value of the acquisition to Exxon Mobil
and its shareholders is "compelling," the real benefit of the
estimated $31 billion transaction will be evident over several
years or even decades.
-By Isabel Ordonez and Angel Gonzalez, Dow Jones Newswires;
713-547-9207; isabel.ordonez@dowjones.com
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