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The Street
The Street
Business
Martin Baccardax

Exxon to buy Pioneer Natural Resources for $60 billion in all-stock deal

Exxon Mobil (XOM ) -)confirmed plans to buy shale producer Pioneer Natural Resources (PXD) -) Wednesday for around $60 billion, the group's biggest takeover deal in more than two decades.

Exxon will pay $253 of stock for each Pioneer share, valuing the Irving, Texas, group at around $59.5 billion. The price represents a 5.6% premium to Pioneer's Tuesday closing price but around 20% north of the level at which it traded prior to recent reports of Exxon's renewed interest. 

Under the terms, Pioneer holders will get 2.3234 Exxon shares for each of their shares. The implied total value of the transaction, including debt, is pegged at $64.5 billion when the deal closes early next year. 

The takeover, if completed, would be the largest since the $81 billion merger between Exxon and Mobil in 1998 and the largest deal of the year in U.S. markets. It would top Pfizer's (PFE) -) $43 billion purchase of cancer-drug specialists Seagen (SGEN) -) in early March. 

“Pioneer is a clear leader in the Permian with a unique asset base and people with deep industry knowledge. The combined capabilities of our two companies will provide long-term value creation well in excess of what either company is capable of doing on a standalone basis,” Exxon Mobil Chief Executive Darren Woods said in a statement. 

“Their tier-one acreage is highly contiguous, allowing for greater opportunities to deploy our technologies, delivering operating and capital efficiency as well as significantly increasing production," he added. 

"As importantly, as we look to combine our companies, we bring together environmental best-practices that will lower our environmental footprint and plan to accelerate Pioneer’s net-zero plan from 2050 to 2035.” 

Exxon Mobil shares were marked 3.4% lower in early Wednesday trading to change hands at $106.72 each, pegging its market value at $427 billion, while Pioneer shares jumped 1% to $239.71 each.

Pioneer Merger Benefits Exxon Mobil 

For Exxon, the deal would secure the industry's largest stake in the Permian Basin, an oil-and-gas-rich expanse of land that runs through west Texas and New Mexico and is largely seen as a cheaper and more reliable area for drilling than other parts of the world.

"We maintain that Founder CEO Scott Sheffield would be a willing seller, and an all-stock deal would make sense for tax and dividend-yield purposes for senior management," said KeyBanc Capital Markets analyst Tim Rezvan prior to formal confirmation of the deal. 

"This final transaction would be the last of many savvy deals for him since the advent of horizontal drilling in the Midland Basin in the early 2010s, which established Pioneer as one of the most core inventory-rich [exploration-and-production companies] in the most prolific U.S. shale oil basin." 

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