Weatherford to File for Bankruptcy

Laxman Pai
Monday, May 13, 2019

Irish-domiciled multinational oil and natural gas service company Weatherford International has entered into an agreement with its top creditors that will allow the company to file for a "prepackaged" Chapter 11 bankruptcy - after more than four years without making a profit.

Weatherford expects to implement the Restructuring Agreement through a "pre-packaged" Chapter 11 process and expects to file U.S. chapter 11 and Irish examinership proceedings.

 As part of this process, Weatherford intends to continue engaging in discussions with, and begin soliciting votes from, its creditors in connection with a proposed Plan of Reorganization prior to filing.

It has executed a restructuring support agreement with a group of its senior noteholders that collectively holds or controls approximately 62% of the Company's senior unsecured notes. The proposed comprehensive financial restructuring would significantly reduce the Company's long-term debt and related interest costs, provide access to additional financing and establish a more sustainable capital structure.

"During the past year, we have been executing a company-wide transformation to fundamentally improve the way we operate our business and to strengthen Weatherford for the long run," said Mark A. McCollum, President and CEO of Weatherford.  

Under the terms of the Restructuring Agreement, the Company's unsecured noteholders would exchange approximately $7.4 billion of senior unsecured notes for approximately 99% of the equity in the Company and $1.25 billion of new tranche B senior unsecured notes.

The Restructuring Agreement contemplates that Weatherford will receive commitments for approximately $1.75 billion in the form of debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing comprised of an approximately $1.0 billion DIP term loan that would be fully backstopped by certain members of the Ad Hoc Noteholder Group and an undrawn $750 million revolving credit facility provided by certain of Weatherford's bank lenders, which would be available as part of the chapter 11 process and be led by Citigroup subject to conditions to be agreed.

Categories: People & Company News Legal Finance

Related Stories

Chuditch-2 Appraisal Well Surveys in Full Swing Offshore Timor-Leste

PTTEP Hires McDermott for Gas Job Offshore Malaysia

OneSubsea to Supply Subsea Wellheads for Prime Energy’s Malampaya Field

Saipem Loads Out Three Topsides for QatarEnergy LNG’s North Field Gas Project

ABS Awards AIP for OceanSTAR’s FSO Design

ONE Guyana FPSO for ExxonMobil’s Yellowtail Field Leaves Drydock in Singapore

China Puts First ‘Home-Made’ Subsea Xmas Tree Into Operation

Exxon's $36 Billion Profit Beats Estimates

Aibel-Built Modules for Bacalhau FPSO Set Sail for Singapore

BP Launches Its ‘Largest-Ever’ Seismic Program at Azerbaijan Oil Field

Current News

SOVs – Analyzing Current, Future Demand Drivers

Decarbonization Offshore O&G: Navigating the Path Forward

Subsea Vessel Market is Full Steam Ahead

China's Imports of Russian Oil Near Record High

TotalEnergies Inks $530M Deal to Acquire Malaysia’s SapuraOMV

Energy Storage on O&G Platforms - A Safety Boost, too?

Malampaya Gas Field Exceeds Export Capacity Amid Grid Demands in Philippines

Timor-Leste: Chuditch-2 Well to be Drilled at New Location Following Site Surveys

Akastor’s Subsidiary Wins $101M Case Against Seatrium's Jurong Shipyard

ONGC Hires Consortium to Deliver FEED Work for Bay of Bengal Oil Field

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com