New York, Feb 9 : Chesapeake Energy Corp said that Aubrey McClendon will step down as
chief executive after a tumultuous year in which a series of investigations
triggered civil and criminal probes of the second-largest U.S. natural gas
producer.
News of the executive's plan to depart on April 1 boosted the
company's shares by 9 percent. The stock has made a partial recovery since
losing almost half its value last spring after a report opened the company and
its co-founder up to intense scrutiny.
Federal regulators and
Chesapeake's board are both looking into whether McClendon, 53, blurred the line
between his personal dealings and those of the company, and into possible
antitrust violations. Big shareholders took control of the board in June after
he was stripped of his title as chairman of the company he cofounded in
1989.
The internal deliberations that led to McClendon's departure remain
unclear. The findings of the board's probe will be released next month, but
Chesapeake said in a statement that the review has "to date found no improper
conduct."
"I think that the controversy, governance and other issues that
have been pulled up have caused lots of questions about him," said David
Larcker, professor of accounting at Stanford University's Graduate School of
Business. "This was just sucking up so much time, it had to be a reasonable
decision to change management."
Chairman Archie Dunham was not available
to comment. The former head of ConocoPhillips was brought in to quell the
shareholder revolt.
In an email to employees, McClendon put his departure
down to "philosophical differences" with the board, but assured them: "The
separation will be amicable and smooth."
Despite a history of McClendon's
perks and corporate benefits creating controversy among shareholders, he will
leave Chesapeake with a lavish package. The company said he "will receive his
full compensation and other benefits to which he is entitled."
A person
familiar with the terms of McClendon's departure said it was being treated as
"termination without cause," entitling the CEO to some of the most generous
benefits laid out in an employment contract that details a wide range of
severance scenarios.
McClendon is entitled to total compensation of about
$47 million (29.8 million pounds). That figure includes $11.7 million in total
cash compensation based on McClendon's salary and bonus, which will be paid out
over a period of four years. It also includes restricted stock awards already
given to McClendon that have a value of $33.5 million, the person familiar with
the compensation package said.
He is also entitled to deferred
compensation of about $800,000 and personal use of corporate jets that could be
worth up to $1 million over four years, the person said.
Chesapeake's
board recently cut McClendon's pay package and gave him no bonus for
2012.
As head of a company that bet big on natural gas, McClendon played
a key role in promoting the hydraulic fracturing technology that unlocked the
huge U.S. supplies in shale formations that are now depressing
prices.
News of his departure comes just over two weeks after Encana Corp
CEO Randy Eresman said he would step down immediately.
Last June, media
reported that Chesapeake plotted with Encana, its top competitor, to suppress
land prices in the Collingwood shale formation in Northern Michigan, a matter
that is the subject of investigations by both the state of Michigan and the
Department of Justice.
That followed investigation in April which found
McClendon had arranged to personally borrow more than $1 billion from EIG Global
Energy Partners, a firm that also is a big investor in Chesapeake.
The
loans, arranged through McClendon's personal shell companies, were secured by
his interest in company wells. McClendon is allowed to take up to a 2.5 percent
stake in every well Chesapeake drills under a controversial program called the
Founders Well Participation Program (FWPP).
"The empire that he built was
based on far higher gas prices, both for Chesapeake and for him through the
Founder Well Participation Program. So given that outlook, it's not a surprise
he is stepping down," said Mark Hanson, an oil and gas analyst at Morningstar
Inc in Chicago.
"At the end of the day, it's no longer the company that
it once was. The board is really not with him these days. If you have done
things a certain way for 23 years and then all of a sudden things change as
radically as they have in the last six months, it's hard to get used
to."
Hefty spending on oil and gas acreage in the nation's shale
formations and a prolonged period of low natural gas prices have left Chesapeake
saddled with debt and a funding shortfall.
Chesapeake sold or agreed to
sell about $12 billion in oil and gas properties last year. In 2013, it plans to
sell up to $7 billion to fill a spending gap that JPMorgan estimates at $5.5
billion.
In early May, after another investigation revealed that
McClendon had partially owned and helped run a secretive $200 million hedge fund
to trade in the same commodities Chesapeake produces, Florida Senator Bill
Nelson urged the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate potential market
manipulation or fraud by the CEO.
An aide to Senator Nelson said he was
not immediately available for comment on McClendon's pending
departure.
Major investors Carl Icahn, who now has a Chesapeake stake of
nearly 9 percent, and Mason Hawkins, with 13.5 percent, took control of the
nine-member board last June.
In a statement issued about a half-hour
after the news of the departure, Icahn said he believed history would prove
McClendon was right about the ultimate value of natural gas and praised the
assets assembled by the former CEO.
"While it is known that some of these
assets will be sold by the company in due course, I do not believe that this
will in any way effect the ultimate realization of Chesapeake's potential,"
Icahn said.
Chesapeake has been forced to sell billions of dollars worth
of acreage, but Dunham said in a memo to employees that "the company is not for
sale."
Chesapeake shares rose to $20.69 in post-market trading, up from a
New York Stock Exchange close of $18.97. The stock is down from highs just above
$26 last March, which came before natural gas prices tumbled to decade lows and
McClendon became an object of so much negative
publicity.
Ends
SA/EN
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Chesapeake CEO McClendon steps down after year of tumult
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