Jersey Boss
12-25-2011, 10:05 PM
Chesapeake Energy Chief Executive Aubrey McClendon has agreed to buy back the collection of antique maps that he sold to the company back in 2008. The purchase price: $12 million plus 2.28% interest.
Chesapeake Energy Lawsuits Pit Billionaire Against Billionaire
Christopher Helman
Forbes Staff
The transaction was one of the terms of a legal settlement between Chesapeake and a shareholders group. The terms of the settlement were revealed Wednesday and still await final approval by the district court of Oklahoma County.
The shareholders had sued the company over what they considered to be an irresponsibly generous compensation package granted McClendon in 2008–a package in which the company had bought McClendon’s maps.
Both Chesapeake and McClendon faced some tough times in 2008. When gas prices plunged in the second half of that year, so did Chesapeake shares. The slide was so severe that McClendon, who had borrowed heavily against his shareholdings, was forced in October 2008 to sell more than 90% of his stock to meet margin calls, wiping out most of his $2 billion fortune. The dumping of McClendon’s 30 million shares into an already bearish market drove down Chesapeake shares further. At the nadir, shares were off 85% from their high earlier in the year.
To help him claw back his fortune–and, says Chesapeake, to reward McClendon for $1 billion worth of joint venture deals he had landed earlier in the year–the board granted him a $110 million pay package that included $75 million to buy interests in Chesapeake wells, a $20 million stock grant, and $12 million to buy his map collection. Other perks from the package included $600,000 for the private use of the corporate jets, nearly $600,000 for accounting services and $131,000 for personal “engineering support.” Chesapeake also agreed to pay $4.6 million to sponsor the NBA’s Oklahoma City Thunder, of which McClendon owns one-fifth.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/christopherhelman/2011/11/03/in-legal-settlement-chesapeakes-mcclendon-to-buy-back-antique-maps/
Did this article/news get any play in the local press last month?
Chesapeake Energy Lawsuits Pit Billionaire Against Billionaire
Christopher Helman
Forbes Staff
The transaction was one of the terms of a legal settlement between Chesapeake and a shareholders group. The terms of the settlement were revealed Wednesday and still await final approval by the district court of Oklahoma County.
The shareholders had sued the company over what they considered to be an irresponsibly generous compensation package granted McClendon in 2008–a package in which the company had bought McClendon’s maps.
Both Chesapeake and McClendon faced some tough times in 2008. When gas prices plunged in the second half of that year, so did Chesapeake shares. The slide was so severe that McClendon, who had borrowed heavily against his shareholdings, was forced in October 2008 to sell more than 90% of his stock to meet margin calls, wiping out most of his $2 billion fortune. The dumping of McClendon’s 30 million shares into an already bearish market drove down Chesapeake shares further. At the nadir, shares were off 85% from their high earlier in the year.
To help him claw back his fortune–and, says Chesapeake, to reward McClendon for $1 billion worth of joint venture deals he had landed earlier in the year–the board granted him a $110 million pay package that included $75 million to buy interests in Chesapeake wells, a $20 million stock grant, and $12 million to buy his map collection. Other perks from the package included $600,000 for the private use of the corporate jets, nearly $600,000 for accounting services and $131,000 for personal “engineering support.” Chesapeake also agreed to pay $4.6 million to sponsor the NBA’s Oklahoma City Thunder, of which McClendon owns one-fifth.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/christopherhelman/2011/11/03/in-legal-settlement-chesapeakes-mcclendon-to-buy-back-antique-maps/
Did this article/news get any play in the local press last month?