BUSINESS FEED

Rose Rock trading begins Friday on NYSE

By ROD WALTON World Staff Writer on Dec 9, 2011, at 2:39 AM  Updated on 12/09/11 at 4:10 AM



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Rod Walton

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Tulsa-based oil terminal and transport company Rose Rock Midstream LP will begin trading Friday on the New York Stock Exchange, SemGroup Corp. officials said Thursday.

The initial public offering of 7 million common units in the master limited partnership will close by Wednesday. SemGroup hopes to raise about $140 million in equity from the IPO.

"Rose Rock will be a separately traded entity," SemGroup spokeswoman Liz Barclay said.

SemGroup spun off most of its SemCrude terminal, storage and transport assets to form Rose Rock earlier this year.

The assets include SemCrude storage at the Cushing interchange, the Kansas-Oklahoma pipeline system, Bakken Shale truck and storage facilities in North Dakota and a truck unloading facility in Platteville, Colo.

Rose Rock will not include SemGroup's 526-mile White Cliffs Pipeline, which carries crude oil from the Denver-Julesberg Basin to the Cushing storage terminals. SemGroup will maintain a controlling interest in Rose Rock, and company CEO Norm Szydlowski and Chief Financial Officer Bob Fitzgerald also will head up the partnership.

The spinoff and IPO were announced in August. SemGroup officials said they wanted to use proceeds from to pay down debt.

Plains All-American Pipeline LP, which made a hostile offer for SemGroup at $24 per share in October, urged the Tulsa company to defer the Rose Rock IPO. That company's CEO, Greg Armstrong, argued that the spinoff would destroy value in the parent SemGroup if completed before a merger. SemGroup rejected Plains' offer.

Several Tulsa energy companies are going public in upcoming weeks. A Williams Cos. Inc. exploration and production spinoff, WPX Energy Inc., starts trading Jan. 3, while Laredo Petroleum and Mid-Con Energy Partners also plan IPOs in the near future.


Rod Walton 918-581-8457
rod.walton@tulsaworld.com
RELATED ITEMS
Read the Tulsa World’s coverage of the SemGroup collapse and recovery.
Energy

Ron Binz draws Republican fire as nominee to lead energy agency

President Barack Obama's nominee to be the nation's top energy regulator came under sharp questioning Tuesday from lawmakers concerned that he may be opposed to coal and natural gas.

Chesapeake Energy CEO tells employees 'staffing adjustments' likely to follow review process

Chesapeake Energy Corp. CEO Doug Lawler acknowledged Tuesday what many employees have feared.

CONTACT THE REPORTER

Rod Walton

918-581-8457
Email

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