Exclusive - Reliance seeks sale of Eagle Ford stake for up to $4.5 billion: sources

Reuters

Published Oct 10, 2014 21:29

Exclusive - Reliance seeks sale of Eagle Ford stake for up to $4.5 billion: sources

By Mike Stone

NEW YORK (Reuters) - India's Reliance Industries Ltd (NS:RELI) is seeking a buyer for its stake in the Eagle Ford Basin oil and natural gas joint venture with Pioneer Natural Resources Co (N:PXD), a sale that could raise up to $4.5 billion (2.80 billion pounds), according to people familiar with the matter.

Pioneer, which has about 230,000 acres in the Eagle Ford Basin according to its website, sold a 45 percent interest in the property to Reliance for $1.2 billion in 2010. The Eagle Ford Basin asset is a three-way joint venture between Mumbai, India-based Reliance; Irving, Texas-based Pioneer, and a division of Mexico's Alpha SAB de CV (MX:ALFAA).

Reliance has appointed Citigroup Inc (N:C) and Bank of America Merrill Lynch (N:BAC) to help sell its 45 percent stake, the sources said, asking not to be named because the matter is not public.

Representatives for Citi and Bank of America declined to comment, while Reliance could not be immediately reached for comment.

The property for sale produces 115,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, with 60 percent of the production in liquid form rather than gas, one of the people said.

There are 472 wells on the Eagle Ford property, according to a Reliance presentation from July. Pioneer owns 46 percent of the joint venture, with Alpha SAB's Newpeck LLC owning 9 percent.

As part of its planned exit from the Eagle Ford joint venture, Reliance is also selling its investment in EFS Midstream LLC, an oil and gas gathering treatment and transportation network, the people said. The mid-stream joint venture was initially funded by Pioneer and Reliance in June 2010.

EFS Midstream operates 11 central gathering plants in south Texas, according to the company's website.

The sale process for the oil production assets and the oil and gas gathering assets is at an early stage, the people said.