- San Antonio, Texas -based refining company
- http://www.andeavor.com
Showing posts with label TSO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TSO. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 1, 2017
=Tesoro (TSO) changing its name to Andeavor (ANDV)
Labels:
ANDV,
name changes,
TSO
Thursday, November 17, 2016
======Western Refining (WNR) to be acquired by Tesoro (TSO) for $4.1 billion
Tesoro Corp. (TSO) announced Thursday that the company has agreed to acquire fellow oil refiner Western Refining Inc. (WNR) in a stock transaction valued at $4.1 billion. Including the assumption of Western's outstanding debt of $1.7 billion and $605 million for a non-controlling interest in Western Refining Logistics L.P. (WNRL), the total value of the deal reaches $6.4 billion.
Western's closing share price Wednesday was $30.50, and the implied price that Tesoro will pay is $37.30 per share, a premium of more than 22%.
Western shareholders may choose to receive 0.435 shares of Tesoro stock for each share of Western stock they own, or $37.30 in cash per share of Western stock. Elections to receive cash will be subject to proration to the extent they exceed approximately 10.8 million shares (or approximately $404 million in the aggregate). Stock elections will not be subject to proration.
Tesoro CEO Greg Goff said:
The acquisition of Western further strengthens our integrated business model and extends our portfolio into attractive and growing markets. As a leading integrated refining, marketing and logistics company, this transformative acquisition drives value through a combination of access to advantaged crude oil, a strong, multi-brand marketing and convenience store portfolio and a robust platform for logistics growth, all of which will allow us to continue to create shareholder value.
The combined company will own 10 refineries in eight states with a refining capacity of 1.1 million barrels a day. The company will also own more than 3,000 retail stations under brand names such as Arco, Shell, Exxon and Tesoro.
Western's closing share price Wednesday was $30.50, and the implied price that Tesoro will pay is $37.30 per share, a premium of more than 22%.
Western shareholders may choose to receive 0.435 shares of Tesoro stock for each share of Western stock they own, or $37.30 in cash per share of Western stock. Elections to receive cash will be subject to proration to the extent they exceed approximately 10.8 million shares (or approximately $404 million in the aggregate). Stock elections will not be subject to proration.
Tesoro CEO Greg Goff said:
The acquisition of Western further strengthens our integrated business model and extends our portfolio into attractive and growing markets. As a leading integrated refining, marketing and logistics company, this transformative acquisition drives value through a combination of access to advantaged crude oil, a strong, multi-brand marketing and convenience store portfolio and a robust platform for logistics growth, all of which will allow us to continue to create shareholder value.
The combined company will own 10 refineries in eight states with a refining capacity of 1.1 million barrels a day. The company will also own more than 3,000 retail stations under brand names such as Arco, Shell, Exxon and Tesoro.
Labels:
mergers & acquisitions,
TSO,
WNR
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Look for Pullbacks in Pumped-Up Oil Refiners
(Barron's; 11 Feb 2013) While shares of oil refiners have been outpacing the broad market since 2010, many of them have been really pumped up since last May. While the stocks now are technically overbought for the near term, long-term chart trends remain positive. That suggests an opportunity is coming to buy a price dip.
For example, HollyFrontier (ticker: HFC) moved higher in a relatively tame rising trend after breaking out last June (see Chart 1). Chart watchers will point out that prices advanced within the confines of a rising trend channel, which is simply a rising trendline drawn through price lows and a parallel line drawn through price highs.

Trend channels can indicate a more orderly rally than a trendline alone as they tamp down on exaggerated price swings within the rising trend. But when prices move outside a channel we can quickly surmise that something changed. A breakdown, of course, would be bearish and indicate a possible reversal in trend. Conversely, a move above a rising channel would indicate an accelerated trend, and that means pullbacks become very shallow. Investors must act quickly to join in on the rally.
But such speed can quickly push a stock too far, too fast, leaving it overbought, or overextended, and ripe for a sharp correction. That is where HollyFrontier is now. Momentum indicators such as the relative strength index (RSI) are at very high levels. While this does not automatically result in a correction, it greatly increases the risk of chasing the stock higher.
A dip back down to the top of the former trend channel is a good place for late bulls to look for an opportunity to buy. Based on current trading, that could take as much as a 10% decline. It sounds big; but in the context of a doubling of price since last June, it is quite reasonable. Given the strength in HollyFrontier to date, however, it does not seem likely the stock will pull back quite that much before eager bulls jump back in.
Tesoro (TSO) is in a similar situation with an accelerated rally and overbought momentum indicators. Making it even more risky is that it has moved 54% above its own 200-day moving average (see Chart 2). Considering that this moving average is used as a proxy for long-term trend, we can see how the stock has indeed gotten a bit ahead of itself. Anything trading too far away from its major moving average is prone to a snapback.

Further, Tesoro has reached an upside price objective derived from its 2011-early 2012 trading range. By projecting the height of the pattern up from the breakout point, we can find a likely price zone at which the rally may run into problems. If the stock survives any selling pressure that arises, it often moves higher again by a similar amount.
In rough terms, Tesoro's range was between 18 and 30, so the first target was 12 points higher, at 42. The second target was another 12 points higher at 54 and the stock traded Monday at 54.34.
Again, long-term trends remain strong, so any pullback should provide investors with a better price at which to buy.
There are several other stocks in the group with similar technical conditions. Western Refining (WNR) is a smaller stock but its trend, following a pullback, looks just as strong. And larger stocks, such as Phillips 66 (PSX) and Marathon Petroleum (MPC), offer potential buys following pullbacks and sport single-digit price-earnings ratios (on trailing 12-month results) to make them interesting from the fundamental side as well.
Refiners:
- Marathon Petroleum (MPC)
- Western Refining (WNR)
- Phillips 66 (PSX)
- HollyFrontier (HFC)
- Tesoro (TSO)
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