Chesapeake Energy shares surge most in two years

Bloomberg

Chesapeake Energy Corp shares rose the most in two years after board member Archie Dunham, former chief executive of ConocoPhillips’ predecessor company, bought more than $4 million in additional stock. Dunham purchased 2.1 million shares December 21, according to a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, nearly doubling his position this month to over 1 percent of company.
“Since I’m in for long term, when I get the opportunity to buy when the whole market drops like it did over the last 10 days I decided I would be foolish not to take advantage of it,” Dunham said in a phone interview.
The company’s shares have fallen 25 percent since the end of November, cutting its market capitalisation to $2 billion. Despite a recent surge in natural gas prices, the whole sector has felt the weight of falling crude prices and the broader equities rout. Chesapeake is in the midst of a strategy change, focusing more on oil production to become less reliant on gas. It agreed to buy WildHorse Resource Development Corp., a crude driller in Texas and Louisiana, in October for $2.27 billion.
Dunham is the former chief executive officer of Conoco Inc., the predecessor to ConocoPhillips. He was appointed non-executive chairman of Chesapeake in 2012 over concerns about the company’s debt and spending under then-CEO and co-founder Aubrey McClendon.
Together, Dunham and Chesapeake Chairman R. Brad Martin have bought shares several times in December.
“I can’t predict the bottom. I can’t predict the top,” Dunham said. “None of us are that smart but, you know, I think I made a good purchase and I’m not going to look back.” The driller rose 27 percent to close at $2.19 a share in New York, the biggest gain since April 2016.

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