Locator: 45724BOOKS.
As noted earlier, I am reading Linda Porter's 1995 biography of Mary 1, the first queen of England. I'm about halfway through the book; Henry VIII had just died leaving a widow queen, Katherine Parr, and at least three who could claim rights to the throne: Henry's third child, and first son; his first daughter, Mary, and, his second daughter.
At the time of Henry's death, Edward was nine years old and older men would rule for him until he reached majority. He died at the age of sixteen. Mary, about 31 years old was old enough to be Edward's mother and in many respects she was. He had never know his own mother, Jane Seymour, who died shortly after he was born. The third stepchild, was Elizabeth, about 13 years old, and very closer in age to her younger brother.
And, then the intrigue begins.
Break, break.
This intrigue about the rights to the throne after Henry VIII dies is incredibly interesting, and I am reading the story at exactly the same time that it's being reported that Exxon will buy Pioneer Natural Resources for $60 billion. With the agreement, comes a $20-billion termination fee. I don't know how these things play out, but if Elizabeth Warren is able to influence the regulators to quash the deal, I assume there is no termination fee, unless, of course, the regulators allow the deal with some caveats that Exxon may not be willing to accept.
As noted, I have no idea of how this works. And, I'm sure if it goes to court anything can happen.
Meanwhile, there are rumors that OXY is now interested and willing to pay $75 billion. Again, just rumors.
Some say they've seen OXY's jet winging its way to Omaha, NE.
Meanwhile, XOM's stock has fallen significantly in value today.
So, just as the throne of England was up for grabs after Henry VIII died, so it seems the Permian assets of Pioneer Natural Resources are also up for grabs.
This is just rambling comments by someone who knows not how these things work. Take it all with a grain of salt.
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API
Pending. Amazing how really poor "google" is for real-time results, but that's another story. Twitter is so much better.
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State Rule
From Bloomberg law today:
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