Filed by the Registrant
☒ Filed by a party other
than the Registrant ☐
On November 20, 2016, Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P. (SXL), Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. (ETP) and certain of their
affiliates entered into a merger agreement, as amended on December 16, 2016 (as so amended and as may be further amended from time to time, the merger agreement), pursuant to which SXL Acquisition Sub LP, a wholly owned subsidiary of
SXL, will merge with ETP, with ETP continuing as the surviving entity and becoming a wholly owned subsidiary of SXL (the merger). Concurrently with the merger, Sunoco Partners LLC, the general partner of SXL (SXL GP),
will merge with Energy Transfer Partners GP, L.P., the general partner of ETP (ETP GP), with ETP GP continuing as the surviving entity and becoming the general partner of SXL (the GP merger and, together with the merger, the
mergers).
The board of directors (the ETP Board) of Energy Transfer Partners, L.L.C., the general partner of ETP
GP, approved and agreed to submit the merger to a vote of ETP unitholders following the recommendation of the conflicts committee of the ETP Board (the ETP Conflicts Committee). The ETP Board and the ETP Conflicts Committee have
determined that the merger agreement and the merger are advisable, fair and reasonable to and in the best interests of ETP and its common unitholders other than Energy Transfer Equity, L.P. (ETE), SXL and their affiliates, and have
approved the merger agreement and the merger.
Under the terms of the merger agreement, subject to certain adjustments, holders of common
units representing limited partner interests in ETP (ETP common units or common units) will receive, for each ETP common unit held, 1.5 common units representing limited partner interests in SXL (SXL common
units). Additionally, the Class E units, Class G units, Class I units and Class K units of ETP issued and outstanding immediately prior to the effective time will be cancelled and converted automatically into an equal number of newly
created classes of units representing limited partner interests in SXL, with the same rights, preferences, privileges, duties and obligations as such classes of ETP units had immediately prior to the closing of the merger. Under the terms of
the merger agreement, ETPs Class H units and incentive distribution rights will be cancelled for no consideration.
The merger
consideration to be received by holders of ETP common units is valued at $39.29 per unit based on the closing price of SXL common units as of November 18, 2016, the last trading day before the public announcement of the merger, representing
approximately a 0.2% discount to the closing price of ETP common units of $39.37 on November 18, 2016, a 5% premium to the volume-weighted average closing price of ETP common units for the five trading days ended November 18, 2016 and a 10% premium
to the volume-weighted average closing price of ETP common units for the 30 trading days ended November 18, 2016. The merger consideration is valued at $35.61 per unit based on the closing price of SXL common units as of March 23, 2017, the
most recent practicable trading day prior to the date of this proxy statement/prospectus, representing a 0.7% premium to the closing price of ETP common units of $35.38 on March 23, 2017, and a 1.3% premium to the volume-weighted average closing
price of ETP common units for the five trading days ended March 23, 2017.
Immediately following the completion of the merger, it is
expected that ETP common unitholders will own approximately 76% of the outstanding SXL common units, based on the number of SXL common units outstanding, on a fully diluted basis, as of March 23, 2017. The common units of SXL and ETP are traded
on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) under the symbols SXL and ETP, respectively. Following the consummation of the merger, it is expected that SXL will change its name to Energy Transfer
Partners, L.P. and apply to continue the listing of its common units on the NYSE under the symbol ETP, and that ETP will change its name to Energy Transfer, LP.
ETP is holding a special meeting of its common unitholders at the Hilton Dallas Park Cities
Hotel, 5954 Luther Lane, Dallas, Texas 75225, Miramar Conference Room, on April 26, 2017 at 10:00 a.m., local time, to obtain the vote of its common unitholders to adopt the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated
thereby.
Your vote is very important regardless of the number of ETP common units you own.
The merger cannot be completed unless the holders of at least a majority of the outstanding ETP common units vote for the adoption of
the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby at the special meeting.
The ETP Board recommends that ETP common unitholders vote FOR the adoption of the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby,
FOR the proposal to approve the adjournment of the special meeting, if necessary, to solicit additional proxies if there are not sufficient votes to adopt the merger agreement at the time of the special meeting and FOR the
advisory compensation proposal.
Pursuant to the merger agreement, ETE, which indirectly owns all of the incentive distribution rights, the general partner interest in ETP and approximately 3.3% of the ETP common units outstanding as
of February 27, 2017, has agreed to vote all of the ETP common units owned beneficially or of record by ETE or its subsidiaries in favor of the approval of the merger agreement and the merger and the approval of any actions required in furtherance
thereof. Whether or not you expect to attend the special meeting in person, we urge you to submit your proxy as promptly as possible through one of the delivery methods described in the accompanying proxy statement/prospectus.
The accompanying proxy statement/prospectus is dated March 24, 2017 and is first being mailed to the common unitholders of ETP on or about
March 24, 2017.
Director Compensation
The following
discussion provides information about the compensation arrangements for ETP GPs non-employee directors who are expected to serve as directors of SXL GP following the merger. The ETP Compensation Committee periodically reviews and makes
recommendations regarding the compensation of the directors of ETP GP. In 2016, non-employee directors each received an annual fee of $50,000 in cash. Additionally, the Chairman of the Audit Committee receives an annual fee of $15,000 and the
members of the Audit Committee receive an annual fee of $10,000. The Chairman of the Compensation Committee receives an annual fee of $7,500 and the members of the Compensation Committee receive an annual fee of $5,000. In 2016, members of the
Conflicts Committee received cash payments on a to-be-determined basis for each Conflicts Committee assignment. Employee directors, including Mr. Warren, do not receive any fees for service as directors. In addition, the non-employee directors
participate in the 2008 Incentive Plan. Each director who is not also (i) a shareholder or a direct or indirect employee of any parent, or (ii) a direct or indirect employee of the general partner of ETP GP, ETP, or a subsidiary, who is
elected or appointed to the board for the first time shall automatically receive, on the date of his or her election or appointment, an award of 2,500 unvested ETP common units. In 2016, non-employee directors received annual grants of restricted
ETP common units equal to an aggregate of $100,000 divided by the closing price of ETP common units on the date of grant, which will vest 60% after the third year and the remaining 40% after the fifth year after the grant date.
The compensation paid to the non-employee directors of ETP GP in 2016 is reflected in the following table:
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Name
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Fees Paid in
Cash(1)
($)
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Unit Awards(2)
($)
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All Other
Compensation
($)
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Total
($)
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Ted Collins, Jr.
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$
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87,852
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$
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100,001
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$
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$
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187,853
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Michael K. Grimm
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132,352
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100,001
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232,353
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David K. Skidmore
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128,865
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100,001
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228,866
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(1)
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Fees paid in cash are based on amounts paid during the period.
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(2)
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Unit award amounts reflect the aggregate grant date fair value of awards based on the market price of ETP common units as of the grant date.
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As of December 31, 2016, Messrs. Collins and Grimm each had 6,600 unit awards outstanding, and Mr. Skidmore had 7,176 unit awards
outstanding.
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THE SPECIAL MEETING
ETP is providing this proxy statement/prospectus to its common unitholders in connection with the solicitation of proxies to be voted at the
special meeting of common unitholders that ETP has called for, among other things, the purpose of holding a vote upon a proposal to adopt the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby and at any adjournment or postponement thereof.
This proxy statement/prospectus constitutes a proxy statement of ETP in connection with the special meeting of ETP common unitholders and a prospectus for SXL in connection with the issuance by SXL of its common units in connection with the merger.
This proxy statement/prospectus is first being mailed to ETPs common unitholders on or about March 24, 2017, and provides ETP common unitholders with the information they need to know to be able to vote or instruct their vote to be cast
at the special meeting of ETP common unitholders.
Date, Time and Place
The special meeting will be held at the Hilton Dallas Park Cities Hotel, 5954 Luther Lane, Dallas, Texas 75225, Miramar Conference Room,
on April 26, 2017, at 10:00 a.m., local time.
Purpose
At the special meeting, ETP common unitholders will be asked to vote solely on the following proposals:
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Merger proposal
: To adopt the merger agreement, a composite copy of which, incorporating the amendment into the text of the initial agreement, is attached as Annex A to this proxy statement/prospectus, and
the transactions contemplated thereby, including the merger;
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Adjournment proposal
: To approve the adjournment of the special meeting, if necessary, to solicit additional proxies if there are not sufficient votes to adopt the merger agreement at the time of the special
meeting; and
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Advisory compensation proposal
: To approve, on an advisory (non-binding) basis, the payments that will or may be paid by ETP to its named executive officers in connection with the merger.
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Recommendation of the ETP Board
The ETP
Board recommends that common unitholders of ETP vote:
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Merger proposal
:
FOR
the adoption of the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby;
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Adjournment proposal
:
FOR
the approval of the adjournment of the special meeting, if necessary, to solicit additional proxies if there are not sufficient votes to adopt the merger
agreement at the time of the special meeting; and
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Advisory compensation proposal
:
FOR
the approval on an advisory (non-binding) basis, of the payments that will or may be paid by ETP to its named executive officers in connection with
the merger.
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The ETP Board and the ETP Conflicts Committee have (i) determined that the merger agreement and the merger
are advisable and fair and reasonable to, and in the best interests of, ETP and the unaffiliated ETP unitholders, and (ii) approved the merger and the merger agreement, and the ETP Board has resolved to recommend adoption of the merger agreement and
the transactions contemplated thereby to the ETP unitholders.
See The MergerRecommendation of the ETP Board; Reasons for the Merger.
In considering the recommendation of the ETP Board with respect to the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby, you should
be aware that some of ETPs directors and executive officers may have interests that are different from, or in addition to, the interests of ETP unitholders more generally. See The MergerInterests of Directors and Executive Officers
of ETP in the Merger.
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Record Date; Outstanding Units; Units Entitled to Vote
The record date for the special meeting is February 27, 2017. Only ETP common unitholders of record at the close of business on the
record date will be entitled to receive notice of and to vote at the special meeting or any adjournment or postponement of the meeting.
As of the close of business on the record date of February 27, 2017, there were approximately 551,551,441 ETP common units outstanding
and entitled to vote at the meeting. Each ETP common unit is entitled to one vote.
If at any time any person or group (other than ETP GP
and its affiliates, including ETE) beneficially owns 20% or more of any class of ETP units, such person or group loses voting rights on all of its units and such units will not be considered outstanding. This loss of voting rights does
not apply to (i) any person or group who acquired 20% or more of any class of ETP units from ETP GP or its affiliates, (ii) any person or group who directly or indirectly acquired 20% or more of any class of ETP units from that person or group
described in clause (i) provided ETP GP notified such transferee that such loss of voting rights did not apply, or (iii) any person or group who acquired 20% or more of any class of units issued by ETP with the prior approval of the ETP Board.
A complete list of ETP common unitholders entitled to vote at the special meeting will be available for inspection at the principal place of
business of ETP during regular business hours for a period of no less than 10 days before the special meeting and at the place of the special meeting during the meeting.
Quorum
A quorum of ETP unitholders
represented in person or by proxy at the special meeting is required to vote on adoption of the merger agreement at the special meeting, but not to vote on approval of any adjournment of the meeting. The holders of at least a majority of the
outstanding ETP common units must be represented in person or by proxy at the meeting in order to constitute a quorum. Any abstentions and broker non-votes will be counted in determining whether a quorum is present at the special meeting.
Required Vote
To adopt the merger
agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby, holders of at least a majority of the outstanding ETP common units must vote in favor of such adoption. ETP cannot complete the merger unless its common unitholders adopt the merger agreement and
the transactions contemplated thereby. Because approval is based on the affirmative vote of at least a majority of the outstanding ETP common units an ETP common unitholders failure to vote, an abstention from voting or a broker non-vote will
have the same effect as a vote AGAINST adoption of the merger agreement.
If a quorum is present at the special meeting, to
approve the adjournment of the meeting, if necessary, to solicit additional proxies if there are not sufficient votes to adopt the merger agreement at the time of the special meeting, holders of at least a majority of the outstanding ETP common
units must vote in favor of the proposal. Therefore, if a quorum is present at the meeting, abstentions, broker non-votes and an ETP common unitholders failure to vote will have the same effect as a vote AGAINST approval of this
proposal. If a quorum is not present at the special meeting, to approve the adjournment of the meeting, holders of at least a majority of the outstanding ETP common units represented thereat either in person or by proxy must vote in favor of the
proposal. Therefore, if a quorum is not present, abstentions and broker non-votes will have the same effect as a vote AGAINST approval of the adjournment proposal, but an ETP common unitholders failure to vote will have no effect
on the outcome of the proposal.
To approve, on an advisory (non-binding) basis, the payments that will or may be paid by ETP to its named
executive officers in connection with the merger, the affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast on the
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advisory compensation proposal by the holders of ETP common units is required. Because approval of this proposal is based on the affirmative vote of at least a majority of the votes cast by the
holders of the ETP common units, an ETP common unitholders failure to vote, an abstention from voting or a broker non-vote will have no effect on the outcome of the proposal.
Unit Ownership of and Voting by ETPs Directors, Executive Officers and Affiliates
As of February 27, 2017, ETPs directors and executive officers and their affiliates (including ETE and its subsidiaries)
beneficially owned and had the right to vote 18,957,402 ETP common units at the special meeting, which represent 3.4% of the ETP common units entitled to vote at the special meeting. It is expected that ETPs directors and executive
officers will vote their units FOR the adoption of the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby, although none of them has entered into any agreement requiring them to do so. Additionally, under the terms of the merger
agreement, ETE has agreed to vote all of the ETP common units owned beneficially or of record by ETE or its subsidiaries in favor of the approval of the merger agreement and the merger and the approval of any actions required in furtherance thereof.
Voting of Units by Holders of Record
If you are entitled to vote at the special meeting and hold your ETP common units in your own name, you can submit a proxy or vote in person by
completing a ballot at the special meeting. However, ETP encourages you to submit a proxy before the special meeting even if you plan to attend the special meeting in order to ensure that your ETP common units are voted. A proxy is a legal
designation of another person to vote your ETP common units on your behalf. If you hold units in your own name, you may submit a proxy for your ETP common units by:
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calling the toll-free number specified on the enclosed proxy card and following the instructions when prompted;
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accessing the Internet website specified on the enclosed proxy card and following the instructions provided to you; or
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filling out, signing and dating the enclosed proxy card and mailing it in the prepaid envelope included with these proxy materials.
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When a common unitholder submits a proxy by telephone or through the Internet, his or her proxy is recorded immediately. ETP encourages its
unitholders to submit their proxies using these methods whenever possible. If you submit a proxy by telephone or the Internet website, please do not return your proxy card by mail.
All ETP common units represented by each properly executed and valid proxy received before the special meeting will be voted in accordance
with the instructions given on the proxy. If an ETP common unitholder executes a proxy card without giving instructions, the ETP common units represented by that proxy card will be voted as the ETP Board recommends, which is:
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Merger proposal
: FOR the adoption of the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby;
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Adjournment proposal
: FOR the approval of the adjournment of the special meeting, if necessary, to solicit additional proxies if there are not sufficient votes to adopt the merger
agreement at the time of the special meeting; and
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Advisory compensation proposal
: FOR the approval, on an advisory (non-binding) basis, of the payments that will or may be paid by ETP to its named executive officers in connection with the
merger.
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Your vote is important. Accordingly, please submit your proxy by telephone, through the Internet
or by mail, whether or not you plan to attend the meeting in person. Proxies must be received by 11:59 p.m., Eastern Time, on April 25, 2017.
Voting of Units Held in Street Name
If
your units are held in an account at a bank, broker or through another nominee, you must instruct the bank, broker or other nominee on how to vote your ETP common units by following the instructions that the bank, broker or other nominee provides to
you with these proxy materials. Most brokers offer the ability for unitholders to submit voting instructions by mail by completing a voting instruction card, by telephone and via the Internet.
If you do not provide voting instructions to your broker, your ETP common units will not be voted on any proposal on which your broker does
not have discretionary authority to vote. This is referred to in this proxy statement/prospectus and in general as a broker non-vote. In these cases, the bank, broker or other nominee can register your ETP common units as being present at the
special meeting for purposes of determining a quorum, but will not be able to vote your ETP common units on those matters for which specific authorization is required. Under the current rules of the NYSE, brokers do not have discretionary authority
to vote on any of the proposals, including the ETP merger proposal. A broker non-vote of an ETP common unit will have the same effect as a vote AGAINST the ETP merger proposal and the ETP adjournment proposal.
If you hold ETP common units through a bank, broker or other nominee and wish to vote your ETP common units in person at the special meeting,
you must obtain a proxy from your bank, broker or other nominee and present it to the inspector of election with your ballot when you vote at the special meeting.
Revocability of Proxies; Changing Your Vote
You may revoke your proxy and/or change your voting instructions at any time before your proxy is voted at the special meeting. If you are a
ETP common unitholder of record, you can do this by:
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sending a written notice to Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. at 8111 Westchester Drive, Suite 600, Dallas, Texas 75225, Attention: Corporate Secretary, that bears a date later than the date of the proxy and is
received prior to the special meeting and states that you revoke your proxy;
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submitting a valid proxy by mail, telephone or internet that bears a date later than the date of the proxy, but no later than the telephone/internet deadline, and is received prior to the special meeting; or
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attending the special meeting and voting by ballot in person (your attendance at the special meeting will not, by itself, revoke any proxy that you have previously given).
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If you hold your ETP common units through a bank, broker or other nominee, you must follow the directions you receive from your bank, broker
or other nominee in order to revoke your proxy or change your voting instructions.
Solicitation of Proxies
This proxy statement/prospectus is furnished in connection with the solicitation of proxies by the ETP Board to be voted at the special
meeting. ETP will bear all costs and expenses in connection with the solicitation of proxies. ETP has engaged MacKenzie Partners, Inc. to assist in the solicitation of proxies for the meeting and ETP estimates it will pay MacKenzie Partners, Inc. a
fee of approximately $50,000 for these services. ETP has also agreed to reimburse MacKenzie Partners, Inc. for reasonable out-of-pocket expenses and disbursements incurred in connection with the proxy solicitation and to indemnify MacKenzie
Partners, Inc. against certain losses, costs and expenses. In addition, ETP may reimburse brokerage firms and other persons representing
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beneficial owners of ETP common units for their reasonable expenses in forwarding solicitation materials to such beneficial owners. Proxies may also be solicited by certain of ETPs
directors, officers and employees by telephone, electronic mail, letter, facsimile or in person, but no additional compensation will be paid to them.
Unitholders should not send unit certificates with their proxies.
A letter of transmittal and instructions for the surrender of ETP common units will be mailed to ETP common unitholders shortly after the
completion of the merger.
No Other Business
Under the ETP partnership agreement, the business to be conducted at the special meeting will be limited to the purposes stated in the notice
to ETP unitholders provided with this proxy statement/prospectus.
Adjournments
Adjournments may be made for the purpose of, among other things, soliciting additional proxies. If a quorum exists, an adjournment may be made
from time to time with approval of the holders of at least a majority of the outstanding ETP common units. If a quorum does not exist, an adjournment may be made from time to time with the approval of the holders of at least a majority of the ETP
common units entitled to vote at such meeting and represented thereat either in person or by proxy. ETP is not required to notify unitholders of any adjournment of 45 days or less if the time and place of the adjourned meeting are announced at the
meeting at which the adjournment is taken, unless after the adjournment a new record date is fixed for the adjourned meeting. At any adjourned meeting, ETP may transact any business that it might have transacted at the original meeting, provided
that a quorum is present at such adjourned meeting. Proxies submitted by ETP unitholders for use at the special meeting will be used at any adjournment or postponement of the meeting. References to the special meeting in this proxy
statement/prospectus are to such special meeting as adjourned or postponed.
Assistance
If you need assistance in completing your proxy card or have questions regarding the special meeting, please contact MacKenzie Partners, Inc.
toll-free at (800) 322-2855 (banks and brokers call collect at (212) 929-5500).
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THE MERGER
This section of the proxy statement/prospectus describes the material aspects of the proposed merger. This section may not contain all of
the information that is important to you. You should carefully read this entire proxy statement/prospectus and the documents incorporated herein by reference, including the full text of the merger agreement and the amendment thereto, for a more
complete understanding of the merger. A copy of the composite merger agreement, which incorporates the amendment into the text of the initial agreement, is attached as Annex A hereto. In addition, important business and financial information about
each of SXL and ETP is included in or incorporated into this proxy statement/prospectus by reference. See Where You Can Find More Information.
Effect of the Merger and the GP Merger
Subject to the terms and conditions of the merger agreement and in accordance with Delaware law, the merger agreement provides for (i) the
merger of SXL Merger Sub LP with ETP and (ii) the merger of SXL GP with ETP GP. ETP, which is sometimes referred to following the merger as the surviving entity, and ETP GP, which is sometimes referred to following the GP merger as the GP merger
surviving entity, will survive the mergers, and the separate limited partnership and limited liability company existence of SXL Merger Sub LP and SXL GP, respectively, will cease. As a result of the merger and the transactions contemplated thereby,
SXL and SXL Merger Sub will become the sole limited partner and sole general partner, respectively, of ETP and, as a result, SXL will own, directly or indirectly, all of the outstanding general and limited partner interests in ETP. Further, ETP GP
will become the sole general partner of SXL. After the completion of the merger, the certificate of limited partnership of ETP in effect immediately prior to the effective time will be the certificate of limited partnership of the surviving entity,
until amended in accordance with its terms and applicable law, and the ETP partnership agreement in effect immediately prior to the effective time will be the agreement of limited partnership of the surviving entity (except to the extent the limited
partnership agreement is amended to reflect the admission of SXL Merger Sub as the sole general partner of ETP), until amended in accordance with its terms and applicable law. After the completion of the GP merger, the certificate of limited
partnership of ETP effective immediately prior to the effective time of the GP merger will be the certificate of limited partnership of the GP surviving entity, until amended in accordance with its terms and applicable law, and the limited
partnership agreement of ETP GP in effect immediately prior to the effective time of the GP merger will be the limited partnership agreement of the GP merger surviving entity, until amended in accordance with its terms and applicable law.
The merger agreement provides that, at the effective time, each ETP common unit issued and outstanding or deemed issued and outstanding as of
immediately prior to the effective time will be converted into the right to receive 1.5 SXL common units. At the effective time, the other classes of ETP units (other than the ETP incentive distribution rights and Class H units, which shall be
cancelled) will automatically convert into SXL units as follows:
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Each Class E unit issued and outstanding as of immediately prior to the effective time will be converted into a unit representing a limited partner interest in SXL having the same rights, preferences, privileges, duties
and obligations that the Class E unit had immediately prior to the closing of the merger (the SXL Class E units);
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Each Class G unit issued and outstanding as of immediately prior to the effective time will be converted into a unit representing a limited partner interest in SXL having the same rights, preferences, privileges, duties
and obligations that the Class G unit had immediately prior to the closing of the merger (the SXL Class G units);
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Each Class I unit issued and outstanding as of immediately prior to the effective time will be converted into a unit representing a limited partner interest in SXL having the same rights, preferences, privileges, duties
and obligations that the Class I unit had immediately prior to the closing of the merger (the SXL Class I units); and
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Each Class K unit issued and outstanding as of immediately prior to the effective time will be converted into a unit representing a limited partner interest in SXL having the same rights, preferences, privileges, duties
and obligations that the Class K unit had immediately prior to the closing of the merger (the SXL Class K units).
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Any SXL securities that are owned by ETP or any of its subsidiaries, excluding SXL GP, immediately prior to the effective time (including the
9,416,196 Class B units representing limited partner interests in SXL (SXL Class B units) and 67,061,274 SXL common units indirectly owned by ETP) will be cancelled without any conversion or payment of consideration in respect
thereof. SXLs common units had a value of $26.19 per unit, based on the closing price of SXL common units on the NYSE, as of November 18, 2016, the last trading day prior to the public announcement of the merger, and a value of $23.74 per
unit, based on the closing price of SXL common units on March 23, 2017, the most recent practicable trading day prior to the date of this proxy statement/prospectus.
Because the exchange ratio was fixed at the time the merger agreement was executed and because the market value of SXL common units and ETP
common units will fluctuate prior to the consummation of the merger, ETP common unitholders cannot be sure of the value of the merger consideration they will receive relative to the value of ETP common units that they are exchanging. For example,
decreases in the market value of SXL common units will negatively affect the value of the merger consideration that ETP common unitholders receive, and increases in the market value of ETP common units may mean that the merger consideration that
such unitholders receive will be worth less than the market value of the ETP common units that they are exchanging. See Risk FactorsRisk Factors Relating to the Merger.
SXL will not issue any fractional units in the merger. Instead, each holder of ETP common units that are converted pursuant to the merger
agreement who otherwise would have received a fraction of an SXL common unit will instead be entitled to receive a whole SXL common unit.
At the effective time, each outstanding award of ETP restricted units will, by virtue of the merger and without any action on the part of the
holder of any such ETP restricted units, cease to relate to or represent a right to receive ETP common units and will be converted into the right to receive an award of SXL restricted units, on the same terms and conditions as were applicable to the
corresponding award of ETP restricted units (including the right to receive distribution equivalents with respect to such award), except that the number of SXL restricted units covered by each such award will be equal to the number of ETP common
units subject to the corresponding award of ETP restricted units multiplied by the exchange ratio, rounded up to the nearest whole unit. With respect to each ETP restricted unit, any distribution equivalent amounts accrued but unpaid as of the
closing will carry over and be paid to the holder as soon as practicable following the closing.
At the effective time, each outstanding
award of ETP cash units will, automatically and without any action on the part of the holder of such cash unit, be converted into the right to receive an award of restricted cash units relating to SXL common units on the same terms and conditions as
were applicable to the award of ETP cash units, except that the number of notional SXL common units related to the award will be equal to the number of notional ETP common units related to the corresponding award of ETP cash units multiplied by the
exchange ratio, rounded up to the nearest whole unit. Prior to the effective time, the ETP Board will adopt an amendment to the ETP cash unit plan to permit the treatment of ETP cash units as provided in the merger agreement.
In connection with the mergers, ETP GP will transfer the 0.6% general partner interest in ETP to SXL Merger Sub and SXL Merger Sub will assume
the rights and duties of the general partner of ETP. As a result of the merger and the related transactions, the 100% limited partner interest in SXL Merger Sub LP will convert into a 99.4% limited partner interest in ETP, the non-economic
general partner interest in SXL Merger Sub LP will be cancelled and SXL Merger Sub will become the general partner of ETP, holding a 0.6% general partner interest. In addition, the incentive distribution rights in ETP and the Class H units
outstanding immediately prior to the effective time will be cancelled.
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Background of the Merger
The senior management and boards of directors of each of ETP and SXL regularly review operational and strategic opportunities to maximize value
for their respective investors. In connection with these reviews, the management and boards of directors of ETP and SXL from time to time evaluate potential transactions that would further their respective strategic objectives. As noted in more
detail in the following paragraphs, ETP and SXL routinely, and in connection with preparation for semi-annual board meetings, considered potential synergistic transactions, including joint ventures, in an effort to increase unitholder value. The
potential for further synergies was evidenced in successful joint ventures undertaken in advance of the commencement of discussions regarding a merger between ETP and SXL.
As part of ETPs and SXLs strategy to maximize value for investors, both ETP and SXL have from time to time evaluated transactions
with each other. For example, ETP and SXL collectively own a 38.25% economic interest in the Dakota Access Pipeline and ETCO Pipeline joint ventures, a combined pipeline system that will deliver crude oil from the Bakken/Three Forks production area
in North Dakota to the Gulf Coast. Phillips 66 owns a 25% economic interest in this pipeline system and a joint venture owned by Marathon Petroleum Corporation and Enbridge Energy Partners, L.P. owns the remaining 36.75% economic interest. In
addition, in 2015, ETP and SXL entered into the Bayou Bridge Pipeline joint venture with Phillips 66 Partners, with ETP and SXL each holding a 30% interest and Phillips 66 Partners owning 40%. The Bayou Bridge Pipeline will deliver crude oil from
Phillips 66 Partners and SXLs terminals in Nederland, Texas to refinery markets in Louisiana. Finally, in the fourth quarter of 2014, ETP and SXL commenced operations on the joint Mariner South project, where a subsidiary of ETP uses
SXLs Mariner South pipeline to deliver export-grade propane and butane products from its Mont Belvieu, Texas storage and fractionation complex to SXLs marine terminal in Nederland, Texas.
In early October 2016, management of ETE, ETP and SXL commenced preparation for semi-annual meetings of the board of directors of each of
these entities to be held between October 17 and October 19. In connection with these preparations, management of each of these entities reviewed information related to current and projected financial performance, including projected financial
performance under various assumptions related to future crude oil, natural gas and natural gas liquids prices, expected timing for completion of capital expenditure projects, projected debt levels and leverage ratios and other matters. Based on this
information, management of ETE analyzed various options to improve the distribution coverage ratios and leverage ratios at ETP and SXL under various assumptions related to future financial performance, including the possibility of a merger of ETP
and SXL. Specifically, ETE analyzed potential reductions in ETP and SXL quarterly cash distribution levels, common equity issuances by ETP and SXL and/or preferred equity issuances by ETP and SXL, with the intention in each case of improving
financial metrics with respect to distribution coverage and leverage of the two partnerships. ETE also concluded that the combination of ETP and SXL would create scope and scale of business, as well as cost and commercial synergies and other
financial benefits that could not be achieved through any of the other alternatives considered.
On October 19, 2016, ETE management had
an informal discussion with the ETP Board and the board of directors of LE GP, LLC, the general partner of ETE (the ETE Board), regarding the possibility of a merger of ETP and SXL.
On October 31, 2016, ETP contacted a representative of Latham & Watkins LLP (Latham) regarding the potential engagement of
Latham as legal advisor to the ETP Board. ETP and the representative of Latham discussed a potential structure for the proposed transaction whereby ETP would merge with and into a wholly owned subsidiary of SXL subject to the necessary approval of
the ETP Board, the SXL Board and the ETP unitholders, as well as customary regulatory approvals.
On October 31, 2016, Kelcy L. Warren,
Chairman of the Board of Directors of LE GP, LLC, the general partner of ETE, met with Michael J. Hennigan, President and Chief Executive Officer of SXL, regarding the possibility of a merger between ETP and SXL. Mr. Warren subsequently
contacted Steven R. Anderson, as Chairman of the standing SXL Conflicts Committee, to discuss the proposed transaction. On November 1, 2016,
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Mr. Hennigan held a call with Mr. Anderson, Scott Angelle and Basil Bray, the members of the standing SXL Conflicts Committee, to advise them of his discussions with Mr. Warren.
On November 1, 2016, the ETP Board and ETE Board held a joint meeting to discuss ETP managements analysis related to a potential merger
transaction between ETP and SXL and the expected structure for such transaction. The ETP Board determined that any such transaction would be subject to review and approval of the ETP Conflicts Committee and determined to appoint David K. Skidmore
and Michael K. Grimm to the ETP Conflicts Committee and delegate to the ETP Conflicts Committee the authority to (i) review and evaluate the proposed transaction, (ii) negotiate the terms and conditions of the proposed transaction and (iii)
determine whether to approve the proposed transaction and to recommend approval of the proposed transaction to the ETP Board. The formal resolutions establishing the ETP Conflicts Committee, appointing Messrs. Skidmore and Grimm to serve on such
committee and delegating authority to the ETP Conflicts Committee to review the proposed transaction (consistent with the motions approved by the ETP Board on November 1, 2016) were adopted on November 14, 2016. The resolutions did not authorize the
ETP Conflicts Committee to pursue alternative transactions with third parties or other strategic alternatives to the proposed transaction.
On November 1, 2016, the ETP Conflicts Committee held a telephonic meeting with Thomas P. Mason, Executive Vice President and General Counsel
of ETE, James M. Wright, General Counsel of ETP, and representatives of Latham to discuss potential legal advisors to the ETP Conflicts Committee. The ETP Conflicts Committee authorized Latham to speak with Potter Anderson & Corroon LLP
(Potter Anderson), which had served as legal counsel to various conflicts committees of the ETE Board on prior matters, to two special committees of the board of directors of the general partner of Sunoco LP (formerly Susser Petroleum
Partners LP) on prior matters, and to ETE in connection with the merger of ETP and Regency Energy Partners LP, about their potential engagement as legal advisor to the ETP Conflicts Committee.
On November 1, 2016, representatives of Latham had a telephonic discussion with Potter Anderson about the proposed transaction and arranged
for Potter Anderson to speak directly with Mr. Skidmore to discuss the potential engagement of Potter Anderson as legal counsel to the ETP Conflicts Committee. On November 1, 2016, Mr. Skidmore had a telephonic discussion with Potter Anderson
to discuss the potential engagement of Potter Anderson as legal counsel to the ETP Conflicts Committee. On November 2, 2016, representatives of Latham had a telephonic discussion with Potter Anderson to further discuss the proposed transaction.
On November 2, 2016, SXL contacted a representative of Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. (V&E) regarding the potential engagement of
V&E as legal advisor to the SXL Board.
On November 2, 2016, the ETP Conflicts Committee held a telephonic meeting with Potter
Anderson and determined to engage Potter Anderson as legal counsel to the ETP Conflicts Committee. An engagement letter dated November 11, 2016 detailing the terms of Potter Andersons engagement was subsequently executed. The ETP Conflicts
Committee and Potter Anderson discussed and confirmed Mr. Skidmores and Mr. Grimms satisfaction of the qualifications to serve as members of the ETP Conflicts Committee under the ETP partnership agreement and discussed and confirmed that
Mr. Skidmore and Mr. Grimm were not otherwise subject to any potential conflicting interests in connection with the proposed transaction. Among other things, (i) the ETP Conflicts Committee discussed and considered Mr. Skidmores ownership
interests in common units of ETE and Series A Convertible Preferred Units of ETE (the ETE convertible units), and determined such ownership interests would not impact Mr. Skidmores ability to serve as a member of the ETP
Conflicts Committee and were not material to Mr. Skidmore, and (ii) the ETP Conflicts Committee discussed and considered that Mr. Grimm serves as a member (and chairman) of the board of directors of RSP Permian, Inc., along with Mr. Matthew S.
Ramsey, the President and Chief Operating Officer of ETP and a member of each of the ETP Board, the ETE Board and the board of directors of Sunoco LP, and Mr. Ted Collins, Jr., a member of the ETP Board, and determined that such membership would not
impact Mr. Grimms ability to serve as a member of the ETP Conflicts Committee or constitute a material conflict for Mr. Grimm. The ETP Conflicts Committee and Potter Anderson discussed potential financial advisors to the ETP Conflicts
Committee. The ETP Conflicts Committee also determined to request from ETP management information regarding prior engagements of financial advisors
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by ETP and its affiliates. Latham subsequently provided to Potter Anderson a list of financial advisors who had been engaged over the past several years by ETP and its affiliates and describing
the nature of such engagements.
On November 4, 2016, the SXL Board held a meeting to discuss the proposed transaction. The SXL Board
determined that any such transaction would be subject to review and approval of the standing SXL Conflicts Committee and delegated to the SXL Conflicts Committee the authority to (i) review and evaluate any potential conflicts arising in connection
with the proposed transaction, (ii) review and evaluate the terms and conditions of the proposed transaction and (iii) make any recommendations to the SXL Board regarding the proposed transaction in light of the potential conflicts of interest in
connection with the proposed transaction. The formal resolutions delegating authority to the SXL Conflicts Committee to review the transaction were adopted later that day. The SXL Conflicts Committee selected Richards, Layton & Finger, P.A.
(RLF) as legal counsel to the SXL Conflicts Committee and Citigroup Global Markets Inc. (Citi) as financial advisor to the SXL Conflicts Committee.
On November 4, 2016, the ETP Conflicts Committee held a telephonic meeting with Potter Anderson to discuss potential financial advisors to the
ETP Conflicts Committee, the qualities the ETP Conflicts Committee should consider in evaluating and selecting among financial advisor candidates, the strengths and weaknesses of certain financial advisor candidates, and the desire to limit outbound
contacts in order to maintain the confidentiality of the process. The ETP Conflicts Committee determined to further explore engaging Barclays Capital Inc. (Barclays) in light of, among other things, Barclays prior exemplary service
as financial advisor to the ETP Conflicts Committee in connection with the merger transaction between ETP and Regency Energy Partners LP, Barclays intimate knowledge of ETP and the other affiliated Energy Transfer entities, and Barclays
leading position as advisor in the energy, MLP and M&A spaces. The ETP Conflicts Committee determined to contact Barclays in order to seek additional information regarding Barclays prior engagements by ETP and its affiliates, including the
nature of such work and the fees earned, the individual team members who would advise the ETP Conflicts Committee if engaged, and the scope of advisory services that Barclays could offer the ETP Conflicts Committee.
On November 4, 2016, Mr. Skidmore and Potter Anderson held a telephonic meeting with representatives of Barclays to discuss the potential
engagement of Barclays as financial advisor to the ETP Conflicts Committee.
On November 5, 2016, the ETP Conflicts Committee held a
telephonic meeting with representatives from Potter Anderson to discuss the potential engagement of Barclays as financial advisor to the ETP Conflicts Committee. The ETP Conflicts Committee determined to engage Barclays, subject to receipt of the
final results of Barclays internal conflicts and independence review and successful negotiation of an engagement letter and fees. Potter Anderson and the ETP Conflicts Committee also discussed the draft formal resolutions of the ETP Board
delegating authority to, and establishing the mandate of, the ETP Conflicts Committee that had been provided to Potter Anderson by Latham. Subsequent to the meeting, Barclays provided to Potter Anderson a draft engagement letter and precedent
investment banker fee information.
On November 6, 2016, Mr. Skidmore and Potter Anderson held a telephonic meeting with representatives
of Barclays to discuss the potential engagement of Barclays as financial advisor to the ETP Conflicts Committee. During the call, Barclays informed Mr. Skidmore that Barclays had received formal conflicts approval earlier that afternoon and that
Barclays and its individual team members did not hold material interests in the ETE family of entities. Mr. Skidmore and Barclays then negotiated and agreed upon Barclays fee.
On November 7, 2016, representatives of Barclays had a call with Mr. Long to discuss initial due diligence and the business rationale of the
proposed transaction.
On November 8, 2016, the ETP Conflicts Committee held a telephonic meeting with representatives of Potter Anderson,
Barclays, Latham, Mr. Mason, Mr. Long, and Bradford Whitehurst, Executive Vice President and Head of Tax of LE GP, LLC to discuss the structure and rationale of the proposed transaction, the role of ETE in connection therewith, the exchange of
diligence information, including financial projections, and the
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anticipated process regarding exchange of proposals and negotiations between the ETP Conflicts Committee and the SXL Conflicts Committee.
On November 8, 2016, V&E sent Latham and ETP a presentation containing a proposed structure and transaction steps for the mergers, which
steps had previously been shared with SXL, and representatives of V&E, Latham and ETP discussed the proposed structure and transaction steps telephonically.
On November 9, 2016, the ETP Conflicts Committee held a telephonic meeting with representatives of Potter Anderson to discuss process matters
and to update the ETP Conflicts Committee as to the status of negotiations with Barclays regarding the terms of the Barclays engagement letter. Over the following days, the ETP Conflicts Committee, Potter Anderson and Barclays negotiated the
remaining terms of Barclays engagement letter. The engagement letter detailing the terms of Barclays engagement was entered into on November 19, 2016.
On November 10, 2016, ETP furnished Barclays with a financial model for purposes of Barclays analysis. In its subsequent presentations
to the ETP Conflicts Committee, Barclays adjusted, upon the advice of ETP management, the projected ETP EBITDA to remove 90.05% of the cash distributions related to the SXL incentive distribution rights and general partner interest of SXL received
by ETP (which is payable by ETP to ETE through distributions on the ETP Class H units that are owned by ETE).
On November 11, 2016, the
ETP Conflicts Committee held a meeting with representatives of Potter Anderson and Barclays during which Barclays provided a preliminary financial review of ETP and SXL, a preliminary analysis of the proposed transaction and other background
information. Barclays also reviewed for informational purposes potential strategic alternatives that could be considered by ETP, including maintaining the status quo, reducing distributions paid in respect of ETP common units, increasing ETP
incentive distribution subsidies, modifying ETP incentive distribution rights by permanently resetting the mandatory quarterly distribution amount and target distribution levels, and eliminating ETP incentive distribution rights through a
simplification transaction between ETP and ETE. The ETP Conflicts Committee, after consultation with its advisors, noted that none of the alternatives other than maintaining the status quo or reducing distributions paid in respect of ETP common
units would be achievable without support from ETE. During the meeting, Potter Anderson presented a review of the duties and powers of the ETP Conflicts Committee in connection with the proposed transaction pursuant to the ETP partnership agreement
and the draft resolutions of the ETP Board delegating authority to the ETP Conflicts Committee.
On November 11, 2016, Mr. Warren sent a
letter to the SXL Board, which indicated that ETE believed that it would be advisable for SXL to consider making a proposal to acquire ETP in an all equity transaction in which the equity exchange ratio would be based on a volume weighted average
price for the common units of each of SXL and ETP, with an appropriate premium being offered to the ETP common unitholders based on SXLs analysis. The letter also indicated that, as SXL would be the acquiring entity in this transaction, the
existing structure of incentive distribution rights in SXL embedded in the current SXL partnership agreement would continue following the closing of the transaction. The letter also indicated that ETE would evaluate and assist with any transaction
that SXL would consider proposing to ETP and, in light of ETEs various rights under the partnership agreements and limited liability company agreements related to the general partners of each of SXL and ETP, ETE would be prepared to take
appropriate action to consent to a transaction between SXL and ETP that ETE determines is beneficial to the unitholders of ETE. Following the delivery of this letter, Mr. Mason had telephonic conversations with Mr. Hennigan, and a representative of
RLF to clarify that, based on this transaction structure, the then-existing SXL incentive distribution subsidies would continue following the closing of the proposed transaction but that, due to the extinguishment of the incentive distribution
rights in ETP in connection with ETP being merged with a subsidiary of SXL pursuant to the proposed transaction structure, the corresponding ETP incentive distribution subsidies provided for in the ETP partnership agreement would also be
extinguished.
On November 14, 2016, representatives of ETP, SXL, ETE, Latham, V&E, Potter Anderson, RLF, Barclays and Citi, as well
as the members of the ETP Conflicts Committee and the SXL Conflicts Committee, attended a meeting at which Matthew S. Ramsey, President and Chief Operating Officer of ETP, Thomas E. Long, Chief Financial Officer of ETP, and Dylan Bramhall, Senior
Vice President-Finance and Treasurer of ETP, provided a
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presentation to the group regarding ETPs business and operations, including a review of each of ETPs business segments and future expected growth projects. The representatives of ETP
also reviewed the financial projections for the business and later provided SXL, the SXL Conflicts Committee and Citi with electronic copies of the presentation, which included the financial projections. Following ETPs presentation and
extensive questions and answers, the parties agreed that representatives of ETP would further discuss the financial projections and address follow-up questions in a subsequent meeting.
At the November 14th meeting, following the ETP presentation, Mr. Hennigan and Peter Gvazdauskas, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer of
SXL, also provided a presentation to the group regarding SXLs business and operations, including a review of SXLs crude oil projects, NGL projects and refined products projects. The representatives of SXL also reviewed the financial
projections for the business and later provided ETP, the ETP Conflicts Committee and Barclays with electronic copies of the presentation, which included the financial projections. Following SXLs presentation and extensive questions and
answers, the parties agreed that representatives of SXL would further discuss the financial projections and address follow-up questions in a subsequent meeting.
On November 14, 2016, the ETP Conflicts Committee held an in-person meeting with Mr. Long, Mr. Wright, and Jason Healy, Associate General
Counsel and Secretary of ETP, as well as representatives of Barclays, Potter Anderson and Latham, to discuss SXLs management presentation and financial projections. The participants agreed that representatives of Barclays would meet with
representatives of Citi to discuss in greater detail SXLs and ETPs financial projections and the assumptions used to calculate the financial projections.
Through the course of several meetings on November 15 and 16, 2016, Barclays engaged in a series of diligence discussions with ETP management
and representatives of SXL management and Citi.
On November 15, 2016, the ETP Conflicts Committee held a series of in-person meetings
with Barclays and Potter Anderson to discuss the financial analysis being performed by Barclays with respect to the proposed transaction and the ETP and SXL financial projections. During these meetings, the ETP Conflicts Committee and its advisors
discussed the authority delegated to the ETP Conflicts Committee, which did not include the authority to pursue alternative transactions with third parties or other strategic alternatives to the proposed transaction, and ETEs expressed lack of
support for a modification of ETP incentive distribution rights or an elimination of ETP incentive distribution rights through a simplification transaction between ETP and ETE. The ETP Conflicts Committee discussed its understanding that these
potential strategic alternatives would not be achievable without ETEs support. Also during these meetings, the ETP Conflicts Committee discussed, among other things, the projected cash distribution coverage ratio shortfalls that would result
if ETP were to continue to make quarterly cash distributions at the current distribution level as well as ETPs possible efforts and alternatives to address those projected shortfalls. As a result of those discussions, the ETP Conflicts
Committee questioned whether ETP could sustain its current level of cash distributions per common unit during the periods covered by the ETP projections, and also questioned whether ETEs ability to provide additional ETP incentive distribution
subsidies would be significantly constrained by, among other things, ETEs credit metrics. Accordingly, the ETP Conflicts Committee determined that further input from ETP and ETE management was necessary in order for the ETP Conflicts Committee
to assess any merger proposal.
On November 16, 2016, the ETP Conflicts Committee held a meeting with representatives from Potter Anderson
and Barclays during which Barclays previewed preliminary merger consequences analyses in respect of the proposed transaction in anticipation of a proposal from SXL, including a review of the ETP distribution cut scenarios. During the meeting, the
ETP Conflicts Committee and its advisors discussed some potential advantages of a proposed transaction, including with respect to simplification of structure, reduction of cost of capital, reduction of debt levels and improvement of debt ratios,
expected impact on credit ratings, and equity market perception. The ETP Conflicts Committee and its advisors also discussed potential disadvantages of a proposed transaction, including the likelihood that a transaction would be dilutive to
distributions per ETP common unit compared to current cash distribution levels.
From November 14, 2016 to November 16, 2016, the SXL
Conflicts Committee held a series of in-person meetings each day, together with its legal and financial advisors, to discuss and consider the proposed transaction, including discussions regarding (i) the potential benefits and considerations of
making a proposal with respect to the proposed transaction, (ii) certain legal and financial matters regarding the proposed
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transaction, (iii) the terms of the merger agreement being prepared for the proposed transaction, and (iv) other related matters. In discussions relating to the terms of the merger agreement, the
SXL Conflicts Committee considered, among other things, the contemplated transaction structure and the implications thereof with respect to the proposed transaction, including (i) required ETP unitholder approvals and (ii) the absence of any
required SXL unitholder approval. The SXL Conflicts Committee also invited Messrs. Hennigan and Gvazdauskas, Kathleen Shea-Ballay, Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary of SXL, and representatives of V&E to attend portions of its
meetings to solicit managements views on the effect of possible terms of the proposed transaction on SXLs operations, including growth plans, and determined that the proposed transaction could result in meaningful potential cost savings
and commercial synergies. Following such discussions, the SXL Conflicts Committee determined that it was in the best interests of SXL and its common unitholders that are not affiliated with ETP, ETE and their affiliates to make a proposal regarding
the proposed transaction to the ETP Conflicts Committee. The SXL Conflicts Committee then determined to propose that SXL acquire ETP (the SXL Initial Proposal) in a transaction in which (i) ETP common unitholders would receive a number
of SXL common units at an exchange ratio reflecting a 5.0% discount to the spot trading price for the ETP common units, (ii) all non-affiliated holders of SXL common units would receive a one-time special distribution of $2.00 per SXL common unit
prior to the closing of the merger, which would be funded through borrowings under SXLs credit facility, (iii) in addition to any required ETP approvals, the transaction would be conditioned on obtaining the approval of holders of a majority
of outstanding SXL common units, (iv) ETE would approve additional SXL incentive distribution subsidies in the amount of $125.0 million per quarter for the first four quarters following the closing of the merger and $40.0 million per quarter for the
fifth through twelfth quarters following the closing of the merger and (v) all existing ETP incentive distribution subsidies and SXL incentive distribution subsidies currently in place would remain in place following the closing of the merger.
On November 16, 2016, the SXL Conflicts Committee and the ETP Conflicts Committee held an in-person meeting during which the SXL Conflicts
Committee delivered the SXL Initial Proposal to the ETP Conflicts Committee.
On November 16, 2016, the ETP Conflicts Committee shared the
terms of the SXL Initial Proposal with Potter Anderson, Barclays, ETP management and Latham. The ETP Conflicts Committee held various in-person meetings with Barclays, Potter Anderson and Mr. Long to discuss the SXL Initial Proposal. The ETP
Conflicts Committee sought guidance from Mr. Long regarding the willingness of ETE to maintain the ETP incentive distribution subsidies (in addition to the existing SXL incentive distribution subsidies) in the combined company, and ETEs
willingness to provide additional incentive distribution subsidies to the combined company. The ETP Conflicts Committee also reiterated its need for formal guidance from ETP management regarding the ability of ETP to maintain its projected
distributions per common unit (and the related coverage shortfalls), and the likely approach to be taken by ETP management to resolve such shortfalls. In subsequent meetings with Potter Anderson and Barclays, the ETP Conflicts Committee considered
various aspects of the SXL Initial Proposal, including (i) the dilutive impact of the proposed exchange ratio on distributions per ETP common unit compared to current distribution levels, (ii) that the proposed one-time special distribution of $2.00
per SXL unit would increase debt at the ETE level and would be counter to the goal of reducing leverage metrics and improving credit ratings on a consolidated and entity basis, and (iii) that the vote of the SXL unitholders, as proposed in the SXL
Initial Proposal, was not legally required. The ETP Conflicts Committee and its advisors also discussed the possibility of synergies available to the pro forma entity, and the ETP Conflicts Committee directed Barclays to explore possible synergies
with ETP management and SXL.
Later on November 16, 2016, Mr. Long had an initial telephonic discussion with Mr. Warren regarding the
incentive distribution subsidies contemplated by the SXL Initial Proposal, and Mr. Warren informed Mr. Long that ETE would be unwilling to continue the existing ETP incentive distribution subsidies provided for in the ETP Partnership Agreement or
provide any additional SXL incentive distribution subsidies over and above existing levels in the current SXL partnership agreement.
On
November 17, 2016, V&E sent an initial draft of the merger agreement (which did not address the economic terms of the merger) to Latham, Potter Anderson, ETP and ETE. Consistent with the SXL Initial Proposal, the draft merger agreement included
a requirement that holders of a majority of outstanding SXL
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common units vote to approve the transaction. The draft merger agreement also contained a no shop covenant that would permit the ETP Board to change its recommendation to the ETP
unitholders that they vote in favor of the merger only upon changed circumstances and would not allow the ETP Board to respond to any inquiries from third parties regarding an alternative transaction.
On November 17, 2016, representatives of Latham and Potter Anderson met in person to discuss issues identified in the initial draft of the
merger agreement and related matters.
On November 17 through November 18, 2016, representatives of Latham held various in-person meetings
with Messrs. Mason, Wright and Healy to discuss issues identified in SXLs initial draft of the merger agreement. The key issues discussed included (i) the no shop covenant, (ii) the requirement that holders of a majority of
outstanding SXL common units vote to approve the transaction, (iii) the restrictions on ETPs and SXLs ability to engage in certain business activities after the execution of the merger agreement and prior to closing, (iv) the
representations and warranties given by ETP and SXL and (v) the remedies and termination provisions.
On November 17, 2016, the ETP
Conflicts Committee held a series of meetings with Barclays and Potter Anderson, and with Messrs. Long and Mason, to discuss the SXL Initial Proposal. At one of the meetings on November 17, 2016, Messrs. Long and Mason reported to the ETP Conflicts
Committee that ETE had determined it would be willing to maintain all existing ETP incentive distribution subsidies and SXL incentive distribution subsidies following the closing of the merger. Messrs. Long and Mason, however, reiterated that ETE
would not be willing to approve additional SXL incentive distribution subsidies. The unwillingness on the part of ETE to approve additional SXL incentive distribution subsidies was due to the significant level of existing incentive distribution
subsidies by ETE in favor of ETP, and the need for ETE, for the benefit of the holders of its publicly traded common units, to responsibly manage its own credit metrics and distribution coverage ratios. Also during these meetings, among other
matters discussed, the participants discussed the unsustainability of ETPs current level of cash distributions per common unit for 2017, 2018 and 2019, with the understanding that, absent a merger transaction, ETP would likely need to reduce
distributions per common unit in order to reduce its leverage ratios and increase its cash distribution coverage ratios to levels that would support the longer term financial health and future cash distribution growth potential at ETP. As detailed
further below in Unaudited Financial Projections of ETP, an assumed 20% reduction in distributions in respect of ETP common units in 2017, and thereafter on a basis that results in ETP maintaining a cash coverage ratio of approximately
1.1x, and a hypothetical removal of a distribution subsidy would allow ETP to maintain a debt-to-EBITDA ratio of 5.1x in 2017, 4.2x in 2018 and 3.9x in 2019, in line with managements desire for ETP to maintain its investment grade rating.
Additionally, such reductions were deemed necessary by ETP management to maintain cash distribution coverage ratios of approximately 1.0x. The ETP Conflicts Committee and Barclays requested formal guidance from ETP management respecting the
likelihood and range of future distribution cuts by ETP.
On November 17, 2016, Barclays held several discussions with ETP management and
representatives of SXL and Citi regarding synergies and other efficiencies that could be achieved in connection with a combination of ETP and SXL.
On November 18, 2016, the ETP Conflicts Committee held a series of meetings with representatives from Barclays and Potter Anderson to further
discuss the merits of the SXL Initial Proposal and possible responses thereto. The ETP Conflicts Committee, Barclays and Potter Anderson discussed the terms of the SXL Initial Proposal and its pro forma effects on the ETP unitholders, including the
expected effect on distributions to former ETP unitholders. The ETP Conflicts Committee, Barclays and Potter Anderson also discussed the possibility of splitting the incentive distribution subsidies for the pro forma entity surviving the proposed
transaction between the former ETP unitholders and the current SXL unitholders and the impact a range of such splits could have on the potential premium offered in the proposed transaction. The ETP Conflicts Committee determined it would not be
productive to pursue a split of incentive distribution subsidies. During one of the ETP Conflicts Committee meetings held on November 18, Messrs. Long and Mason reported to Barclays and the ETP Conflicts Committee that it was ETP managements
belief that it is likely that ETP would need to reduce its quarterly distributions by 15% to 25% from the current distribution levels for 2017, 2018 and 2019, and that
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assuming reductions in this range, ETE would likely seek to renegotiate the ETP incentive distribution subsidies currently in effect for 2017, 2018 and 2019 in order for ETE to satisfy the
leverage ratio covenants in ETEs existing debt agreements (it being understood that ETP has no obligation to renegotiate such incentive distribution subsidies). Also after further inquiry from the ETP Conflicts Committee, representatives of
ETE and ETP management again reiterated that ETE would not be willing to approve additional incentive distribution subsidies. The ETP Conflicts Committee and its advisors also discussed the recent fluctuations in the market price of SXL common units
and ETP common units, and the impact on the premium or discount reflected in various possible exchange ratios, particularly with respect to a premium or discount determined by reference to the spot trading price. Following such discussions, the ETP
Conflicts Committee determined to deliver to the SXL Conflicts Committee a counterproposal (the ETP Counterproposal), pursuant to which (i) ETP common unitholders would receive SXL common units at an exchange ratio that would equal a 10%
premium to the spot trading price for the ETP common units, (ii) SXL would not make a one-time special cash distribution to the SXL unitholders prior to the closing of the transaction, (iii) no SXL unitholder vote would be required to approve the
transaction and (iv) all existing ETP incentive distribution subsidies and SXL incentive distribution subsidies would remain in place following the closing of the merger. Mr. Grimm delivered the ETP Counterproposal to the SXL Conflicts Committee on
November 18, 2016.
On November 18, 2016, the SXL Conflicts Committee met in person, together with its legal and financial advisors, to
discuss possible responses to and related matters regarding the ETP Counterproposal. Following discussion, the SXL Conflicts Committee determined to propose (the SXL Revised Proposal) that ETP common unitholders would receive 1.475 SXL
common units for each ETP common unit and that all ETP incentive distribution subsidies and SXL incentive distribution subsidies would remain in place following the closing of the merger. In deciding upon the terms of the SXL Revised Proposal, the
SXL Conflicts Committee determined that the SXL Conflicts Committees focus should be on obtaining the most attractive exchange ratio for SXL and that, to do so, the SXL Conflicts Committee should not insist on an SXL unitholder vote as a
condition to the proposed transaction.
On the evening of November 18, 2016, Mr. Anderson, the chairman of the SXL Conflicts Committee,
held a telephone call with Mr. Skidmore during which he conveyed the SXL Revised Proposal.
On November 19, 2016, the ETP Conflicts
Committee held a telephonic meeting with representatives of Barclays and Potter Anderson to discuss the SXL Revised Proposal and possible responses thereto. At this meeting, Barclays discussed its analysis regarding the range of exchange ratios that
may be appropriate given the anticipated status quo of ETP in the absence of the proposed transaction and the effect on ETP, SXL, and ETE. The ETP Conflicts Committee also discussed the impact of recent trading prices on the premiums reflected in
possible exchange ratios. Following discussion, the ETP Conflicts Committee determined to propose that ETP common unitholders would receive 1.50 SXL common units for each ETP common unit (the ETP Revised Counterproposal), and Mr.
Skidmore conveyed the ETP Revised Counterproposal to Mr. Anderson shortly after the meeting.
On November 19, 2016, representatives of
Latham and Potter Anderson held a telephonic meeting to discuss issues regarding the draft merger agreement.
On November 19, 2016, the
SXL Conflicts Committee held a series of in-person meetings, together with its legal and financial advisors, to discuss possible responses to and related matters regarding the ETP Revised Counterproposal. Following discussion, the SXL Conflicts
Committee determined that it would reiterate its proposal that SXL would acquire ETP at a 1.475 exchange ratio.
On November 19, 2016, Mr.
Anderson conveyed to Mr. Skidmore that the SXL Conflicts Committee rejected the ETP Revised Counterproposal and reiterated its proposal that SXL would acquire ETP at a 1.475 exchange ratio.
On November 19, 2016, the ETP Conflicts Committee held a telephonic meeting with representatives of Barclays and Potter Anderson to discuss
SXLs response to the ETP Revised Counterproposal. During this
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meeting, the ETP Conflicts Committee also discussed with its advisors a list of merger agreement issues that Latham had provided to Potter Anderson, including the SXL Conflicts Committees
agreement to forego its request that the proposed transaction be conditioned on the approval of a majority of the SXL unitholders, as well as a written statement from ETP management regarding the likelihood of future distribution cuts by ETP. The
ETP Conflicts Committee and Barclays further discussed the amount of increased incentive distribution subsidies that would likely be necessary to account for the differential between the ETP Conflicts Committees proposed exchange ratio of
1.500 and the SXL Conflicts Committees proposed exchange ratio of 1.475, and the benefits ETP would obtain if ETE agreed to additional incentive distribution subsidies. Following this discussion, the ETP Conflicts Committee determined to
reject the SXL Conflicts Committees proposal of a 1.475 exchange ratio and to reiterate its proposal of a 1.500 exchange ratio. Following this meeting, Mr. Skidmore communicated such proposal to Mr. Anderson.
On November 19, 2016, the SXL Conflicts Committee held another in-person meeting, together with its legal and financial advisors, to discuss
possible responses to and related matters regarding ETPs proposal of a 1.500 exchange ratio. Following discussion, the SXL Conflicts Committee determined that it would accept the proposed 1.500 exchange ratio, subject to final documentation of
the transaction prior to opening of the market on Monday, November 21, 2016.
On November 19, 2016, Mr. Anderson conveyed to Mr. Skidmore
the SXL Conflicts Committees acceptance of the proposed 1.500 exchange ratio, subject to final documentation of the transaction prior to opening of the market on Monday, November 21, 2016.
On November 19, 2016, the ETP Conflicts Committee held a telephonic meeting with representatives of Barclays and Potter Anderson to discuss
SXLs response to the ETP Revised Counterproposal, and determined to accept such terms. Barclays and the ETP Conflicts Committee also discussed the expectation that the proposed transaction would strengthen the pro forma entitys balance
sheet.
On November 19, 2016, Latham sent a revised draft of the merger agreement to V&E, RLF, SXL, ETP, ETE and Potter Anderson.
Consistent with the ETP Revised Counterproposal, the draft merger agreement provided for an exchange ratio of 1.500 SXL common units per ETP common unit.
On November 19, 2016, representatives of Latham, V&E, ETP, Potter Anderson and RLF held a telephonic meeting to discuss issues regarding
the revised merger agreement, including the revised no shop covenant, which would allow the ETP Board to respond to inquiries from third parties regarding an alternative transaction, and the remedies and termination provisions.
On November 20, 2016, V&E provided additional comments to the merger agreement to Latham, including a proposed termination fee in the
amount of 3.5% of the ETP equity value in the event the merger agreement was terminated under certain circumstances. Thereafter, Latham sent a revised draft of the merger agreement to V&E, RLF, SXL, ETP, ETE and Potter Anderson.
On November 20, 2016, the ETP Conflicts Committee held a telephonic meeting with representatives from Potter Anderson and Barclays. During the
meeting, Barclays presented the ETP Conflicts Committee with its financial analysis of the terms agreed to in the proposed transaction, including the 1.500 exchange ratio, and Potter Anderson discussed certain material terms of the merger agreement
and the SXL partnership agreement, including the proposed treatment of existing incentive distribution subsidies.
On November 20, 2016,
Potter Anderson provided comments to the merger agreement and the SXL partnership agreement to Latham.
On November 20, 2016, the ETP
Conflicts Committee held a telephonic meeting with Barclays, Potter Anderson, Latham and Mr. Whitehurst to consider and discuss the proposed transaction. Representatives of Latham summarized the terms of the merger agreement, including the closing
conditions (including the required vote of the ETP common unitholders), the representations and warranties, the operating covenants, and the deal protections (including the no shop provisions and exceptions thereto, the ETP Conflicts
Committees ability to
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change its recommendation and to negotiate alternative proposals, termination events, termination fees, and expense reimbursement) as well as the amendment and waiver provisions, and the
governing law. The representatives of Latham also summarized the SXL partnership agreement for the ETP Conflicts Committee and its advisors, including the anticipated duration of certain incentive distribution subsidies.
On November 20, 2016, ETP management finalized its written statement regarding the likelihood of distribution cuts by ETP and provided the
statement to Potter Anderson and Barclays. The ETP Conflicts Committee then reconvened its meeting with Barclays and Potter Anderson, during which (i) Barclays presented the ETP Conflicts Committee with its financial analysis of the terms agreed to
in the proposed transaction in light of such written statement of ETP management, (ii) Potter Anderson discussed certain terms related to the merger agreement and the SXL partnership agreement, including the anticipated duration of certain incentive
distribution subsidies, and (iii) the ETP Conflicts Committee discussed and considered factors that supported approving the proposed transaction and factors that did not support approving the proposed transaction (which merger agreement terms and
factors are discussed in the Recommendation of the ETP Board; Reasons for the Merger section). Upon the request of the ETP Conflicts Committee, Barclays delivered an oral fairness opinion as of November 20, 2016, which was subsequently
confirmed by delivery of a written opinion dated as of such date, to the effect that the Exchange Ratio (as defined in the merger agreement) to be offered to the unaffiliated ETP unitholders was fair, from a financial point of view, to such
unaffiliated ETP unitholders. Following such discussion and receipt of the Barclays fairness opinion, the ETP Conflicts Committee unanimously (i) determined in good faith that the proposed transaction, including the merger agreement and the
transactions contemplated thereby, on the terms set forth in the merger agreement and the form of the SXL partnership agreement attached thereto, were advisable and fair and reasonable to, and in the best interests of ETP and the unaffiliated ETP
unitholders, (ii) approved the proposed transaction (including the merger agreement) upon the terms and conditions set forth in the merger agreement and the SXL partnership agreement, and (iii) recommended that the ETP Board approve the merger
agreement (including the consummation of the transactions contemplated thereby) and the proposed transaction, submit the merger agreement to the limited partners of ETP for approval and cause ETP to enter into the merger agreement and consummate the
proposed transaction upon the terms and conditions set forth in the merger agreement and the SXL partnership agreement (subject to obtaining the requisite approval of limited partners of ETP).
On November 20, 2016, the ETP Board held a joint board meeting with the ETE Board, at which representatives from ETE management, ETP
management and Latham attended as guests. All members of the ETP Board and ETE Board were present other than Marshall S. McCrea (member of the ETP Board and the ETE Board) and James R. Perry (former member of the ETP Board). Representatives of
Latham summarized the terms of the merger agreement for the ETP Board and the ETE Board. The ETP Conflicts Committee then advised the ETP Board that it had approved the merger agreement and recommended that the ETP Board approve the merger agreement
and submit the merger agreement to ETPs limited partners for approval. Following this recommendation, and after a discussion of various financial, legal and other considerations relating to the proposed transaction, including factors that
supported approving the proposed transaction and factors that did not support approving the proposed transaction, the ETP Board determined that it was in the best interests of ETP GP and its partners and ETP and its partners, and declared it
advisable, for ETP GP and ETP to enter into the merger agreement, and the ETP Board approved and adopted the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby, including the merger. Thereafter, the ETE Board determined that it was in the
best interests of ETE and its partners, and declared it advisable, for ETE to enter into the merger agreement, and the ETE Board approved and adopted the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby.
On November 20, 2016, the SXL Conflicts Committee held a meeting, together with its legal and financial advisors, to discuss the proposed
transaction. At this meeting, among other matters, RLF reviewed with the SXL Conflicts Committee the terms of the merger agreement and Citi discussed with the SXL Conflicts Committee Citis financial perspectives regarding the Exchange Ratio.
Following a discussion regarding the proposed transaction, the merger agreement, the SXL partnership agreement and related matters, the SXL Conflicts Committee approved, and recommended that the SXL Board approve, the proposed transaction, including
the merger agreement and the SXL partnership agreement. The SXL Conflicts Committee then advised the SXL
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Board that it had approved the merger agreement and recommended that the SXL Board approve the merger agreement. Following this recommendation, and after discussion with the SXL Conflicts
Committee members regarding the SXL Conflicts Committees process and rationale for its recommendation, and discussion with the SXL Boards advisors, the SXL Board approved the proposed transaction, including the merger agreement and the
SXL partnership agreement.
On November 20, 2016, the parties finalized and executed the merger agreement.
On November 21, 2016, prior to the opening of trading on the NYSE, the parties issued a press release announcing the transaction.
From November 22, 2016 to December 8, 2016, ETP, SXL, Latham, V&E, Potter Anderson and RLF had various discussions regarding alternative
structures for the proposed transaction, and in particular, the structure of the GP merger.
On December 9, 2016, V&E sent an initial
draft of the amendment to the merger agreement (the Amendment) to Latham, ETP and ETE reflecting a change in the merger structure, whereby SXL GP would merge with ETP GP, with ETP GP surviving the GP merger as an indirect wholly owned
subsidiary of ETE and the general partner of SXL.
On December 12, 2016, representatives of Latham and Potter Anderson held a telephonic
meeting to discuss issues identified in the initial draft of the Amendment.
On December 13, 2016, Latham sent a revised draft of the
Amendment to V&E and SXL.
On December 14, 2016, V&E sent a revised draft of the Amendment to Latham, ETP, ETE and Potter
Anderson, which was in near final form. Representatives of Latham, Potter Anderson and V&E held various telephonic meetings to discuss and finalize the Amendment.
On December 15, 2016, the ETP Conflicts Committee held a meeting with Potter Anderson, during which Potter Anderson discussed certain terms
related to the Amendment, including the changes to the structure of the GP merger, representations and warranties, and indemnification provisions, as well as the revisions to the SXL partnership agreement. Following such discussion, the ETP
Conflicts Committee unanimously (i) determined in good faith that the Amendment was advisable and fair and reasonable to, and in the best interests of ETP and the unaffiliated ETP unitholders, (ii) approved the Amendment upon the terms and
conditions set forth therein, and (iii) recommended that the ETP Board approve the Amendment and cause ETP to enter into the Amendment.
On December 16, 2016, the SXL Conflicts Committee held a meeting, together with its legal and financial advisors, to discuss the Amendment.
Following discussion, the SXL Conflicts Committee approved, and recommended that the SXL Board approve, the Amendment. The SXL Conflicts Committee then advised the SXL Board that it had approved the Amendment and recommended that the SXL Board
approve the Amendment.
On December 16, 2016, the ETP Board executed a unanimous written consent whereby the ETP Board determined in good
faith that it was in the best interests of ETP GP and its partners and ETP and the unaffiliated ETP unitholders, and declared it advisable, for ETP GP and ETP to enter into the Amendment, and the ETP Board approved and adopted the Amendment.
On December 16, 2016, the ETE Board executed a unanimous written consent whereby the ETE Board determined that it was in the best interest of
ETE and its partners, and declared it advisable, for ETE to enter into the Amendment, and the ETE Board approved and adopted the Amendment.
On December 16, 2016, the SXL Board executed a unanimous written consent whereby the SXL Board approved and adopted the Amendment.
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Recommendation of the ETP Board; Reasons for the Merger
The ETP Conflicts Committee consists of two independent directors, Michael K. Grimm and David K. Skidmore, neither of whom are officers or
controlling unitholders of ETP or its affiliates. The ETP Board authorized the ETP Conflicts Committee to (i) review and evaluate any potential conflicts arising in connection with the merger or other related arrangements and agreements, (ii)
review, evaluate and negotiate with SXL the terms and conditions of the merger, together with the form, terms and provisions of the merger agreement, on behalf of ETP and the unaffiliated ETP unitholders, (iii) determine whether the merger and
related arrangements are advisable and fair and reasonable to, and in the best interests of, ETP and the unaffiliated ETP unitholders, (iv) determine whether or not to approve, and to recommend that the ETP Board approve, the merger agreement and
related arrangements, with any such approval and related recommendation of the ETP Conflicts Committee constituting Special Approval (as defined in the ETP partnership agreement and in the Fourth Amended and Restated Limited Liability
Company Agreement of ETP GP LLC) of the merger.
The ETP Conflicts Committee retained and was advised by Potter Anderson & Corroon LLP
as its outside legal counsel and Barclays as its financial advisor. The ETP Conflicts Committee oversaw the performance of financial and legal due diligence by its advisors, conducted an extensive review and evaluation of SXLs proposal and
maintaining the status quo, and conducted, with the assistance of its advisors, extensive negotiations with SXL and its representatives with respect to SXLs proposal, the merger agreement and other related agreements. ETP retained Latham &
Watkins LLP as its outside legal counsel.
The ETP Conflicts Committee, by unanimous vote at a meeting held on November 20, 2016, (i)
determined in good faith that the proposed merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby, including the merger, are advisable and fair, and reasonable to, and in the best interests of, ETP and the unaffiliated ETP unitholders, (ii)
approved the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby upon the terms set forth in the merger agreement and the SXL partnership agreement, (iii) recommended that the ETP Board approve the merger agreement and the transactions
contemplated thereby, submit the merger agreement to the limited partners of ETP for approval and cause ETP to enter into the merger agreement and consummate the merger upon the terms and conditions set forth in the merger agreement and the SXL
partnership agreement, subject to obtaining the requisite approval of the limited partners of ETP, with such approval and recommendation constituting Special Approval (as defined in the ETP partnership agreement and in the Fourth Amended
and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of ETP GP LLC) of the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby, including the merger.
The ETP Conflicts Committee, by unanimous vote at a meeting held on December 15, 2016, (i) determined in good faith that the amendment to
the merger agreement is advisable and fair and reasonable to, and in the best interests of, ETP and the unaffiliated ETP unitholders, (ii) approved the amendment to the merger agreement and (iii) recommended that the ETP Board approve the amendment
to the merger agreement and authorize the entry into the amendment to the merger agreement, with such approval and recommendation constituting Special Approval (as defined in the ETP partnership agreement and in the Fourth Amended and
Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of ETP GP LLC) of the amendment to the merger agreement.
Based on the ETP Conflicts
Committees recommendation, the ETP Board (with Marshall S. (Mackie) McCrea, III and James R. (Rick) Perry not in attendance), at a meeting held on November 20, 2016, (i) determined that the merger is in the best interests of ETP and the
unaffiliated ETP unitholders, (ii) approved the merger, the merger agreement and the execution, delivery and performance of the merger agreement, (iii) directed that the merger agreement be submitted to a vote of the limited partners of ETP and
(iv) resolved to recommend that the ETP common unitholders vote in favor of the adoption of the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby.
Further, based on the ETP Conflicts Committees recommendation, the ETP Board, by unanimous written consent dated December 16, 2016, (i)
determined in good faith that the amendment to the merger agreement is in
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the best interests of ETP and the unaffiliated ETP unitholders and (ii) approved the amendment to the merger agreement and the execution, delivery and performance thereof. The amendment to the
merger agreement was undertaken in order to simplify the resulting debt structure of the Energy Transfer family of partnerships by minimizing the conveyances of certain equity interests. As originally structured, the merger would have required
additional debt restructuring to achieve the intended outcome. As amended, the merger has a reduced impact on the existing debt structure of the Energy Transfer family of partnerships.
The ETP Conflicts Committee and the ETP Board viewed the following factors as being generally positive or favorable in coming to their
determinations and recommendation with respect to the merger:
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The financial terms offered to the holders of ETP common units, including:
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The consideration to be paid to holders of ETP common units, 1.5 SXL common units for each ETP common unit, represents:
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a 9.85% premium to the 30-day volume-weighted average closing price (VWAP) for the period ended on November 18, 2016 (the last trading day before the announcement of the merger agreement);
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a 6.59% premium to the 20-day VWAP for the period ended on November 18, 2016 (the last trading day before the announcement of the merger agreement);
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a 6.33% premium to the 10-day VWAP for the period ended on November 18, 2016 (the last trading day before the announcement of the merger agreement);
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a 5.10% premium to the 5-day VWAP for the period ended on November 18, 2016 (the last trading day before the announcement of the merger agreement); and
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a 6.80% premium to the closing price on November 16, 2016, the date of SXLs initial proposal.
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The fact that the exchange ratio is fixed and therefore the market value of the consideration payable to ETP common unitholders would increase in the event that the market price of SXL common units increases relative to
any change in the market price of ETP common units prior to the closing of the mergers.
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The fact that the merger consideration generally will not be taxable for U.S. federal income tax purposes to ETPs common unitholders.
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Holders of ETP common units would be entitled to the right to receive SXL common units at the exchange ratio, which is a price the ETP Conflicts Committee viewed as fair and reasonable in light of ETPs recent and
projected financial performance and recent trading prices of the ETP common units and in light of the strengths of the surviving entity and benefits to be received by the holders of ETP common units, including:
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The likelihood that ETP would not be able to sustain quarterly distributions at current amounts per unit, taking into account ETP managements projections indicating increasing leverage, significant additional
equity issuances, constrained cash flow, and a sub-1.0x distribution coverage ratio for the last two quarters of 2016 and for the years 2017 and 2018 at current distribution amounts.
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The ETP Conflicts Committees belief that the public trading price of the ETP common units may have been supported by the markets perception that ETP would be able to maintain current distribution levels.
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The prospects that cash distributions with respect to ETP common units would likely be reduced in light of the
ETP Management Written Statement (as more fully described in the section entitled Unaudited Financial Projections of ETP) to the effect that, if the merger is not consummated and ETE is unwilling or unable to provide additional incentive
distribution subsidies, ETP
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management would likely consider a reduction in quarterly cash distributions in the range of 15% to 25% in order to reduce ETPs leverage ratios and increase its distribution coverage ratio
to maintain its investment grade rating, support its longer term financial health and promote its future cash distribution growth potential, and to the effect that, in the event of such reductions, ETP management believed that it was likely that ETE
would seek to negotiate a reduction in the incentive distribution subsidies currently in effect in order to preserve ETEs existing credit ratings.
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The opinion of Barclays, dated November 20, 2016, that based upon and subject to the factors and assumptions set forth in its opinion, the exchange ratio was fair to the unaffiliated ETP unitholders, from a financial
point of view, including the various analyses undertaken by Barclays in connection with its opinion.
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The expectation that the merger will be accretive to SXLs distributable cash flow per SXL common unit and distributable cash flow per SXL common unit, which will inure to the benefit of the current holders of ETP
common units.
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ETEs agreement to cause SXL GP to execute and deliver the SXL partnership agreement providing for, among other things, a reduction in distributions paid by SXL in respect of the incentive distribution rights in
SXL in an amount equal to the amount of reductions in distributions paid by ETP in respect of the incentive distribution rights in ETP as set forth in the ETP partnership agreement.
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ETP unitholders receipt of the equity ownership in an entity with a diversified platform of assets and substantially lower cost of capital, which is expected to provide greater ability to pursue accretive capital
projects and acquisitions that would provide for higher distribution growth.
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The expectation that, on a pro forma basis after giving effect to the merger, the pro forma entity will be the second largest midstream master limited partnership (MLP) in the United States as measured by
enterprise value.
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The expected benefits from the merger resulting from the increased size and scale of midstream assets across multiple basins, the addition of builds, a major presence in the Marcellus and Utica basins, an increased
presence in the Permian and Eagle Ford basins, the prospects for an increased upside to ETPs intrastate gas system, the prospects for significant synergies for the combined company and the increased financial capacity to make additional
accretive capital investments.
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The expectation that the merger will create operating and regulatory efficiencies and cost savings in administrative and interest costs, tax savings, and other combined benefits.
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SXL, as the combined entity, is expected to have a strong balance sheet and maintain an investment grade rating. SXLs balance sheet and lower cost of capital will allow ETPs unitholders to benefit from the
investment grade rating of the combined entity.
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The strength of ETPs and the ETP Conflicts Committees negotiations and the value obtained therefrom, including:
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The exchange ratio of 1.5 SXL common units for each ETP common unit represents an increase to the 1.334 ratio implied in SXLs initial proposal, which reflected a 5% discount to the spot trading price for ETP
common units as of November 16, 2016.
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In response to the SXL Conflicts Committees reiteration of its proposed exchange ratio of 1.475 SXL common units for each ETP common unit, the ETP Conflicts Committee reiterated its proposed exchange ratio of 1.5
SXL common units for each ETP common unit, which the SXL Conflicts Committee ultimately accepted.
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The conclusion reached by the ETP Conflicts Committee that the exchange ratio of 1.5 SXL common units for each
ETP common unit was likely the highest price SXL was willing to pay at
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the time of the ETP Conflicts Committees determination to approve and recommend to the ETP Board.
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Though initially requested by the SXL Conflicts Committee, the final merger agreement does not require a vote of the SXL unitholders.
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The SXL Conflicts Committee originally requested a special distribution of $2.00 per SXL common unit to the public, unaffiliated unitholders of SXL, which the ETP Conflicts Committee rejected.
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The ETP Conflicts Committees belief that any potential alternative transactions with third parties, simplification transactions, and incentive distribution right modification transactions were not achievable due
to lack of support from ETE (and ETEs control of ETP GP and ETP GP LLC) and the ETP Conflicts Committees consideration of maintaining the status quo and the potential impact maintaining the status quo would have on the ability of ETP to
maintain its current distribution level.
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The following procedural safeguards involved in the negotiation of the merger agreement:
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The ETP Conflicts Committee consisted solely of directors who are not officers or controlling unitholders of ETE or its affiliates and who satisfied the requirements under the ETP partnership agreement for service on
the ETP Conflicts Committee.
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The ETP Conflicts Committee was charged with evaluating and negotiating the terms and conditions of the proposed transaction on behalf of ETP and the unaffiliated ETP unitholders, with the power to decline to pursue a
transaction, and that the ETP Board had resolved not to approve a proposed transaction without the prior approval and recommendation of the ETP Conflicts Committee.
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Other than with respect to any awards under the ETP equity plans or the ETP cash unit plan described below at Interests of Directors and Executive Officers of ETP in the MergerTreatment of ETP
Equity-Based Awards, the members of the ETP Conflicts Committee will not personally benefit from the completion of the merger in a manner different from the unaffiliated ETP unitholders.
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The members of the ETP Conflicts Committee were appropriately compensated for their services and their compensation was in no way contingent on their approving the merger agreement or the merger.
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The terms and conditions of the merger agreement and the merger were determined through arms-length negotiations between the ETP Conflicts Committee and the SXL Conflicts Committee, with the assistance of their
respective representatives and advisors.
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The ETP Conflicts Committee retained and was advised by experienced and qualified advisors, consisting of legal counsel, Potter Anderson & Corroon LLP, and financial advisor, Barclays.
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The terms of the merger agreement, principally:
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Holders of ETP common units will receive the right to receive 1.5 SXL common units for each ETP common unit.
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The requirement that the merger agreement and the merger be approved by a vote of the holders of at least a majority of the outstanding ETP common units and the requirement that ETE vote or cause to be voted all ETP
common units then owned beneficially or of record by it or any of its subsidiaries, as of the record date, in favor of the approval of the merger agreement and the merger and the approval of any actions required in furtherance thereof.
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The provisions allowing the ETP Conflicts Committee and the ETP Board to withdraw or change their recommendation
of the merger agreement in the event of a superior proposal from a third
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party (other than ETE or its affiliates) or a change of circumstance if the ETP Board (upon the recommendation of the ETP Conflicts Committee) makes a good faith determination that the failure to
change its recommendation would be inconsistent with its duties under the ETP partnership agreement or applicable law and complies with the terms of the merger agreement.
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The provisions allowing ETP to provide information to, and participate in discussions and negotiations with, a third party (other than ETE or its affiliates) in response to an unsolicited alternative proposal, which
may, in certain circumstances, result in a superior proposal.
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The operating covenants to which SXL is subject provide protection to ETP unitholders by restricting SXLs ability to take certain actions prior to the closing of the merger that could reduce the value of SXL
common units received by ETP unitholders in the merger.
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The limited conditions and exceptions to the closing conditions.
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Under the terms of the merger agreement, prior to the effective time of the merger, ETP is prohibited from revoking or diminishing the authority of the ETP Conflicts Committee.
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Any amendments to the merger agreement require consultation with the ETP Conflicts Committee, and the ETP Conflicts Committee is permitted to rescind its approval of the merger agreement, with such rescission resulting
in the rescission of Special Approval (as defined in the ETP partnership agreement and in the Fourth Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of ETP GP LLC), if the ETP Board takes or authorizes any amendment that is
counter to any recommendation by the ETP Conflicts Committee.
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If the ETP Board (i) waives any inaccuracies in the representations and warranties of the other party under the merger agreement, (ii) extends time for performance of the other partys obligations under the merger
agreement, (iii) waives the other partys compliance with any agreement or condition contained in the merger agreement, or (iv) otherwise grants any consent under the merger agreement without the concurrence of the ETP Conflicts Committee, then
the ETP Conflicts Committee can rescind its approval of the merger agreement, with such rescission resulting in the rescission of Special Approval (as defined in the ETP partnership agreement and in the Fourth Amended and Restated
Limited Liability Company Agreement of ETP GP LLC).
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The ETP Conflicts Committee and the ETP Board considered the following
additional factors in making their determinations and recommendation with respect to the merger:
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There are certain potential negative consequences that may affect ETP unitholders, including the following:
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The consideration to be paid to holders of ETP common units, 1.5 SXL common units for each ETP common unit, represents a 0.22% discount to the closing price of ETP common units on November 18, 2016.
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The fact that ETP unitholders will receive 1.5 SXL common units for each ETP common unit and that it is expected that the cash distributions per 1.5 SXL common units will initially be less than the current distributions
on 1.0 ETP common unit.
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The fact that the exchange ratio is fixed and therefore the market value of the consideration payable to ETP common unitholders would decrease in the event that the market price of SXL common units decreases relative to
any change in the market price of ETP common units prior to the closing of the merger.
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The absence of certain procedural safeguards, including:
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The fact that the ETP unitholders are not entitled to appraisal rights under the merger agreement, the ETP partnership agreement or Delaware law.
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The ETP Conflicts Committee was not authorized to, and did not, conduct an auction process or other solicitation
of interest from third parties for the acquisition of ETP. Given ETEs control
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over ETPs general partner, it was unrealistic to expect or pursue an unsolicited third party acquisition proposal or offer for the assets or control of ETP, and it was unlikely that the ETP
Conflicts Committee could conduct a meaningful auction for the acquisition of the assets or control of ETP.
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Certain members of ETP management and the ETP Board may have interests that are different from those of the unaffiliated ETP unitholders. Please read Interests of Directors and Executive Officers of ETP in
the Merger.
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Although the merger is subject to approval by a majority of the ETP common units, the vote includes ETP units held by ETE and its affiliates, and there is no requirement of a separate approval by the unaffiliated ETP
unitholders.
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Certain terms of the merger agreement, principally:
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The provisions limiting the ability of ETP to solicit, or to consider unsolicited, offers from third parties for ETP.
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The provisions obligating ETP to hold a special meeting of unitholders to vote on the merger even if the ETP Conflicts Committee changes its recommendation.
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Certain break-up fees payable by ETP, including in connection with termination of the merger agreement as a result of a superior proposal for ETP.
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ETPs obligation to pay SXLs expenses in certain circumstances.
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Litigation may occur in connection with the merger and any such litigation may result in significant costs and a diversion of management focus.
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There is risk that the merger might not be completed in a timely manner, or that the merger might not be consummated at all as a result of a failure to satisfy the conditions contained in the merger agreement, and a
failure to complete the merger could negatively affect the trading price of the ETP common units or could result in significant costs and disruption to ETPs normal business.
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The foregoing discussion is not intended to be exhaustive, but is intended to address the material information and principal factors
considered by the ETP Conflicts Committee and the ETP Board in considering the merger. In view of the number and variety of factors and the amount of information considered, the ETP Conflicts Committee and the ETP Board did not find it practicable
to, and did not make specific assessments of, quantify or otherwise assign relative weights to, the specific factors considered in reaching its determination. In addition, the ETP Conflicts Committee and the ETP Board did not undertake to make any
specific determination as to whether any particular factor, or any aspect of any particular factor, was favorable or unfavorable to its ultimate determination, and individual members of the ETP Conflicts Committee and the ETP Board may have given
different weights to different factors. The ETP Conflicts Committee and the ETP Board made their recommendations based on the totality of information presented to, and the investigation conducted by, the ETP Conflicts Committee and the ETP Board. It
should be noted that certain statements and other information presented in this section are forward-looking in nature and, therefore, should be read in light of the factors discussed under the heading Cautionary Statement Regarding
Forward-Looking Statements.
The ETP Board recommends that ETP common unitholders vote FOR the adoption of the merger
agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby, FOR the proposal to approve the adjournment of the special meeting, if necessary, to solicit additional proxies if there are not sufficient votes to approve the merger agreement at the
time of the special meeting and FOR the advisory compensation proposal.
Opinion of the Financial Advisor to
the ETP Conflicts Committee
The ETP Conflicts Committee engaged Barclays to act as the ETP Conflicts Committees financial
advisor with respect to the proposed transaction. On November 20, 2016, Barclays rendered its oral opinion (which was
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subsequently confirmed in writing) to the ETP Conflicts Committee that, as of such date and based upon and subject to the qualifications, limitations and assumptions stated in its opinion, the
exchange ratio to be offered to the unaffiliated ETP unitholders in the proposed transaction is fair, from a financial point of view, to such unaffiliated ETP unitholders.
The full text of Barclays written opinion, dated as of November 20, 2016, is attached to this proxy statement/prospectus as Annex
B. Barclays written opinion sets forth, among other things, the assumptions made, procedures followed, factors considered and limitations upon the review undertaken by Barclays in rendering its opinion. You are encouraged to read the
opinion carefully in its entirety. The following is a summary of Barclays opinion and the methodology that Barclays used to render its opinion. This summary is qualified in its entirety by reference to the full text of the opinion.
Barclays opinion, the issuance of which was approved by Barclays Valuation and Fairness Opinion Committee, is addressed to the ETP
Conflicts Committee, addresses only the fairness to unaffiliated ETP unitholders, from a financial point of view, of the exchange ratio to be offered to such unaffiliated ETP unitholders in the proposed transaction and does not constitute a
recommendation to any unaffiliated ETP unitholder as to how such unaffiliated ETP unitholder should vote or act with respect to the proposed transaction or any other matter. The terms of the proposed transaction were determined through
arms-length negotiations between the ETP Conflicts Committee and the SXL Conflicts Committee and were approved unanimously by the ETP Conflicts Committee. Barclays did not recommend that any specific form of consideration should be offered to
unaffiliated ETP unitholders or that any specific form of consideration constituted the only appropriate consideration for the proposed transaction. Barclays was not requested to address, and its opinion does not in any manner address, the
underlying business decision to proceed with or effect the transaction or the likelihood of consummation of the transaction or the relative merits of the proposed transaction as compared to any other transaction or business strategy in which ETP
might engage. In addition, Barclays expressed no view as to, and its opinion does not in any manner address, the fairness of the amount or the nature of (i) any compensation to any officers, directors or employees of any parties to the proposed
transaction, or any class of such persons, relative to the exchange ratio in the proposed transaction or otherwise; (ii) the fairness of any portion or aspect of the proposed transaction to the holders of any class of securities, creditors or other
constituencies of ETP or any other person, or to any other person, other than the fairness, from a financial point of view, of the exchange ratio to be offered to the unaffiliated ETP unitholders; or (iii) any portion or aspect of the proposed
transaction to any one class or group of ETPs or any other persons equity security holders vis a vis any other class or group of ETPs security holders or any other persons security holders (including, without limitation, the
allocation of any consideration amongst or within such classes or groups of security holders). No limitations were imposed by ETP or the ETP Conflicts Committee upon Barclays with respect to the investigations made or procedures followed by it in
rendering its opinion.
In arriving at its opinion, Barclays reviewed and analyzed, among other things:
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a draft of the merger agreement, dated as of November 20, 2016, and the specific terms of the proposed transaction;
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publicly available information concerning ETP and SXL that Barclays believed to be relevant to its analysis, including each of ETPs and SXLs Annual Reports on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
2015 and Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q for the fiscal quarters ended March 31, 2016, June 30, 2016 and September 30, 2016;
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financial and operating information with respect to the businesses, operations and prospects of ETP furnished to Barclays by ETP, including the ETP Unaudited Financial Projections (as defined in the section entitled
Unaudited Financial Projections of ETP) (the ETP Projections);
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the ETP Management Written Statement (as more fully described in the section entitled Unaudited Financial Projections of ETP);
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ETPs expectations with respect to the potential impact of the proposed transaction on ETPs credit ratings;
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financial and operating information with respect to the business, operations and prospects of SXL, initially prepared by management of SXL and furnished by SXL to the management of ETP (the SXL Projections
and, together with the ETP Projections, the Projections);
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a schedule of the incentive distribution subsidies provided by, and projected to be provided by, ETE to each of ETP and SXL and the expectation that following completion of the proposed transaction ETE will maintain
such incentive distribution subsidies at the projected levels (the IDR Projected Subsidies);
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a comparison of the trading histories of the ETP common units and the SXL common units with each other from May 18, 2016 to November 18, 2016;
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a comparison of the historical financial results and present financial condition of each of ETP and SXL with those of other companies that Barclays deemed relevant;
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a comparison of the financial terms of the proposed transaction with the financial terms of certain other transactions that Barclays deemed relevant; and
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certain estimates provided by ETP to Barclays as to the amounts and timing of the cost savings and revenue enhancements (collectively, the Expected Synergies) anticipated by the management of ETP to result
from the proposed transaction.
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In addition, Barclays had discussions with the managements of each of ETP and SXL concerning
their respective businesses, operations, assets, liabilities, financial conditions and prospects and undertook such other studies, analyses and investigations as Barclays deemed appropriate.
In arriving at its opinion, Barclays assumed and relied upon the accuracy and completeness of the financial and other information used by
Barclays without any independent verification of such information (and has not assumed responsibility or liability for any independent verification of such information). Barclays also relied upon the assurances of the management of ETP that
they were not aware of any facts or circumstances that would make such information inaccurate or misleading. With respect to the ETP Projections, upon the advice of ETP, Barclays assumed that such ETP Projections were reasonably prepared on a basis
reflecting the best then-available estimates and judgments of the management of ETP as to the future financial performance of ETP and that ETP will perform substantially in accordance with such ETP Projections, and Barclays considered and relied on
such projections. With respect to the SXL Projections, upon the advice of ETP, Barclays assumed that such projections were reasonably prepared on a basis reflecting the best then-available estimates and judgments of the management of SXL, as
confirmed to Barclays by the management of ETP, as to the future financial performance of SXL and that SXL will perform substantially in accordance with such SXL Projections, and Barclays considered and relied on such projections. With respect to
the Expected Synergies, upon the advice of ETP, Barclays assumed that the amounts and timing of the Expected Synergies are reasonable and that the Expected Synergies will be realized in accordance with such estimates. In addition, upon the advice of
ETP, Barclays assumed that the IDR Projected Subsidies were reasonably prepared on a basis reflecting the best currently available estimates and judgments of the management of ETP, that, assuming the proposed transaction is consummated, the amounts
and timing of the subsidies set forth in the IDR Projected Subsidies are reasonable, achievable and sustainable, and that such subsidies as set forth in the IDR Projected Subsidies will continue to inure to the benefit of each of ETP and SXL in the
amounts and at the times contemplated by the IDR Projected Subsidies. Barclays assumed, upon the advice of ETP, that if the proposed transaction is not consummated, ETP would likely reduce the amount of its quarterly distributions to holders of ETP
common units by 15% to 25% and that in light of the detrimental impact that such reduction would have on ETEs credit profile, ETE would likely seek to negotiate a reduction in the incentive distribution subsidies that currently inure to the
benefit of ETP. In arriving at its opinion, Barclays assumed no responsibility for and expressed no view as to any of such projections or estimates or the assumptions on which they were based. In arriving at its opinion, Barclays did not
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conduct a physical inspection of the properties and facilities of ETP or SXL, and did not make or obtain any evaluations or appraisals of the assets or liabilities of ETP or
SXL. Barclays opinion was necessarily based upon market, economic and other conditions as they existed on, and could be evaluated as of, November 20, 2016. Barclays was not authorized to solicit, and Barclays did not solicit, any
indications of interest from any third party with respect to the purchase of all or any part of ETPs business. Barclays assumed no responsibility for updating or revising its opinion based on events or circumstances that may have occurred
after the delivery of its opinion to ETP on November 20, 2016. In addition, Barclays expressed no opinion as to the prices at which (i) ETP common units or SXL common units would trade following the announcement of the proposed transaction or
(ii) SXL common units would trade following the consummation of the proposed transaction. Barclays opinion should not be viewed as providing any assurance that the market value of the SXL common units to be held by the unaffiliated ETP
unitholders after the consummation of the proposed transaction will be in excess of the market value of the ETP common units owned by such unaffiliated ETP unitholders at any time prior to the announcement or consummation of the proposed
transaction.
Barclays assumed that the executed merger agreement will have conformed in all material respects to the last draft reviewed
by Barclays. In addition, Barclays assumed the accuracy of the representations and warranties contained in the merger agreement and all agreements related thereto. Barclays also assumed, upon the advice of ETP, that all material governmental,
regulatory and third party approvals, consents and releases for the proposed transaction will be obtained within the constraints contemplated by the merger agreement and that the proposed transaction will be consummated in accordance with the terms
of the merger agreement without waiver, modification or amendment of any material term, condition or agreement thereof. Barclays did not express any opinion as to any tax or other consequences that might result from the proposed transaction, nor
does Barclays opinion address any legal, tax, regulatory or accounting matters, as to which Barclays understood that ETP had obtained such advice as it deemed necessary from qualified professionals.
In connection with rendering its opinion, Barclays performed certain financial, comparative and other analyses as summarized below. In
arriving at its opinion, Barclays did not ascribe a specific range of values to the ETP common units or the SXL common units but rather made its determination as to fairness, from a financial point of view, to unaffiliated ETP unitholders of the
exchange ratio to be offered to such unaffiliated ETP unitholders in the proposed transaction on the basis of various financial and comparative analyses. The preparation of a fairness opinion is a complex process and involves various determinations
as to the most appropriate and relevant methods of financial and comparative analyses and the application of those methods to the particular circumstances. Therefore, a fairness opinion is not readily susceptible to summary description.
In arriving at its opinion, Barclays did not attribute any particular weight to any single analysis or factor considered by it but rather made
qualitative judgments as to the significance and relevance of each analysis and factor relative to all other analyses and factors performed and considered by it and in the context of the circumstances of the particular transaction. Accordingly,
Barclays believes that its analyses must be considered as a whole, as considering any portion of such analyses and factors, without considering all analyses and factors as a whole, could create a misleading or incomplete view of the process
underlying its opinion.
The following is a summary of the material financial analyses used by Barclays in preparing its opinion to the
ETP Conflicts Committee. Certain financial, comparative and other analyses summarized below include information presented in tabular format. In order to fully understand the financial, comparative and other analyses used by Barclays, the tables must
be read together with the text of each summary, as the tables alone do not constitute a complete description of the financial analyses. In performing its analyses, Barclays made numerous assumptions with respect to industry performance, general
business and economic conditions and other matters, many of which are beyond the control of ETP or any other parties to the proposed transaction. None of the ETP Conflicts Committee, ETP, SXL, ETE, Barclays or any other person assumes responsibility
if future results are materially different from those discussed. Any estimates contained in these analyses are not necessarily indicative of actual values or predictive of future results or values, which may be significantly more or less favorable
than as set forth below. In addition, analyses relating to the value of the businesses do not purport to be appraisals or reflect the prices at which the businesses may actually be sold.
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Summary of Analyses
The following is a summary of the material financial analyses performed by Barclays with respect to ETP and SXL in preparing Barclays
opinion:
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discounted distributable cash flows analysis;
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selected comparable company analysis;
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selected precedent transactions analysis; and
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analysis of public third-party equity research analyst price targets of ETP and SXL.
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Each of
these methodologies was used to generate reference per unit equity value ranges for ETP common units and reference per unit equity value ranges for SXL common units. In order to derive implied per unit values in the selected precedent transactions
analysis, the implied equity value range for ETP and SXL was then divided by an applicable estimate of the number of diluted units outstanding. For purposes of the ETP calculations, the number of diluted units outstanding at year end 2016, per the
ETP Projections, was used to derive implied per unit values. The reference per unit equity value ranges were then also used to generate implied exchange ratios for each of these methodologies. For purposes of the SXL calculations, the number of
units estimated to be outstanding at year end 2016, per the SXL Projections, was used to derive implied per unit values. For purposes of its analyses, Barclays looked at the exchange ratio of 1.5000x SXL common units for each ETP common unit to
determine an implied equity value of $39.29 per ETP common unit for the proposed transaction based on the closing price of an SXL common unit at market close on November 18, 2016. For each of the discounted distributable cash flow analysis, the
selected comparable company analysis, the selected precedent transactions analysis, and the analysis of public third-party equity research analyst price targets, the implied equity value ranges per ETP common unit and the implied exchange ratios
were then compared to the exchange ratio of 1.5000x SXL common units for each ETP common unit in the proposed transaction.
In addition to
analyzing the value of the ETP common units and the SXL common units, to provide additional background and perspective to the ETP Conflicts Committee, Barclays also analyzed and reviewed: (i) the daily historical closing prices of ETP common units
and SXL common units and the exchange ratios implied by those closing unit prices for the period from May 18, 2016 to November 18, 2016; (ii) certain publicly available information related to selected MLP merger transactions to calculate the amount
of premiums paid by the acquirers to the acquired companys unitholders; (iii) the pro forma impact of the proposed transaction on the current and future financial performance and credit profile of SXL, as the surviving entity, using projected
estimates for 2017, 2018, and 2019 for distributable cash flow per unit and distributions per unit for the surviving entity based on the ETP Projections and the SXL Projections.
In particular, in applying the various valuation methodologies to the particular businesses, operations and prospects of ETP and SXL, and the
particular circumstances of the proposed transaction, Barclays made qualitative judgments as to the significance and relevance of each analysis. In addition, Barclays made numerous assumptions with respect to industry performance, general business
and economic conditions and other matters, many of which are beyond the control of ETP and SXL. Such qualitative judgments and assumptions of Barclays were made following discussions with the managements of each of ETP and SXL. Accordingly, the
methodologies and the implied common equity value ranges and implied exchange ratio ranges derived therefrom must be considered as a whole and in the context of the narrative description of the financial analyses, including the assumptions
underlying these analyses. Considering the implied common equity value ranges or the implied exchange ratio ranges without considering the full narrative description of the financial analyses, including the assumptions underlying these analyses,
could create a misleading or incomplete view of the process underlying, and conclusions represented by, Barclays opinion.
Discounted Distributable Cash Flow Analysis
In order to estimate the present values of ETP common units and SXL common units, Barclays performed discounted distributable cash flow
analyses for each of ETP and SXL. A discounted cash flow analysis is a
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traditional valuation methodology used to derive an intrinsic valuation of an asset by calculating the present value of estimated future cash flows of the asset; in this case, the
present value of the estimated future distributable cash flows of the ETP common units and the SXL common units. Present value refers to the current value of future cash flows or amounts and is obtained by discounting
those future distributable cash flows by a range of discount rates that takes into account macroeconomic assumptions and estimates of risk, the opportunity cost of capital, expected returns, the time value of money, and other appropriate factors.
The discounted distributable cash flow analysis for the ETP common units was performed under two scenarios provided by the management of ETP, each of which are described below.
The first scenario considered status quo ETP utilizing the ETP Status Quo Case Projections (as defined in the section entitled Unaudited
Financial Projections of ETP) which are derived from the ETP Projections from 2017 through 2019 (ETP Status Quo Case). The second scenario is based on the ETP Distribution Reduction Case Projections (as defined in the section
entitled Unaudited Financial Projections of ETP) which are derived from the ETP Status Quo Case Projections but adjusted to reflect (i) a hypothetical reduction in distributions in respect of ETP common units by approximately 20% in 2017
and that thereafter distributions in respect of ETP common units are made on a basis that results in ETP maintaining a cash coverage ratio of 1.1x, and (ii) the hypothetical removal of a $465 million incentive distribution subsidy that was in place
during 2017 (ETP Distribution Reduction Case). Cash Coverage refers to a ratio used to determine the amount of cash available to pay a units distribution expense, and is expressed as a ratio of the cash available to the
distribution being paid.
To calculate the estimated per ETP common unit equity value ranges in the discounted distributable cash flow
analysis, Barclays added (i) projected distributable cash flow per ETP common unit for fiscal years 2017 through 2019 based on the ETP Projections to (ii) the terminal value at the end of the forecast period, or the terminal value of the
ETP common units, as of December 31, 2019, and discounted such distributable cash flows per ETP common unit to their net present value using selected discount rates for each of the ETP Status Quo Case and ETP Distribution Reduction Case. For
each case, Barclays used a nominal discount rate range of 12.5% to 14.5%. This discount rate range was selected by Barclays using its professional judgment and experience, taking into account projected cost of equity capital rates for ETP and
the comparable companies utilized in the Selected Comparable Companies Analysis described below, which projected cost of equity capital rate ranges were derived from (i) an analysis of the relative cost of equity rates of such companies based on
2017 estimated distributable cash flow per unit yields, as adjusted to include the portion of the distributable cash flow attributable to the general partner of such companies, and using an estimated compound annual growth rate for such companies
for the years 2017, 2018 and 2019, and (ii) an analysis of the cost of equity rates of such companies derived from reviewing certain metrics of such companies, including a five-year raw historical beta, market value of debt and equity, total
capitalization, debt to equity ratio, debt in relation to debt plus equity, and unlevered beta. The terminal value of the ETP common units was estimated by applying a range of assumed yields of 8.0% to 10.0% in ETP Status Quo Case and a range of
assumed yields of 7.5% to 9.5% in ETP Distribution Reduction Case to ETPs estimated distributable cash flow per ETP common unit for 2019 for ETP Status Quo Case and ETP Distribution Reduction Case, respectively. The assumed yields were
selected based on Barclays professional judgment and experience, taking into account the yields of ETP and the selected comparable companies utilized in the Selected Comparable Companies Analysis described below. The reference equity value
range per ETP common unit yielded by the ETP discounted distributable cash flow analysis implied an equity value range for the ETP common units of (i) $39.50 to $44.00 per ETP common unit based on ETP Status Quo Case; and (ii) $40.00 to $46.00 per
ETP common unit based on ETP Distribution Reduction Case, in each case, as compared to the closing ETP common unit price of $39.37 on November 18, 2016.
To calculate the estimated per SXL common unit equity value ranges in the discounted distributable cash flow analysis for SXL, Barclays added
(i) projected distributable cash flow per SXL common unit for fiscal years 2017 through 2019 based on the SXL Projections to (ii) the terminal value of the SXL common units, as of December 31, 2019, and discounted such distributable cash flows per
SXL common unit to their net present value as of January 1, 2017 using a nominal discount rate range of 10.0% to 12.0%. This discount rate range was selected by Barclays using its professional judgment and experience, taking into account projected
cost of equity
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capital rates for SXL and the selected comparable companies utilized in the Selected Comparable Companies Analysis described below, which projected cost of equity capital rate ranges were derived
from (i) an analysis of the relative cost of equity rates of such companies based on 2017 estimated distributable cash flow per unit yields, as adjusted to include the portion of the distributable cash flow attributable to the general partner
of such companies, and using an estimated compound annual growth rate for such companies for the years 2017, 2018 and 2019, and (ii) an analysis of the cost of equity rates of such companies derived from reviewing certain metrics of such
companies, including a five-year raw historical beta, market value of debt and equity, total capitalization, debt to equity ratio, debt in relation to debt plus equity, and unlevered beta. The terminal value of the SXL common units was estimated by
applying a range of assumed yields of 7.5% to 9.5% to SXLs 2019 estimated distributable cash flow per SXL common unit. The assumed yields were selected based on Barclays professional judgment and experience, taking into account the
yields of SXL and the selected comparable companies utilized in the Selected Comparable Companies Analysis described below. The reference equity value range for the SXL common units yielded by the SXL discounted distributable cash flow analysis
implied an equity value range for SXL of $29.00 to $33.00 per SXL common unit, as compared to the closing SXL common unit price of $26.19 on November 18, 2016.
Using the implied reference equity value per unit ranges for each of the ETP common units and the SXL common units, Barclays derived reference
implied exchange ratio ranges of (i) 1.1970x to 1.5172x based on ETP Status Quo Case without including Expected Synergies; (ii) 1.1695x to 1.4778x based on ETP Status Quo Case with Expected Synergies; (iii) 1.2121x to 1.5862x based on ETP
Distribution Reduction Case without Expected Synergies; and (iv) 1.1843x to 1.5450x based on ETP Distribution Reduction Case with Expected Synergies.
Barclays noted that the exchange ratio of 1.5000x to be offered to unaffiliated ETP unitholders in the proposed transaction was in line with
the implied equity value ranges per ETP common unit and the implied exchange ratio yielded by Barclays discounted distributable cash flow analysis.
Selected Comparable Company Analysis
In order to assess how the public market values units of similar publicly traded MLPs, Barclays reviewed and compared specific financial and
operating data relating to ETP and SXL to that of MLPs selected by Barclays based on Barclays experience with MLPs. None of the MLPs that were selected for such purpose were subsequently excluded in conducting this analysis.
The MLPs selected with respect to ETP were:
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Enbridge Energy Partners, LP;
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Enterprise Products Partners, LP;
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Plains All American Pipeline, LP; and
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Barclays calculated and analyzed distributable cash flow per unit
yields using published estimates by third party equity research analysts for estimated distributable cash flow per unit in 2017 and 2018 for each of the comparable companies selected and for ETP using the ETP Projections. The results of the ETP
selected comparable company analysis are summarized below:
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Yield Range of Comparable MLPs of ETP
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Distributable Cash Flow per Unit Yield:
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Low
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Median
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High
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2017E Yield
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7.9
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%
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8.3
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%
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11.7
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%
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2018E Yield
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8.2
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%
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8.9
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%
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12.2
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%
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Barclays selected the comparable MLPs listed above because their business and operating profiles are
reasonably similar to that of ETP. However, because of the inherent differences between the business, operations and prospects of ETP and those of the selected comparable companies, Barclays believed that it was
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inappropriate to, and therefore did not, rely solely on the quantitative results of the selected comparable company analysis. Accordingly, Barclays also made certain qualitative judgments
concerning differences between the business, financial and operating characteristics and prospects of ETP and the selected comparable companies that could affect the public trading values of each in order to provide a context in which to consider
the results of the quantitative analysis. These qualitative judgments related primarily to the differing sizes, growth prospects, profitability levels and degrees of operational risk between ETP and the selected MLPs included in the selected
comparable company analysis. The equity value range for the ETP common units yielded by the ETP selected comparable company analysis implied a reference equity value range for ETP of $37.00 to $45.00 per ETP common unit.
The MLPs selected with respect to SXL were:
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Enterprise Products Partners, LP;
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Magellan Midstream Partners, LP;
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Plains All American Pipeline, LP.
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Barclays calculated and analyzed distributable cash flow
per unit yields using published estimates by third party equity research analysts for estimated distributable cash flow per unit in 2017 and 2018 for each of the comparable companies selected and for SXL using the SXL Projections. The results of the
SXL selected comparable company analysis are summarized below:
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Yield Range of Comparable MLPs of SXL
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Distributable Cash Flow per Unit Yield:
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Low
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Median
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High
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2017E Yield
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6.6
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%
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7.9
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%
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8.6
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%
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2018E Yield
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6.8
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%
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8.4
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%
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9.1
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%
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Barclays selected the comparable MLPs listed above because their business and operating profiles are
reasonably similar to that of SXL. However, because of the inherent differences between the business, operations and prospects of SXL and those of the selected comparable companies, Barclays believed that it was inappropriate to, and therefore
did not, rely solely on the quantitative results of the selected comparable company analysis. Accordingly, Barclays also made certain qualitative judgments concerning differences between the business, financial and operating characteristics and
prospects of SXL and the selected comparable companies that could affect the public trading values of each in order to provide a context in which to consider the results of the quantitative analysis. These qualitative judgments related primarily to
the differing sizes, growth prospects, profitability levels and degrees of operational risk between SXL and the selected MLPs included in the selected comparable company analysis. The equity value range for the SXL common units yielded by the SXL
comparable company analysis implied a reference equity value range for SXL of $26.00 to $33.00 per SXL common unit.
Using the implied
reference equity value per unit ranges for each of ETP and SXL, Barclays derived a reference implied exchange ratio range of 1.1212x to 1.7308x without Expected Synergies, and 1.0955x to 1.6870x with Expected Synergies.
Barclays noted that the exchange ratio of 1.5000x to be offered to unaffiliated ETP unitholders in the proposed transaction was in line with
the implied equity value range per ETP common unit and the implied exchange ratio range yielded by Barclays selected comparable companies analysis.
Selected Precedent Transactions Analysis
Barclays reviewed and compared the purchase prices and financial multiples paid in selected other transactions that Barclays deemed relevant
based on its experience with merger and acquisition transactions, specifically in the MLP industry. Barclays chose such MLP merger transactions based on, among other things, the similarity of the applicable companies to ETP and SXL with respect
principally to size and operational focus
89
and because the organizations involved are all structured as MLPs. Each of the selected transactions was a merger of two MLPs that was announced between October 1997 and October 2016. None of the
transactions selected based on the criteria were subsequently excluded in conducting this analysis. The following list sets forth the transactions analyzed based on such characteristics:
|
|
|
Target/Acquiror
|
|
Announcement Date
|
PennTex Midstream Partners, LP / Energy Transfer
Partners, L.P.
|
|
October 2016
|
|
|
JP Energy Partners LP / American Midstream
Partners, LP
|
|
October 2016
|
|
|
Markwest Energy Partners, LP / MPLX LP
|
|
July 2015
|
|
|
Crestwood Midstream Partners, LP / Crestwood
Equity Partners, LP
|
|
May 2015
|
|
|
Regency Energy Partners LP / Energy Transfer
Partners, L.P.
|
|
January 2015
|
|
|
Atlas Pipeline Partners, LP / Targa Resources
Partners, LP
|
|
October 2014
|
|
|
Oiltanking Partners, LP / Enterprise Products
Partners, LP
|
|
October 2014
|
|
|
Williams Partners, LP / Access Midstream Partners,
LP
|
|
June 2014
|
|
|
PVR Partners, LP / Regency Energy Partners
LP
|
|
October 2013
|
|
|
Crestwood Midstream Partners, LP / Inergy
Midstream, LP
|
|
May 2013
|
|
|
Copano Energy, LLC / Kinder Morgan Energy
Partners, LP
|
|
January 2013
|
|
|
Duncan Energy Partners, LP / Enterprise Products
Partners, LP
|
|
April 2011
|
|
|
TEPPCO Partners, LP / Enterprise Products
Partners, LP
|
|
June 2009
|
|
|
Pacific Energy Partners, LP / Plains All American
Pipeline, LP
|
|
June 2006
|
|
|
Kaneb Pipe Line Partners, LP / Valero LP
|
|
November 2004
|
|
|
Gulfterra Energy Partners, LP / Enterprise
Products Partners, LP
|
|
December 2003
|
|
|
Santa Fe Pacific Pipeline Partners, LP / Kinder
Morgan
Energy Partners, LP
|
|
October 1997
|
Using publicly available information, Barclays calculated and analyzed the multiples of enterprise value, or
EV, to last twelve month (LTM) earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or LTM EBITDA, represented by the prices paid in selected precedent transactions. The results of the selected
precedent transactions analysis are summarized below:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
EV/LTM EBITDA
|
|
|
|
Low
|
|
|
Median
|
|
|
Mean
|
|
|
High
|
|
Enterprise Value as a Multiple of:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
LTM EBITDA
|
|
|
9.2x
|
|
|
|
15.5x
|
|
|
|
16.2x
|
|
|
|
25.9x
|
|
The reasons for and the circumstances surrounding each of the selected precedent transactions analyzed were
diverse and there are inherent differences between the businesses, operations, financial conditions and prospects of ETP, SXL, and the MLPs included in the selected precedent transactions analysis. Accordingly, Barclays believed that a purely
quantitative selected precedent transactions analysis would not be particularly meaningful in the context of considering the proposed transaction. Barclays therefore made qualitative judgments concerning differences between the characteristics of
the selected precedent transactions and the proposed transaction which would affect the acquisition values of the selected target companies and ETP and SXL. ETPs and SXLs LTM EBITDA were based on the ETP Projections and the SXL
Projections, respectively, for the four quarters ending December 31, 2016, but the ETP LTM EBITDA was adjusted to remove 90.05% of the cash
90
distributions related to the SXL incentive distribution rights and general partner interest of SXL received by ETP (which is payable by ETP to ETE through distributions on the ETP Class H
units that are owned by ETE). Based upon these judgments, Barclays selected precedent transactions analysis yielded a reference equity value range for the ETP common units of $34.00 to $41.00 per ETP common unit and a reference equity value
range for the SXL common units of $17.00 to $24.50 per SXL common unit.
Using the implied reference equity value per unit ranges for each
of the ETP common units and the SXL common units, Barclays also derived a reference implied exchange ratio range of 1.3878x to 2.4118x.
Barclays noted that the exchange ratio of 1.5000x to be offered to unaffiliated ETP unitholders in the proposed transaction was in line with
the implied equity value range per ETP common unit and the implied exchange ratio range yielded by Barclays selected precedent transactions analysis.
Analysis of Equity Research Analyst Price Targets
Barclays reviewed and compared, as of November 18, 2016, the publicly available price targets of ETP common units and SXL common units
published by equity research analysts associated with various Wall Street firms, of which there were 14 (including Barclays equity research analyst price targets for each of ETP and SXL). The research analysts price targets per ETP
common unit ranged from $36.00 to $55.00 and per SXL common unit ranged from $26.00 to $44.00. The publicly available share price targets published by such equity research analysts do not necessarily reflect the current market trading prices for ETP
common units or SXL common units and these estimates are subject to uncertainties, including future financial performance of ETP and SXL and future market conditions. Using the range of research analyst price targets per ETP common unit and SXL
common unit, Barclays also derived a reference implied exchange ratio range of 0.8182x to 2.1154x. Barclays noted that the exchange ratio of 1.5000x to be offered in the proposed transaction was in line with the implied equity value range per ETP
common unit and the implied exchange ratio range yielded by Barclays research estimate analysis.
Historical Common Unit
Trading Analysis
To provide background information and perspective with respect to the historical unit prices of ETP common units
and SXL common units, Barclays reviewed the daily historical closing unit prices of ETP common units and SXL common units for the period from May 18, 2016 to November 18, 2016. Barclays analyzed the ratio of the daily closing price per ETP common
unit to the corresponding closing price per SXL common unit of SXL over such period. Over the period, the implied relative exchange ratio ranged from a low of 1.2386x to a high of 1.5032x SXL common units per ETP common unit. In addition, Barclays
reviewed the implied relative exchange ratio of the closing price per ETP common unit and closing price per SXL common unit based on November 18, 2016 closing prices and 5-day, 10-day, 20-day and 30-day volume weighted average prices
(VWAP), respectively, as of November 18, 2016. This analysis implied relative exchange ratios ranging from a low of 1.3655x to a high of 1.5032x SXL common units per ETP common unit, which Barclays noted was in line with the exchange
ratio of 1.5000x to be offered to unaffiliated ETP unitholders in the proposed transaction.
91
Premiums Analysis
In order to provide background information and perspective to, and to assess the implied premium offered to unaffiliated ETP unitholders in the
proposed transaction, Barclays reviewed and analyzed the implied premium levels in the proposed transaction based on the exchange ratios as of November 18, 2016 closing prices and the 5-day, 10-day, 20-day and 30-day VWAP of ETP common units and SXL
common units. The table below sets forth the summary results of the analysis:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Heads-Up
Exchange Ratio
|
|
|
Implied Premium /
(Discount) to Historical
Heads-Up Exchange
Ratio
|
|
Proposed Transaction
|
|
|
1.5000x
|
|
|
|
|
%
|
Current (11/18/2016)
|
|
|
1.5032x
|
|
|
|
(0.22
|
%)
|
5-Day VWAP
|
|
|
1.4272x
|
|
|
|
5.10
|
%
|
10-Day VWAP
|
|
|
1.4107x
|
|
|
|
6.33
|
%
|
20-Day VWAP
|
|
|
1.4073x
|
|
|
|
6.59
|
%
|
30-Day VWAP
|
|
|
1.3655x
|
|
|
|
9.85
|
%
|
Pro Forma Merger Consequences Analysis
Barclays reviewed and analyzed the pro forma impact of the transaction on projected distributable cash flow (DCF) and distributions
of the combined company for each of 2017, 2018, and 2019. Barclays performed this analysis based on the ETP Projections, SXL Projections, and with respect to ETE, based on the ETP Projections and SXL Projections, taking into account cash flows
derived from ETEs other subsidiaries per ETP management, and the IDR Projected Subsidies and taking into account the Expected Synergies, using pro forma EBITDA for the combined company of $5,144 million, $7,475 million and $8,178 million for
the remainder of 2017 (assuming a closing date of March 31, 2017), 2018 and 2019, respectively. EBITDA is a non-GAAP financial performance measure that subtracts from Consolidated EBITDA amount related to less than wholly owned subsidiaries and adds
back cash distributions from said entities. Based upon the IDR Projected Subsidies, Barclays assumed that ETE will provide total incentive distribution subsidies of $656 million in 2017, $153 million in 2018 and $128 million in 2019 and that $33
million of annual incentive distribution subsidies will remain in effect in perpetuity, consistent with the current incentive distribution subsidies in place at ETP. In connection with this analysis, Barclays noted that the implied pro forma debt to
EBITDA ratio for SXL was 4.9x, 4.0x and 3.7x for 2017, 2018 and 2019, respectively, for ETP was 5.2x, 4.4x and 4.1x for 2017, 2018 and 2019, respectively, and for ETE, the pro forma consolidated debt to EBITDA ratio was 5.7x, 4.7x and 4.3x for 2017,
2018 and 2019, respectively. With respect to the pro forma analysis using ETP Projections and SXL Projections, Barclays noted that pro forma per unit distributions for the combined company would be dilutive to ETP standalone in each of 2017, 2018,
and 2019, respectively. For SXL, with respect to the pro forma analysis based on ETP Projections and SXL Projections, Barclays noted that per unit distributions for the combined company would be accretive to SXL standalone in each of 2017, 2018, and
2019. Additionally, Barclays noted the pro forma dilution indicated to result from the proposed transaction under the pro forma merger consequence analysis relative to standalone ETP common unit distributions per the ETP Projections would be
less than the distribution reduction arising from ETP Distribution Reduction Case, which ETP management stated would be the likely course of action in the absence of the proposed transaction, in 2017 and approximately neutral relative to such
reduction in per ETP common unit distributions arising from ETP Distribution Reduction Case in each of 2018 and 2019. Barclays further noted the pro forma dilution indicated to result from the proposed transaction under the pro forma merger
consequence analysis relative to standalone ETP distributable cash flow per ETP common unit per the ETP Projections would be less than the reduction in distributable cash flow per ETP common unit arising from ETP Distribution Reduction Case, which
ETP management stated would be the likely course of action in the absence of the proposed transaction, in 2017, approximately neutral relative to distributable cash flow per ETP common unit arising from ETP Case in 2018 and accretive relative to
distributable cash flow per ETP common unit arising from ETP Distribution Reduction Case in 2019. With respect to ETE, Barclays noted that the pro forma dilution indicated to result from the proposed transaction under the pro forma merger
consequence analysis relative to standalone ETE distributable cash flow per ETE common
92
unit would be less than the reduction in distributable cash flow per ETE common unit arising from ETP Distribution Reduction Case in 2017, less than the reduction in distributable cash flow per
ETE common unit arising from ETP Distribution Reduction Case in 2018 and accretive relative to distributable cash flow per ETE common unit arising from ETP Distribution Reduction Case in 2019. The tables below provide a pro forma comparison of the
ETP Status Quo Case relative to the ETP Distribution Reduction Case and a comparison of the pro forma consequences of the proposed transaction to SXL, ETP and ETE as compared to the ETP Status Quo Case.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Status
Quo Case
-- Metric
Per Unit
|
|
|
Distribution
Reduction
Case -- Metric
Per Unit
|
|
|
Distribution
Reduction Case
-- Percentage
Change Relative
To ETP Status
Quo Case
|
|
|
Proposed
Transaction --
Metric Per Unit
|
|
|
Proposed
Transaction
-- Percentage
Change
Relative
To
ETP Status
Quo Case
|
|
Pro Forma Impact to SXL
|
|
2017E DCF /
Common Unit
|
|
$
|
2.27
|
|
|
|
NA
|
|
|
|
NA
|
|
|
$
|
2.51
|
|
|
|
10.5
|
%
|
|
|
2018E DCF /
Common Unit
|
|
$
|
2.55
|
|
|
|
NA
|
|
|
|
NA
|
|
|
$
|
2.70
|
|
|
|
5.9
|
%
|
|
|
2019E DCF /
Common Unit
|
|
$
|
2.77
|
|
|
|
NA
|
|
|
|
NA
|
|
|
$
|
2.90
|
|
|
|
4.6
|
%
|
|
|
2017E
Distribution /
Common Unit
|
|
$
|
2.17
|
|
|
|
NA
|
|
|
|
NA
|
|
|
$
|
2.38
|
|
|
|
9.9
|
%
|
|
|
2018E
Distribution /
Common Unit
|
|
$
|
2.32
|
|
|
|
NA
|
|
|
|
NA
|
|
|
$
|
2.50
|
|
|
|
7.4
|
%
|
|
|
2019E
Distribution /
Common Unit
|
|
$
|
2.49
|
|
|
|
NA
|
|
|
|
NA
|
|
|
$
|
2.65
|
|
|
|
6.2
|
%
|
Pro Forma Impact to ETP
|
|
2017E DCF /
Common Unit
|
|
$
|
3.92
|
|
|
$
|
3.55
|
|
|
|
(9.6
|
%)
|
|
$
|
3.76
|
|
|
|
(4.1
|
%)
|
|
|
2018E DCF /
Common Unit
|
|
$
|
4.02
|
|
|
$
|
4.04
|
|
|
|
0.3
|
%
|
|
$
|
4.05
|
|
|
|
0.6
|
%
|
|
|
2019E DCF /
Common Unit
|
|
$
|
4.26
|
|
|
$
|
4.28
|
|
|
|
0.5
|
%
|
|
$
|
4.35
|
|
|
|
2.3
|
%
|
|
|
2017E
Distribution /
Common Unit
|
|
$
|
4.22
|
|
|
$
|
3.37
|
|
|
|
(20.1
|
%)
|
|
$
|
3.57
|
|
|
|
(15.3
|
%)
|
|
|
2018E
Distribution /
Common Unit
|
|
$
|
4.22
|
|
|
$
|
3.75
|
|
|
|
(11.1
|
%)
|
|
$
|
3.75
|
|
|
|
(11.3
|
%)
|
|
|
2019E
Distribution /
Common Unit
|
|
$
|
4.22
|
|
|
$
|
3.98
|
|
|
|
(5.7
|
%)
|
|
$
|
3.97
|
|
|
|
(6.0
|
%)
|
Pro Forma Impact to ETE
|
|
2017E DCF/
Common Unit
|
|
$
|
1.22
|
|
|
$
|
1.19
|
|
|
|
(2.8
|
%)
|
|
$
|
1.19
|
|
|
|
(2.1
|
%)
|
|
|
2018E DCF/
Common Unit
|
|
$
|
1.81
|
|
|
$
|
1.54
|
|
|
|
(15.0
|
%)
|
|
$
|
1.75
|
|
|
|
(3.6
|
%)
|
|
|
2019E DCF/
Common Unit
|
|
$
|
1.96
|
|
|
$
|
1.81
|
|
|
|
(7.8
|
%)
|
|
$
|
2.01
|
|
|
|
2.3
|
%
|
93
General
Barclays is an internationally recognized investment banking firm and, as part of its investment banking activities, is regularly engaged in
the valuation of businesses and their securities in connection with mergers and acquisitions, investments for passive and control purposes, negotiated underwritings, competitive bids, secondary distributions of listed and unlisted securities,
private placements and valuations for estate, corporate and other purposes. The ETP Conflicts Committee selected Barclays because of its familiarity with ETP and SXL, and because of Barclays qualifications, reputation and experience in the
valuation of businesses and securities in connection with mergers and acquisitions generally, knowledge of the industries in which ETP and SXL operate, as well as substantial experience in transactions comparable to the proposed transaction.
Barclays is acting as financial advisor to the ETP Conflicts Committee in connection with the proposed transaction. As compensation for its
services in connection with the proposed transaction, ETP will pay Barclays a fee of $7.5 million, conditioned upon and payable upon closing of the proposed transaction, which is referred to as the Transaction Fee. In addition, ETP paid
Barclays a fee of $1 million upon delivery of the opinion, which is referred to as the Opinion Fee. The Opinion Fee was not contingent upon the conclusion of Barclays opinion and the Opinion Fee is creditable against the
Transaction Fee upon the closing of the proposed transaction. In addition, the ETP Conflicts Committee, in its sole discretion, will consider whether to cause ETP to pay Barclays, based on the ETP Conflicts Committees assessment of the quality
and quantity of work performed, and value added by, Barclays in connection with its engagement with the ETP Conflicts Committee, an additional discretionary fee of up to $1 million (payable with the Transaction Fee). In addition, ETP has agreed
to reimburse Barclays for a portion of its reasonable expenses incurred in connection with the proposed transaction (not to exceed $150,000 without the prior consent of the ETP Conflicts Committee, not to be unreasonably withheld; provided that the
foregoing expense cap will not limit or modify ETPs indemnification obligations pursuant to the engagement letter entered into by Barclays and the ETP Conflicts Committee) and to indemnify Barclays for certain liabilities that may arise out of
its engagement by the ETP Conflicts Committee and the rendering of Barclays opinion as set forth in Barclays engagement letter with the ETP Conflicts Committee. Barclays has performed various investment banking and financial services for
ETP, ETE, SXL and their affiliates in the past, and Barclays expects to perform such services in the future, and has received, and expects to receive, customary fees for such services. Specifically, since January 2014, Barclays has performed the
following investment banking and financial services: (i) agent on ETPs $1.5 billion 2016 ATM equity offering program; (ii) bookrunner on ETPs approximately $3 billion senior notes offering; (iii) financial advisor to the ETP Conflicts
Committee on ETPs acquisition of Regency Energy Partners LP; (iv) agent on ETPs $1.5 billion 2015 ATM equity offering program; (v) financial advisor to the ETP Conflicts Committee on ETPs acquisition of the Bakken Pipeline project
from ETE; (vi) a financial advisor to the ETP Conflicts Committee on ETPs divestiture of Mid-Atlantic Convenience Stores, LLC to Sunoco LP (in which ETE acquired the membership interest in the general partner of Sunoco LP from ETP in July
2015); (vii) agent on ETPs $1.5 billion 2014 ATM equity offering program; (viii) financial advisor to ETP on its acquisition of Susser Holdings Corp.; (ix) bookrunner for ETEs $400 million term loan offering in 2014; (x) bookrunner on
SXLs 2015 approximately $560 million equity offering; (xi) bookrunner on SXLs 2016 approximately $650 million block equity offering; (xii) placement agent in SXLs $1 billion 2014 equity offering program; (xiii) bookrunner on
SXLs 2014 approximately $373 million equity offering; (xiv) bookrunner on SXLs 2014 $1 billion notes offering; and (xv) Barclays is currently a lender under ETPs, ETEs, SXLs and Sunoco LPs existing revolving
credit facilities. In respect of these services, Barclays received fees since January 2014 of (a) less than $1 million from ETE; (b) approximately $12 million to $15 million from SXL; (c) approximately $22 million to $24 million from ETP (including
fees received from PennTex Midstream Partners, LP, which ETP acquired in October 2016, and excluding any fees paid or payable in respect of the proposed transaction) and (d) approximately $2 million to $3.5 million from Sunoco LP. Barclays
disclosed the nature of its relationship and engagements for ETP, ETE, SXL and their affiliates and the amount and nature of the fees it received from such parties to the ETP Conflicts Committee on or about November 4, 2016, and such relationships
and fees were discussed at various times throughout November 4 to November 9, 2016 by the ETP Conflicts Committee with management and the ETP Conflict Committees legal counsel. See The MergerBackground of the Merger
beginning on page 66 of this
94
proxy statement/prospectus. Barclays subsequently disclosed such information directly to the ETP Conflicts Committee in its presentation dated November 20, 2016.
Barclays and its affiliates engage in a wide range of businesses from investment and commercial banking, lending, asset management and other
financial and non-financial services. In the ordinary course of its business, Barclays and its affiliates may actively trade and effect transactions in the equity, debt and/or other securities (and any derivatives thereof) and financial instruments
(including loans and other obligations) of ETP, ETE and SXL and their respective affiliates for Barclays own account and for the accounts of Barclays customers and, accordingly, may at any time hold long or short positions and
investments in such securities and financial instruments
Unaudited Financial Projections of ETP
ETP does not as a matter of course make public projections as to earnings or other results. However, the management of ETP has prepared
prospective financial information to assist the ETP Board and the ETP Conflicts Committee in evaluating ETPs operations and prospects, and for use in connection with discussions with third parties regarding possible combination transactions.
The accompanying summary prospective financial information was not prepared with a view toward complying with United States generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), the published guidelines of the SEC regarding projections, with
a view toward public disclosure or with a view toward complying with the guidelines established by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants with respect to prospective financial information, but, in the view of ETPs management
was, based on certain growth assumptions, prepared on a reasonable basis, reflected the best currently available estimates and judgments, and presented, to the best of ETPs managements knowledge and belief, the expected course of action
and the expected future financial performance of ETP. However, this information is not fact. None of the unaudited financial projections reflect any impact of the proposed transaction.
Neither SXLs nor ETPs independent auditors, any other independent accountants nor any of their other respective advisors, have
compiled, examined or performed any procedures with respect to the prospective financial information contained herein, nor have they expressed any opinion or any other form of assurance on such information or its achievability, and assume no
responsibility for the prospective financial information. The reports of the independent registered public accounting firms incorporated by reference into this proxy statement/prospectus relate to the historical financial information of SXL and ETP,
respectively. Such reports do not extend to the unaudited financial projections and should not be read to do so.
In developing the ETP
unaudited financial projections set forth below (the ETP Unaudited Financial Projections), the management of ETP made numerous material assumptions with respect to ETP for the periods covered by the projections, including, but not
limited to, the following:
|
|
|
the EBITDA and maintenance capital expenditures from existing assets and business activities;
|
|
|
|
organic growth opportunities, and the amounts and timing of related capital expenditures and future EBITDA to be generated from such organic growth opportunities;
|
|
|
|
the credit risk of customers and the potential impact from future deteriorations of credit quality, including the potential for bankruptcy, of certain customers and the financial impact to ETP related thereto;
|
|
|
|
outstanding debt and debt and equity issuance during applicable periods, and the availability and cost of debt and equity capital;
|
|
|
|
the amount and timing of debt repayments;
|
|
|
|
the amount of incentive distribution subsidies that ETE provides to ETP; and
|
|
|
|
other general business, market, and financial assumptions.
|
95
The principal quantifiable assumptions material to the unaudited financial projections of ETP
include assumptions regarding pricing of crude oil and natural gas. In connection with the unaudited financial projections of ETP, the following assumptions related to price were made:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2017
|
|
|
2018
|
|
|
2019
|
|
Price of Crude Oil
|
|
$
|
50.00
|
|
|
$
|
55.00
|
|
|
$
|
60.00
|
|
Price of Natural Gas
|
|
$
|
3.11
|
|
|
$
|
3.01
|
|
|
$
|
3.00
|
|
In addition, as set forth in the ETP managements written statement (the ETP Management Written
Statement), ETP management has recently reviewed ETPs projected results of operations, capital expenditures, debt and equity funding requirements, leverage metrics and distributable cash flow per ETP common unit, including the projected
financial information provided to Barclays in connection with its role as the financial advisor to the ETP Conflicts Committee. In connection with this review, ETP management has evaluated the effects of the significant levels of equity issuances
and borrowings that have occurred to fund capital expenditures related to organic growth projects and acquisitions and that will continue to occur through the completion of this $10.0 billion growth capital program, and has determined that:
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|
|
this significant growth capital expenditure program is expected to generate substantial cash flow from long-term contracts supporting such projects in future years as such projects are completed; however, due to delays
in the completion of some of these projects, which have delayed cash flows, and the increased interest expense on additional borrowings and the additional cash distributions on newly issued ETP common units to fund these projects, ETPs
leverage has increased and its cash distribution coverage has decreased;
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|
ETP has several options to manage its leverage levels and its cash distribution coverage ratio, including the possibility of seeking additional incentive distribution subsidies from ETE or reducing its quarterly cash
distributions; and
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|
if the proposed transaction with SXL is not consummated, ETP would need to consider its other alternatives and, in the event that ETE is unwilling or unable to provide additional incentive distribution subsidies, ETP
management would likely consider a reduction in quarterly cash distributions in the range of 15% to 25% in order to reduce ETPs leverage ratios and increase its distribution coverage ratio to maintain its investment grade rating, support its
long-term financial health and promote its future distribution growth potential, and in the event that ETP were to make such cash distributions reductions in this range during this period, it is likely that ETE would seek to negotiate a reduction in
the incentive distribution subsidies currently in effect in order for ETE to preserve its existing credit ratings.
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The
estimates and assumptions underlying the ETP Unaudited Financial Projections are inherently uncertain and, though considered reasonable by the management of ETP as of the date of the preparation of such unaudited financial projections, are subject
to a wide variety of significant business, economic, regulatory and competitive risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in the unaudited financial projections, including, among other things,
the matters described in the sections entitled Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Statements and Risk Factors beginning on pages 37 and 30, respectively. Accordingly, there can be no assurance that the ETP
Unaudited Financial Projections are indicative of the future performance of ETP, or that actual results will not differ materially from the results presented in the ETP Unaudited Financial Projections. Inclusion of the ETP Unaudited Financial
Projections in this proxy statement/prospectus should not be regarded as a representation by any person that the results contained in the ETP Unaudited Financial Projections will be achieved.
The unaudited financial projections were prepared solely for internal use to assist in the evaluation of the merger. Such projections are
inherently subjective in nature, susceptible to interpretation and accordingly, contemplated results may not be achieved. While presented with numerical specificity, the unaudited financial projections reflect numerous estimates and assumptions
with respect to future industry performance under various industry scenarios as well as assumptions for competition, general business, economic, market and financial conditions and matters specific to the businesses of SXL and ETP, all of which are
difficult to predict
96
and many of which are beyond the preparing parties control. Accordingly, there can be no assurance that the assumptions made in preparing any particular projection will prove
accurate. There will be differences between actual and forecasted results, and the differences may be material. The risk that these uncertainties and contingencies could cause the assumptions to fail to be reflective of actual results is
further increased due to the length of time over which these assumptions apply. The assumptions in early periods have a compounding effect on the projections shown in later periods. Thus, any failure of an assumption to be reflective of
actual results in an early period would have a greater effect on the projected results failing to be reflective of actual events in later periods. While the SXL and ETP boards, Conflicts Committees and their advisors used the following
projections as a tool in evaluating the merger, they did so with a thorough understanding of the foregoing limitations.
In
light of the foregoing factors and the uncertainties
inherent in the ETP Unaudited Financial
Projections, the unaffiliated ETP unitholders are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the ETP Unaudited Financial Projections.
The ETP Unaudited Financial Projections are not included in this proxy statement/prospectus to induce any unaffiliated ETP unitholders to vote
in favor of any of the proposals at the ETP special meeting.
The following table sets forth select projected financial information
derived from financial projections prepared by ETP management to reflect the base case for the financial performance for ETP based on the assumptions that the proposed transaction with SXL is not consumated and ETP maintains its cash distribution
per ETP common unit at the current cash distribution rate of $4.22 per common unit on an annualized basis (the ETP Status Quo Case Projections).
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Year Ending December 31,
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2017E
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|
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2018E
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2019E
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($ in millions, except per unit amounts)
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Consolidated EBITDA
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$
|
7,071
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|
|
$
|
8,560
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|
|
$
|
9,223
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EBITDA
|
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$
|
5,025
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|
|
$
|
5,984
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|
|
$
|
6,485
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Distributable cash flow(1)
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|
$
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3,630
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|
$
|
4,560
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|
|
$
|
5,039
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Distributable cash flow per ETP common unit(2)
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$
|
3.92
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$
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4.02
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$
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4.26
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Distribution per ETP common unit
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$
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4.22
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$
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4.22
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$
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4.22
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Distribution coverage ratio(3)
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0.93x
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|
|
0.96x
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|
1.02x
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(1)
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Distributable cash flow is defined as EBITDA less maintenance capital expenditures, interest expense and cash income taxes paid and the add back of non-cash and transaction-related expenses for ETPs wholly owned
subsidiaries.
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(2)
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Gives effect to incentive distribution subsidies of $656.0 million, $138.0 million and $128.0 million for the years ending December 31, 2017, 2018 and 2019, respectively, previously agreed to by ETE.
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(3)
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Distribution coverage ratio is distributable cash flow divided by total cash distributed in respect of limited partner and general partner interests.
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The following table presents select projected financial information derived from financial projections proposed by ETP management based upon
the ETP Status Quo Case Projections as adjusted to reflect (i) a hypothetical reduction in distributions in respect of ETP common units by approximately 20% in 2017 and that thereafter distributions in respect of ETP common units are made on a basis
that results in ETP maintaining a cash coverage ratio of 1.1x, and (ii) a hypothetical removal of a $465 million incentive distribution subsidy that was in place during 2017 (the ETP Distribution Reduction Case Projections). The $465
million incentive distribution subsidy represents the 2017 amount of the recent incentive distribution subsidy announced on August 3, 2016. ETP management determined that it was likely that this particular subsidy would be reversed, based on the
reduced distributions to ETE under the ETP Distribution Reduction Case Projections. While any reversal would require the consent of ETP, it is ETP managements belief that a reversal would be necessary in order for ETE to maintain the leverage
metrics required to sustain its current credit rating. Maintaining ETEs credit rating is important for preserving the credit rating of ETP due to the relationship between the credit rating of a general partner and the credit rating of the
underlying master limited partnership under existing rating agency policies. Negative credit ratings actions at ETE could have a flow through effect, creating negative ratings pressure at ETP. The hypothetical distribution reduction
was intended to prevent such negative ratings pressure from impacting ETP. Accordingly, the removal of the incentive distribution subsidy is consistent with the thesis of the ETP Distribution Reduction Case Projections.
97
The ETP Distribution Reduction Case Projections were prepared to demonstrate and evaluate the
impact of a 15% to 25% reduction in the distributions in respect of ETP common units distribution per the ETP Management Written Statement, the primary effect of which is to reduce the number of ETP common units that would otherwise be necessary to
issue in order to improve ETPs debt to EBITDA ratio for the purpose of allowing ETP to maintain its investment grade ratings.
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Year Ending December 31,
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2017E
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2018E
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|
|
2019E
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|
|
($ in millions, except per unit amounts)
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Consolidated EBITDA
|
|
$
|
7,071
|
|
|
$
|
8,560
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|
|
$
|
9,223
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|
EBITDA
|
|
$
|
5,025
|
|
|
$
|
5,984
|
|
|
$
|
6,485
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Distributable cash flow
|
|
$
|
3,632
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|
|
$
|
4,575
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$
|
5,068
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Distributable cash flow per ETP common unit
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$
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3.55
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$
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4.04
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$
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4.28
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Distribution per ETP common unit
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$
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3.37
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$
|
3.75
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|
|
$
|
3.98
|
|
Debt to EBITDA Ratio(1)
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|
|
5.1x
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|
|
4.2x
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|
|
3.9x
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(1)
|
The Debt to EBITDA ratio is calculated by dividing total partnership non-joint venture debt by EBITDA.
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Consolidated EBITDA is a non-GAAP financial performance measure that is defined as total partnership earnings before interest, taxes,
depreciation, depletion, amortization and other non-cash items, such as non-cash compensation expense, gains and losses on disposals of assets, the allowance for equity funds used during construction, unrealized gains and losses on commodity risk
management activities, non-cash impairment charges, losses on extinguishments of debt and other non-operating income or expense items. Unrealized gains and losses on commodity risk management activities include unrealized gains and losses on
commodity derivatives and inventory fair value adjustments (excluding lower of cost or market adjustments). Consolidated EBITDA reflects amounts for less than wholly-owned subsidiaries based on 100% of the subsidiaries results of operations
and for unconsolidated affiliates based on ETPs proportionate ownership. Consolidated EBITDA is reported on a consistent basis as Adjusted EBITDA in ETP public filings. EBITDA is a non-GAAP financial performance measure that subtracts from
Consolidated EBITDA amounts related to less than wholly owned subsidiaries and adds back cash distributions from said entities. Distributable cash flow is a non-GAAP financial performance measure that represents the distributable cash flow accruing
to ETP. Distributable cash flow per ETP common unit is a non-GAAP financial performance measure that represents the distributable cash flow accruing to each ETP common unit. Non-GAAP financial measures should not be considered in isolation
from, or as a substitute for, financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. ETPs calculation of these non-GAAP measures may differ from others in its industry and is not necessarily comparable with similar titles used by other
companies.
ETP DOES NOT INTEND TO UPDATE OR OTHERWISE REVISE THE ETP UNAUDITED FINANCIAL PROJECTIONS TO REFLECT CIRCUMSTANCES EXISTING
AFTER THE DATE WHEN MADE OR TO REFLECT THE OCCURRENCE OF FUTURE EVENTS, EVEN IN THE EVENT THAT ANY OR ALL OF THE ASSUMPTIONS UNDERLYING SUCH ETP UNAUDITED FINANCIAL PROJECTIONS ARE NO LONGER APPROPRIATE.
Reasons of the SXL Conflicts Committee and the SXL Board for the Merger
The reasons for the SXL Conflicts Committee and the SXL Board approving the merger agreement and the merger on November 20, 2016, include:
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The value created in the merger for the SXL unitholders as a result of the expectation that the acquisition of ETP will provide SXL:
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the opportunity to extend its strategic footprint further upstream, to vertically integrate its NGL business and to realize potential benefits of controlling additional NGL volumes;
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benefits of additional scale and scope of business, including diversification of basin and geographic and product exposures;
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98
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an enhanced ability to manage risk associated with large scale investment opportunities;
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the ability to better capitalize on commercial synergies between the ETP and SXL businesses and to realize potential cost savings; and
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enhanced capital markets access.
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The expectation that, during at least the first three years following the merger, the distributions to be received by SXL common unitholders will be higher than the distributions that would have been received by SXL
common unitholders if the merger were not completed.
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The opportunity for SXL to benefit from any future earnings and growth of ETPs assets after the merger.
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The expectation that there should be relatively low execution risk in integrating ETPs and SXLs businesses due to existing shared services.
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The SXL Board also based its determination to approve the merger agreement and the merger, in part, on the unanimous recommendation of the SXL
Conflicts Committee that the SXL Board approve the merger agreement and the merger, following the SXL Conflicts Committees evaluation of the merger in consultation with its legal and financial advisors and with SXL management. The SXL Board
also consulted with its legal advisors prior to approving the merger agreement and the merger.
The foregoing discussion is not intended
to be exhaustive, and is only intended to address the principal factors considered by the SXL Conflicts Committee and the SXL Board in favor of the merger. In view of the number and variety of factors and the amount of information considered, the
SXL Conflicts Committee and the SXL Board did not find it practicable to, and did not make specific assessments of, quantify or otherwise assign relative weights to, the specific factors considered in reaching its determination. In addition, the SXL
Conflicts Committee and the SXL Board did not undertake to make any specific determination as to whether any particular factor, or any aspect of any particular factor, was favorable or unfavorable to its ultimate determination, and individual
members of the SXL Conflicts Committee and the SXL Board may have given different weights to different factors. The SXL Conflicts Committee and the SXL Board made their determinations based on the totality of information presented to, and the
investigation conducted by, the SXL Conflicts Committee and the SXL Board. It should be noted that certain statements and other information presented in this section are forward-looking in nature and, therefore, should be read in light of the
factors discussed under the heading Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Statements.
Unaudited
Financial Projections of SXL
SXL does not as a matter of course make public projections as to earnings or other results. However, the
management of SXL prepared prospective financial information to assist the SXL Board and the SXL Conflicts Committee and its advisors in evaluating SXLs operations and prospects and the potential merger, and these projections were provided to
the ETP Board and the ETP Conflicts Committee, and to Barclays as the financial advisor to the ETP Conflicts Committee, in connection with the analysis and negotiation of the merger. The accompanying summary prospective financial information was not
prepared with a view toward public disclosure or with a view toward complying with the guidelines established by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants with respect to prospective financial information, but, in the view of SXLs
management was, based on certain growth assumptions, prepared on a reasonable basis, reflected the best currently available estimates and judgments, and presented, to the best of SXLs managements knowledge and belief, the expected course
of action and the expected future financial performance of SXL. However, this information is not fact. None of the unaudited financial projections reflect any impact of the proposed transaction and have not been updated since the date of
preparation.
Neither SXLs nor ETPs independent auditors, nor any other independent accountants, have compiled, examined or
performed any procedures with respect to the prospective financial information contained herein, nor have they expressed any opinion or any other form of assurance on such information or its achievability, and assume no responsibility for the
prospective financial information. The reports of the independent registered
99
public accounting firms incorporated by reference into this proxy statement/prospectus relate to the historical financial information of SXL and ETP, respectively. Such reports do not extend to
the unaudited financial projections and should not be read to do so.
In developing the unaudited financial projections set forth below
(the SXL Unaudited Financial Projections), management of SXL made numerous material assumptions with respect to SXL for the periods covered by the projections, including, but not limited to, the following:
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the EBITDA and maintenance capital expenditures from existing assets and business activities;
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|
assumptions with respect to organic growth projects, including the timing of permitting, construction and start-up, and the amounts and timing of capital expenditures and EBITDA associated with such projects;
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|
the amount and timing of issuances of debt and equity securities, and the availability and cost of debt and equity capital;
|
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|
assumptions relating to the prices and production of, and demand for, crude oil, natural gas, NGLs, and other hydrocarbon and petrochemical products, and the commodities markets;
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|
the volumes of products handled and the margins associated with services and products provided to customers; and
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|
other general business, market and financial assumptions.
|
The principal quantifiable
assumptions material to the unaudited financial projections of SXL include assumptions regarding pricing of crude oil. In connection with the unaudited financial projections of SXL, the following assumptions related to price were made:
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2017
|
|
|
2018
|
|
|
2019
|
|
Price of Crude Oil
|
|
$
|
50.00
|
|
|
$
|
55.00
|
|
|
$
|
60.00
|
|
All of these assumptions involve variables making them difficult to predict, and most are beyond the control
of either SXL or ETP. Although management of SXL believes that there was a reasonable basis for the underlying assumptions related to the SXL Unaudited Financial Projections, any assumptions for near-term and long-term projected cases remain
uncertain, and the risk of inaccuracy increases with the length of the forecast period.
The estimates and assumptions underlying the SXL
Unaudited Financial Projections are inherently uncertain and, though considered reasonable by the management of SXL as of the date of the preparation of such projections, are subject to a wide variety of significant business, economic, regulatory
and competitive risks and uncertainties that are outside of the control of SXL and ETP and could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in the SXL Unaudited Financial Projections, including, among other things, the matters
described in the sections entitled Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Statements and Risk Factors beginning on pages 37 and 30, respectively. Accordingly, there can be no assurance that the projections are
indicative of the future performance of SXL, or that actual results will not differ materially from those presented in the SXL Unaudited Financial Projections. Inclusion of the SXL Unaudited Financial Projections in this proxy statement/prospectus
should not be regarded as a representation by any person that the results contained in the SXL Unaudited Financial Projections will be achieved.
The unaudited financial projections were prepared solely for internal use to assist in the evaluation of the merger. Such projections are
inherently subjective in nature, susceptible to interpretation and accordingly, contemplated results may not be achieved. While presented with numerical specificity, the unaudited financial projections reflect numerous estimates and assumptions with
respect to future industry performance under various industry scenarios as well as assumptions for competition, general business, economic, market and financial conditions and matters specific to the businesses of SXL and ETP, all of which are
difficult to predict and many of which are beyond the preparing parties control. Accordingly, there can be no assurance that the assumptions made in preparing any particular projection will prove accurate. There will be differences between
actual and forecasted results, and the differences may be material. The risk that these uncertainties and
100
contingencies could cause the assumptions to fail to be reflective of actual results is further increased due to the length of time over which these assumptions apply. The assumptions in early
periods have a compounding effect on the projections shown in later periods. Thus, any failure of an assumption to be reflective of actual results in an early period would have a greater effect on the projected results failing to be reflective of
actual events in later periods. While the SXL and ETP boards, Conflicts Committees and their advisors used the following projections as a tool in evaluating the merger, they did so with a thorough understanding of the foregoing limitations.
In
light of the foregoing factors and the uncertainties inherent in the SXL Unaudited Financial Projections, the unaffiliated ETP unitholders are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the SXL Unaudited Financial Projections.
The SXL Unaudited Financial Projections are not included in this proxy statement/prospectus in order to induce any unaffiliated ETP
unitholders to vote in favor of any of the proposals at the ETP special meeting.
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Year Ending December 31,
|
|
|
|
2017E
|
|
|
2018E
|
|
|
2019E
|
|
|
|
($ in millions, except per unit amounts)
|
|
EBITDA
|
|
$
|
1,698
|
|
|
$
|
2,043
|
|
|
$
|
2,256
|
|
Distributable cash flow
|
|
$
|
1,208
|
|
|
$
|
1,418
|
|
|
$
|
1,607
|
|
Distributable cash flow per SXL common unit
|
|
$
|
2.31
|
|
|
$
|
2.55
|
|
|
$
|
2.77
|
|
Distribution per common unit
|
|
$
|
2.17
|
|
|
$
|
2.32
|
|
|
$
|
2.49
|
|
EBITDA is a non-GAAP financial performance measure that represents pre-tax income, plus non-cash charges such
as depreciation, amortization and stock-based compensation and excludes the income and charges recorded on account of previously divested operations. Distributable cash flow is a non-GAAP financial performance measure that represents the
distributable cash flow accruing to SXL. Distributable cash flow per SXL common unit is a non-GAAP financial performance measure that represents the distributable cash flow accruing to each SXL common unit. Distribution per SXL common unit is a
non-GAAP financial performance measure that represents the distributions accruing to each SXL common unit. Non-GAAP financial measures should not be considered in isolation from, or as a substitute for, financial information presented in accordance
with GAAP. SXLs calculation of these non-GAAP measures may differ from others in its industry and is not necessarily comparable with similar titles used by other companies.
SXL DOES NOT INTEND TO UPDATE OR OTHERWISE REVISE THE SXL UNAUDITED FINANCIAL PROJECTIONS TO REFLECT CIRCUMSTANCES EXISTING AFTER THE DATE
WHEN MADE OR TO REFLECT THE OCCURRENCE OF FUTURE EVENTS, EVEN IN THE EVENT THAT ANY OR ALL OF THE ASSUMPTIONS UNDERLYING SUCH SXL UNAUDITED FINANCIAL PROJECTIONS ARE NO LONGER APPROPRIATE.
Interests of Directors and Executive Officers of ETP in the Merger
In considering the recommendation of the ETP Board that you vote to adopt the merger agreement, you should be aware that aside from their
interests as unitholders of ETP, ETPs directors and executive officers have interests in the merger that are different from, or in addition to, the interests of ETP unitholders generally. The members of the ETP Board were aware of and
considered these interests, among other matters, in evaluating and negotiating the merger agreement and the merger, and in recommending to the unitholders of ETP that the merger agreement be adopted. See Background of the Merger
and Recommendation of the ETP Board; Reasons for the Merger. ETPs unitholders should take these interests into account in deciding whether to vote FOR the adoption of the merger agreement. These interests are
described in more detail below, and certain of them are quantified in the narrative and the table below.
Existing Relationships of ETP GP LLC
Officers and Directors with ETE and SXL
ETE, as the sole member of ETP GP LLC, is entitled under the limited liability company
agreement of ETP GP LLC to appoint all of the directors of ETP GP LLC. Accordingly, ETE has appointed to the ETP Board and has the ability to remove from the ETP Board each of the directors of ETP GP LLC, including, subject to the
101
terms of the merger agreement restricting the removal of ETP Conflicts Committee members during the pendency of the merger agreement, each of the members of the ETP Conflicts Committee.
In addition, certain of the directors and executive officers of ETP GP LLC also serve as directors or executive officers of LE GP, LLC, the
general partner of ETE (ETE GP) and/or SXL GP, as set forth below:
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|
|
|
|
|
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Name
|
|
Position at ETP GP LLC
|
|
Position at SXL GP
|
|
Position at ETE GP
|
Kelcy L. Warren
|
|
Chief Executive
Officer and Chairman
of the Board of Directors
|
|
|
|
Chairman of the Board of Directors
|
Marshall S. (Mackie) McCrea, III
|
|
Director
|
|
Chairman of the
Board of Directors
|
|
Group Chief Operating Officer, Chief Commercial Officer and Director
|
Matthew S. Ramsey
|
|
President, Chief
Operating Officer and
Director
|
|
|
|
Director
|
Thomas E. Long
|
|
Chief Financial
Officer
|
|
|
|
Group Chief Financial Officer
|
Economic Interests of ETP GP LLC Officers and Directors in ETE and SXL
Certain of the directors and executive officers of ETP GP LLC hold common units in SXL and ETE, and thus may have economic interests in the
merger that are different from ETP common unitholders generally. Set forth below is a summary of the common unit ownership of each of the directors and executive officers of ETP GP LLC in ETP, SXL and ETE, as of March 23, 2017, the most recent
practicable date.
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Name
|
|
ETP Common Units
Beneficially Owned
|
|
|
SXL Common Units
Beneficially Owned
|
|
|
ETE Common Units
Beneficially Owned
|
|
Kelcy L. Warren(1)
|
|
|
21,167
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
187,739,220
|
|
Ted Collins, Jr.
|
|
|
114,624
|
|
|
|
23,404
|
|
|
|
344,532
|
|
Michael K. Grimm
|
|
|
27,104
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Marshall S. (Mackie) McCrea, III
|
|
|
351,710
|
|
|
|
58,495
|
|
|
|
2,347,200
|
|
Matthew S. Ramsey(2)
|
|
|
14,370
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
53,331
|
|
David K. Skidmore(3)
|
|
|
14,617
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4,000
|
|
Thomas E. Long
|
|
|
27,340
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
James M. Wright, Jr.
|
|
|
18,537
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
10,352
|
|
A. Troy Sturrock
|
|
|
11,182
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,000
|
|
(1)
|
Mr. Warren also owns 187,313,942 ETE convertible units. In March 2016, ETE completed a private offering of 329.3 million ETE convertible units to certain unitholders who elected to participate in a plan to forgo a
portion of future potential cash distributions on ETE common units participating in the plan for a period of up to nine fiscal quarters, commencing with distributions for the fiscal quarter ended March 31, 2016, and reinvest those distributions in
ETE convertible units (the Plan). Mr. Warren participated in the Plan with respect to substantially all of his ETE common units.
|
(2)
|
Mr. Ramsey also owns 51,317 ETE convertible units which he received as a result of his participation in the Plan with respect to substantially all of his ETE common units.
|
(3)
|
Mr. Skidmore also owns 4,000 ETE convertible units which he received as a result of his participation in the Plan with respect to all of his ETE common units.
|
Treatment of ETP Equity-Based Awards
Under the merger agreement, as with all holders of ETP restricted units, each ETP restricted unit held by ETPs directors and executive
officers that is outstanding as of immediately prior to the effective time will cease to relate to or represent a right to receive ETP common units and will be converted, at the effective time, into the right to receive an award of restricted units
relating to SXL common units on the same terms and conditions as were applicable to the corresponding award of ETP restricted units, except that the number of SXL common
102
units covered by the award will be equal to the number of ETP common units covered by the corresponding award of ETP restricted units multiplied by the exchange ratio, rounded up to the nearest
whole unit.
As of March 23, 2017, the ETP executive officers and directors held the following numbers of outstanding ETP restricted
units:
|
|
|
|
|
Name of Executive Officer
|
|
Number of
Outstanding ETP
Restricted Units
|
|
Kelcy L. Warren
|
|
|
|
|
Marshall S. (Mackie) McCrea, III
|
|
|
381,005
|
|
Matthew S. Ramsey
|
|
|
172,815
|
|
Thomas E. Long
|
|
|
69,332
|
|
James M. Wright
|
|
|
52,990
|
|
A. Troy Sturrock
|
|
|
26,781
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Name of Director
|
|
Number of
Outstanding ETP
Restricted Units
|
|
Ted Collins, Jr.
|
|
|
8,303
|
|
Michael K. Grimm
|
|
|
8,303
|
|
David K. Skidmore
|
|
|
8,879
|
|
Indemnification and Insurance
The ETP partnership agreement requires ETP, among other things, to indemnify the directors and executive officers of ETP GP LLC, the general
partner of ETP GP, against certain liabilities that may arise by reason of their service as directors or officers.
In addition, the
merger agreement provides that, for a period of six years from the effective time, ETP, the surviving entity, and ETP GP, the GP merger surviving entity, will indemnify, defend and hold harmless each officer or director of ETP, ETP GP LLC, SXL, SXL
GP or any of its subsidiaries and also with respect to any such person, in their capacity as a director, officer, employee, member, trustee or fiduciary of another corporation, foundation, partnership, joint venture, trust, pension or other employee
benefit plan or enterprise (whether or not such other entity or enterprise is affiliated with ETP) serving at the request of or on behalf of ETP, ETP GP LLC, SXL, SXL GP or any of its subsidiaries and together with such persons heirs,
executors or administrators against any cost or expenses (including attorneys fees), judgments, fines, losses, claims, damages or liabilities and amounts paid in settlement in connection with any actual or threatened claim, action, suit,
proceeding or investigation, whether civil, criminal, administrative, investigative or otherwise and whether or not such claim, action, suit, proceeding or investigation results in a formal civil or criminal litigation or regulatory action.
In addition, pursuant to the terms of the merger agreement, ETPs, ETP GP LLCs, SXLs or SXL GPs directors and executive
officers will be entitled to certain ongoing indemnification and coverage under directors and officers liability insurance policies from the surviving entity. Such indemnification and insurance coverage is further described in the
section entitled The Merger AgreementIndemnification; Directors and Officers Insurance.
New Arrangements with SXL
Following the completion of the merger, (i) Kelcy L. Warren, Chief Executive Officer of ETP, is expected to become the Chief
Executive Officer of SXL, (ii) Marshall S. (Mackie) McCrea, III, Group Chief Operating Officer and Chief Commercial Officer of ETE, is expected to become the Chief Commercial Officer of SXL, (iii) Matthew S. Ramsey, President and Chief Operating
Officer of ETP, is expected to become the President of SXL, and (iv) Thomas E. Long, Chief Financial Officer of ETP, is expected to become the Chief Financial Officer of SXL. SXL also expects that Michael J. Hennigan, the current President and
Chief Executive Officer of SXL, and other members of the SXL management team will continue in management roles of the combined company with
103
the current SXL business operations continuing to be headquartered in Philadelphia. Specifically, Mr. Hennigan is expected to serve as President, Crude, NGL and Refined Products following the
merger.
ETP GP Board Following the Merger
The current members of the ETP Board are expected to serve as members of the post-merger ETP Board following the merger, when the ETP Board
becomes responsible for managing ETP GP as the general partner of SXL.
Severance Plan
ETP GP and its affiliates have not entered into any employment agreements with executive officers of ETP or SXL, and the executive officers are
not expected to enter into any such agreements in connection with the merger. Executive officers participate in the Energy Transfer Partners GP, L.P. Severance Plan (the Severance Plan). The Severance Plan provides for payment of
certain severance benefits in the event of a Qualifying Termination (as that term is defined in the Severance Plan). In general, the Severance Plan provides payment of two weeks of annual base salary for each year or partial year of employment
service, up to a maximum of 52 weeks or one year of annual base salary (with a minimum of four weeks of annual base salary) and up to three months of continued group health insurance coverage. The Severance Plan also provides that additional
benefits in addition to those provided under the Severance Plan may be paid based on special circumstances, which additional benefits will be unique and non-precedent setting. The Severance Plan is available to all salaried employees on a
nondiscriminatory basis and is not related to or otherwise based on the merger.
In connection with the merger, ETP and SXL or their
affiliates intend to adopt the ETP/SXL Merger Severance Plan (the Merger Severance Plan), which will provide severance benefits to employees who incur a qualifying termination in connection with the merger. A qualifying
termination for purposes of the Merger Severance Plan include terminations of employment resulting from (i) a position being eliminated at, prior to or following closing as a result of the integration of the combined organization, (ii) a position
being transitioned to another employee on a future date as a result of the integration of the combined organization, or (iii) a decision by an employee not to accept an offer to relocate to a position in a location that is more than 50 miles from
the employees existing job location.
In general, the Merger Severance Plan provides payment of two weeks of base pay for each full
or partial year of continued service with ETP or SXL, as applicable, subject to certain minimum and maximum levels, which, for the executive officers is a minimum of 26 weeks and maximum of 52 weeks of base salary, and three months of continued
health insurance coverage and outplacement services. The Merger Severance Plan also provides for accelerated vesting of a specified portion of an employees outstanding awards under the existing long-term incentive plans maintained by ETP, SXL
or their affiliates. In the event of a qualifying termination of an executive officer, the executive officer would be entitled to accelerated vesting of 50% of the executives unvested ETP, SXL and/or Sunoco LP equity awards. Receipt of
severance under the Merger Severance Plan is subject to the employee executing and not revoking a release of claims. The merger is not currently expected to result in a qualifying termination for any of ETPs named executive officers; however,
benefits would be payable under the Merger Severance Plan if an executive officer does incur a qualifying termination in connection with the merger.
Quantification of Payments and Benefits to ETPs Named Executive Officers
The following table sets forth the information required by Item 402(t) of Regulation S-K regarding the compensation that is based on or
otherwise relates to the merger and that may be paid or become payable to ETPs named executive officers, which is referred to as the golden parachute compensation. The information set forth in the table below is intended to comply
with Item 402(t) of Regulation S-K, which requires disclosure of information about certain compensation for each of ETPs named executive officers that is based on or otherwise relates to the merger. Pursuant to SEC requirements, the
following disclosure assumes that each of the
104
named executive officers is terminated immediately following the closing if the merger. However, it is not presently anticipated that any of the named executive officers will be terminated in
connection with the merger.
The amounts indicated below are estimates based on the material assumptions described in the notes to the
table below, which may or may not actually occur. Some of these assumptions are based on information not currently available and, as a result, the actual amounts, if any, that may be paid or become payable to a named executive officer may differ
materially from the amounts set forth below. Furthermore, for purposes of calculating such amounts, ETP has assumed the following:
|
|
|
the relevant price per ETP common unit is $35.35, which is the average closing market price per ETP common unit as quoted on the NYSE over the first five business days following the first public announcement of the
merger on November 21, 2016;
|
|
|
|
the relevant price per SXL common unit is $25.52, which is the closing market price per SXL common unit as quoted on the NYSE on March 1, 2017, the last practicable date prior to the filing of this proxy
statement/prospectus;
|
|
|
|
the relevant price per Sunoco LP common unit is $25.01, which is the closing market price per Sunoco LP common unit as quoted on the NYSE on March 1, 2017, the last practicable date prior to the filing of this proxy
statement/prospectus;
|
|
|
|
the merger will close on March 1, 2017, the last practicable date prior to the filing of this proxy statement/prospectus; and
|
|
|
|
the named executive officers experience a qualifying termination immediately following the merger on March 1, 2017, the last practicable date prior to the filing of this proxy statement/prospectus.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Name
|
|
Cash
($)(1)
|
|
|
Equity ($)(2)
|
|
|
Perquisites/
Benefits
($)(3)
|
|
|
Total ($)
|
|
|
|
ETP
|
|
|
SXL
|
|
|
SUN
|
|
|
|
Kelcy L. Warren (4)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thomas E. Long
|
|
|
229,500
|
|
|
|
1,225,443
|
|
|
|
347,455
|
|
|
|
454,382
|
|
|
|
30,250
|
|
|
|
2,287,030
|
|
Matthew S. Ramsey
|
|
|
318,750
|
|
|
|
4,418,856
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
34,789
|
|
|
|
30,250
|
|
|
|
4,802,645
|
|
James M. Wright
|
|
|
191,250
|
|
|
|
936,598
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
30,250
|
|
|
|
1,158,098
|
|
Michael J. Hennigan
|
|
|
637,500
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
6,702,879
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
30,250
|
|
|
|
7,370,629
|
|
(1)
|
The named executive officers participate in the ETP/SXL Merger Severance Plan, pursuant to which each named executive officer would be entitled to the double-trigger cash severance amounts in the event the named
executive officer incurs a qualifying termination in connection with the merger. A qualifying termination for purposes of the Merger Severance Plan includes terminations of employment resulting from (i) a position being eliminated at,
prior to or following closing as a result of the integration of the combined organization, (ii) a position being transitioned to another employee on a future date as a result of the integration of the combined organization, or (iii) a decision by an
employee not to accept an offer to relocate to a position in a location that is more than 50 miles from the employees existing job location. The amounts reported consist of two weeks of base salary for each full or partial year of continued
service with ETP or SXL, as applicable, subject to a minimum of 26 weeks and maximum of 52 weeks of base salary for the named executive officers. See the section above titled Interests of Directors and Executive Officers of ETP in the
MergerSeverance Plan for more information.
|
(2)
|
Amounts reported represent the value of double-trigger accelerated vesting of the named executive officers
outstanding and unvested ETP, SXL and/or Sunoco LP equity awards. For Mr. Long this represents accelerated vesting of 50% of his outstanding ETP, SXL and Sunoco LP awards, or 34,666 units, 13,615 units and 18,168 units, respectively. For Mr. Ramsey
this represents accelerated vesting of 100% of his ETP award granted in December 2015 and 50% of his 2016 ETP award (a total of 125,003 ETP units) and accelerated vesting of 50% of his outstanding Sunoco LP awards (1,391 Sunoco LP units). For Mr.
Wright this represents accelerated vesting of 50% of his outstanding ETP awards (26,495 ETP units). For
|
105
|
Mr. Hennigan this represents accelerated vesting of 100% of his outstanding SXL awards granted in December 2012 and December 2014 and accelerated vesting of 50% his remaining SXL awards (a
total of 262,652 SXL units). Each named executive officer would be entitled to this double-trigger accelerated vesting under the Merger Severance Plan (for those awards that vest as to 50% of the outstanding units) or the applicable award agreement
(for those awards that vest as to 100% of the outstanding units) in the event the named executive officer incurs a qualifying termination in connection with the merger.
|
(3)
|
Amounts reported consist of the cost of providing healthcare coverage and outplacement services to the executive officer for a period of three months. Pursuant to the Merger Severance Plan, these double-trigger benefits
are provided in the event the named executive officer incurs a qualifying termination in connection with the merger.
|
(4)
|
Mr. Warren would not be entitled to any compensation or benefits under the Merger Severance Plan or otherwise in connection with the merger.
|
Interests of ETE and ETP in the Merger
ETE holds a controlling ownership interest in ETP. ETE controls ETP through ETEs ownership of ETP GP LLC, which is the general
partner of ETP GP. ETE also owns all of the limited partner interests in ETP GP. ETP GP owns 100% of the general partner interest and incentive distribution rights in ETP. ETE also owns all of the Class H units and Class I units in ETP, as
well as approximately 3.3% of the outstanding ETP common units. In addition, ETE indirectly owns a 0.1% membership interest in SXL GP, which owns 100% of the general partner interest and incentive distribution rights in SXL. ETE has different
economic interests in the merger than ETP common unitholders generally due to, among other things, ETEs ownership of economic interests in ETP other than ETP common units and ETEs ongoing indirect ownership of the general partner
interest and incentive distribution rights in SXL following the merger. In addition, due to ETEs ownership of incentive distribution rights in ETP, ETE has different interests than ETP common unitholders in certain of the alternatives ETP has
indicated it would consider if a merger with SXL is not consummated, including any reduction in ETPs distribution levels, which would have a disproportionately negative impact on ETE, as the holder of the incentive distribution rights in ETP,
compared to ETP common unitholders generally. Please see Unaudited Financial Projections of ETP for a discussion of ETP managements evaluation of its options to manage ETPs leverage levels and cash distribution coverage ratio
in the absence of the merger.
ETP holds a controlling ownership interest in SXL through its ownership of a 99.9% membership interest in
SXL GP, which owns 100% of the general partner interest and incentive distribution rights in SXL. ETP also owns all of the Class B units in SXL and approximately 21% of the outstanding SXL common units.
Under the terms of the merger agreement, ETE has agreed to vote all of the ETP common units owned beneficially or of record by ETE and its
subsidiaries in favor of the approval of the merger agreement and the merger and the approval of any actions required in furtherance thereof.
No Dissenters Rights or Appraisal Rights
Neither appraisal rights nor dissenters rights are available in connection
with the merger under the Delaware LP Act, the merger agreement or the ETP partnership agreement.
No SXL Unitholder
Approval Required
SXL unitholders are not required to adopt the merger agreement or approve the merger or the issuance of SXL common
units in connection with the merger.
Accounting Treatment of the Merger
ETP controls SXL through its ownership of SXL GP and therefore currently consolidates the operations of SXL into ETPs financial
statements. For accounting purposes, the merger will result in ETP being considered
106
the surviving consolidated entity, rather than SXL, which is the surviving consolidated entity for legal and reporting purposes. Subsequent to the merger, SXL will present consolidated financial
statements that reflect the historical consolidated financial statements of ETP. The merger will be accounted for as an equity transaction and will be reflected in the consolidated financial statements as ETPs acquisition of SXLs
noncontrolling interest. The carrying amounts of SXLs and ETPs assets and liabilities will not be adjusted, nor will a gain or loss be recognized as a result of the merger.
SXL Amended and Restated Partnership Agreement
In conjunction with the merger, SXL GP will enter into the SXL partnership agreement, providing for, among other things, (i) the creation of
the SXL Class J units, (ii) the creation and issuance of the SXL Class E units, SXL Class G units, SXL Class I units and SXL Class K units and (iii) a change in the definition of Operating Surplus in the SXL partnership agreement to
provide that such term will include an amount equal to the accumulated and undistributed operating surplus of ETP as of the closing of the merger. In addition, the SXL partnership agreement will provide for the reduction by ETE, as the indirect
holder of SXLs incentive distribution rights following the consummation of the merger, in quarterly distributions in respect of such rights in the following amounts:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Quarter Ending
|
|
Former ETP
IDR Reduction
|
|
|
Former SXL
IDR Reduction
|
|
|
Total IDR
Reduction
|
|
March 31, 2017
|
|
$
|
149,500,000
|
|
|
$
|
7,500,000
|
|
|
$
|
157,000,000
|
|
June 30, 2017
|
|
$
|
154,500,000
|
|
|
$
|
7,500,000
|
|
|
$
|
162,000,000
|
|
September 30, 2017
|
|
$
|
155,750,000
|
|
|
$
|
7,500,000
|
|
|
$
|
163,250,000
|
|
December 31, 2017
|
|
$
|
165,750,000
|
|
|
$
|
7,500,000
|
|
|
$
|
173,250,000
|
|
March 31, 2018
|
|
$
|
34,500,000
|
|
|
$
|
7,500,000
|
|
|
$
|
42,000,000
|
|
June 30, 2018
|
|
$
|
34,500,000
|
|
|
$
|
7,500,000
|
|
|
$
|
42,000,000
|
|
September 30, 2018
|
|
$
|
34,500,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
34,500,000
|
|
December 31, 2018
|
|
$
|
34,500,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
34,500,000
|
|
March 31, 2019
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
June 30, 2019
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
September 30, 2019
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
December 31, 2019
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
March 31, 2020 and Each Quarter Thereafter
|
|
$
|
8,250,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
8,250,000
|
|
Regulatory Approvals and Clearances Required for the Merger
Consummation of the merger is subject to the expiration or termination of the applicable waiting period under the HSR Act, if any, and
obtaining any approval or consent under any other applicable antitrust law. There is no filing requirement under the HSR Act for the merger, and therefore no waiting period applies. Further, no approvals or consents are required under any other
antitrust law. Therefore, there are no regulatory approvals or clearances required to consummate the merger.
At any time before or after
the effective time, the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice (the Antitrust Division), the Federal Trade Commission (the FTC) or another governmental authority could take action under the antitrust laws, including
seeking to prevent the merger, to rescind the merger or to conditionally approve the merger upon the divestiture of assets of SXL or ETP or subject to other remedies. In addition, U.S. state attorneys general could take action under the antitrust
laws as they deem necessary or desirable in the public interest including without limitation seeking to enjoin the completion of the merger or permitting completion subject to regulatory concessions or conditions. Private parties may also seek to
take legal action under the antitrust laws under some circumstances. There can be no assurance that a challenge to the merger on antitrust grounds will not be made or, if such a challenge is made, that it would not be successful.
SXL and ETP have agreed to (including to cause their respective subsidiaries to) use their reasonable best efforts to resolve any objections
that a governmental authority may assert under antitrust laws with respect to the
107
transactions contemplated by the merger agreement, including the merger, and to avoid or eliminate each and every impediment under any antitrust law that may be asserted by any governmental
authority with respect to the merger, in each case, so as to enable the closing of the merger to occur as promptly as practicable and in any event no later than the outside date, and including agreeing to dispose or hold separate certain assets or
agreeing to a non-compete or other restriction. Notwithstanding the foregoing, ETP has agreed not to commit to any disposal, hold separate of other restriction related to it or its subsidiaries businesses, operations or assets without SXLs
prior written consent.
Directors and Executive Officers of SXL After the Merger
Following the consummation of the mergers, ETP GP, as the general partner of SXL, will have direct responsibility for conducting SXLs
business and for managing its operations. Because ETP GP is a limited partnership, its general partner, ETP GP LLC, will ultimately be responsible for the business and operations of SXL. Therefore, the board of directors and officers of ETP GP
LLC will make decisions on SXLs behalf. SXL expects that the directors and executive officers of SXL GP immediately prior to the merger will continue in management roles of ETP GP LLC after the mergers, except that (i) Kelcy L. Warren, Chief
Executive Officer of ETP, is expected to become the Chief Executive Officer of SXL, (ii) Marshall S. (Mackie) McCrea, III, Group Chief Operating Officer and Chief Commercial Officer of ETE, is expected to become the Chief Commercial Officer of SXL,
(iii) Matthew S. Ramsey, President and Chief Operating Officer of ETP, is expected to become the President of SXL, and (iv) Thomas E. Long, Chief Financial Officer of ETP, is expected to become the Chief Financial Officer of SXL. SXL also
expects that Michael J. Hennigan, the current President and Chief Executive Officer of SXL, and other members of the SXL management team will continue in management roles of the combined company with the current SXL business operations continuing to
be headquartered in Philadelphia. Specifically, Mr. Hennigan is expected to serve as President, Crude, NGL and Refined Products following the merger.
Listing of SXL Common Units; Delisting and Deregistration of ETP Common Units
SXL common units are currently listed on the NYSE
under the ticker symbol SXL. It is a condition to closing that the SXL common units to be issued in the merger to ETP unitholders be approved for listing on the NYSE, subject to official notice of issuance. Following the consummation of
the merger, it is expected that SXL will change its name to Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. and apply to continue the listing of its common units on the NYSE under the symbol ETP.
ETP common units are currently listed on the NYSE under the ticker symbol ETP. If the merger is completed, ETP common units will
cease to be listed on the NYSE and will be deregistered under the Exchange Act. Following the consummation of the merger, it is expected that ETP will change its name to Energy Transfer, LP.
Ownership of SXL After the Merger
SXL will issue approximately 829.3 million SXL common units to former ETP unitholders pursuant to the merger. Further, the number of SXL common
units outstanding will increase after the date of this proxy statement/prospectus if SXL sells additional common units to the public. Based on the number of SXL common units outstanding as of the date of this proxy statement/prospectus, immediately
following the completion of the merger, SXL expects to have approximately 1,084.6 million common units outstanding. ETP unitholders are therefore expected to hold approximately 76% of the aggregate number of SXL common units outstanding
immediately after the merger and approximately 80% of SXLs total units of all classes. Holders of SXL common units (similarly to holders of ETP common units) are not entitled to elect SXLs general partner or the directors of the SXL
Board and have only limited voting rights on matters affecting SXLs business. Please read Comparison of Rights of SXL Unitholders and ETP Unitholders for additional information.
Restrictions on Sales of SXL Common Units Received in the Merger
SXL common units issued in the merger will not be subject to any restrictions on transfer arising under the Securities Act or the Exchange Act,
except for SXL common units issued to any ETP unitholder who may be
108
deemed to be an affiliate of SXL after the completion of the merger. This proxy statement/prospectus does not cover resales of SXL common units received by any person upon the
completion of the merger, and no person is authorized to make any use of this proxy statement/prospectus in connection with any resale.
Litigation Relating to the Merger
Between January 6, 2017 and February 8, 2017, seven purported ETP common unitholders separately
filed seven putative unitholder class action lawsuits challenging the merger and the disclosures made in connection with the merger. Two of these lawsuits have been voluntarily dismissed: (a)
Koma v. Energy Transfer Partners,
L
.
P
.
, et al
., Case No. 3:17-cv-00060-L, in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division (the
Koma
Lawsuit); and (b)
Ashraf v. Energy Transfer Partners,
L.P. et al.
, Case No. 3:17-cv-00118-B, in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division (collectively, the Dismissed Lawsuits). The five remaining lawsuits are styled: (a)
Shure v. Energy
Transfer Partners, L.P. et al.
, Case No. 1:17-cv-00044-RGA, in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware (the
Shure
Lawsuit); (b)
Verlin v. Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. et al.
, Case No.
1:17-cv-00045-RGA, in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware (the
Verlin
Lawsuit); (c)
Duany v. Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. et al.
, Case No. 1:17-cv-00058-RGA, in the United States District Court
for the District of Delaware (the
Duany
Lawsuit); (d)
Epstein v. Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. et al
., Case No. 1:17-cv-00069-RGA, in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware (the
Epstein
Lawsuit); and (e)
Sgnilek v. Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. et al
., Case No. 1:17-cv-00141-RGA, in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware (the
Sgnilek
Lawsuit and, collectively with the
Shure
Lawsuit,
Verlin
Lawsuit,
Duany
Lawsuit, and
Epstein
Lawsuit, the Lawsuits). The
Duany
Lawsuit and
Epstein
Lawsuit are filed against ETP, ETP GP, ETP GP LLC, ETE, and the members of the ETP
Board. The
Shure
Lawsuit and
Verlin
Lawsuit are filed against ETP, ETP GP, the members of the ETP Board, ETE, SXL, and SXL GP. The
Sgnilek
Lawsuit is filed against ETP, ETP GP, ETP GP LLC, ETE, the members of the ETP Board, SXL,
and SXL GP (collectively, Defendants).
Plaintiffs allege causes of action challenging the merger and the preliminary joint
proxy statement/prospectus filed in connection with the merger. According to Plaintiffs, the preliminary joint proxy statement/prospectus is allegedly misleading because, among other things, it fails to disclose certain information concerning, in
general, (a) the background and process that led to the merger; (b) ETEs, ETPs, and SXLs financial projections; (c) the financial analysis and fairness opinion provided by Barclays; and (d) alleged conflicts of interest concerning
Barclays, ETE, and certain officers and directors of ETP and ETE. Based on these allegations, and in general, Plaintiffs allege that (i) Defendants have violated Section 14(a) of the Exchange Act and Rule 14a-9 promulgated thereunder and (ii) the
members of the ETP Board have violated Section 20(a) of the Exchange Act. Plaintiffs in the
Shure
Lawsuit and
Verlin
Lawsuit also allege that SXL has violated Section 20(a) of the Exchange Act. Plaintiffs also assert, in general, that
the terms of the merger (including, among other terms, the merger consideration) are unfair to ETP common unitholders and resulted from an unfair and conflicted process. Based on these allegations, the
Sgnilek
Lawsuit also alleges that (a)
the ETP Board, ETP GP, ETP GP LLC, ETP, and ETE have breached the covenant of good faith and/or fiduciary duties, and (b) SXL and SXL GP have aided and abetted these alleged breaches. The allegations and causes of action in the Dismissed Lawsuits
were similar to the allegations and causes of action in the Lawsuits.
Based on these allegations, Plaintiffs seek to enjoin Defendants
from proceeding with or consummating the merger unless and until Defendants disclose the allegedly omitted information summarized above. The
Sgnilek
Lawsuit also seeks to enjoin Defendants from proceeding with or consummating the merger
unless and until the ETP Board adopts and implements processes to obtain the best possible terms for ETP common unitholders. To the extent that the merger is consummated before injunctive relief is granted, Plaintiffs seek to have the merger
rescinded. Plaintiffs also seek damages and attorneys fees.
Defendants dates to answer, move to dismiss, or otherwise respond
to the Lawsuits have not yet been set. Defendants cannot predict the outcome of these or any other lawsuits that might be filed subsequent to the date of the filing of this joint proxy statement/prospectus, nor can Defendants predict the amount of
time and expense that will be required to resolve such litigation. Defendants believe the Lawsuits are without merit and intend to defend vigorously against the Lawsuits and any other actions challenging the merger.
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PROPOSAL 1: THE MERGER AGREEMENT
The following describes the material provisions of the merger agreement and the amendment thereto, a composite copy of which, incorporating
the amendment into the text of the initial agreement, is attached as Annex A to this proxy statement/prospectus and incorporated by reference herein. The description in this section and elsewhere in this proxy statement/prospectus is qualified in
its entirety by reference to the merger agreement. This summary does not purport to be complete and may not contain all of the information about the merger agreement that is important to you. SXL and ETP encourage you to read carefully the merger
agreement in its entirety before making any decisions regarding the mergers as it is the legal document governing the mergers.
The
merger agreement and this summary of its terms have been included to provide you with information regarding the terms of the merger agreement. Factual disclosures about SXL, ETP or any of their respective subsidiaries or affiliates contained in this
proxy statement/prospectus or their respective public reports filed with the SEC may supplement, update or modify the factual disclosures about SXL, ETP or their respective subsidiaries or affiliates contained in the merger agreement and described
in this summary. The representations, warranties and covenants made in the merger agreement by SXL and ETP were qualified and subject to important limitations agreed to by SXL and ETP in connection with negotiating the terms of the merger agreement.
In particular, in your review of the representations and warranties contained in the merger agreement and described in this summary, it is important to bear in mind that the representations and warranties were negotiated with the principal purposes
of allocating risk between the parties to the merger agreement, rather than establishing matters as facts. The representations and warranties may also be subject to a contractual standard of materiality different from those generally applicable to
unitholders and reports and documents filed with the SEC and in some cases were qualified by confidential disclosures that were made by each party to the other, which disclosures are not reflected in the merger agreement or otherwise publicly
disclosed. Moreover, information concerning the subject matter of the representations and warranties may have changed since the date of the merger agreement and subsequent developments or new information qualifying a representation or warranty may
have been included in this proxy statement/prospectus. For the foregoing reasons, the representations, warranties and covenants or any descriptions of those provisions should not be read alone.
The Merger
Subject to the terms and conditions of the merger agreement and in accordance with Delaware law, the merger agreement provides for the merger
of SXL Merger Sub LP with and into ETP, with ETP surviving the merger as a wholly owned subsidiary of SXL, but ETP will cease to be a publicly traded limited partnership. ETP, which is sometimes referred to following the merger as the surviving
entity, will survive the merger, and the separate limited partnership existence of SXL Merger Sub LP will cease. After the completion of the merger, the certificate of limited partnership of ETP in effect immediately prior to the effective time and
as amended by the certificate of merger will remain unchanged and will be the certificate of limited partnership of the surviving entity from and after the effective time, and thereafter may be amended in accordance with its terms or by applicable
law. In addition, after the completion of the merger, the ETP partnership agreement will remain unchanged (except to the extent the ETP partnership agreement is amended to reflect the admission of SXL Merger Sub as the sole general partner of ETP)
and will be the agreement of limited partnership of the surviving entity from and after the effective time, and thereafter may be amended in accordance with its terms or by applicable law.
The merger agreement also provides, subject to the terms and conditions of the merger agreement and in accordance with Delaware law and
Pennsylvania law, for the merger of SXL GP with and into ETP GP, with ETP GP surviving the GP merger as the general partner of SXL. ETP GP, which is sometimes referred to following the GP merger as the GP surviving entity, will survive the GP
merger, and the separate limited liability company existence of SXL GP will cease. Upon the completion of the GP merger, the certificate of limited
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partnership of ETP GP in effect immediately prior to the GP merger effective time will be the certificate of limited partnership of the GP surviving entity from and after the GP merger effective
time, and thereafter may be amended in accordance with its terms or by applicable law. In addition, upon the completion of the GP merger, the limited partnership agreement of ETP GP in effect immediately prior to the GP merger effective time will
remain unchanged and will be the limited partnership agreement of the GP surviving entity from and after the GP merger effective time, and thereafter may be amended in accordance with its terms or by applicable law.
Following the consummation of the merger, it is expected that SXL will change its name to Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. and apply
to continue the listing of its common units on the NYSE under the symbol ETP, and that ETP will change its name to Energy Transfer, LP.
Effective Time; Closing
The effective time of the merger will be at such time that ETP files with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware a certificate of
merger, executed in accordance with the relevant provisions of the Delaware LP Act or at such other date or time as is agreed to by SXL and ETP and specified in the certificate of merger. The effective time of the GP merger will be at such time that
ETP GP files with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware and the Secretary of State of the State of Pennsylvania a certificate of merger, executed in accordance with the relevant provisions of the Delaware LP Act and the Pennsylvania
Limited Liability Company Law, or such other date or time as is agreed to by ETP GP and SXL GP and specified in the certificates of merger.
Unless the parties agree otherwise, the closing of the mergers will occur at 9:00 a.m., Eastern Time, on the second business day after the
satisfaction or waiver of the conditions to the merger provided in the merger agreement (other than conditions that by their nature are to be satisfied at the closing of the merger, but subject to the satisfaction or waiver of those conditions), or
at such other date or time as SXL and ETP agree. For further discussion of the conditions to the merger, see Conditions to Consummation of the Mergers.
SXL and ETP currently expect to complete the mergers shortly following the conclusion of the meeting, subject to receipt of required
unitholder and regulatory approvals and to the satisfaction or waiver of the other conditions to the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement described below.
Conditions to Consummation of the Mergers
SXL and ETP may not complete the mergers unless each of the following conditions is satisfied or waived, if waiver is permitted by applicable
law:
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the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby must have been adopted by the affirmative vote or consent of the holders of at least a majority of the outstanding ETP common units;
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any waiting period applicable to the merger under the HSR Act must have been terminated or expired, and any approval or consent under any other applicable antitrust law must have been obtained;
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no law, injunction, judgment or ruling enacted, promulgated, issued, entered, amended or enforced by any governmental authority will be in effect enjoining, restraining, preventing or prohibiting the consummation of the
transactions contemplated by the merger agreement or making the consummation of such transactions illegal;
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the registration statement of which this proxy statement/prospectus forms a part must have been declared effective by the SEC and must not be subject to any stop order or proceedings initiated or threatened by the SEC;
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the SXL common units to be issued in the merger must have been approved for listing on the NYSE, subject to official notice of issuance;
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ETP having received an opinion of its counsel, Latham & Watkins LLP, to the effect that at least 90% of the gross income of ETP for all of the calendar year that immediately precedes the calendar year that includes
the closing date and each calendar quarter of the calendar year that includes the closing date for which the necessary financial information is available is from sources treated as qualifying income within the meaning of Section 7704(d)
of the Code; and
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SXL having received an opinion of its counsel, Vinson & Elkins L.L.P., to the effect that (i) at least 90% of the gross income of SXL for all of the calendar year that immediately precedes the calendar year that
includes the closing date and each calendar quarter of the calendar year that includes the closing date for which the necessary financial information is available is from sources treated as qualifying income within the meaning of Section
7704(d) of the Code and (ii) at least 90% of the combined gross income of each of SXL and ETP for all of the calendar year that immediately precedes the calendar year that includes the closing date and each calendar quarter of the calendar year that
includes the closing date for which the necessary financial information is available is from sources treated as qualifying income within the meaning of Section 7704(d) of the Code.
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The obligations of SXL, SXL Merger Sub and SXL Merger Sub LP to effect the merger are subject to the satisfaction or waiver of the following
additional conditions:
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the representations and warranties of ETP and ETP GP in the merger agreement being true and correct in all respects both when made and at and as of the date of the closing of the merger, except to the extent expressly
made as of an earlier date, in which case as of such date, except where the failure of such representations and warranties to not be so true and correct (without giving effect to any limitation as to material adverse effect or materiality contained
in any individual representation or warranty), does not have and would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a material adverse effect on ETP (apart from certain identified representations and warranties (i) that
there will not have been a material adverse effect on ETP from December 31, 2015 through the closing date, with respect to the authority to execute the merger agreement and consummate the transactions contemplated thereby and that the adoption of
the merger agreement by the affirmative vote or consent of the holders of at least a majority of the outstanding ETP common units is the only approval of the holders of any outstanding equity interests in ETP that is required for approval of the
transactions contemplated by the merger agreement, which in each case must be true and correct in all respects, and (ii) with respect to ETPs capitalization, which must be true and correct in all respects other than immaterial misstatements
and omissions);
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ETP and ETP GP having performed, in all material respects, all obligations required to be performed by them under the merger agreement;
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the receipt of an officers certificate executed by an executive officer of ETP GP certifying that the two preceding conditions have been satisfied;
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SXL having received an opinion of its counsel, Vinson & Elkins L.L.P., to the effect that for U.S. federal income tax purposes (i) SXL should not recognize any income or gain as a result of the merger (other than
any gain resulting from a disguised sale attributable to contributions of cash or other property to SXL after the date of the merger agreement and prior to the effective time of the merger) and (ii) no gain or loss should be recognized by
holders of SXL common units as a result of the merger (other than any gain resulting from (A) any decrease in partnership liabilities pursuant to Section 752 of the Code and (B) a disguised sale attributable to contributions of cash or other
property to SXL after the date of the merger agreement and prior to the effective time of the merger); and
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ETP GP, as the GP surviving entity and the successor to SXL GP as general partner of SXL, having executed and delivered to SXL a joinder agreement by which ETP GP agrees to assume the rights and duties of the general
partner of SXL under the SXL partnership agreement and to be bound by the provisions thereof.
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The obligations of ETP and ETP GP to effect the merger are subject to the satisfaction or waiver
of the following additional conditions:
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the representations and warranties of SXL, SXL GP, SXL Merger Sub and SXL Merger Sub LP in the merger agreement being true and correct in all respects both when made and at and as of the date of the closing of the
merger, except to the extent expressly made as of an earlier date, in which case as of such date, except where the failure of such representations and warranties to be so true and correct (without giving effect to any limitation as to material
adverse effect or materiality contained in any individual representation or warranty), does not have and would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a material adverse effect on SXL (apart from certain identified
representations and warranties (i) providing that there will not have been a material adverse effect on SXL from December 31, 2015 through the closing date and with respect to the authority to execute the merger agreement and consummate the
transactions contemplated thereby, which must be true and correct in all respects, and (ii) with respect to SXLs capitalization, which must be true and correct in all respects other than immaterial misstatements and omissions);
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SXL, SXL GP, SXL Merger Sub and SXL Merger Sub LP having performed, in all material respects, all obligations required to be performed by them under the merger agreement;
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the receipt of an officers certificate executed by an executive officer of SXL GP and an authorized signatory of SXL Merger Sub LP certifying that the two preceding conditions have been satisfied;
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ETP having received an opinion of its counsel, Latham & Watkins LLP, to the effect that for U.S. federal income tax purposes (i) ETP should not recognize any income or gain as a result of the merger and (ii) no gain
or loss should be recognized by holders of ETP common units as a result of the merger (other than any gain resulting from the distribution of cash or from any decrease in partnership liabilities pursuant to Section 752 of the Code); and
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SXL GP having executed and delivered to ETP the SXL partnership agreement, dated effective as of the effective time of the merger.
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For purposes of the merger agreement, the term material adverse effect means, when used with respect to a party to the merger
agreement, any change, effect, event or occurrence that, individually or in the aggregate, (x) has had or would reasonably be expected to have a material adverse effect on the business, financial condition or results of operations of such party or
its subsidiaries, taken as a whole, or (y) prevents or materially impedes, interferes with or hinders the consummation of the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement, including the merger, on or before the outside date;
provided
,
however
, that any adverse changes, effects, events or occurrences resulting from or due to any of the following will be disregarded in determining whether there has been a material adverse effect: (i) changes, effects, events or
occurrences generally affecting the United States or global economy, the financial, credit, debt, securities or other capital markets or political, legislative or regulatory conditions or changes in the industries in which such party operates; (ii)
the announcement or pendency of the merger agreement or the transactions contemplated thereby or the performance of the merger agreement (including, for the avoidance of doubt, performance of the parties reasonable best efforts obligations
under the merger agreement in connection with obtaining regulatory approval); (iii) any change in the market price or trading volume of the limited partner interests, shares of common stock or other equity securities of such party (it being
understood and agreed that the foregoing will not preclude any other party to the merger agreement from asserting that any facts or occurrences giving rise to or contributing to such change that are not otherwise excluded from the definition of
material adverse effect should be deemed to constitute, or be taken into account in determining whether there has been, or would reasonably be expected to be, a material adverse effect); (iv) acts of war or terrorism (or the escalation of the
foregoing) or natural disasters or other force majeure events; (v) changes in any laws or regulations applicable to such party or applicable accounting regulations or principles or the interpretation thereof; (vi) any legal proceedings commenced by
or involving any current or former member, partner or unitholders of such party (on their own or on behalf of such party) arising out of or related to the merger agreement or the transactions contemplated thereby; (vii) changes, effects, events or
occurrences
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generally affecting the prices of oil, natural gas, natural gas liquids or coal or other commodities; (viii) any failure of a party to meet any internal or external projections, forecasts or
estimates of revenues, earnings or other financial or operating metrics for any period (it being understood and agreed that the foregoing will not preclude any other party to the merger agreement from asserting that any facts or occurrences giving
rise to or contributing to such failure that are not otherwise excluded from the definition of material adverse effect should be deemed to constitute, or be taken into account in determining whether there has been, or would reasonably be
expected to be, a material adverse effect); and (ix) the taking of any action required by the merger agreement;
provided
,
however
, that changes, effects, events or occurrences referred to in clauses (i), (iv), (v) and (vii) above will
be considered for purposes of determining whether there has been or would reasonably be expected to be a material adverse effect if and to the extent such state of affairs, changes, effects, events or occurrences has had or would reasonably be
expected to have a disproportionate adverse effect on such party and its subsidiaries, taken as a whole, as compared to other companies of similar size operating in the industries in which such party and its subsidiaries operate.
ETP Unitholder Approval
ETP has agreed to hold a special meeting of its unitholders as soon as is practicable after the date of the merger agreement for the purpose of
such unitholders voting on the adoption of the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby. Unless terminated pursuant to its terms, the merger agreement requires ETP to submit the merger agreement to a unitholder vote (i) even if the
ETP Board no longer recommends adoption of the merger agreement and (ii) irrespective of the commencement, public proposal, public disclosure or communication to ETP of any alternative proposal (as described below). In addition, unless the ETP
Board has effected an adverse recommendation change in accordance with the merger agreement as described in Change in ETP Board Recommendation, ETP has agreed to use reasonable best efforts to solicit from its unitholders proxies
in favor of the approval of the merger agreement and the merger and the approval of any actions required in furtherance thereof. The ETP Board has approved the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby and authorized that the merger
agreement be submitted to the unitholders of ETP for their consideration.
For purposes of the merger agreement, the term
alternative proposal means any inquiry, proposal or offer from any person or group (as defined in Section 13(d) of the Exchange Act), other than SXL, its subsidiaries and their respective affiliates, relating to any (i)
direct or indirect acquisition (whether in a single transaction or a series of related transactions), of assets of ETP and its subsidiaries equal to 15% or more of ETPs consolidated assets or to which 15% or more of ETPs revenues or
earnings on a consolidated basis are attributable, (ii) direct or indirect acquisition (whether in a single transaction or a series of related transactions) of beneficial ownership (within the meaning of Section 13 under the Exchange Act) of 15% or
more of any class of equity securities of ETP, (iii) tender offer or exchange offer that if consummated would result in any person or group (as defined in Section 13(d) of the Exchange Act) beneficially owning 15% or more of any class of
equity securities of ETP or (iv) merger, consolidation, unit exchange, share exchange, business combination, recapitalization, liquidation, dissolution or similar transaction involving ETP or any of its subsidiaries which is structured to permit any
person or group (as defined in Section 13(d) of the Exchange Act) to acquire beneficial ownership of at least 15% of ETPs consolidated assets, net income, net expenses, revenue or equity interests; in each case, other than the
transactions contemplated by the merger agreement.
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No Solicitation by ETP of Alternative Proposals
The merger agreement contains detailed provisions prohibiting ETP from seeking an alternative proposal to the merger. Under these no
solicitation provisions, ETP has agreed that it will not, and will cause its subsidiaries not to, and use its reasonable best efforts to cause its and its subsidiaries directors, officers, employees, investment bankers, financial
advisors, attorneys, accountants, agents and other representatives not to, directly or indirectly:
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solicit, initiate, knowingly facilitate, knowingly encourage (including by way of furnishing confidential information) or knowingly induce or take any other action intended to lead to any inquiries or any proposals that
constitute or could reasonably be expected to lead to an alternative proposal;
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grant any waiver or release of any standstill or similar agreement with respect to any units of ETP or of any of its subsidiaries; or
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except as permitted by the merger agreement, enter into any confidentiality agreement, merger agreement, letter of intent, agreement in principle, unit purchase agreement, asset purchase agreement or unit exchange
agreement, option agreement or other similar agreement relating to an alternative proposal.
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In addition, the merger
agreement requires ETP and its subsidiaries to (i) cease and cause to be terminated any discussions or negotiations with any persons conducted prior to the execution of the merger agreement regarding an alternative proposal, (ii) request the return
or destruction of all confidential information previously provided to any such persons and (iii) immediately prohibit any access by any persons (other than SXL and its representatives) to any physical or electronic data room relating to a possible
alternative proposal.
Notwithstanding these restrictions, the merger agreement provides that, under specified circumstances at any time
prior to ETP unitholders voting in favor of adopting the merger agreement, ETP may furnish information, including confidential information, with respect to it and its subsidiaries to, and participate in discussions or negotiations with, any third
party that makes a written alternative proposal that the ETP Board (upon the recommendation of the ETP Conflicts Committee) believes is bona fide so long as (after consultation with its financial advisors and outside legal counsel) the ETP Board
(upon the recommendation of the ETP Conflicts Committee) determines in good faith that (i) such alternative proposal constitutes or could reasonably be expected to lead to or result in a superior proposal, (ii) failure to furnish such information or
participate in such discussions would be inconsistent with the ETP Boards duties under the ETP partnership agreement or applicable law and (iii) such alternative proposal did not result from a material breach of the no solicitation provisions
in the merger agreement.
ETP has also agreed in the merger agreement that it (i) will promptly, and in any event within 24 hours after
receipt, notify SXL of any alternative proposal or any request for information or inquiry with regard to any alternative proposal and the identity of the person making any such alternative proposal, request or inquiry (including providing SXL with
copies of any written materials received from or on behalf of such person relating to such proposal, offer, request or inquiry) and (ii) will provide SXL with the terms, conditions and nature of any such alternative proposal, request or inquiry. In
addition, ETP agrees to keep SXL reasonably informed of all material developments affecting the status and terms of any such alternative proposals, offers, inquiries or requests (and promptly provide SXL with copies of any written materials received
by it or that it has delivered to any third party making an alternative proposal that relate to such proposals, offers, requests or inquiries) and of the status of any such discussions or negotiations.
The merger agreement permits ETP or the ETP Board to issue a stop, look and listen communication pursuant to Rule 14d-9(f) or
comply with Rule 14d-9 and Rule 14e-2 under the Exchange Act if the ETP Board determines in good faith (after consultation with outside legal counsel) that the failure to take such action would be reasonably likely to constitute a violation of
applicable law.
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For purposes of the merger agreement, a superior proposal means a
bona fide
unsolicited
written offer, obtained after the date of the merger agreement and not in breach of ETPs no solicitation obligations described above (other than an immaterial breach), to acquire, directly or indirectly, 80% or more of the outstanding equity
securities of ETP or 80% or more of the assets of ETP and its subsidiaries on a consolidated basis, made by a third party (other than ETE or any of its affiliates), which is on terms and conditions that the ETP Board determines in its good faith to
be (i) reasonably capable of being consummated in accordance with its terms, taking into account legal, regulatory, financial, financing and timing aspects of the proposal, and (ii) if consummated, more favorable to ETPs unitholders (in their
capacity as unitholders) from a financial point of view than the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement, taking into account at the time of such determination any changes to the terms of the merger agreement that as of that time had been
committed to by SXL in writing.
Change in ETP Board Recommendation
The merger agreement provides that ETP will not, and will cause its subsidiaries and use reasonable best efforts to cause its representatives
not to, directly or indirectly, withdraw, modify or qualify, or propose publicly to withdraw, modify or qualify, in a manner adverse to SXL, the recommendation of the ETP Board that its unitholders adopt the merger agreement or publicly recommend
the approval or adoption of, or publicly approve or adopt, or propose to publicly recommend, approve or adopt, any alternative proposal, or fail to recommend against acceptance of any tender offer or exchange offer for ETP units within ten business
days after commencement of such offer, or resolve or agree to take any of the foregoing actions. In addition, subject to certain limitations, if ETP receives an alternative proposal it will, within five business days of receipt of a written request
from SXL, publicly reconfirm the recommendation of the ETP Board that its unitholders adopt the merger agreement and ETP may not unreasonably withhold, delay (beyond the five business day period) or condition such public reconfirmation.
ETPs taking or failing to take, as applicable, any of the actions described above is referred to as an adverse recommendation
change.
Notwithstanding the terms described above or any other term of the merger agreement to the contrary, subject to the
conditions described below, the ETP Board and the ETP Conflicts Committee may, at any time prior to the adoption of the merger agreement by the ETP unitholders, effect an adverse recommendation change in response to either (i) an alternative
proposal constituting a superior proposal or (ii) a changed circumstance that was not known to or reasonably foreseeable by the ETP Board prior to the date of the merger agreement, in each case if the ETP Board, upon the recommendation of the ETP
Conflicts Committee and after consultation with its outside legal counsel and financial advisors, determines in good faith that the failure to take such action would be inconsistent with its duties under the ETP partnership agreement or applicable
law, and the following conditions have been met:
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if the ETP Board intends to effect such adverse recommendation change in response to an alternative proposal:
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such alternative proposal is bona fide, in writing and has not been withdrawn or abandoned;
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the ETP Board (upon the recommendation of the ETP Conflicts Committee) has determined, after consultation with its outside legal counsel and financial advisors, that such alternative proposal constitutes a superior
proposal after giving effect to the adjustments offered by SXL pursuant to the fifth bullet below;
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ETP has provided prior written notice to SXL of the intention of the ETP Board to effect an adverse recommendation change, and such notice has specified the identity of the person making such alternative proposal, the
material terms and conditions of such alternative proposal, and complete copies of any written proposal or offers (including proposed agreements) received by ETP in connection with such alternative proposal;
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during the period that commences on the date of delivery of the above-described notice and ends on the date that is the fifth calendar day following the date of such delivery, ETP must have (1) negotiated with SXL in
good faith to make such adjustments to the terms and conditions of the merger agreement as would permit the ETP Board not to effect an adverse recommendation change and (2) kept SXL reasonably informed with respect to the status and changes in the
material terms and conditions of such alternative proposal or other change in circumstances related thereto; provided, that any material revisions to such alternative proposal (including any change in the purchase price) will require delivery of a
subsequent notice and a subsequent notice period, except that such subsequent notice period will expire upon the later of (x) the end of the initial notice period and (y) the date that is the third calendar day following the date of the delivery of
such subsequent notice; and
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the ETP Board must have considered all revisions to the terms of the merger agreement irrevocably offered in writing by SXL and, at the end of the notice period, must have determined in good faith that (i) such
alternative proposal continues to constitute a superior proposal and (ii) failure to effect an adverse recommendation change would be inconsistent with its duties under the ETP partnership agreement or applicable law, in each case even if such
revisions were to be given effect; or
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if the ETP Board intends to effect such adverse recommendation change in response to a changed circumstance:
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ETP has provided prior written notice to SXL of the intention of the ETP Board to effect an adverse recommendation change, and such notice has specified the details of such changed circumstance and the reasons for the
adverse recommendation change;
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during the period that commences on the date of delivery of the above-described notice and ends on the date that is the fifth calendar day following the date of such delivery, ETP must have (i) negotiated with SXL in
good faith to make such adjustments to the terms and conditions of the merger agreement as would permit the ETP Board not to effect an adverse recommendation change and (ii) kept SXL reasonably informed of any change in circumstances related
thereto; and
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the ETP Board must have considered all revisions to the terms of the merger agreement irrevocably offered in writing by SXL and, at the end of the notice period, must have determined in good faith (upon the
recommendation of the ETP Conflicts Committee) that the failure to effect an adverse recommendation change would be inconsistent with its duties under the ETP partnership agreement or applicable law even if such revisions were to be given effect.
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As used in the merger agreement, a changed circumstance means a material event, circumstance, effect, condition, change or
development, in each case that arises or occurs after the date of the merger agreement and was not, prior to the date of the merger agreement, known to or reasonably foreseeable by the ETP Board and did not result from or arise out of the
announcement or pendency of, or any actions required to be taken by (or to be refrained from being taken by) ETP pursuant to the merger agreement; provided, however, that in no event shall the following events, circumstances, or changes in
circumstances constitute a changed circumstance: (i) any change in the price or change in trading volume, of the common units or the fact that ETP meets or exceeds internal or published projections, budgets, forecasts or estimates of revenues,
earnings or other financial results for any period (provided, however, that the exception to this clause (i) shall not apply to the underlying causes giving rise to or contributing to such change or prevent any of such underlying causes from being
taken into account in determining whether a changed circumstance has occurred) or (ii) any matters generally affecting the industry in which ETP operates as a whole that have not had or would not reasonably be expected to have a disproportionate
effect on ETP and/or its subsidiaries.
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Merger Consideration
The merger agreement provides that, at the effective time, each ETP common unit issued and outstanding or deemed issued and outstanding as of
immediately prior to the effective time will be converted into the right to receive 1.5 SXL common units. Each Class E, Class G, Class I and Class K unit issued and outstanding as of immediately prior to the effective time will be converted into a
unit representing a limited partner interest in SXL, which constitutes a share of a new class of units in SXL containing provisions substantially equivalent to the respective provisions set forth in the ETP partnership agreement governing such
units.
SXL will not issue any fractional units in the merger. Instead, all fractional SXL units that a holder of ETP common units would
otherwise be entitled to receive as consideration for the merger will be aggregated and then, if a fractional SXL unit results from that aggregation, be rounded up to the nearest whole SXL unit.
Treatment of Restricted Units and Cash Units
Under the merger agreement, equity-based awards that are outstanding as of the effective time, including awards held by ETPs directors
and executive officers, will be treated at the effective time as follows:
Restricted Units
. Each outstanding award of ETP
restricted units will, as of the effective time, by virtue of the merger and without any action on the part of the holder of any such ETP restricted units, cease to relate to or represent a right to receive ETP common units and will be converted
into a right to receive an award of SXL restricted units, on the same terms and conditions as were applicable to the corresponding award of ETP restricted units (including the right to receive distribution equivalents with respect to such award),
except that the number of SXL restricted units covered by each such award will be equal to the number of ETP common units subject to the corresponding award of ETP restricted units multiplied by the exchange ratio, rounded up to the nearest whole
unit. With respect to each ETP restricted unit, any distribution equivalent amounts accrued but unpaid as of the closing will carry over and be paid to the holder as soon as practicable following the closing.
Cash Units
. Each outstanding award of ETP cash units will, automatically and without any action on the part of the holder of such cash
unit, be converted into the right to receive an award of restricted cash units relating to SXL common units on the same terms and conditions as were applicable to the award of ETP cash units, except that the number of notional SXL common units
related to the award will be equal to the number of notional ETP common units related to the corresponding award of ETP cash units multiplied by the exchange ratio, rounded up to the nearest whole unit. Prior to the effective time, the ETP Board
will adopt an amendment to the ETP cash unit plan to permit the treatment of ETP cash units as provided in the merger agreement.
Treatment of General Partner Interest; Incentive Distribution Rights and Class H Units
In connection with the mergers, ETP GP will
transfer the 0.6% general partner interest in ETP to SXL Merger Sub and SXL Merger Sub will assume the rights and duties of the general partner of ETP. As a result of the merger and the related transactions, the 100% limited partner interest in
SXL Merger Sub LP will convert into a 99.4% limited partner interest in ETP, the non-economic general partner interest in SXL Merger Sub LP will be cancelled and SXL Merger Sub will become the general partner of ETP, holding a 0.6% general partner
interest. In addition, the incentive distribution rights in ETP and the Class H units outstanding immediately prior to the effective time will be cancelled.
Adjustments to Prevent Dilution
Prior to the effective time, each of the exchange ratio, the SXL Class E units, the SXL Class G units, the SXL Class I units and the SXL Class
K units will be appropriately adjusted to reflect fully the effect of any unit dividend, subdivision, reclassification, recapitalization, split, split-up, unit distribution, combination, exchange of units or similar transaction and to provide the
holders of ETP common units, Class E units, Class G units, Class I units and Class K units the same economic effect as contemplated by the merger agreement prior to such event.
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Withholding
SXL and the exchange agent will be entitled to deduct and withhold from the merger consideration otherwise payable to any person pursuant to
the merger agreement such amounts as are required to be deducted and withheld with respect to the making of such payment under the Code, or under any provision of applicable U.S. federal, state, local or non-U.S. tax law. To the extent that
deduction and withholding is required, such deduction and withholding may be taken in SXL common units. To the extent withheld, such withheld SXL common units will be treated as having been paid to the person in respect of whom such withholding was
made.
Distributions
No distributions with respect to SXL common units issued in the merger will be paid to the holder of any unsurrendered certificates or
book-entry units until such certificates or book-entry units are surrendered. Following such surrender, there will be paid, without interest, to the record holder of SXL common units issued in exchange therefor (i) at the time of such surrender, all
distributions payable in respect of any such SXL common units with a record date after the effective time and a payment date on or prior to the date of such surrender and not previously paid and (ii) at the appropriate payment date, the
distributions payable with respect to such SXL common units with a record date after the effective time but with a payment date subsequent to such surrender. For purposes of distributions in respect of SXL common units, all SXL common units to be
issued pursuant to the merger will be entitled to distributions as if issued and outstanding as of the effective time.
Regulatory Matters
See The MergerRegulatory Approvals and Clearances Required for the Merger for a description of the material regulatory
requirements for the completion of the merger.
SXL and ETP have agreed to (including to cause their respective subsidiaries to) use their
reasonable best efforts to resolve any objections that a governmental authority or any other person may assert under antitrust laws with respect to the merger, and to avoid or eliminate each and every impediment under any antitrust law that may be
asserted by any governmental authority with respect to the merger, in each case, so as to enable the closing of the mergers to occur as promptly as practicable and in any event no later than the outside date. Notwithstanding the foregoing, SXL and
ETP have agreed not to commit to any disposal, hold separate of other restriction related to its or its subsidiaries businesses, operations or assets without the other partys prior written consent.
Termination of the Merger Agreement
SXL or ETP may terminate the merger agreement at any time prior to the effective time, whether before or after the ETP unitholders have
approved the merger agreement, by mutual written consent.
In addition, either SXL or ETP may terminate the merger agreement at any time
prior to the effective time by written notice to the other party:
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if the merger has not been consummated on or before the outside date; provided, that the right to terminate the merger agreement if the merger has not been consummated on or before the outside date will not be
available to a party (i) if the inability to satisfy the conditions to closing was due to the failure of such party to perform any of its obligations under the merger agreement or (ii) if the other party has filed (and is then pursuing) an action
seeking specific performance to enforce the obligations under the merger agreement;
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if any governmental authority has issued a final and nonappealable law, injunction, judgment or ruling that enjoins or otherwise prohibits the consummation of the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement or
makes the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement illegal;
provided
,
however
, that the right to terminate for this reason will not be available if the prohibition was due to the failure of the terminating party to perform any
of its obligations under the merger agreement; or
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if the ETP unitholders do not adopt the merger agreement at the special meeting of ETP unitholders called for such purpose or any adjournment or postponement of such meeting.
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In addition, SXL may terminate the merger agreement:
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if an adverse recommendation change by the ETP Board shall have occurred;
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if prior to the adoption of the merger agreement by ETP unitholders, ETP is in willful breach of its obligations to (i) duly call, give notice of and hold a special meeting of ETP unitholders for the purpose of
obtaining unitholder approval of the merger agreement, use its reasonable best efforts to solicit proxies from the ETP unitholders in favor of such adoption and, through the ETP Board, recommend the adoption of the merger agreement to ETP
unitholders or (ii) comply with the requirements applicable to the other party described under No Solicitation by ETP of Alternative Proposals;
provided
, that the right to terminate the merger agreement for this reason will
not be available to SXL if it is then in material breach of any of its representations, warranties, covenants or agreements under the merger agreement; or
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if there is a breach by ETP of any of its representations, warranties, covenants or agreements in the merger agreement such that certain closing conditions would not be satisfied, or if capable of being cured, such
breach has not been cured within 30 days following delivery of written notice from SXL of such breach;
provided
that SXL will not have the right to terminate the merger agreement for this reason if SXL is then in material breach of any of its
representations, warranties, covenants or agreements contained in the merger agreement.
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In addition, ETP may terminate the
merger agreement:
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if there is a breach by SXL of any of its representations, warranties, covenants or agreements in the merger agreement such that certain closing conditions would not be satisfied, or if capable of being cured, such
breach has not been cured within 30 days following delivery of written notice from ETP of such breach;
provided
that ETP will not have the right to terminate the merger agreement for this reason if ETP is then in material breach of any of its
representations, warranties, covenants or agreements contained in the merger agreement; or
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prior to the adoption of the merger agreement by ETP unitholders, in order to enter into (concurrently with such termination) any agreement, understanding or arrangement providing for a superior proposal in accordance
with ETPs obligation to comply with the requirements described under No Solicitation by ETP of Alternative Proposals, including payment of the termination fee.
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In some cases, termination of the merger agreement will require ETP to reimburse up to $30.0 million of SXLs expenses and pay a
termination fee to SXL (less any expenses of SXL and its affiliates previously reimbursed by ETP), as described below under Termination Fee and Expenses. Following payment of the termination fee, ETP will not
be obligated to pay any additional expenses incurred by SXL or its affiliates.
Termination Fee
The merger agreement provides that ETP is required to pay a termination fee to SXL of $630.0 million, less any expenses of SXL previously
reimbursed by ETP, as described below under Expenses, to SXL:
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if (i) an alternative proposal was publicly proposed or publicly disclosed prior to, and not withdrawn at the
time of, the date of the special meeting of ETP unitholders called for the purpose of adopting the merger agreement (or, if the special meeting of ETP unitholders did not occur, prior to the date on which the merger agreement was terminated as a
result of the failure to consummate the merger prior to the outside date), (ii) the merger agreement is terminated by either party (A) as a result of the failure to consummate the merger prior to the outside date or (B) because the merger agreement
was not adopted at the special meeting of ETP unitholders called for such purpose and (iii) ETP enters into a
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definitive agreement with respect to, or consummates, any alternative proposal during the 12-month period following the date on which the merger agreement is terminated (whether or not such
alternative proposal is the same alternative proposal referred to in clause (i));
provided
, that for purposes of the payment of the termination fee described above, the term alternative proposal has the meaning provided under
ETP Unitholder Approval, except that the references to 15% or more will be deemed to be references to 50% or more;
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if SXL terminates the merger agreement due to:
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an adverse recommendation change having occurred;
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ETP being, prior to the adoption of the merger agreement by ETP unitholders, in willful breach of its obligations to (i) duly call, give notice of and hold a special meeting of its unitholders for the purpose of
obtaining unitholder approval of the merger agreement, use its reasonable best efforts to solicit proxies from unitholders in favor of such adoption and, through the ETP Board, recommend the adoption of the merger agreement to ETP unitholders or
(ii) comply with the requirements described under No Solicitation by ETP of Alternative Proposals; or
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the merger agreement not being adopted by the ETP common unitholders at a special meeting called for such purpose where an adverse recommendation change has occurred; or
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if ETP terminates the merger agreement:
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because the merger agreement was not adopted by ETP unitholders at a special meeting of ETP unitholders called for such purpose in a case where an adverse recommendation change has occurred; or
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prior to the receipt of the ETP unitholder approval, in order to enter into (concurrently with such termination) any agreement, understanding or arrangement providing for a superior proposal.
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Expenses
Generally, all fees and expenses incurred in connection with the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement will be the obligation of
the party incurring such fees and expenses.
In addition, ETP is required to pay the expenses of SXL in the event that the merger
agreement is terminated:
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by ETP or SXL because the merger agreement was not adopted by ETP unitholders at a special meeting of ETP unitholders (or if ETP terminates the merger agreement pursuant to another termination right at a time when the
agreement was terminable for this reason); or
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by SXL because ETP is in willful breach of its obligations to (i) duly call, give notice of and hold a special meeting of ETPs unitholders for the purpose of obtaining unitholder approval of the merger agreement,
use its reasonable best efforts to solicit proxies from unitholders in favor of such adoption and, through the ETP Board, recommend the adoption of the merger agreement to ETPs unitholders or (ii) comply with the requirements described under
No Solicitation by ETP of Alternative Proposals.
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In such case, ETP promptly, but in no event later than
three business days after receipt of an invoice therefor from SXL, will be required to pay SXLs designee all of the reasonably documented out-of-pocket expenses (including all fees and expenses of counsel, accountants, investment bankers,
financing sources, hedging counterparties, experts and consultants) incurred by SXL and its affiliates in connection with the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby, up to a maximum amount of $30.0 million. In no event will ETP
be required to make any such payment if, at the time of such termination, the merger agreement was terminable by it because there is a breach by SXL of any of its representations, warranties, covenants or
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agreements in the merger agreement such that certain closing conditions would not be satisfied, or if capable of being cured, such breach has not been cured within 30 days following delivery of
written notice of such breach. Following payment of the termination fee, ETP will not be obligated to pay any additional expenses incurred by SXL or its affiliates.
Conduct of Business Pending the Consummation of the Merger
Under the merger agreement, each of SXL and ETP has undertaken certain covenants that place restrictions on it and its respective subsidiaries
from the date of the merger agreement until the earlier of the termination of the merger agreement in accordance with its terms and the effective time, unless the other party gives its prior written consent (which, in certain instances, cannot be
unreasonably withheld, conditioned or delayed). In general, each party has agreed to (i) cause its respective business to be conducted in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice, (ii) use commercially reasonable efforts to
preserve intact its respective business organization, (iii) use commercially reasonable efforts to keep in full force and effect all material permits and insurance policies maintained by it, its subsidiaries and its joint ventures, other than
changes to such policies made in the ordinary course of business and (iv) use commercially reasonable efforts to comply in all material respects with all applicable laws and the requirements of its respective material contracts.
Subject to certain exceptions set forth in the merger agreement and the disclosure schedules delivered by ETP to SXL in connection with the
merger agreement, unless SXL consents in writing (which consent cannot be unreasonably withheld, conditioned or delayed), ETP will not, and will not permit any of its subsidiaries or joint ventures to, among other things, undertake the following
actions:
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sell, transfer, lease, farmout or otherwise dispose of any properties or assets that (i) do not generate cash on a recurring basis and have a fair market value in excess of $100.0 million in the aggregate (except (A)
pursuant to certain contracts listed in the disclosure schedules, (B) dispositions of obsolete or worthless equipment that is replaced with comparable or better equipment, (C) transactions in the ordinary course of business consistent with past
practice or (D) sales or transfers to ETP or its subsidiaries) and (ii) generate cash on a recurring basis (including securities of ETPs subsidiaries);
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make any capital expenditures (which includes, among others, any investments by contribution to capital) in excess of $400.0 million in the aggregate other than certain capital expenditures set forth on the disclosure
schedules or as may be reasonably required to conduct emergency operations or repairs of any well, pipeline or other facility;
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directly or indirectly acquire (i) any entity, division, business or equity interest of any third party or, (ii) except in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice, any assets that, in the
aggregate, have a purchase price in excess of $200.0 million;
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make any loans or advances to any person other than (i) to its employees in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice, (ii) loans and advances to ETP or its subsidiaries and (iii) trade credit
granted in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice;
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(i) except for in connection with certain contracts relating to indebtedness or commodity derivative instruments
entered into in compliance with ETPs risk management policy and (other than in the case of non-competition agreements) as in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice, enter into material contracts (other than those already
contemplated as of the date of the merger agreement or as are approved as part of any previously announced project of an ETP joint venture) in which the annual revenues or payments are anticipated to be in excess of $400.0 million, or terminate or
amend in any material respect any material ETP contract, or (ii) (A) waive any material rights under any material ETP contract, (B) enter into or extend the term or scope of any material ETP contract that materially restricts ETP or any of its
subsidiaries from engaging in any line of business or in any geographic area, (C) enter into any material ETP contract that would be breached by, or require the consent of any third party in order to continue in full force following, consummation of
the transactions
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contemplated by the merger agreement or (D) release any person from, or modify or waive any provision of, any standstill or confidentiality agreement related to a sale of ETP or any of its
material subsidiaries;
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adopt a plan or agreement of complete or partial liquidation, dissolution, restructuring, recapitalization, merger, consolidation or other reorganization (other than transactions between wholly owned subsidiaries of
ETP);
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except as provided under any agreement entered into prior to the date of the merger agreement, pay, discharge, settle or satisfy any suit, action, claims or proceeding, in excess of $20.0 million individually or $40.0
million in the aggregate; or
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take any action which would in any material respect impede or delay the ability of the parties to satisfy any of the conditions to the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement, in each case to a date after the
outside date.
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ETP has further agreed that, subject to certain exceptions in the merger agreement and the disclosure
schedules delivered by ETP to SXL in connection with the merger agreement ETP will not, and will not permit any of its subsidiaries or joint ventures to, among other things, undertake the following actions without the consent of SXL (which consent
may be withheld in SXLs sole discretion):
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issue, sell, grant, dispose of, accelerate the vesting of or modify, any ownership or other limited partner interests in ETP, voting securities or equity interests, or any securities convertible into or exchangeable for
ownership or other interests in ETP, voting securities or equity interests, other than (i) in connection with the vesting or settlement of any equity or equity-based award that is outstanding on, or granted after, the date of the merger agreement in
accordance with the terms of such award, (ii) in connection with the granting of any awards under the ETP equity plans or the ETP cash unit plan in the ordinary course of business and (iii) issuances of Class K units with the powers, preferences,
rights and obligations as set forth in Amendment No. 15 to the ETP partnership agreement;
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redeem, purchase or otherwise acquire any of ETPs partnership interests, voting securities or equity interests, other than tax withholding with respect to any equity or equity-based award that is outstanding on,
or granted after, the date of the merger agreement and in accordance with the terms of such awards;
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declare, set aside for payment or pay any distribution on any ETP common units or other partnership interests, or otherwise make any payments to ETP unitholders in their capacity as such, other than distributions by a
subsidiary of ETP to its parent;
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split, combine, subdivide or reclassify any ETP common units or other partnership interests in ETP;
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incur, refinance or assume any indebtedness for borrowed money or guarantee any such indebtedness for borrowed money or issue or sell any debt securities or options, warrants, calls or other rights to acquire any debt
securities of ETP or any of its subsidiaries or joint ventures, except that ETP may:
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borrow under ETPs existing credit facility (and to the extent such credit facility is increased);
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in addition to borrowings under the preceding bullet, borrow additional amounts up to $200.0 million; and
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borrow from or repay a subsidiary, and ETPs subsidiaries may borrow from or repay ETP;
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prepay or repurchase any long-term indebtedness for borrowed money or debt securities of ETP or any of its subsidiaries, other than revolving indebtedness, borrowings from ETP to a subsidiary and repayments or
repurchases required pursuant to the terms of such indebtedness or debt securities;
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except in the ordinary course of business or as required by applicable law, (i) change its fiscal year or any method of tax accounting, (ii) make, change or revoke any material tax election, (iii) settle or compromise
any material liability for taxes or (iv) file any material amended tax return;
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make any changes in financial accounting methods, principles or practices (or change an annual accounting period), except insofar as may be required by a change in GAAP or applicable law;
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amend ETPs certificate of limited partnership or the ETP partnership agreement; or
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engage in any activity or conduct its business in a manner that would cause less than 90% of the gross income of ETP for any calendar quarter since its formation and prior to the effective time to be treated as
qualifying income within the meaning of Section 7704(d) of the Code.
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Subject to certain exceptions set forth in
the merger agreement and the disclosure schedules delivered by SXL to ETP in connection with the merger agreement, unless ETP consents in writing (which consent cannot be unreasonably withheld, conditioned or delayed), SXL has agreed to certain
restrictions limiting the ability of it and its subsidiaries to, among other things:
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make any capital expenditures (which includes, among others, any investments by contribution to capital) in excess of $150.0 million in the aggregate other than certain capital expenditures set forth on the disclosure
schedules or as may be reasonably required to conduct emergency operations or repairs of any well, pipeline or other facility;
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(i) except for in connection with certain contracts relating to indebtedness or commodity derivative instruments entered into in compliance with SXLs risk management policy and (other than in the case of
non-competition agreements) as in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice, enter into material contracts or terminate or amend in any material respect any material SXL contract or (ii) (A) waive any material rights under any
material SXL contract, (B) enter into or extend the term or scope of any material SXL contract that materially restricts SXL or any of its subsidiaries from engaging in any line of business or in any geographic area, (C) enter into any material SXL
contract that would be breached by, or require the consent of any third party in order to continue in full force following, consummation of the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement or (D) release any person from, or modify or waive any
provision of, any standstill or confidentiality agreement related to a sale of SXL or any of its material subsidiaries;
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amend SXLs certificate of limited partnership or the SXL partnership agreement (other than amendments (i) in connection with any SXL acquisition transaction or (ii) that are approved by the general partner or a
SXL unit majority); or
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adopt a plan or agreement of complete or partial liquidation, dissolution, restructuring, recapitalization or other reorganization (other than transactions exclusively between wholly owned subsidiaries of SXL).
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SXL has further agreed that, subject to certain exceptions in the merger agreement and the disclosure schedules delivered
by SXL to ETP in connection with the merger agreement SXL will not, and will not permit any of its subsidiaries or joint ventures to, among other things, undertake the following actions without the consent of ETP (which consent may be withheld in
ETPs sole discretion):
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issue, sell, grant, dispose of, accelerate the vesting of or modify any limited partner interests in SXL, voting securities or equity interests, or any securities convertible into or exchangeable for limited partner
interests in SXL, other than (i) in connection with the vesting or settlement of any equity or equity-based award that is outstanding on the date of the merger agreement or thereafter granted in accordance with their terms, (ii) issuances of up to
$200.0 million in connection with a transaction involving the acquisition of assets or equity interests and (iii) issuances exceeding $200.0 million in connection with a transaction involving the acquisition of assets or equity interests as to which
the SXL Board has received an opinion from a nationally recognized investment banking firm to the effect that such transaction is fair, from a financial point of view, to the SXL unitholders (any transaction described in clauses (ii) or (iii), a
SXL acquisition transaction);
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redeem, purchase or otherwise acquire any of SXLs outstanding partnership interests, voting securities or equity interests, other than tax withholding with respect to, equity or equity-based awards outstanding on
the date of the merger agreement or thereafter granted in accordance with their terms;
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declare, set aside for payment or pay any distribution on any SXL common units, or otherwise make any payments to SXLs unitholders in their capacity as such other than (i) distributions by a direct or indirect
subsidiary of SXL to its parent, (ii) SXLs regular quarterly distribution and associated distributions to SXL GP or (iii) distributions in connection with a parent acquisition transaction;
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split, combine, subdivide or reclassify any SXL partnership units or other interests;
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incur, refinance or assume any indebtedness for borrowed money or guarantee any such indebtedness for borrowed money or issue or sell any debt securities or options, warrants, calls or other rights to acquire any debt
securities of SXL or any of its subsidiaries or joint ventures, except that SXL may:
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borrow under SXLs existing credit facility (and to the extent such credit facility is increased);
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in addition to borrowings under the preceding bullet, borrow additional amounts up to $200.0 million; and
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borrow from or repay a subsidiary, and SXLs subsidiaries may borrow from or repay SXL;
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prepay or repurchase any long-term indebtedness for borrowed money or debt securities of SXL or any of its subsidiaries, other than revolving indebtedness, borrowings from SXL to a subsidiary and repayments or
repurchases required pursuant to the terms of such indebtedness or debt securities;
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except in the ordinary course of business or as required by applicable law, (i) change its fiscal year or any method of tax accounting, (ii) make, change or revoke any material tax election, (iii) settle or compromise
any material liability for taxes or (iv) file any material amended tax return;
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make, or permit any of its subsidiaries to make, any acquisition of any other person or business that would reasonably be expected to prevent, materially impede or materially delay the consummation of the merger; or
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engage in any activity or conduct its business in a manner that would cause less than 90% of the gross income of SXL for any calendar quarter since its formation and prior to the effective time to be treated as
qualifying income within the meaning of Section 7704(d) of the Code.
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Indemnification;
Directors and Officers Insurance
The merger agreement provides that, from and after the effective time, SXL and the GP
surviving entity will, to the fullest extent permitted by law, indemnify and hold harmless, and provide advancement and reimbursement of expenses to, all past and present directors and officers of SXL, SXL GP, ETP, ETP GP or any of their respective
subsidiaries, to the fullest extent that SXL, SXL GP or any of their respective subsidiaries would be permitted to indemnify such indemnified persons.
In addition, from and after the effective time and as provided by the merger agreement, SXL and the GP surviving entity will honor the
provisions regarding the elimination of liability of directors, indemnification of officers, directors and employees and advancement of expenses contained in the governing instruments of SXL or ETP GP and any subsidiary of SXL or ETP GP immediately
prior to the effective time and ensure that the organizational documents of SXL and the GP surviving entity will, for a period of six years following the effective time, contain provisions no less favorable with respect to indemnification,
advancement of expenses and exculpation than are presently set forth in such governing instruments. SXL and the GP surviving entity will maintain in effect for six years from the effective time of the merger the current directors and
officers liability insurance policies covering acts or omissions occurring at or prior to the effective time with respect to such indemnified persons, so long as SXL and the GP surviving entity are not required to expend more than an amount
per year equal to 300% of current annual premiums paid by SXL or SXL GP for such insurance. SXL or SXL GP
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may, in its sole discretion prior to the effective time, purchase a tail policy with respect to acts or omissions occurring or alleged to have occurred prior to the effective time
that were committed or alleged to have been committed by any past and present directors, officers and employees of SXL, SXL GP or any of their respective subsidiaries in their capacity as such, so long as the cost of such policy does not exceed six
times an amount equal to 300% of the current annual premiums paid by SXL or SXL GP for directors and officers liability insurance policies and, if such a tail policy is purchased, SXL and the GP surviving entity will have no
further obligations with respect to maintaining directors and officers liability insurance.
Financing Matters
The merger agreement provides that ETP consents to SXLs use of and reliance on any audited or unaudited financial statements
relating to ETP and its consolidated subsidiaries, any ETP joint ventures or entities or businesses acquired by ETP reasonably requested by SXL to be used in any financing or other activities of SXL, including any filings that SXL desires to make
with the SEC. In addition, ETP will use commercially reasonable efforts, at SXLs sole cost and expense, to obtain the consents of any auditor to the inclusion of the financial statements referenced above in appropriate filings with the
SEC. Prior to the closing, ETP will provide such assistance (and will cause its subsidiaries and its and their respective personnel and advisors to provide such assistance), as SXL may reasonably request in order to assist SXL in connection
with financing activities, including any public offerings to be registered under the Securities Act or private offerings. Such assistance will include, but not be limited to, the following: (i) providing such information, and making available such
personnel as SXL may reasonably request; (ii) participation in, and assistance with, any marketing activities related to such financing; (iii) participation by senior management of ETP in, and their assistance with, the preparation of rating agency
presentations and meetings with rating agencies; (iv) taking such actions as are reasonably requested by SXL or its financing sources to facilitate the satisfaction of all conditions precedent to obtaining such financing; and (v) taking such actions
as may be required to permit any cash and marketable securities of ETP or SXL to be made available to finance the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement at the effective time.
SXL Amended and Restated Partnership Agreement
In conjunction with the merger, SXL GP will amend and restate the current SXL partnership agreement, providing for, among other things, (i) the
reduction by ETE, as the indirect holder of SXLs incentive distribution rights following the consummation of the merger, of quarterly distributions in such amounts as correspond to the reductions in ETPs incentive distribution rights set
forth in the ETP partnership agreement prior to the consummation of the merger, (ii) the creation of the SXL Class J units, (iii) the creation and issuance of the SXL Class E, SXL Class G, SXL Class I and SXL Class K units and (iv) a change in the
definition of Operating Surplus in the SXL partnership agreement to provide that such term will include an amount equal to the accumulated and undistributed operating surplus of ETP as of the closing of the merger.
Amendment and Waiver
At any time prior to the effective time, whether before or after adoption of the merger agreement by ETP unitholders, the parties may, by
written agreement and by action taken or authorized by the ETP Board and the SXL Board, amend the merger agreement;
provided
,
however
, that the ETP Board and the SXL Board may not take or authorize any such action unless it has first
referred such action to the ETP Conflicts Committee and the SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, for its consideration, and permitted the ETP Conflicts Committee and the SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, not less than two business days to
make a recommendation to the ETP Board and the SXL Board, as applicable, with respect thereto (for the avoidance of doubt, the ETP Board and the SXL Board will in no way be obligated to follow the recommendation of the ETP Conflicts Committee and
the SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, and the ETP Board and the SXL Board, as applicable, will be permitted to take action following the expiration of such two business day period); provided, however, that in the event the ETP Board or SXL
Board takes or authorizes an action that is counter to any recommendation by the
126
ETP Conflicts Committee or the SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, then the ETP Conflicts Committee or the SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, may rescind its approval of the merger
agreement, with such rescission resulting in the rescission of special approval under Section 7.9 of the ETP partnership agreement or the SXL partnership agreement, as applicable. Following approval of the merger and the other
transactions contemplated by the merger agreement by ETP unitholders, no amendment or change to the provisions of the merger agreement will be made which by law would require further approval by ETP unitholders, without such approval.
Unless otherwise expressly set forth in the merger agreement, whenever a determination, decision, approval or consent of ETP or the ETP Board
or of SXL or the SXL Board is required pursuant to the merger agreement, such determination, decision, approval or consent must be authorized by the ETP Board and the SXL Board, as applicable;
provided
,
however
, that the ETP Board and
the SXL Board, as applicable, may not take or authorize any such action unless it has first referred such action to the ETP Conflicts Committee and the SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, for its consideration, and permitted the ETP Conflicts
Committee and the SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, not less than two business days to make a recommendation to the ETP Board and the SXL Board, as applicable, with respect thereto (for the avoidance of doubt, the ETP Board and the SXL Board,
as applicable, will in no way be obligated to follow the recommendation of the ETP Conflicts Committee or the SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, and the ETP Board and the SXL Board, as applicable, will be permitted to take action following the
expiration of such two business day period).
At any time prior to the effective time, any party to the merger agreement may, to the
extent legally allowed: (i) waive any inaccuracies in the representations and warranties of any other party contained in the merger agreement; (ii) extend the time for the performance of any of the obligations or acts of any other party provided for
in the merger agreement; or (iii) waive compliance by any other party with any of the agreements or conditions contained in the merger agreement, as permitted under the merger agreement;
provided, however
, that in the event the ETP Board or
the SXL Board takes or authorizes any action under this provision or otherwise grants any consent under the merger agreement without the concurrence of the ETP Conflicts Committee or the SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, then the ETP Conflicts
Committee or the SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, may rescind its approval of the merger agreement, with such rescission resulting in the rescission of special approval under Section 7.9 of the ETP partnership agreement or the SXL
partnership agreement, as applicable.
Remedies; Specific Performance
The merger agreement provides that, in the event ETP pays the termination fee (described under Termination Fee) to SXL when
required, ETP will have no further liability to SXL or SXL GP. Notwithstanding any termination of the merger agreement, the merger agreement provides that nothing in the agreement (other than payment of the termination fee) will relieve any
party from any liability for any failure to consummate the transactions when required pursuant to the merger agreement or any party from liability for fraud or a willful breach of any covenant or agreement contained in the merger agreement. The
merger agreement also provides that the parties are entitled to obtain an injunction to prevent breaches of the merger agreement and to specifically enforce the merger agreement. In the event that SXL receives the termination fee, SXL may not seek
any award of specific performance under the merger agreement.
Representations and Warranties
The merger agreement contains representations and warranties made by ETP and SXL. These representations and warranties have been made
solely for the benefit of the other parties to the merger agreement and:
|
|
|
may be intended not as statements of fact or of the condition of the parties to the merger agreement or their respective subsidiaries, but rather as a way of allocating the risk to one of the parties if those statements
prove to be inaccurate;
|
127
|
|
|
have been qualified by disclosures that were made to the other party in connection with the negotiation of the merger agreement, which disclosures may not be reflected in the merger agreement;
|
|
|
|
may apply standards of materiality in a way that is different from what may be viewed as material to you or other investors; and
|
|
|
|
were made only as of the date of the merger agreement or such other date or dates as may be specified in the merger agreement and are subject to more recent developments.
|
The representations and warranties made by both ETP and SXL relate to, among other things:
|
|
|
organization, formation, standing, power and similar matters;
|
|
|
|
approval and authorization of the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement and any conflicts created by such transactions;
|
|
|
|
required consents and approvals of governmental authorities in connection with the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement;
|
|
|
|
documents filed with the SEC, financial statements included in those documents and regulatory reports filed with governmental authorities;
|
|
|
|
absence of certain changes or events from December 31, 2015 through the date of the merger agreement and from the date of the merger agreement through the closing date;
|
|
|
|
compliance with applicable laws and permits;
|
|
|
|
information supplied in connection with this proxy statement/prospectus;
|
|
|
|
contracts of each party;
|
|
|
|
brokers and other advisors;
|
|
|
|
state takeover statutes;
|
|
|
|
regulatory matters; and
|
|
|
|
absence of additional representations and warranties.
|
Additional representations and
warranties made only by ETP relate to, among other things:
|
|
|
opinion of financial advisor.
|
Distributions
The merger agreement provides that, from the date of the merger agreement until the effective time, each of SXL and ETP will coordinate with
the other regarding the declaration of any distributions in respect of SXL units
128
and ETP common units. The merger agreement also provides that holders of ETP common units will receive, for any quarter, either: (i) only distributions in respect of ETP common units or (ii)
only distributions in respect of SXL common units that they receive in exchange therefor in the merger.
ETEs
Obligation to Vote ETP Units
Under the terms of the merger agreement, ETE has agreed to vote all ETP limited partner interests then
owned beneficially or of record by it or any of its subsidiaries, as of the record date, in favor of the approval of the merger agreement and the merger and the approval of any actions required in furtherance thereof. ETE consents to, and has caused
or will cause, to the extent necessary and to the extent permitted by the organizational documents thereof, each of its subsidiaries to consent to, the merger agreement, the SXL partnership agreement and the transactions contemplated by the merger
agreement. As of February 27, 2017, ETE and its subsidiaries collectively held 18,356,751 ETP common units, representing approximately 3.3% of the ETP units entitled to vote on the merger.
In addition, ETP has agreed to consent, in its capacity as the sole member of SXL GP, to SXLs entry into the merger agreement, the SXL
partnership agreement and the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement.
Additional Agreements
The merger agreement also contains covenants relating to cooperation in the preparation of this proxy statement/prospectus and additional
agreements relating to, among other things, access to information, notice of specified matters and public announcements. The merger agreement also obligates SXL to have SXL common units to be issued in connection with the merger approved for listing
on the NYSE, subject to official notice of issuance, prior to the date of the consummation of the merger.
129
SUNOCO LOGISTICS PARTNERS L.P.
UNAUDITED PRO FORMA FINANCIAL INFORMATION
The following unaudited pro forma consolidated financial information of SXL reflects the pro forma impacts of SXLs proposed merger with
ETP. Under the terms of the merger agreement, holders of ETP common units will receive 1.5 SXL common units for each ETP common unit.
SXL is currently a consolidated subsidiary of ETP for financial accounting and reporting purposes and has been reflected as such in ETPs
historical consolidated financial statements since October 5, 2012. For accounting purposes, the merger will result in ETP being considered the surviving consolidated entity, rather than SXL, which is the surviving consolidated entity for legal
and reporting purposes. Subsequent to the proposed merger, SXL will present consolidated financial statements that reflect the historical consolidated financial statements of ETP. The proposed merger will be accounted for as an equity
transaction and will be reflected in the consolidated financial statements as ETPs acquisition of SXLs noncontrolling interest. The carrying amounts of SXLs and ETPs assets and liabilities will not be adjusted, nor will a
gain or loss be recognized as a result of the merger.
The unaudited pro forma condensed consolidated balance sheet gives effect to the
merger as if it had occurred on December 31, 2016, while the unaudited pro forma condensed consolidated statements of operations give effect to the merger as if it had occurred on January 1, 2016. The unaudited pro forma condensed consolidated
balance sheet and condensed consolidated statements of operations should be read in conjunction with SXLs Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2016 and ETPs Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31,
2016.
The unaudited pro forma condensed consolidated financial statements are for illustrative purposes only and are not necessarily
indicative of the financial results that would have occurred if the merger had been consummated on the dates indicated, nor are they necessarily indicative of the financial position or results of operations in the future. The pro forma adjustments,
as described in the accompanying notes, are based upon available information and certain assumptions that are believed to be reasonable as of the date of this proxy statement/prospectus.
130
Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.
Unaudited Pro Forma Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets
December 31, 2016
(in
millions)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ETP
Historical
|
|
|
Pro Forma
Adjustments
|
|
|
|
|
|
SXL Pro Forma
for Merger
|
|
ASSETS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current assets:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
|
$
|
360
|
|
|
$
|
(25
|
)
|
|
|
a
|
|
|
$
|
335
|
|
Accounts receivable, net
|
|
|
3,002
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3,002
|
|
Accounts receivable from related companies
|
|
|
209
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
209
|
|
Inventories
|
|
|
1,712
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,712
|
|
Derivative assets
|
|
|
20
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
20
|
|
Other current assets
|
|
|
426
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
426
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total current assets
|
|
|
5,729
|
|
|
|
(25
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5,704
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Property, plant and equipment, net
|
|
|
50,917
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
50,917
|
|
Advances to and investments in unconsolidated affiliates
|
|
|
4,280
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4,280
|
|
Other non-current assets, net
|
|
|
672
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
672
|
|
Intangible assets, net
|
|
|
4,696
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4,696
|
|
Goodwill
|
|
|
3,897
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3,897
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total assets
|
|
$
|
70,191
|
|
|
$
|
(25
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
70,166
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
131
Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.
Unaudited Pro Forma Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets
December 31, 2016
(in
millions)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ETP
Historical
|
|
|
Pro Forma
Adjustments
|
|
|
|
|
|
SXL Pro Forma
for Merger
|
|
LIABILITIES AND EQUITY
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accounts payable
|
|
$
|
2,900
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
2,900
|
|
Accounts payable to related companies
|
|
|
43
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
43
|
|
Derivative liabilities
|
|
|
166
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
166
|
|
Accrued and other current liabilities
|
|
|
1,905
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,905
|
|
Current maturities of long-term debt
|
|
|
1,189
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,189
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total current liabilities
|
|
|
6,203
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
6,203
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Long-term debt, less current maturities
|
|
|
31,741
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
31,741
|
|
Long-term notes payablerelated companies
|
|
|
250
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
250
|
|
Non-current derivative liabilities
|
|
|
76
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
76
|
|
Deferred income taxes
|
|
|
4,394
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4,394
|
|
Other non-current liabilities
|
|
|
952
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
952
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Commitments and contingencies
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Series A Preferred Units
|
|
|
33
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
33
|
|
Redeemable noncontrolling interests
|
|
|
15
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
15
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
General Partner
|
|
|
206
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
206
|
|
Limited Partners:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Common Unitholders
|
|
|
14,946
|
|
|
|
(25
|
)
|
|
|
a
|
|
|
|
24,475
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
9,554
|
|
|
|
b
|
|
|
|
|
|
Class H Unitholder
|
|
|
3,480
|
|
|
|
(3,480
|
)
|
|
|
b
|
|
|
|
|
|
Class I Unitholder
|
|
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2
|
|
Accumulated other comprehensive income
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total partners capital
|
|
|
18,642
|
|
|
|
6,049
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
24,691
|
|
Noncontrolling interest
|
|
|
7,885
|
|
|
|
(6,074
|
)
|
|
|
b
|
|
|
|
1,811
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total equity
|
|
|
26,527
|
|
|
|
(25
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
26,502
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total liabilities and equity
|
|
$
|
70,191
|
|
|
$
|
(25
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
70,166
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
132
Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.
Unaudited Pro Forma Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations
For the Year Ended December 31, 2016
(in millions, except per unit data)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ETP
Historical
|
|
|
Pro Forma
Adjustments
|
|
|
|
|
|
SXL Pro Forma
for Merger
|
|
|
|
|
Revenues
|
|
$
|
21,827
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
21,827
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Costs and expenses:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cost of products sold
|
|
|
15,394
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
15,394
|
|
|
|
|
|
Operating expenses
|
|
|
1,484
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,484
|
|
|
|
|
|
Depreciation, depletion and amortization
|
|
|
1,986
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,986
|
|
|
|
|
|
Selling, general and administrative
|
|
|
348
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
348
|
|
|
|
|
|
Impairment losses
|
|
|
813
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
813
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total costs and expenses
|
|
|
20,025
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
20,025
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Operating income
|
|
|
1,802
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,802
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other income (expense):
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Interest expense, net of interest capitalized
|
|
|
(1,317
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1,317
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
Equity in earnings of unconsolidated affiliates
|
|
|
59
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
59
|
|
|
|
|
|
Impairment of investment in consolidated affiliates
|
|
|
(308
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(308
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
Gains on acquisitions
|
|
|
83
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
83
|
|
|
|
|
|
Losses on interest rate derivatives
|
|
|
(12
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(12
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
Other, net
|
|
|
131
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
131
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Income before income tax benefit
|
|
|
438
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
438
|
|
|
|
|
|
Income tax benefit
|
|
|
(186
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(186
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net income
|
|
$
|
624
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
624
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Allocation of net income:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
General Partner
|
|
$
|
958
|
|
|
$
|
(31
|
)
|
|
|
c
|
|
|
$
|
927
|
|
|
|
|
|
Common Unitholders
|
|
|
(1,039
|
)
|
|
|
636
|
|
|
|
c
|
|
|
|
(403
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
Class H Unitholder
|
|
|
351
|
|
|
|
(351
|
)
|
|
|
c
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Class I Unitholder
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other securities
|
|
|
19
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
19
|
|
|
|
|
|
Noncontrolling Interests
|
|
|
327
|
|
|
|
(254
|
)
|
|
|
c
|
|
|
|
73
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
624
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
624
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net income (loss) per common unit:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basic
|
|
$
|
(2.06
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
(0.41
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Diluted
|
|
$
|
(2.06
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
(0.41
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted average number of common units outstanding:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basic
|
|
|
505.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
986.3
|
|
|
|
d
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Diluted
|
|
|
505.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
986.3
|
|
|
|
d
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
133
Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.
Notes to Unaudited Pro Forma Financial Information
The unaudited pro forma condensed consolidated financial statements are for illustrative purposes only and are not necessarily indicative of
the financial results that would have occurred if the merger had been consummated on the dates indicated, nor are they necessarily indicative of the financial position or results of operations in the future. The pro forma adjustments, as described
in the accompanying notes, are based upon available information and certain assumptions that are believed to be reasonable as of the date of this proxy statement/prospectus.
Pro Forma Adjustments
Following is a description of the pro forma adjustments made to the combined historical financial statements of SXL and ETP:
|
a.
|
Pro forma adjustment to reflect the payment of an estimated $25 million of incremental transaction costs related to the proposed merger, including advisory, legal, accounting and other professional fees and expenses.
Such fees and expenses will be recognized in the statement of operations when incurred; however, the estimated expenses are not reflected in the pro forma statements of operations included herein.
|
|
b.
|
Pro forma adjustments to reflect the cancellation of the ETP Class H units in accordance with the merger agreement and the reclassification to common unitholders capital of the noncontrolling interest in SXL.
|
|
c.
|
Pro forma adjustments to reflect the changes in net income allocation for purposes related to (i) the changes in the general partners ownership interest and changes in incentive distribution rights in connection
with the merger, (ii) the cancellation of the ETP Class H units in accordance with the merger agreement, and (iii) the elimination of the noncontrolling interest in SXL. The pro forma adjustment to the general partners interest in net income
reflects the following (in millions):
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Year Ended
December 31,
2016
|
|
Pro forma increase in general partners interest in income, excluding incentive
distributions
|
|
$
|
5
|
|
Pro forma decrease in incentive distributions to the general partner
|
|
|
(36
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pro forma decrease in income allocated to the general partner
|
|
$
|
(31
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
The pro forma increase in general partners interest in income, excluding incentive distributions, in the
table above reflects the change in net income that would have been allocated to the general partner interest based on the pro forma change in the general partners ownership percentage. The amounts represent the difference in ETPs
historical general partner ownership percentage compared to the pro forma general partner percentage, which percentage was calculated based on the historical proportionate ownership of SXLs general partner diluted by the issuance of additional
common units to ETPs unitholders.
The pro forma decrease in incentive distributions to the general partner in the table above,
reflects the change in incentive distributions that would have been paid based on (i) the assumed SXL common units that would have been outstanding upon each quarterly distribution record date, assuming that the outstanding ETP common units had been
converted to SXL common units at the exchange rate of 1.50 SXL common units for each ETP common unit and (ii) the pro forma
134
change in the general partners ownership percentage. These pro forma ownership changes, along with the historical distributions paid per SXL common unit, were used to derive the pro forma
incentive distributions in accordance with the requirements for distributions of available cash in the SXL partnership agreement.
|
d.
|
Pro forma weighted average common units outstanding reflects (i) SXLs weighted average limited partner units outstanding for the respective periods, plus (ii) the assumed exchange of ETP common units for SXL
common units, based on the weighted average of ETP common units outstanding during the respective periods multiplied by the exchange rate of 1.5, minus (iii) the elimination of 67.1 million SXL common units and 9.4 million SXL Class B units, which
are held by ETP. Pro forma diluted weighted average common units outstanding reflects the dilutive impact of unvested equity awards currently outstanding under the long-term incentive plans of SXL and ETP. Following is a reconciliation of
ETPs historical weighted average number of common units outstanding to the pro forma weighted average number of common units outstanding (in millions):
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Year Ended
December 31,
2016
|
|
ETP historical weighted average number of common units outstanding - basic
|
|
|
505.5
|
|
Exchange rate of SXL common units to be issued for each ETP common unit
|
|
|
1.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
758.3
|
|
SXL historical weighted average number of common units outstanding - basic
|
|
|
304.5
|
|
Weighted average SXL units held by ETP
|
|
|
(76.5
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pro forma SXL weighted average number of common units outstanding - basic
|
|
|
986.3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dilutive impact of participating securities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pro forma SXL weighted average number of common units outstanding - diluted
|
|
|
986.3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
135
MATERIAL U.S. FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES OF THE MERGER
The following is a discussion of the material U.S. federal income tax consequences of the merger that may be relevant to ETP common
unitholders. Unless otherwise noted, the legal conclusions set forth in the discussion relating to the consequences of the merger to ETP and its common unitholders are the opinion of Latham & Watkins LLP, counsel to ETP, as to the material U.S.
federal income tax consequences relating to those matters. This discussion is based upon current provisions of the Code, existing and proposed Treasury regulations promulgated under the Code (the Treasury Regulations) and current
administrative rulings and court decisions, all of which are subject to change, possibly with retroactive effect. Changes in these authorities may cause the tax consequences to vary substantially from the consequences described below.
This discussion does not purport to be a complete discussion of all U.S. federal income tax consequences of the merger. Moreover, the
discussion focuses on ETP common unitholders who are individual citizens or residents of the United States (for U.S. federal income tax purposes) and has only limited application to corporations, estates, trusts, nonresident aliens or other
unitholders subject to specialized tax treatment, such as tax-exempt institutions, employee benefit plans, foreign persons, financial institutions, insurance companies, real estate investment trusts (REITs), individual retirement accounts (IRAs),
mutual funds, traders in securities that elect mark-to-market, persons who hold ETP common units (who will hold SXL common units after the merger) as part of a hedge, straddle or conversion transaction, persons who acquired ETP common units by gift,
or directors and employees of ETP that received (or are deemed to receive) ETP common units as compensation or through the exercise (or deemed exercise) of options, unit appreciation rights, phantom units or restricted units granted under an ETP
equity incentive plan. Also, the discussion assumes that the ETP common units are held as capital assets at the time of the merger (generally, property held for investment).
Neither ETP nor SXL has sought a ruling from the IRS with respect to any of the tax consequences discussed below, and the IRS would not be
precluded from taking positions contrary to those described herein. As a result, no assurance can be given that the IRS will agree with all of the tax characterizations and the tax consequences described below. Some tax aspects of the merger are not
certain, and no assurance can be given that the below-described opinions and/or the statements contained herein with respect to tax matters would be sustained by a court if contested by the IRS. Furthermore, the tax treatment of the merger may
be significantly modified by future legislative or administrative changes or court decisions. Any modifications may or may not be retroactively applied.
Accordingly, SXL and ETP strongly urge each ETP unitholder to consult with, and depend upon, such unitholders own tax advisor in
analyzing the U.S. federal, state, local and foreign tax consequences particular to the unitholder of the merger.
Tax Opinions Required as a
Condition to Closing
No ruling has been or will be requested from the IRS with respect to the tax consequences of the merger. Instead,
SXL and ETP will rely on the opinions of their respective counsel regarding the tax consequences of the merger.
It is a condition of
SXLs obligation to complete the merger that SXL receive an opinion of its counsel, Vinson & Elkins L.L.P., to the effect that for U.S. federal income tax purposes:
|
|
|
SXL should not recognize any income or gain as a result of the merger (other than any gain resulting from a disguised sale attributable to contributions of cash or other property to SXL after the date of the merger
agreement and prior to the effective time of the merger) and
|
|
|
|
no gain or loss should be recognized by holders of SXL common units as a result of the merger (other than any gain resulting from (A) any decrease in partnership liabilities pursuant to Section 752 of the Code and
(B) a disguised sale attributable to contributions of cash or other property to SXL after the date of the merger agreement and prior to the effective time of the merger).
|
136
It is a condition of ETPs obligation to complete the merger that ETP receive an opinion of
its counsel, Latham & Watkins LLP, to the effect that for U.S. federal income tax purposes:
|
|
|
ETP should not recognize any income or gain as a result of the merger and
|
|
|
|
no gain or loss should be recognized by holders of ETP common units as a result of the merger (other than any gain resulting from the distribution of cash or from any decrease in partnership liabilities pursuant to
Section 752 of the Code).
|
It is a condition of each of SXLs and ETPs obligation to complete the merger that:
|
|
|
SXL receive an opinion from its counsel, Vinson & Elkins L.L.P., to the effect that:
|
|
|
|
at least 90% of the gross income of SXL for all of the calendar year that immediately precedes the calendar year that includes the closing date and each calendar quarter of the calendar year that includes the closing
date for which the necessary financial information is available is from sources treated as qualifying income within the meaning of Section 7704(d) of the Code and
|
|
|
|
at least 90% of the combined gross income of each of SXL and ETP for all of the calendar year that immediately precedes the calendar year that includes the closing date and each calendar quarter of the calendar year
that includes the closing date for which the necessary financial information is available is from sources treated as qualifying income within the meaning of Section 7704(d) of the Code; and
|
|
|
|
ETP receive an opinion from its counsel, Latham & Watkins LLP, to the effect that at least 90% of the gross income of ETP for all of the calendar year that immediately precedes the calendar year that includes the
closing date and each calendar quarter of the calendar year that includes the closing date for which the necessary financial information is available is from sources treated as qualifying income within the meaning of Section 7704(d) of
the Code.
|
The opinions of counsel will assume that the merger will be consummated in the manner contemplated by, and in
accordance with, the terms set forth in the merger agreement and described in this proxy statement/prospectus. In addition, the tax opinions delivered to SXL and ETP at closing will be based upon certain factual assumptions and representations made
by the officers of SXL, SXL GP, ETP, ETP GP and any of their respective affiliates. If either SXL or ETP waives the receipt of the requisite tax opinion as a condition to closing and the changes to the tax consequences would be material, then this
proxy statement/prospectus will be amended and recirculated and unitholder approval will be resolicited. Unlike a ruling, an opinion of counsel represents only that counsels best legal judgment and does not bind the IRS or the courts.
Accordingly, no assurance can be given that the above-described opinions will be sustained by a court if contested by the IRS.
Assumptions Related to
the U.S. Federal Income Tax Treatment of the Merger
The expected U.S. federal income tax consequences of the merger are dependent upon
SXL and ETP being treated as partnerships for U.S. federal income tax purposes at the time of the merger. If SXL or ETP were to be treated as a corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes at the time of the merger, the consequences of the
merger would be materially different. If SXL were to be treated as a corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes, the merger would likely be a fully taxable transaction to ETP common unitholders.
The discussion below assumes that each of SXL and ETP will be classified as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes at the time of
the merger. Please read the discussion of the opinion of Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. that SXL is classified as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes and the discussion of the opinion of Latham & Watkins LLP that ETP is classified as
a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes under U.S. Federal Income Tax Treatment of the Merger below.
Additionally,
the discussion below assumes that all of the liabilities of SXL that are deemed assumed by ETP in the merger qualify for an exception to the disguised sale rules. SXL and ETP believe that such
137
liabilities qualify for one or more of the exceptions to the disguised sale rules and intend to take the position that neither SXL nor ETP will recognize any income or gain as a
result of the disguised sale rules (except a disguised sale attributable to contributions of cash or other property to SXL after the date of the merger agreement and prior to the effective time of the merger).
U.S. Federal Income Tax Treatment of the Merger
Upon the terms and subject to the conditions set forth in the merger agreement, SXL Merger Sub LP will merge with and into ETP, with ETP
surviving the merger and becoming a wholly owned subsidiary of SXL, and all ETP common units will be converted into the right to receive SXL common units. Although for state law purposes ETP will become a wholly owned subsidiary of SXL in the
merger, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, the merger is intended to be a merger of SXL and ETP within the meaning of Treasury Regulations promulgated under Section 708 of the Code, with ETP being treated as the continuing partnership
and SXL being treated as the terminated partnership. As a result, each holder of SXL common units, including SXL common unitholders and the ETP common unitholders that will receive SXL common units in the merger, will be treated as a partner of ETP
for U.S. federal income tax purposes following the merger.
As a result of ETP surviving the merger for U.S. federal income tax purposes,
the following transactions will be deemed to occur for U.S. federal income tax purposes: (1) SXL will be deemed to contribute its assets to ETP in exchange for (i) the issuance to SXL of ETP units and (ii) the assumption of SXLs
liabilities and (2) SXL will be deemed to liquidate, distributing ETP units to the SXL unitholders in exchange for such SXL units (the Assets-Over Form).
The remainder of this discussion, except as otherwise noted, assumes that the merger and the transactions contemplated thereby will be treated
for U.S. federal income tax purposes in the manner described above. For the purposes of this discussion, and based upon the factual representations made by SXL and SXL GP, Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. is of the opinion that SXL will be treated as a
partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes immediately preceding the merger. The representations made by SXL and SXL GP upon which Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. has relied in rendering its opinion include, without limitation: (1) neither SXL nor
its operating company has elected or will elect to be treated, or is otherwise treated, as a corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes and (2) for each taxable year of its existence, more than 90% of SXLs gross income has been and will
be income of a character that Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. has opined is qualifying income within the meaning of Section 7704(d) of the Code. In addition, for the purposes of this discussion, and based upon the factual representations made
by ETP and ETP GP, Latham & Watkins LLP is of the opinion that ETP will be treated as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes immediately preceding the merger. The representations made by ETP and ETP GP upon which Latham & Watkins
LLP has relied in rendering its opinion include, without limitation: (1) neither ETP nor any of its partnership or limited liability company subsidiaries, other than those identified as such to Latham & Watkins LLP, have elected or will elect to
be treated as a corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes, (2) for each taxable year of its existence, more than 90% of ETPs gross income has been and will be income of a type that Latham & Watkins LLP has opined or will opine is
qualifying income within the meaning of Section 7704(d) of the Code and (3) each commodity hedging transaction that ETP treats as resulting in qualifying income has been and will be appropriately identified as a hedging transaction
pursuant to applicable Treasury Regulations, and has been and will be associated with oil, gas or products thereof that are held or to be held by ETP in activities that Latham & Watkins LLP has opined or will opine result in qualifying income.
Tax Consequences of the Merger to ETP and ETP Common Unitholders
Although for state law purposes ETP will become a wholly owned subsidiary of SXL in the merger, for U.S. federal income tax purposes ETP
(rather than SXL) will be treated as the continuing partnership following the merger pursuant to Treasury Regulations promulgated under Section 708 of the Code. As a result, ETP should not recognize any income, gain or loss for U.S. federal income
tax purposes as a result of the merger, and ETP
138
common unitholders should not recognize any income, gain or loss with respect to the SXL common units that they receive as part of the exchange. However, ETP common unitholders may recognize
income, gain or loss as a result of a net reduction in the share of nonrecourse liabilities allocated to such unitholder as a result of the merger.
Potential Taxable Gain to Certain ETP Common Unitholders from Reallocation of Nonrecourse Liabilities
As a partner in ETP, an ETP common unitholder must include the nonrecourse liabilities of ETP allocable to his or her ETP common units in the
tax basis of such common units. The amount of nonrecourse liabilities allocable to each unitholder is determined under complex regulations under Section 752 of the Code. As a result of the merger, the allocable share of nonrecourse liabilities
allocated to existing ETP common unitholders will be recalculated to take into account the combination of SXL and ETP into a single partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes. Therefore, the merger may cause a net reduction in the allocable
share of nonrecourse liabilities of an existing ETP common unitholder, which is referred to as a reducing debt shift. If an existing ETP common unitholder experiences a net reduction in such unitholders share of nonrecourse
liabilities as a result of the merger, such unitholder will be deemed to have received a cash distribution equal to the amount of the reduction and a corresponding basis reduction in such unitholders units.
A reducing debt shift and the resulting deemed cash distribution may, under certain circumstances, result in the recognition of taxable gain
by an ETP common unitholder to the extent the amount of the resulting deemed cash distribution exceeds such unitholders tax basis in his or her ETP common units. However, an ETP common unitholder would not recognize taxable gain if such
unitholders tax basis in his or her ETP common units is positive without regard to any amount of basis associated with the unitholders share of nonrecourse liabilities. If an existing ETP common unitholder has suspended passive losses
with respect to his or her ETP common units, such unitholder may be able to offset all or a portion of any gain resulting from a reducing debt shift with such losses. Please read Material U.S. Federal Income Tax Consequences of SXL Common Unit
OwnershipTax Consequences of Partnership Common Unit OwnershipLimitation on Deductibility of Losses.
Tax Basis and
Holding Period of ETP Common Units
Immediately prior to the merger, an ETP common unitholders tax basis in his or her common
units should equal the amount such unitholder paid for such ETP common units, (a) decreased, but not below zero, by distributions received by such unitholder from ETP and the aggregate amount of deductions, losses and nondeductible expenses (that
are not required to be capitalized), that have been allocated by ETP to such unitholder and (b) increased by such unitholders share of ETPs nonrecourse liabilities and the aggregate amount of income and gain allocated by ETP to such
unitholder. Following the merger, each ETP common unitholders share of ETPs nonrecourse liabilities will be recalculated. Any resulting increase or decrease in an ETP common unitholders nonrecourse liabilities will result in a
corresponding increase or decrease in such unitholders adjusted tax basis in its ETP common units.
Although for state law purposes
ETP will become a wholly owned subsidiary of SXL in the merger, for U.S. federal income tax purposes ETP (rather than SXL) will be treated as the continuing partnership following the merger. As such, an ETP common unitholders holding period in
his or her ETP common units will remain unchanged as a result of the merger.
139
MATERIAL U.S. FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES OF SXL COMMON UNIT
OWNERSHIP
For state law purposes, ETP will become a wholly owned subsidiary of SXL in the merger and ETP common unitholders will
become SXL common unitholders. For U.S. federal income tax purposes, however, ETP (rather than SXL) is expected to be treated as the continuing partnership in the merger. As a result, each holder of SXL common units, including SXL common unitholders
and the ETP common unitholders that will receive SXL common units in the merger, will be treated as a partner of ETP for U.S. federal income tax purposes following the merger. For purposes of this summary, because former ETP common unitholders will
become SXL common unitholders for state law purposes, we refer to the continuing partnership as SXL. Unless the context otherwise requires, references in this section to SXL include its operating subsidiaries, and references in this section to
we and us are references to SXL and its operating subsidiaries. This section is based upon current provisions of the Code, existing and proposed Treasury Regulations and current administrative rulings and court decisions, all
of which are subject to change. Changes in these authorities may cause the tax consequences to vary substantially from the consequences described below.
Legal conclusions contained in this section, unless otherwise noted, are the opinion of Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. and are based on the
accuracy of representations made by us to them for this purpose. However, this section does not address all federal income tax matters that affect us or our unitholders and does not describe the application of the alternative minimum tax that may be
applicable to certain unitholders. Furthermore, this section focuses on unitholders who are individual citizens or residents of the United States (for federal income tax purposes), who have the U.S. dollar as their functional currency, who use the
calendar year as their taxable year, and who hold units as capital assets (generally, property that is held for investment). This section has limited applicability to corporations, partnerships (including entities treated as partnerships for federal
income tax purposes), estates, trusts,
non-resident
aliens or other unitholders subject to specialized tax treatment, such as
tax-exempt
institutions,
non-U.S.
persons, individual retirement accounts (IRAs), employee benefit plans, real estate investment trusts or mutual funds.
Accordingly, we encourage each common unitholder to consult the
unitholders own tax advisor in analyzing the federal, state, local and non
-U.S.
tax consequences particular to that unitholder resulting from ownership or disposition of units and potential
changes in applicable tax laws
.
We will rely on the opinions and advice of Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. with respect to
the matters described herein. An opinion of counsel represents only that counsels best legal judgment and does not bind IRS or a court. Accordingly, the opinions and statements made herein may not be sustained by a court if contested by the
IRS. Any such contest of the matters described herein may materially and adversely impact the market for units and the prices at which our units trade. In addition, our costs of any contest with the IRS will be borne indirectly by our unitholders
and our general partner because the costs will reduce our cash available for distribution. Furthermore, the tax consequences of an investment in us may be significantly modified by future legislative or administrative changes or court decisions,
which may be retroactively applied.
For the reasons described below, Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. has not rendered an opinion
with respect to the following federal income tax issues: (1) the treatment of a unitholder whose units are the subject of a securities loan (e.g., a loan to a short seller to cover a short sale of units) (please read Tax
Consequences of Unit OwnershipTreatment of Securities Loans); (2) whether our monthly convention for allocating taxable income and losses is permitted by existing Treasury Regulations (please read Disposition of
UnitsAllocations Between Transferors and Transferees); and (3) whether our method for taking into account Section 743 adjustments is sustainable in certain cases (please read Tax Consequences of Unit
OwnershipSection 754 Election and Uniformity of Units).
Partnership Status
We expect to be treated as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes and, therefore, generally will not be liable for
entity-level
federal income taxes. Instead, as described below, each of our common unitholders
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will take into account its respective share of our items of income, gain, loss and deduction in computing its federal income tax liability as if the common unitholder had earned such income
directly, even if we make no cash distributions to the common unitholder.
Section 7704 of the Code generally provides that a
publicly traded partnership will be taxed as a corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes. However, if 90% or more of a partnerships gross income for every taxable year it is publicly traded consists of qualifying income, the
partnership may continue to be treated as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes (the Qualifying Income Exception). Qualifying income includes income and gains derived from the exploration, development, mining or production,
processing, transportation, and marketing of natural resources, including oil, gas, and products thereof. Other types of qualifying income include interest (other than from a financial business), dividends, gains from the sale of real property and
gains from the sale or other disposition of capital assets held for the production of qualifying income. We estimate that less than 2% of our current gross income is not qualifying income; however, this estimate could change from time to time.
No ruling has been or will be sought from the IRS with respect to SXLs classification as a partnership for federal income tax purposes
or as to the classification of our partnership and limited liability company subsidiaries. Instead we have relied on the opinion of counsel that, based upon the Code, existing Treasury Regulations, published revenue rulings and court decisions and
representations described below, SXL and our partnership and limited liability company subsidiaries, other than those that have been identified as such to Vinson & Elkins L.L.P., will each be classified as a partnership or disregarded as an
entity separate from its owner for federal income tax purposes.
In rendering its opinion that we have been and will continue to be
treated as partnerships or disregarded as an entity separate from its owner for federal income tax purposes, Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. has relied on the factual representations made by us and our general partner, including, without limitation:
(a) Neither SXL nor any of its partnership or limited liability company subsidiaries after the merger, other than those that have been
identified as such to Vinson & Elkins L.L.P., has elected to be treated as a corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes;
(b) For each taxable year since and including the year of SXLs initial public offering, more than 90% of SXLs gross income has
been and will be income of a character that Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. has opined is qualifying income within the meaning of Section 7704(d) of the Code; and
(c) Each hedging transaction that we treat as resulting in qualifying income has been and will be appropriately identified as a hedging
transaction pursuant to applicable Treasury Regulations, and has been and will be associated with oil, natural gas, or products thereof that are held or to be held by us in activities that Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. has opined or will opine
result in qualifying income.
We believe that these representations are true and will be true in the future.
If we fail to meet the Qualifying Income Exception, other than a failure that is determined by the IRS to be inadvertent and that is cured
within a reasonable time after discovery (in which case the IRS may also require us to make adjustments with respect to our common unitholders or pay other amounts), we will be treated as transferring all of our assets, subject to liabilities, to a
newly formed corporation on the first day of the year in which we fail to meet the Qualifying Income Exception, in return for stock in that corporation and then as distributing that stock to our unitholders in liquidation. This deemed contribution
and liquidation should not result in the recognition of taxable income by our common unitholders or us so long as our liabilities do not exceed the tax basis of our assets. Thereafter, we would be treated as an association taxable as a corporation
for federal income tax purposes.
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The present U.S. federal income tax treatment of publicly traded partnerships, including us, or
an investment in our common units may be modified by administrative, legislative or judicial changes or differing interpretations at any time. For example, from time to time, members of Congress and the President propose and consider substantive
changes to the existing federal income tax laws that affect publicly traded partnerships, including the elimination of the Qualifying Income Exception upon which we rely for our treatment as a partnership for federal income tax purposes.
In addition, the IRS has issued proposed regulations regarding qualifying income under Section 7704(d)(1)(E) of the Code (the Proposed
Regulations). We do not believe the Proposed Regulations affect our ability to qualify as a publicly traded partnership. However, there are no assurances that final regulations will not include changes that interpret Section 7704(d)(1)(E) in a
manner that is contrary to the Proposed Regulations, which could modify the amount of our gross income that we are able to treat as qualifying income for the purposes of the Qualifying Income Exception. We are unable to predict whether any such
changes will ultimately be enacted. However, it is possible that a change in law could affect us and may be applied retroactively. Any such changes could negatively impact the value of an investment in our common units.
If for any reason we are taxable as a corporation in any taxable year, our items of income, gain, loss and deduction would be taken into
account by us in determining the amount of our liability for federal income tax, rather than being passed through to our common unitholders. Our partnership agreement provides that if a law is enacted or existing law is modified or interpreted in a
manner that subjects us to taxation as a corporation or otherwise subjects us to entity-level taxation for federal, state or local income tax purposes, the minimum quarterly distribution amount and the target distribution amounts may be adjusted to
reflect the impact of that law on us. Our taxation as a corporation would materially reduce the cash available for distribution to unitholders and thus would likely substantially reduce the value of our units. Any distribution made to a common
unitholder at a time we are treated as a corporation would be (i) a taxable dividend to the extent of our current and accumulated earnings and profits, then (ii) a nontaxable return of capital to the extent of the unitholders tax
basis in its units, and thereafter (iii) taxable capital gain.
At the state level, several states have been evaluating ways to
subject partnerships to entity-level taxation through the imposition of state income, franchise, or other forms of taxation. Imposition of a similar tax on us in the jurisdictions in which we operate or in other jurisdictions to which we may expand
could substantially reduce our cash available for distribution to our unitholders.
The remainder of this discussion is based on the
opinion of Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. that we will be treated as a partnership for federal income tax purposes.
Limited Partner Status
Unitholders who have become limited partners of SXL will be treated as partners of SXL for U.S. federal income tax purposes. Also, assignees
who have executed and delivered transfer applications, and are awaiting admission as limited partners, and unitholders whose common units are held in street name or by a nominee and who have the right to direct the nominee in the exercise of all
substantive rights attendant to the ownership of their common units will be treated as partners of SXL for U.S. federal income tax purposes. As there is no direct or indirect controlling authority addressing assignees of common units who are
entitled to execute and deliver transfer applications and thereby become entitled to direct the exercise of attendant rights, but who fail to execute and deliver transfer applications, Vinson & Elkins L.L.P.s opinion does not extend
to these persons. Furthermore, a purchaser or other transferee of common units who does not execute and deliver a transfer application may not receive some federal income tax information or reports furnished to record holders of common units unless
the common units are held in a nominee or street name account and the nominee or broker has executed and delivered a transfer application for those common units.
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A beneficial owner of common units whose common units have been transferred to a short seller to
complete a short sale would appear to lose status as a partner with respect to such common units for federal income tax purposes. Please read Tax Consequences of Unit OwnershipTreatment of Securities Loans.
Income, gain, deductions or losses would not appear to be reportable by a common unitholder who is not a partner for federal income tax
purposes, and any cash distributions received by a common unitholder who is not a partner for federal income tax purposes would therefore appear to be fully taxable as ordinary income. Common unitholders who are not treated as partners in us as
described above are urged to consult their own tax advisors with respect to the tax consequences applicable to them under the circumstances.
Tax
Consequences of Common Unit Ownership
Flow-Through of Taxable Income
. Subject to the discussion below under
Entity-Level
Collections of Unitholder Taxes with respect to payments we may be required to make on behalf of our common unitholders, we will not pay any federal income tax. Rather, each common
unitholder will be required to report on its federal income tax return each year its share of our income, gains, losses and deductions for our taxable year or years ending with or within its taxable year. Consequently, we may allocate income to a
common unitholder even if that unitholder has not received a cash distribution.
Treatment of Distributions
. Distributions made by
us to a unitholder generally will not be taxable to the common unitholder, unless such distributions are of cash or marketable securities that are treated as cash and exceed the common unitholders tax basis in its units, in which case the
unitholder generally will recognize gain taxable in the manner described below under Disposition of Units.
Any
reduction in a common unitholders share of our nonrecourse liabilities (liabilities for which no partner bears the economic risk of loss) will be treated as a distribution by us of cash to that common unitholder. A decrease in a
common unitholders percentage interest in us because of our issuance of additional units may decrease the unitholders share of our nonrecourse liabilities. For purposes of the foregoing, a common unitholders share of our
nonrecourse liabilities generally will be based upon that common unitholders share of the unrealized appreciation (or depreciation) in our assets, to the extent thereof, with any excess liabilities allocated based on the common
unitholders share of our profits. Please read Disposition of Units.
A
non-pro
rata distribution of money or property (including a deemed distribution as a result of the reallocation of our liabilities described above) may cause a common unitholder to recognize ordinary income,
if the distribution reduces the common unitholders share of our unrealized receivables, including depreciation recapture and substantially appreciated inventory items, both as defined in Section 751 of the Code
(Section 751 Assets). To the extent of such reduction, the common unitholder would be deemed to receive its proportionate share of the Section 751 Assets and exchange such assets with us in return for a portion of the
non-pro
rata distribution. This deemed exchange generally will result in the common unitholders recognition of ordinary income in an amount equal to the excess of (1) the
non-pro
rata portion of that distribution over (2) the common unitholders tax basis (generally zero) in the Section 751 Assets deemed to be relinquished in the exchange.
Basis of Common Units
. Please read Material U.S. Federal Income Tax Consequences of the MergerTax Basis and Holding Period
of the SXL Units Deemed Received for a discussion of how to determine the initial tax basis of SXL units received in the merger. That basis generally will be (i) increased by the common unitholders share of our income and any
increases in such unitholders share of our nonrecourse liabilities and (ii) decreased, but not below zero, by the amount of all distributions to the common unitholder, the common unitholders share of our losses and any decreases in
the common unitholders share of our nonrecourse liabilities. The IRS has ruled that a partner who acquires interests in a partnership in separate transactions must combine those interests and maintain a single adjusted tax basis for all of
those interests.
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Limitations on Deductibility of Losses
. A unitholder may not be entitled to deduct the
full amount of loss we allocate to it because its share of our losses will be limited to the lesser of (i) the common unitholders tax basis in its units and (ii) in the case of a common unitholder that is an individual, estate, trust
or certain types of
closely-held
corporations, the amount for which the unitholder is considered to be at risk with respect to our activities. In general, a common unitholder will be at risk to the
extent of its tax basis in its units, reduced by (1) any portion of that basis attributable to the unitholders share of our liabilities, (2) any portion of that basis representing amounts otherwise protected against loss because of a
guarantee, stop loss agreement or similar arrangement and (3) any amount of money the unitholder borrows to acquire or hold its units, if the lender of those borrowed funds owns an interest in us, is related to another unitholder or can look
only to the units for repayment. A unitholder subject to the at risk limitation must recapture losses deducted in previous years to the extent that distributions (including distributions deemed to result from a reduction in a unitholders share
of liabilities) cause the unitholders at risk amount to be less than zero at the end of any taxable year.
Losses disallowed to a
unitholder or recaptured as a result of the basis or at risk limitations will carry forward and will be allowable as a deduction in a later year to the extent that the unitholders tax basis or at risk amount, whichever is the limiting factor,
is subsequently increased. Upon a taxable disposition of units, any gain recognized by a unitholder can be offset by losses that were previously suspended by the at risk limitation but not losses suspended by the basis limitation. Any loss
previously suspended by the at risk limitation in excess of that gain can no longer be used and will not be available to offset a unitholders salary or active business income.
In addition to the basis and at risk limitations, a passive activity loss limitation generally limits the deductibility of losses incurred by
individuals, estates, trusts, some
closely-held
corporations and personal service corporations from passive activities (generally, trade or business activities in which the taxpayer does not
materially participate). The passive loss limitations are applied separately with respect to each publicly traded partnership. Consequently, any passive losses we generate will be available to offset only passive income generated by us. Passive
losses that exceed a unitholders share of passive income we generate may be deducted in full when the unitholder disposes of all of its units in a fully taxable transaction with an unrelated party. The passive loss rules generally are applied
after other applicable limitations on deductions, including the at risk and basis limitations.
The application of the requirement that
the passive loss limitations are applied separately with respect to each publicly traded partnership to a former ETP unitholder that becomes an SXL unitholder in the merger and that (i) held SXL units prior to becoming an SXL unitholder as
result of the merger or (ii) also holds units in ETE, is uncertain. Any such unitholders should consult their own tax advisor regarding the application of the passive loss rules.
Limitations on Interest Deductions
. The deductibility of a
non-corporate
taxpayers
investment interest expense generally is limited to the amount of that taxpayers net investment income. Investment interest expense includes:
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interest on indebtedness allocable to property held for investment;
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interest expense allocated against portfolio income; and
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the portion of interest expense incurred to purchase or carry an interest in a passive activity to the extent allocable against portfolio income.
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The computation of a unitholders investment interest expense will take into account interest on any margin account borrowing or other
loan incurred to purchase or carry a unit. Net investment income includes gross income from property held for investment and amounts treated as portfolio income under the passive loss rules, less deductible expenses other than interest directly
connected with the production of investment income. Net investment income generally does not include qualified dividend income or gains attributable to the disposition of property held for investment. A unitholders share of a publicly traded
partnerships portfolio income and, according to the IRS, net passive income will be treated as investment income for purposes of the investment interest expense limitation.
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Entity-Level Collections of Unitholder Taxes
. If we are required or elect under applicable
law to pay any federal, state, local or
non-U.S.
tax on behalf of any current or former unitholder or our general partner, we are authorized to treat the payment as a distribution of cash to the relevant
unitholder or general partner. Where the tax is payable on behalf of all unitholders or we cannot determine the specific unitholder on whose behalf the tax is payable, we are authorized to treat the payment as a distribution to all current
unitholders. Payments by us as described above could give rise to an overpayment of tax on behalf of a unitholder, in which event the unitholder may be entitled to claim a refund of the overpayment amount. Unitholders are urged to consult their tax
advisors to determine the consequences to them of any tax payment we make on their behalf.
Allocation of Income, Gain, Loss and
Deduction
. After giving effect to special allocation provisions with respect to our other classes of units, our items of income, gain, loss and deduction generally will be allocated amongst our common unitholders and our general partner in
accordance with their percentage interests in us. If distributions are made in respect of the incentive distribution rights, gross income will be allocated to the recipients to the extent of such distributions.
Specified items of our income, gain, loss and deduction will be allocated under Section 704(c) of the Code (or the principles of
Section 704(c) of the Code) to account for any difference between the tax basis and fair market value of our assets at the time such assets are contributed to us and at the time of any subsequent offering of our units (a
Book-Tax
Disparity). As a result, the federal income tax burden associated with any
Book-Tax
Disparity immediately prior to an offering generally will be borne by
our partners holding interests in us prior to such offering. In addition, items of recapture income will be specially allocated to the extent possible to the unitholder who was allocated the deduction giving rise to that recapture income in order to
minimize the recognition of ordinary income by other unitholders.
An allocation of items of our income, gain, loss or deduction, other
than an allocation required by the Code to eliminate a
Book-Tax
Disparity, will generally be given effect for federal income tax purposes in determining a partners share of an item of income, gain, loss
or deduction only if the allocation has substantial economic effect. In any other case, a partners share of an item will be determined on the basis of the partners interest in us, which will be determined by taking into
account all the facts and circumstances, including (i) the partners relative contributions to us, (ii) the interests of all the partners in profits and losses, (iii) the interest of all the partners in cash flow and
(iv) the rights of all the partners to distributions of capital upon liquidation. Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. is of the opinion that, with the exception of the issues described in Section 754 Election and
Disposition of UnitsAllocations Between Transferors and Transferees, allocations of income, gain, loss or deduction under our partnership agreement will be given effect for federal income tax purposes.
Treatment of Securities Loans
. A common unitholder whose units are loaned (for example, a loan to a short seller to cover a
short sale of units) may be treated as having disposed of those units and may recognize gain or loss as a result of such deemed disposition. If so, such common unitholder would no longer be treated for tax purposes as a partner with respect to those
units during the period of the loan and may recognize gain or loss from the disposition. As a result, during this period, (i) any of our income, gain, loss or deduction allocated to those units would not be reportable by the lending unitholder
and (ii) any cash distributions received by the common unitholder as to those units may be treated as ordinary taxable income.
Due
to a lack of controlling authority, Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. has not rendered an opinion regarding the tax treatment of a common unitholder that enters into a securities loan with respect to its units. Common unitholders desiring to
assure their status as partners and avoid the risk of income recognition from a loan of their units are urged to modify any applicable brokerage account agreements to prohibit their brokers from borrowing and lending their units. The IRS has
announced that it is studying issues relating to the tax treatment of short sales of partnership interests. Please read Disposition of UnitsRecognition of Gain or Loss.
Tax Rates
. Under current law, the highest marginal federal income tax rates for individuals applicable to ordinary income and
long-term
capital gains (generally, gains from the sale or exchange of certain investment
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assets held for more than one year) are 39.6% and 20%, respectively. These rates are subject to change by new legislation at any time.
In addition, a 3.8% net investment income tax (NIIT) applies to certain net investment income earned by individuals, estates and
trusts. For these purposes, net investment income generally includes a unitholders allocable share of our income and gain realized by a unitholder from a sale of units. In the case of an individual, the tax will be imposed on the lesser of
(i) the unitholders net investment income from all investments and (ii) the amount by which the unitholders modified adjusted gross income exceeds $250,000 (if the unitholder is married and filing jointly or a surviving
spouse), $125,000 (if married filing separately) or $200,000 (if the unitholder is unmarried or in any other case). In the case of an estate or trust, the tax will be imposed on the lesser of (i) undistributed net investment income and
(ii) the excess adjusted gross income over the dollar amount at which the highest income tax bracket applicable to an estate or trust begins.
Section
754 Election.
We have made the election permitted by Section 754 of the Code that permits us to adjust
the tax bases in our assets as to specific purchased units under Section 743(b) of the Code to reflect the unit purchase price. The Section 743(b) adjustment separately applies to each purchaser of units based upon the values and bases of
our assets at the time of the relevant purchase. The Section 743(b) adjustment does not apply to a person who purchases units directly from us. For purposes of this discussion, a common unitholders basis in our assets will be considered
to have two components: (1) its share of the tax basis in our assets as to all common unitholders (common basis) and (2) its Section 743(b) adjustment to that tax basis (which may be positive or negative).
Under Treasury Regulations, a Section 743(b) adjustment attributable to property depreciable under Section 168 of the Code, such as
our storage assets, may be amortizable over the remaining cost recovery period for such property, while a Section 743(b) adjustment attributable to properties subject to depreciation under Section 167 of the Code, must be amortized
straight-line or using the 150% declining balance method. As a result, if we owned any assets subject to depreciation under Section 167 of the Code, the amortization rates could give rise to differences in the taxation of common unitholders
purchasing units from us and common unitholders purchasing from other unitholders.
Under our partnership agreement, we are authorized to
take a position to preserve the uniformity of units even if that position is not consistent with these or any other Treasury Regulations. Please read Disposition of Common UnitsUniformity of Units. Consistent with this
authority, we intend to treat properties depreciable under Section 167, if any, in the same manner as properties depreciable under Section 168 for this purpose. These positions are consistent with the methods employed by other publicly
traded partnerships but are inconsistent with the existing Treasury Regulations, and Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. has not opined on the validity of this approach.
The IRS may challenge our position with respect to depreciating or amortizing the Section 743(b) adjustment we take to preserve the
uniformity of units due to lack of controlling authority. Because a common unitholders tax basis for its units is reduced by its share of our items of deduction or loss, any position we take that understates deductions will overstate a common
unitholders basis in its units, and may cause the common unitholder to understate gain or overstate loss on any sale of such units. Please read Disposition of Common UnitsRecognition of Gain or Loss. If a challenge to
such treatment were sustained, the gain from the sale of units may be increased without the benefit of additional deductions.
The
calculations involved in the Section 754 election are complex and will be made on the basis of assumptions as to the value of our assets and other matters. The IRS could seek to reallocate some or all of any Section 743(b) adjustment we
allocated to our assets subject to depreciation to goodwill or nondepreciable assets. Goodwill, as an intangible asset, is generally nonamortizable or amortizable over a longer period of time or under a less accelerated method than our tangible
assets. We cannot assure any common unitholder that the determinations we make will not be successfully challenged by the IRS or that the resulting deductions will not
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be reduced or disallowed altogether. Should the IRS require a different tax basis adjustment to be made, and should, in our opinion, the expense of compliance exceed the benefit of the election,
we may seek permission from the IRS to revoke our Section 754 election. If permission is granted, a subsequent purchaser of units may be allocated more income than it would have been allocated had the election not been revoked.
Tax Treatment of Operations
Accounting Method and Taxable Year
. We will use the year ending December 31 as our taxable year and the accrual method of
accounting for federal income tax purposes. Each unitholder will be required to include in its tax return its share of our income, gain, loss and deduction for each taxable year ending within or with its taxable year. In addition, a unitholder who
has a taxable year ending on a date other than December 31 and who disposes of all of its units following the close of our taxable year but before the close of its taxable year must include its share of our income, gain, loss and deduction in
income for its taxable year, with the result that it will be required to include in income for its taxable year its share of more than one year of our income, gain, loss and deduction. Please read Disposition of UnitsAllocations
Between Transferors and Transferees.
Tax Basis, Depreciation and Amortization
. The tax basis of our assets will be used for
purposes of computing depreciation and cost recovery deductions and, ultimately, gain or loss on the disposition of those assets. If we dispose of depreciable property by sale, foreclosure or otherwise, all or a portion of any gain, determined by
reference to the amount of depreciation deductions previously taken, may be subject to the recapture rules and taxed as ordinary income rather than capital gain. Similarly, a unitholder who has taken cost recovery or depreciation deductions with
respect to property we own will likely be required to recapture some or all of those deductions as ordinary income upon a sale of its interest in us. Please read Tax Consequences of Unit OwnershipAllocation of Income, Gain, Loss
and Deduction.
The costs we incur in offering and selling our units (called syndication expenses) must be capitalized
and cannot be deducted currently, ratably or upon our termination. Although there are uncertainties regarding the classification of costs as organization expenses, which may be amortized by us, and as syndication expenses, which may not be amortized
by us, the underwriting discounts and commissions we incur will be treated as syndication expenses. Please read Disposition of UnitsRecognition of Gain or Loss.
Coal Income
. Section 631 of the Code provides special rules by which gains or losses on the sale of coal may be treated, in whole
or in part, as gains or losses from the sale of property used in a trade or business under Section 1231 of the Code. Specifically, if the owner of coal held for more than one year disposes of that coal under a contract by virtue of which the
owner retains an economic interest in the coal under Section 631(c) of the Code, the gain or loss realized will be treated under Section 1231 of the Code as gain or loss from property used in a trade or business. Section 1231 gains and
losses may be treated as capital gains and losses. Please read Sales of Coal Reserves or Timberland. In computing such gain or loss, the amount realized is reduced by the adjusted depletion basis in the coal, determined as
described in Coal Depletion.
For purposes of Section 631(c), the coal generally is deemed to be disposed of on the day
on which the coal is mined. Further, Treasury Regulations promulgated under Section 631 provide that advance royalty payments may also be treated as proceeds from sales of coal to which Section 631 applies and, therefore, such payment may
be treated as capital gain under Section 1231. However, if the right to mine the related coal expires or terminates under the contract that provides for the payment of advance royalty payments or such right is abandoned before the coal has been
mined, we may, pursuant to the Treasury regulations, file an amended return that reflects the payments attributable to unmined coal as ordinary income and not as received from the sale of coal under Section 631.
Our royalties from coal leases generally will be treated as proceeds from sales of coal to which Section 631 applies. Accordingly, the
difference between the royalties paid to us by the lessees and the adjusted depletion basis in the extracted coal generally will be treated as gain from the sale of property used in a trade or business,
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which may be treated as capital gain under Section 1231. Please read Sales of Coal Reserves or Timberland. Our royalties that do not qualify under Section 631(c) generally
will be taxable as ordinary income in the year of sale.
Coal Depletion
. In general, we are entitled to depletion deductions with
respect to coal mined from the underlying mineral property. Subject to the limitations on the deductibility of losses discussed above, we generally are entitled to the greater of cost depletion limited to the basis of the property or percentage
depletion. The percentage depletion rate for coal is 10%. If Section 631(c) applies to the disposition of the coal, however, we are not eligible for percentage depletion. Please read Coal Income.
Depletion deductions we claim generally will reduce the tax basis of the underlying mineral property. Depletion deductions can, however,
exceed the total tax basis of the mineral property. The excess of our percentage depletion deductions over the adjusted tax basis of the property at the end of the taxable year is subject to tax preference treatment in computing the alternative
minimum tax, the consequences of which are not addressed herein. In addition, a corporate unitholders allocable share of the amount allowable as a percentage depletion deduction for any property will be reduced by 20% of the excess, if any, of
that partners allocable share of the amount of the percentage depletion deductions for the taxable year over the adjusted tax basis of the mineral property as of the close of the taxable year.
Oil and Natural Gas Depletion
. Subject to the limitations on deductibility of losses discussed above (please read Tax
Consequences of Unit OwnershipLimitations on Deductibility of Losses), unitholders may be entitled to depletion deductions with respect to our oil and natural gas royalty interests. The deduction is equal to the greater of cost depletion
limited to the basis of the property or (if otherwise allowable) percentage depletion.
Percentage depletion is generally available with
respect to unitholders who qualify under the independent producer exemption contained in Section 613A(c) of the Code. For this purpose, an independent producer is a person not directly or indirectly involved in the retail sale of oil, natural gas or
derivative products or the operation of a major refinery. Percentage depletion is calculated as an amount generally equal to 15% of the unitholders gross income from the oil and gas property for the taxable year. A unitholder generally may
deduct percentage depletion only to the extent the unitholders average daily production of domestic crude oil, or the natural gas equivalent, does not exceed 1,000 barrels. A limitation equal to the lower of 65% of taxable income or 100% of
taxable income from the property further limits the deduction for the taxable year.
All or a portion of any gain recognized by a
unitholder as a result of either the disposition by us of some or all of our oil and natural gas interests or the disposition by the unitholder of some or all of his units may be taxed as ordinary income to the extent of recapture of oil and gas
depletion.
Although the Code requires each unitholder to compute his own depletion allowance and maintain records of his share of the
adjusted tax basis of the underlying property for depletion and other purposes, we intend to furnish each of its unitholders with information relating to this computation for federal income tax purposes. Each unitholder, however, remains responsible
for calculating his own depletion allowance and maintaining records of his share of the adjusted tax basis of the underlying property for depletion and other purposes.
Timber Income
. Section 631 of the Code provides special rules by which gains or losses on the sale of timber may be treated, in
whole or in part, as gains or losses from the sale of property used in a trade or business under Section 1231 of the Code. Specifically, if the owner of timber (including a holder of a contract right to cut timber) held for more than one year
disposes of that timber under any contract by virtue of which the owner retains an economic interest in the timber under Section 631(b) of the Code, the gain or loss realized will be treated under Section 1231 of the Code as gain or loss from
property used in a trade or business. Section 1231 gains and losses may be treated as capital gains and losses. Please read Sales of Coal Reserves or Timberland. In computing such gain or loss, the amount realized is reduced
by the adjusted basis in the timber, determined as described in Timber Depletion. For purposes of Section 631(b), the timber generally is
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deemed to be disposed of on the day on which the timber is cut (which is generally deemed to be the date when, in the ordinary course of business, the quantity of the timber cut is first
definitely determined).
Proceeds we receive from standing timber sales generally will be treated as sales of timber to which
Section 631 applies. Accordingly, the difference between those proceeds and the adjusted basis in the timber sold generally will be treated as gain from the sale of property used in a trade or business, which may be treated as capital gain
under Section 1231. Please read Sales of Coal Reserves and Timberland. Gains from sale of timber by us that do not qualify under Section 631 generally will be taxable as ordinary income in the year of sale.
Timber Depletion
. Timber is subject to cost depletion and is not subject to accelerated cost recovery, depreciation or percentage
depletion. Timber depletion is determined with respect to each separate timber account (containing timber located in a timber block) and is equal to the product obtained by multiplying the units of timber cut by a fraction, the numerator
of which is the aggregate adjusted basis of all timber included in such account and the denominator of which is the total number of timber units in such timber account. The depletion allowance so calculated for the timber cut in a particular period
represents the adjusted tax basis of such cut timber for purposes of determining gain or loss on its disposition. The tax basis of the remaining timber in each timber account is reduced by the depletion allowance for cut timber from such account.
Sales of Coal Reserves or Timberland
. If any of our coal reserves or timberland are sold or otherwise disposed of in a taxable
transaction, we will recognize (and allocate to our unitholders) any gain or loss measured by the difference between the amount realized (including the amount of any indebtedness assumed by the purchaser upon such disposition or to which such
property is subject) and the adjusted tax basis of the property sold. Generally, the character of any gain or loss recognized upon that disposition will depend upon whether our coal reserves or the particular tract of timberland sold are held by it:
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for sale to customers in the ordinary course of business (i.e., we are a dealer with respect to that property);
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for use in a trade or business within the meaning of Section 1231 of the Code; or
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as a capital asset within the meaning of Section 1221 of the Code.
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In determining dealer
status with respect to coal reserves, timberland and other types of real estate, the courts have identified a number of factors for distinguishing between a particular property held for sale in the ordinary course of business and one held for
investment. Any determination must be based on all the facts and circumstances surrounding the particular property and sale in question.
We intend to hold our coal reserves and timberland for the purposes of generating cash flow from coal royalties and periodic harvesting and
sale of timber and achieving long-term capital appreciation. Although we may consider strategic sales of coal reserves and timberland consistent with achieving long-term capital appreciation, we do not anticipate frequent sales, nor significant
marketing, improvement or subdivision activity in connection with any strategic sales. Thus, we do not believe that we will be viewed as a dealer. In light of the factual nature of this question, however, there is no assurance that our purposes for
holding our properties will not change and that its future activities will not cause us to be a dealer in coal reserves or timberland.
If we are not a dealer with respect to our coal reserves or our timberland and we have held the disposed property for more than a
one-year
period primarily for use in our trade or business, the character of any gain or loss realized from a disposition of the property will be determined under Section 1231 of the Code. If we have not held
the property for more than one year at the time of the sale, gain or loss from the sale will be taxable as ordinary income.
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unitholders distributive share of any Section 1231 gain or loss generated by us will be aggregated with any other gains and losses realized by that unitholder from the disposition of property used in the trade or
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business, as defined in Section 1231(b) of the Code, and from the involuntary conversion of such properties and of capital assets held in connection with a trade or business or a transaction
entered into for profit for the requisite holding period. If a net gain results, all such gains and losses will be long-term capital gains and losses; if a net loss results, all such gains and losses will be ordinary income and losses. Net
Section 1231 gains will be treated as ordinary income to the extent of prior net Section 1231 losses of the taxpayer or predecessor taxpayer for the five most recent prior taxable years to the extent such losses have not previously been
offset against Section 1231 gains. Losses are deemed recaptured in the chronological order in which they arose.
If we are not a
dealer with respect to its coal reserves or a particular tract of timberland, and that property is not used in a trade or business, the property will be a capital asset within the meaning of Section 1221 of the Code. Gain or loss
recognized from the disposition of that property will be taxable as capital gain or loss, and the character of such capital gain or loss as long-term or short-term will be based upon our holding period in such property at the time of its sale. The
requisite holding period for long-term capital gain is more than one year.
Upon a disposition of coal reserves or timberland, a portion
of the gain, if any, equal to the lesser of (i) the depletion deductions that reduced the tax basis of the disposed mineral property plus deductible development and mining exploration expenses, or (ii) the amount of gain recognized on the
disposition, will be treated as ordinary income to us.
Valuation and Tax Basis of Our Properties
. The federal income tax
consequences of the ownership and disposition of units will depend in part on our estimates of the relative fair market values and the tax bases of our assets. Although we may from time to time consult with professional appraisers regarding
valuation matters, we will make many of the relative fair market value estimates ourselves. These estimates and determinations of tax basis are subject to challenge and will not be binding on the IRS or the courts. If the estimates of fair market
value or basis are later found to be incorrect, the character and amount of items of income, gain, loss or deduction previously reported by unitholders could change, and unitholders could be required to adjust their tax liability for prior years and
incur interest and penalties with respect to those adjustments.
Disposition of Common Units
Recognition of Gain or Loss
. A common unitholder will be required to recognize gain or loss on a sale of units equal to the difference
between the common unitholders amount realized and tax basis in the units sold. A common unitholders amount realized generally will equal the sum of the cash and the fair market value of other property it receives plus its share of our
liabilities with respect to the units sold. Because the amount realized includes a common unitholders share of our liabilities, the gain recognized on the sale of units could result in a tax liability in excess of any cash received from the
sale.
Except as noted below, gain or loss recognized by a unitholder on the sale or exchange of a unit held for more than one year
generally will be taxable as
long-term
capital gain or loss. However, gain or loss recognized on the disposition of units will be separately computed and taxed as ordinary income or loss under Section 751
of the Code to the extent attributable to Section 751 Assets, such as depreciation recapture and our inventory items, regardless of whether such inventory item is substantially appreciated in value. Ordinary income attributable to
Section 751 Assets may exceed net taxable gain realized on the sale of a unit and may be recognized even if there is a net taxable loss realized on the sale of a unit. Thus, a unitholder may recognize both ordinary income and capital gain or
loss upon a sale of units. Net capital loss may offset capital gains and, in the case of individuals, up to $3,000 of ordinary income per year.
For purposes of calculating gain or loss on the sale of units, the common unitholders tax basis will be adjusted by its allocable share
of our income or loss in respect of its units for the year of the sale. Furthermore, as described above the IRS has ruled that a partner who acquires interests in a partnership in separate transactions must combine those interests and maintain a
single adjusted tax basis for all those interests. Upon a sale or other disposition of less than all of those interests, a portion of that tax basis must be allocated to the interests sold
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using an equitable apportionment method, which generally means that the tax basis allocated to the interest sold equals an amount that bears the same relation to the partners
tax basis in its entire interest in the partnership as the value of the interest sold bears to the value of the partners entire interest in the partnership.
Treasury Regulations under Section 1223 of the Code allow a selling common unitholder who can identify units transferred with an
ascertainable holding period to elect to use the actual holding period of the units transferred. Thus, according to the ruling discussed in the paragraph above, a common unitholder will be unable to select high or low basis units to sell as would be
the case with corporate stock, but, according to the Treasury Regulations, it may designate specific units sold for purposes of determining the holding period of the units transferred. A common unitholder electing to use the actual holding period of
units transferred must consistently use that identification method for all subsequent sales or exchanges of our units. A common unitholder considering the purchase of additional units or a sale of units purchased in separate transactions is urged to
consult its tax advisor as to the possible consequences of this ruling and application of the Treasury Regulations.
Specific provisions
of the Code affect the taxation of some financial products and securities, including partnership interests, by treating a taxpayer as having sold an appreciated financial position, including a partnership interest with respect to which
gain would be recognized if it were sold, assigned or terminated at its fair market value, in the event the taxpayer or a related person enters into:
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an offsetting notional principal contract; or
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a futures or forward contract with respect to the partnership interest or substantially identical property.
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Moreover, if a taxpayer has previously entered into a short sale, an offsetting notional principal contract or a futures or forward contract
with respect to the partnership interest, the taxpayer will be treated as having sold that position if the taxpayer or a related person then acquires the partnership interest or substantially identical property. The Secretary of the Treasury is
authorized to issue Treasury Regulations that treat a taxpayer that enters into transactions or positions that have substantially the same effect as the preceding transactions as having constructively sold the financial position.
Allocations Between Transferors and Transferees
.
In general, our taxable income or loss will be determined annually, will be
prorated on a monthly basis and will be subsequently apportioned among the common unitholders in proportion to the number of units owned by each of them as of the opening of the applicable exchange on the first business day of the month (the
Allocation Date). Nevertheless, we allocate certain deductions for depreciation of capital additions based upon the date the underlying property is placed in service, and gain or loss realized on a sale or other disposition of our assets
or, in the discretion of the general partner, any other extraordinary item of income, gain, loss or deduction will be allocated among the common unitholders on the Allocation Date in the month in which such income, gain, loss or deduction is
recognized. As a result, a common unitholder transferring units may be allocated income, gain, loss and deduction realized after the date of transfer.
Although simplifying conventions are contemplated by the Code and most publicly traded partnerships use similar simplifying conventions, the
use of this method may not be permitted under existing Treasury Regulations. The Department of the Treasury and the IRS issued final Treasury Regulations pursuant to which a publicly traded partnership may use a similar monthly simplifying
convention to allocate tax items among transferor and transferee unitholders. The regulations apply beginning with our taxable year that began on January 1, 2016. Nonetheless, the regulations do not specifically authorize the use of the
proration method we have adopted. Accordingly, Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. is unable to opine on the validity of this method of allocating income and deductions between transferee and transferor unitholders. If this method is not allowed
under the final Treasury Regulations our taxable income or losses could be reallocated among our unitholders. We are authorized to revise our method of allocation between transferee and transferor unitholders, as well as among unitholders whose
interests vary during a taxable year, to conform to a method permitted under the Treasury Regulations.
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A common unitholder who disposes of units prior to the record date set for a cash distribution
for that quarter will be allocated items of our income, gain, loss and deduction attributable to the month of disposition but will not be entitled to receive a cash distribution for that period.
Notification Requirements
. A unitholder who sells or purchases any of its units is generally required to notify us in writing of that
transaction within 30 days after the transaction (or, if earlier, January 15 of the year following the transaction in the case of a seller). Upon receiving such notifications we are required to notify the IRS of that transaction and to
furnish specified information to the transferor and transferee. Failure to notify us of a transfer of units may, in some cases, lead to the imposition of penalties. However, these reporting requirements do not apply to a sale by an individual who is
a citizen of the United States and who effects the sale through a broker who will satisfy such requirements.
Constructive
Termination
. We will be considered to have terminated our partnership for federal income tax purposes upon the sale or exchange of 50% or more of the total interests in our capital and profits within a twelve-month period. For such purposes,
multiple sales of the same unit are counted only once. A constructive termination results in the closing of our taxable year for all common unitholders. In the case of a common unitholder reporting on a taxable year other than a fiscal year ending
December 31, the closing of our taxable year may result in more than twelve months of our taxable income or loss being includable in such common unitholders taxable income for the year of termination.
A constructive termination occurring on a date other than December 31 will result in us filing two tax returns for one fiscal year and
the cost of the preparation of these returns will be borne by all common unitholders. However, pursuant to an IRS relief procedure the IRS may allow, among other things, a constructively terminated partnership to provide a single Schedule
K-1
for the calendar year in which a termination occurs. We would be required to make new tax elections after a termination, including a new election under Section 754 of the Code, and a termination would
result in a deferral of our deductions for depreciation and thus may increase the taxable income allocable to our unitholders. A termination could also result in penalties if we were unable to determine that the termination had occurred. Moreover, a
termination might either accelerate the application of, or subject us to, any tax legislation enacted before the termination.
Uniformity of Common
Units
Because we cannot match transferors and transferees of units and other reasons, we must maintain uniformity of the economic and
tax characteristics of the units to a purchaser of these units. In the absence of uniformity, we may be unable to completely comply with a number of federal income tax requirements. Any
non-uniformity
could
have a negative impact on the value of the units. Please read Tax Consequences of Unit OwnershipSection 754 Election.
Our partnership agreement permits our general partner to take positions in filing our tax returns that preserve the uniformity of our units.
These positions may include reducing the depreciation, amortization or loss deductions to which a unitholder would otherwise be entitled or reporting a slower amortization of Section 743(b) adjustments for some unitholders than that to which
they would otherwise be entitled. Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. is unable to opine as to the validity of such filing positions.
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common unitholders tax basis in its units is reduced by its share of our deductions (whether or not such deductions were claimed on an individual income tax return) so that any position that we take that understates deductions will overstate
the unitholders basis in its units, and may cause the unitholder to understate gain or overstate loss on any sale of such units. Please read Disposition of UnitsRecognition of Gain or Loss above and Tax
Consequences of Unit OwnershipSection 754 Election above. The IRS may challenge one or more of any positions we take to preserve the uniformity of units. If such a challenge were sustained, the uniformity of units might be affected
and, under some circumstances, the gain from the sale of units might be increased without the benefit of additional deductions.
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Tax-Exempt
Organizations and Other Investors
Ownership of common units by employee benefit plans and other
tax-exempt
organizations as well as by
non-resident
alien individuals,
non-U.S.
corporations and other
non-U.S.
persons (collectively,
Non-U.S.
Unitholders) raises issues unique to those investors and, as described below, may have substantially adverse tax consequences to them. Prospective unitholders that are
tax-exempt
organizations or
Non-U.S.
Unitholders should consult their tax advisors before investing in our units. Employee benefit plans and most other
tax-exempt
organizations, including IRAs and other retirement plans, are subject to federal income tax on unrelated business taxable income. Virtually all of our income will be unrelated business taxable income and
will be taxable to a
tax-exempt
unitholder.
Non-U.S.
Unitholders are taxed by the United States on income effectively connected with the conduct of a U.S. trade or business (effectively connected income) and on certain types of
U.S.-source
non-effectively
connected income (such as dividends), unless exempted or further limited by an income tax treaty.
Non-U.S.
Unitholders will be considered to be engaged in
business in the United States because of their ownership of our units. Furthermore, it is probable that they will be deemed to conduct such activities through permanent establishments in the United States within the meaning of applicable tax
treaties. Consequently, they will be required to file federal tax returns to report their share of our income, gain, loss or deduction and pay federal income tax on their share of our net income or gain. Moreover, under rules applicable to publicly
traded partnerships, distributions to
Non-U.S.
Unitholders are subject to withholding at the highest applicable effective tax rate. Each
Non-U.S.
Unitholder must obtain
a taxpayer identification number from the IRS and submit that number to our transfer agent on a
Form W-8BEN,
W-8BEN-E
or
applicable substitute form in order to obtain credit for these withholding taxes.
In addition, because a
Non-U.S.
Unitholder classified as a corporation will be treated as engaged in a United States trade or business, that corporation may be subject to the U.S. branch profits tax at a rate of 30%, in addition to
regular federal income tax, on its share of our income and gain as adjusted for changes in the foreign corporations U.S. net equity to the extent reflected in the corporations effectively connected earnings and profits. That
tax may be reduced or eliminated by an income tax treaty between the United States and the country in which the foreign corporate unitholder is a qualified resident. In addition, this type of unitholder is subject to special information
reporting requirements under Section 6038C of the Code.
A
Non-U.S.
Unitholder who sells or
otherwise disposes of a unit will be subject to federal income tax on gain realized from the sale or disposition of that unit to the extent the gain is effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business of the
Non-U.S.
Unitholder. Under a ruling published by the IRS interpreting the scope of effectively connected income, gain realized by a
Non-U.S.
Unitholder from
the sale of its interest in a partnership that is engaged in a trade or business in the United States will be considered to be effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business. Thus, part or all of a
Non-U.S.
Unitholders gain from the sale or other disposition of its units may be treated as effectively connected with a unitholders indirect U.S. trade or business constituted by its investment in
us. Moreover, under the Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act, a
Non-U.S.
Unitholder generally will be subject to federal income tax upon the sale or disposition of a unit if at any time during the
shorter of the five-year period ending on the date of the disposition or the
Non-U.S.
holders holding period for the common unit (i) such
Non-U.S.
holder
owned (directly or constructively applying certain attribution rules) more than 5% of our units and (ii) 50% or more of the fair market value of our worldwide real property interests and our other assets used or held for use in a trade or
business consisted of U.S. real property interests (which include U.S. real estate, including land, improvements, and certain associated personal property, and interests in certain entities holding U.S. real estate). More than 50% of our assets may
consist of U.S. real property interests. Therefore,
Non-U.S.
Unitholders may be subject to federal income tax on gain from the sale or disposition of their units.
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Administrative Matters
Information Returns and Audit Procedures
. We intend to furnish to each unitholder, within 90 days after the close of each taxable
year, specific tax information, including a
Schedule K-1,
which describes its share of our income, gain, loss and deduction for our preceding taxable year. In preparing this information, which will not be
reviewed by counsel, we will take various accounting and reporting positions, some of which have been mentioned earlier, to determine each common unitholders share of income, gain, loss and deduction. We cannot assure our unitholders that
those positions will yield a result that conforms to all of the requirements of the Code, Treasury Regulations or administrative interpretations of the IRS.
The IRS may audit our federal income tax information returns. Neither we nor Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. can assure prospective
unitholders that the IRS will not successfully challenge the positions we adopt, and such a challenge could adversely affect the value of the units. Adjustments resulting from an IRS audit may require each unitholder to adjust a prior years
tax liability and may result in an audit of the unitholders own return. Any audit of a unitholders return could result in adjustments unrelated to our returns.
Publicly traded partnerships generally are treated as entities separate from their owners for purposes of federal income tax audits, judicial
review of administrative adjustments by the IRS and tax settlement proceedings. The tax treatment of partnership items of income, gain, loss and deduction are determined in a partnership proceeding rather than in separate proceedings of the
partners. The Code requires that one partner be designated as the Tax Matters Partner for these purposes, and our partnership agreement designates our general partner.
The Tax Matters Partner can extend the statute of limitations for assessment of tax deficiencies against unitholders for items in our returns.
The Tax Matters Partner may bind a common unitholder with less than a 1% profits interest in us to a settlement with the IRS unless that unitholder elects, by filing a statement with the IRS, not to give that authority to the Tax Matters Partner.
The Tax Matters Partner may seek judicial review, by which all the common unitholders are bound, of a final partnership administrative adjustment and, if the Tax Matters Partner fails to seek judicial review, judicial review may be sought by any
common unitholder having at least a 1% interest in profits or by any group of unitholders having in the aggregate at least a 5% interest in profits. However, only one action for judicial review may go forward, and each common unitholder with an
interest in the outcome may participate in that action.
A common unitholder must file a statement with the IRS identifying the
treatment of any item on its federal income tax return that is not consistent with the treatment of the item on our return. Intentional or negligent disregard of this consistency requirement may subject a unitholder to substantial penalties.
Pursuant to the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015, for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2017, if the IRS makes audit adjustments to
our income tax returns, it may assess and collect any taxes (including any applicable penalties and interest) resulting from such audit adjustment directly from us, unless we elect to have our general partner and unitholders take any audit
adjustment into account in accordance with their interests in us during the taxable year under audit. Similarly, for such taxable years, if the IRS makes audit adjustments to income tax returns filed by an entity in which we are a member or
partner, it may assess and collect any taxes (including penalties and interest) resulting from such audit adjustment directly from such entity. Generally, we expect to elect to have our general partner and unitholders take any such audit adjustment
into account in accordance with their interests in us during the taxable year under audit, but there can be no assurance that such election will be effective in all circumstances. With respect to audit adjustments as to an entity in which we are a
member or partner, the Joint Committee of Taxation has stated that we would not be able to have our general partner and our unitholders take such audit adjustment into account. If we are unable to have our general partner and our unitholders take
such audit adjustment into account in accordance with their interests in us during the taxable year under audit, our then current unitholders may bear some or all of the tax liability resulting from such audit adjustment, even if such unitholders
did not own our Common Units during the taxable year under audit. If,
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as a result of any such audit adjustment, we are required to make payments of taxes, penalties, and interest, our cash available for distribution to our Unitholders might be substantially
reduced. These rules are not applicable for taxable years beginning on or prior to December 31, 2017. Congress has proposed changes to the Bipartisan Budget Act, and we anticipate that amendments may be made. Accordingly, the manner in which
these rules may apply to us in the future is uncertain.
Additionally, pursuant to the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015, the Internal Revenue
Code will no longer require that we designate a Tax Matters Partner. Instead, for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2017, we will be required to designate a partner, or other person, with a substantial presence in the United States as
the partnership representative (Partnership Representative). The Partnership Representative will have the sole authority to act on our behalf for purposes of, among other things, U.S. federal income tax audits and judicial review of
administrative adjustments by the IRS. If we do not make such a designation, the IRS can select any person as the Partnership Representative. We currently anticipate that we will designate our general partner as the Partnership Representative.
Further, any actions taken by us or by the Partnership Representative on our behalf with respect to, among other things, U.S. federal income tax audits and judicial review of administrative adjustments by the IRS, will be binding on us and all of
the unitholders. These rules are not applicable for taxable years beginning on or prior to December 31, 2017.
Additional
Withholding Requirements
. Withholding taxes may apply to certain types of payments made to foreign financial institutions (as specially defined in the Code) and certain other foreign entities. Specifically, a 30% withholding tax may
be imposed on interest, dividends and other fixed or determinable annual or periodical gains, profits and income from sources within the United States (FDAP Income), or gross proceeds from the sale or other disposition of any property of
a type which can produce interest or dividends from sources within the United States (Gross Proceeds) paid to a foreign financial institution or to a
non-financial
foreign entity (as
specially defined in the Code), unless (i) the foreign financial institution undertakes certain diligence and reporting, (ii) the
non-financial
foreign entity either certifies it does not have any
substantial U.S. owners or furnishes identifying information regarding each substantial U.S. owner or (iii) the foreign financial institution or
non-financial
foreign entity otherwise qualifies for an
exemption from these rules. If the payee is a foreign financial institution and is subject to the diligence and reporting requirements in clause (i) above, it must enter into an agreement with the U.S. Department of the Treasury requiring,
among other things, that it undertake to identify accounts held by certain U.S. persons or U.S.-owned foreign entities, annually report certain information about such accounts, and withhold 30% on payments to noncompliant foreign financial
institutions and certain other account holders. Foreign financial institutions located in jurisdictions that have an intergovernmental agreement with the United States governing these requirements may be subject to different rules.
These rules generally apply to payments of FDAP Income currently and generally will apply to payments of relevant Gross Proceeds made on or
after January 1, 2019. Thus, to the extent ETP has FDAP Income or has Gross Proceeds on or after January 1, 2019 that are not treated as effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business (please read
Tax-Exempt
Organizations and Other Investors), unitholders who are foreign financial institutions or certain other foreign entities, or persons that hold their common units through such
foreign entities, may be subject to withholding on distributions they receive from ETP, or their distributive share of ETPs income, pursuant to the rules described above.
Prospective investors should consult their own tax advisors regarding the potential application of these withholding provisions to their
investment in ETPs common units.
Nominee Reporting
. Persons who hold an interest in us as a nominee for another person are
required to furnish to us:
(1) the name, address and taxpayer identification number of the
beneficial owner and the nominee;
(2) a statement regarding whether the beneficial owner is:
(a) a
non-U.S.
person;
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(b) a
non-U.S.
government, an international organization or any
wholly-owned
agency or instrumentality of either of the foregoing; or
(c) a
tax-exempt
entity;
(3) the amount and description of units held, acquired or transferred for the beneficial owner; and
(4) specific information including the dates of acquisitions and transfers, means of acquisitions and
transfers, and acquisition cost for purchases, as well as the amount of net proceeds from sales.
Brokers and financial institutions are
required to furnish additional information, including whether they are U.S. persons and specific information on units they acquire, hold or transfer for their own account. A penalty of $250 per failure, up to a maximum of $3 million per
calendar year, is imposed by the Code for failure to report that information to us. The nominee is required to supply the beneficial owner of the units with the information furnished to us.
Accuracy-Related Penalties
. Certain penalties may be imposed as a result of an underpayment of tax that is attributable to one or more
specified causes, including negligence or disregard of rules or regulations, substantial understatements of income tax and substantial valuation misstatements. No penalty will be imposed, however, for any portion of an underpayment if it is shown
that there was a reasonable cause for the underpayment of that portion and that the taxpayer acted in good faith regarding the underpayment of that portion. We do not anticipate that any
accuracy-related
penalties will be assessed against us.
State, Local, Foreign and Other Tax Considerations
In addition to federal income taxes, common unitholders will be subject to other taxes, including state and local income taxes, unincorporated
business taxes, and estate, inheritance or intangibles taxes that may be imposed by the various jurisdictions in which we conduct business or own property or in which the common unitholder is a resident. We conduct business or own property in many
states in the United States. Most of these states impose an income tax on individuals, corporations and other entities. As we make acquisitions or expand our business, we may own property or conduct business in other states in additional states that
impose a personal income tax. Although an analysis of those various taxes is not presented here, each prospective unitholder should consider their potential impact on its investment in us.
A unitholder may be required to file income tax returns and pay income taxes in some or all of the jurisdictions in which we do business or
own property, though such unitholder may not be required to file a return and pay taxes in certain jurisdictions because its income from such jurisdictions falls below the jurisdictions filing and payment requirement. Further, a common
unitholder may be subject to penalties for a failure to comply with any filing or payment requirement applicable to such unitholder. Some of the jurisdictions may require us, or we may elect, to withhold a percentage of income from amounts to be
distributed to a common unitholder who is not a resident of the jurisdiction. Withholding, the amount of which may be greater or less than a particular common unitholders income tax liability to the jurisdiction, generally does not relieve a
nonresident common unitholder from the obligation to file an income tax return.
It is the responsibility of each common unitholder
to investigate the legal and tax consequences, under the laws of pertinent states and localities, of its investment in us. Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. has not rendered an opinion on the state, local, or
non-U.S.
tax consequences of an investment in us. We strongly recommend that each prospective common unitholder consult, and depend on, its own tax counsel or other advisor with regard to those matters. It is
the responsibility of each common unitholder to file all tax returns that may be required of the common unitholder.
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DESCRIPTION OF SXL COMMON UNITS
SXL common units represent limited partner interests in SXL. SXL common units entitle the holders to participate in partnership
distributions and to exercise the rights and privileges available to limited partners under the current SXL partnership agreement.
Where Common Units Are Traded
SXLs outstanding common units are listed on the NYSE under the symbol SXL. The
common units received by ETP unitholders in the merger will also be listed on the NYSE. Following the consummation of the merger, it is expected that SXL will change its name to Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. and apply to continue
the listing of its common units on the NYSE under the symbol ETP.
Quarterly Distributions
The current SXL partnership agreement requires that SXL distribute 100% of its Available Cash (as defined in the current SXL
partnership agreement) to its partners within 45 days following the end of each quarter. Available Cash consists generally of all of SXLs cash on hand less the amount of cash reserves that are necessary or appropriate in the reasonable
discretion of SXL GP to provide for the proper conduct of the business, comply with applicable law or any debt agreement and provide funds for distributions to unitholders and SXL GP in respect of any one or more of the next four quarters plus all
cash on hand on the date of determination of available cash for the quarter resulting from working capital borrowings made after the end of the quarter. Please see Comparison of Rights of SXL Unitholders and ETP UnitholdersDistributions
of Available Cash for a further discussion of SXLs quarterly distributions.
Transfer Agent and Registrar
SXLs transfer agent and registrar for the SXL common units is American Stock Transfer & Trust Company.
Summary of Partnership Agreement
A summary of the important provisions of the SXL partnership agreement is included under the caption Comparison of the Rights of SXL
Unitholders and ETP Unitholders in this proxy statement/prospectus.
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COMPARISON OF RIGHTS OF SXL UNITHOLDERS AND ETP UNITHOLDERS
The rights of ETP unitholders are currently governed by ETPs Second Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership, as amended
(the ETP partnership agreement), and the Delaware LP Act. The rights of SXLs unitholders are currently governed by the Third Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P., as amended (the
current SXL partnership agreement), and the Delaware LP Act. In conjunction with the closing of the merger, SXL GP will enter into the Fourth Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P., a form
of which is attached to this proxy statement/prospectus as Annex C (the SXL partnership agreement), which, together with the Delaware LP Act, will govern the rights of ETP unitholders and the current SXL unitholders following the
consummation of the merger. ETP GP will execute a joinder agreement agreeing to be bound by the SXL partnership agreement, which will provide for the admission of ETP GP as the general partner of SXL at the effective time of the GP merger. Unless
the context otherwise requires, the description of the rights of SXL unitholders appearing in this section describe the rights provided for in the SXL partnership agreement.
There are many differences between the rights of ETP unitholders and the rights of SXL unitholders. Some of these, such as distribution and
voting rights, are significant. The following description summarizes the material differences that may affect the rights of ETP unitholders and SXL unitholders but does not purport to be a complete statement of all those differences, or a complete
description of the specific provisions referred to in this summary. The identification of specific differences is not intended to indicate that other equally significant or more significant differences do not exist. ETP unitholders should read
carefully the relevant provisions of the SXL partnership agreement and the ETP partnership agreement. A form of the SXL partnership agreement is attached to this proxy statement/prospectus as Annex C. Copies of the other documents referred to in
this summary may be obtained as described under Where You Can Find More Information.
Purpose
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ETP
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SXL
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ETPs stated purpose is to serve as a limited partner of Heritage ETC, L.P. a Delaware limited partnership, and any successors thereto (the ETP Operating Partnership), to engage in any business activities that the
ETP Operating Partnership is permitted to engage in and to engage in any business activities that are approved by its general partner.
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SXLs stated purpose is to serve as a limited partner of Sunoco Logistics Partners Operations L.P., a Delaware limited partnership, and any successors thereto (the SXL Operating Partnership), to engage in any
business activities that the SXL Operating Partnership or its subsidiaries are permitted to engage in and to engage in any business activities that are approved by its general partner.
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Outstanding Units
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ETP
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SXL
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As of March 23, 2017, ETP had outstanding (a) approximately 552,836,714 common units, (b) 8,853,832 Class E units, (c) 90,706,500
Class G units, (d) 81,001,069 Class H units, (e) 100 Class I units, (f) no Class J units, (g) 101,525,429 Class K units and (h) 6,274,636 ETP restricted units granted under the ETP equity plans.
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As of March 23, 2017, SXL had outstanding (a) 322,388,550 common units, (b) 9,416,196 Class B units representing limited partner
interests in SXL (Class B units), and (c) 3,224,477 common units subject to outstanding unvested awards under employee and director equity plans of SXL.
Pursuant to the terms of the merger agreement, the Class B units, which are owned indirectly by ETP, will automatically be cancelled for no consideration.
Additionally, pursuant to the terms of the merger agreement, the SXL partnership agreement will
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ETP
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SXL
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The Class E units, Class G units, Class H units, Class I units, Class J units and Class K are not convertible into ETP common units and do
not have any other redemption or conversion rights.
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provide for the establishment of the SXL Class E units, SXL Class G units, SXL Class I units, SXL Class J units and SXL Class K units, each a class of units representing limited partner interests in SXL, in such number and with
the same rights, preferences, privileges, duties and obligations as the Class E units, Class G units, Class I units, Class J units and Class K units of ETP, respectively.
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Issuance of Additional Securities
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ETP
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SXL
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The ETP partnership agreement authorizes ETP to issue an unlimited number of additional limited partner interests and other equity securities
for the consideration and on the terms and conditions established by the general partner in its sole discretion without the approval of the ETP unitholders. Any such additional partnership securities may be senior to the common units.
It is possible that ETP will fund acquisitions through the issuance of additional common
units or other equity securities. Holders of any additional common units issued by ETP will be entitled to share equally with the then-existing holders of common units in distributions of available cash. In addition, the issuance of additional
partnership interests may dilute the value of the interests of the then-existing holders of common units in ETPs net assets.
In accordance with Delaware law and the provisions of the ETP partnership agreement, ETP may also issue additional partnership securities that, in the sole
discretion of the general partner, have special voting rights to which the common units are not entitled.
The ETP partnership agreement also restricts ETPs ability to issue any securities with distribution rights prior to liquidation that are senior to or on
a parity with either of the Class H units or Class I units or that have allocation rights that are senior to or on a parity with the allocations with respect to Net Termination Gains (as defined in the ETP partnership agreement) applicable to the
Class H units. If the merger is completed, each outstanding Class H unit will be cancelled for no consideration.
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The SXL partnership agreement authorizes SXL to issue an unlimited number of additional limited partner interests, other equity securities,
options, rights, warrants and appreciation rights for the consideration and on the terms and conditions established by the general partner without the approval of the SXL common unitholders. Any such additional partnership securities may be
senior to the SXL common units.
It is possible that SXL will fund acquisitions
through the issuance of additional common units or other equity securities. Holders of any additional common units issued by SXL will be entitled to share equally with the then-existing holders of common units in distributions of available cash. In
addition, the issuance of additional partnership interests may dilute the value of the interests of the then-existing holders of common units in SXLs net assets.
In accordance with Delaware law and the provisions of the SXL partnership agreement, the general partner may also issue additional partnership securities that
have special voting rights to which the common units are not entitled.
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Distributions of Available Cash
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ETP
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SXL
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General
. Within 45 days after the end of each quarter, ETP will distribute all available cash to its partners as of the applicable record date.
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General
. Within 45 days after the end of each quarter, SXL will distribute all available cash to partners of record on the applicable record date.
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Definition of Available Cash
. Available cash is defined in the ETP partnership agreement and generally means, for any calendar
quarter, all cash on hand at the end of such quarter:
less the amount of cash reserves that the general partner in its reasonable discretion
determines is necessary or appropriate to:
provide for the proper conduct of ETPs business (including reserves for future
capital expenditures);
comply with applicable law, any of ETPs debt instruments or other agreements;
or
provide
funds for distributions to unitholders and the general partner for any one or more of the next four quarters;
plus all cash on hand immediately prior to the date of the distribution of available
cash for the quarter.
ETP will treat all available cash distributed as coming from
operating surplus until the sum of all available cash distributed equals operating surplus since the date of ETPs initial public offering through the close of the immediately preceding quarter. ETP will treat any amounts distributed in excess
of operating surplus as capital surplus.
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Definition of Available Cash
. Available cash is defined in the SXL partnership agreement and generally means, for any calendar
quarter, all cash on hand at the end of such quarter:
less the amount of cash reserves that the general partner in good faith determines is
necessary or appropriate to:
provide for the proper conduct of SXLs business (including reserves for future
capital expenditures and for anticipated future credit needs of SXL);
comply with applicable law, any of SXLs debt instruments or other agreements;
or
provide
funds for distributions to unitholders and the general partner for any one or more of the next four quarters;
plus all cash on hand on the date of determination of available cash for the
quarter.
SXL will treat all available cash distributed as coming from operating
surplus until the sum of all available cash distributed equals the operating surplus since the date of SXLs initial public offering through the close of the immediately preceding quarter. SXL will treat any amounts distributed in excess of
operating surplus as capital surplus.
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Definition of Operating Surplus
. Operating surplus for any period generally means the sum of:
$10.0 million (as
described below) plus all cash and cash equivalents of ETP on hand as of the close of business on the closing date of its initial public offering; plus
all its cash receipts for the period beginning on the closing date of its initial public
offering and ending with the last day of such period, other than cash receipts from interim capital transactions; plus
all cash receipts of ETP after the end of such period but on or before the date of
determination of operating surplus with respect to such period resulting from borrowings for working capital purposes, plus
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Definition of Operating Surplus
. Operating surplus for any period generally means:
$15.0 million (as
described below) plus all cash and cash equivalents of SXL on hand as of the close of business on the closing date of its initial public offering; plus
all of its cash receipts for the period beginning on the closing date of its initial
public offering and ending with the last day of such period, other than cash receipts from interim capital transactions; plus
all cash receipts of SXL after the end of such period but on or before the date of
determination of operating surplus with respect to such period resulting from borrowings for working capital purposes, plus
an amount equal to the accumulated and undistributed operating surplus of
ETP
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160
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ETP
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SXL
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an amount equal to the operating surplus of Regency Energy Partners LP
immediately prior to ETPs acquisition of Regency Energy Partners LP, less the sum of
operating expenditures; plus
the amount of cash
reserves established by its general partner to provide funds for future operating expenditures, provided, however, that disbursements made or cash reserves established, increased or reduced after the end of such period but on or before the date of
determination of available cash with respect to such period will be deemed to have been made, established, increased or reduced for purposes of determining operating surplus, within such period if the general partner so determines.
Operating surplus includes a provision that will enable ETP, if it chooses, to distribute
as operating surplus up to $10.0 million of cash it receives from non-operating sources, such as asset sales, issuances of securities and long-term borrowings, that would otherwise be distributed as capital surplus.
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immediately prior to the closing of the merger (including $10.0 million of cash received from non-operating sources
that ETP may distribute as operating surplus under the ETP partnership agreement), less the sum of
operating expenditures; plus
the amount of cash
reserves established by its general partner to provide funds for future operating expenditures, provided, however, that disbursements made or cash reserves established, increased or reduced after the end of such period but on or before the date of
determination of available cash with respect to such period will be deemed to have been made, established, increased or reduced for purposes of determining operating surplus, within such period if the general partner so determines.
Operating surplus includes a provision that will enable SXL, if it chooses, to distribute
as operating surplus up to $25.0 million of cash it receives from non-operating sources, such as asset sales, issuances of securities and long-term borrowings, that would otherwise be distributed as capital surplus.
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Definition of Capital Surplus
. Capital surplus will generally be generated only by:
borrowings other
than working capital borrowings;
sales of debt and equity securities; and
sales or other
dispositions of assets for cash, other than inventory, accounts receivable and other current assets sold in the ordinary course of business or as part of normal retirements or replacements of assets.
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Definition of Capital Surplus
. Capital surplus will generally be generated only by:
borrowings other
than working capital borrowings;
sales of debt and equity securities; and
sales or other
dispositions of assets for cash, other than inventory, accounts receivable and other current assets sold in the ordinary course of business or as part of normal retirements or replacements of assets.
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Distributions of Available Cash from Operating Surplus to Common Unitholders, Class E Unitholders and Class G Unitholders.
Subject to the distributions to be made to any Class H unitholders, Class I unitholders
and Class K unitholders as described below, ETP is required to make distributions of any remaining available cash from operating surplus for any quarter in the following manner:
first, 100% to all
common unitholders, Class E unitholders, Class G unitholders and the general partner, in accordance with their percentage
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Distributions of Available Cash from Operating Surplus.
SXL is currently required to make distributions of available cash from operating surplus for any quarter in the following manner:
first, 100% to all
common unitholders and the general partner, in accordance with their percentage interests, until each common unit has received $0.075 per common unit for such quarter, also known as the minimum quarterly distribution;
second, 100% to all
common unitholders and the general partner, in accordance with their
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ETP
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SXL
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interests, until each common unit has received $0.25 per unit for such quarter, also known as the minimum quarterly
distribution;
second, 100% to all common unitholders, Class E unitholders, Class G unitholders and the
general partner, in accordance with their respective percentage interests, until each common unit has received $0.275 per unit for such quarter, also known as the first target distribution; and
thereafter, in the
manner described in Incentive Distribution Rights below.
Limitations on Distributions to Class E Unitholders and Class G Unitholders
.
For each taxable year, no portion of any partnership cash distribution attributable to
(i) any distribution or dividend received by ETP from ETP Holdco Corporation (Holdco) or the proceeds of any sale of the capital stock of Holdco or (ii) any interest payments received by ETP with respect to indebtedness of ETP or its
subsidiaries (referred to as Holdco Distributions) will be distributed to the Class E units or Class G units.
The aggregate partnership distributions made to each Class E unit in respect of each
fiscal year may not exceed $1.41.
The aggregate partnership distributions made to each Class G unit for each taxable year
will not exceed $3.75.
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respective percentage interests, until each common unit has received $0.0833 per common unit for such quarter, also known
as the first target distribution; and
thereafter, in the manner described in Incentive Distribution Rights
below.
The SXL partnership agreement will provide that the SXL Class E units and SXL
Class G units participate in the distributions of available cash and receive their respective percentage interests. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the distributions on each SXL Class E unit may not exceed $1.41 per year and distributions on each SXL
Class G unit may not exceed $3.75 per year. In addition, the distributions to the holders of the incentive distribution rights will not exceed the amount holders of the incentive distribution rights would otherwise receive if the available cash for
distribution were reduced to the extent it constitutes amounts previously distributed with respect to the SXL Class G units.
The SXL partnership agreement will also provide distribution rights with respect to the SXL Class K units as correspond to the distribution rights contained in
the ETP partnership agreement with respect to the Class K units.
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Distributions to Class H Unitholders
. The Class H units do not
have a percentage interest and holders are not entitled to receive distributions of cash from operating surplus or capital surplus;
however
, prior to any distribution of available cash to any class of ETP units, Class H units are entitled to
receive distributions of available cash in an amount equal to 90.05% of all distributions to ETP by SXL GP with respect to the incentive distribution rights and general partner interest in SXL, calculated on a cumulative basis beginning with the
quarter ended March 31, 2015.
Distributions to Class I unitholders
. The Class
I units do not have a percentage interest and holders are not entitled to receive distributions of available cash from operating surplus or capital surplus;
however
, prior to making any distribution of available cash for the quarter ending
December 31, 2016 to any class of ETP units
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162
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ETP
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SXL
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other than the Class H units, the Class I units are entitled to cash distributions equal to $2.0 million for such quarter. The Class I units
are not entitled to any cash distributions for any quarter subsequent to the quarter ending December 31, 2016.
Distributions to Class J unitholders
. The Class J units do not have a percentage interest and holders are not entitled to receive distributions of
available cash from operating surplus or capital surplus.
Distributions to Class K
unitholders
. The Class K units do not have a percentage interest and holders are not entitled to receive distributions of cash from operating surplus or capital surplus;
however
prior to ETP making any distribution of available cash to
any class of ETP units other than the Class H units and the Class I units, each Class K unit is entitled to a quarterly cash distribution in an amount equal to $0.67275 per Class K unit;
provided
,
however
, no portion of any partnership
cash distribution attributable to (i) any distribution or dividend received by ETP from Holdco or the proceeds of any sale of the capital stock of Holdco or (ii) any Holdco Distributions.
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Distributions from Capital Surplus
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How Distributions from Capital Surplus Will Be Made
. ETP is required to make
distributions of available cash from capital surplus initially to the Class H unitholders and Class I unitholders in a manner similar to the distributions of available cash from operating surplus, as described above. ETP will make distributions of
any remaining available cash from capital surplus in the following manner:
first, to all unitholders and its general partner, in accordance with their respective
percentage interests, until ETP distributes for each outstanding common unit, an amount of available cash from capital surplus equal to our initial public offering price; and
thereafter, ETP will make all distributions of available cash from capital surplus as if
they were from operating surplus.
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Distributions from Capital Surplus
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How Distributions from Capital Surplus Will Be Made
. SXL is currently required to
make distributions of available cash from capital surplus in the following manner:
first, to all unitholders and its general partner, in accordance with their respective
percentage interests, until SXL distributes for each outstanding common unit, an amount of available cash from capital surplus equal to the initial public offering price of its common units; and
thereafter, SXL
will make all distributions of available cash from capital surplus as if they were from operating surplus.
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Effect of a Distribution from Capital Surplus
. The ETP partnership agreement treats a distribution of capital surplus as the repayment of the initial unit price from ETPs initial public offering, which is a return of
capital. The initial public offering price per common unit less any distributions of capital surplus per unit is referred to as unrecovered capital.
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Effect of a Distribution from Capital Surplus
. The SXL partnership agreement treats a distribution of capital surplus as the repayment of the initial unit price from SXLs initial public offering, which is a return of
capital. The initial public offering price per common unit less any distributions of capital surplus per unit is referred to as unrecovered capital.
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Incentive Distribution Rights
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ETP
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SXL
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Incentive distribution rights represent the right to receive an increasing percentage of quarterly distributions of available cash from
operating surplus after the minimum quarterly distribution has been paid. ETPs general partner currently holds the incentive distribution rights. Distributions of additional available cash from operating surplus (other than as described above)
will be distributed in the following manner:
If for any quarter:
first, (i) to the
general partner in accordance with its percentage interest, (ii) 13% to the holders of the incentive distribution rights, pro rata, and (iii) to all common unitholders, Class E unitholders and Class G unitholders, pro rata, a percentage equal
to 100% less the percentages applicable to the general partner and holders of the incentive distribution rights, until each common unit has received $0.3175 per unit for such quarter, also known as the second target distribution;
second, (i) to the
general partner in accordance with its percentage interest, (ii) 23% to the holders of the incentive distribution rights, pro rata, and (iii) to all common unitholders, Class E unitholders and Class G unitholders, pro rata, a percentage equal to
100% less the percentages applicable to the general partner and holders of the incentive distribution rights, until each common unit has received $0.4125 per unit for such quarter, also known as the third target distribution; and
thereafter, (i) to
the general partner in accordance with its percentage interest, (ii) 48% to the holder of the incentive distribution rights, pro rata, and (iii) to all common unitholders, Class E unitholders and Class G unitholders, pro rata, a percentage equal to
100% less the percentages applicable to the general partner and holders of the incentive distribution rights.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the distributions on each Class E unit may not exceed $1.41 per year and distributions on each Class G unit may not exceed $3.75
per year. In addition, the distributions to the holders of the incentive distribution rights will not exceed the amount holders of the incentive distribution rights would otherwise receive if the available cash for distribution were reduced to the
extent it constitutes
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Incentive distribution rights represent the right to receive an increasing percentage of quarterly distributions of available cash from
operating surplus after the minimum quarterly distribution has been paid. SXLs general partner currently holds the incentive distribution rights. Distributions of additional available cash from operating surplus (other than as described above)
will be distributed in the following manner:
If for any quarter:
first, (i) to the
general partner in accordance with its percentage interest, (ii) 13% to the holders of the incentive distribution rights, pro rata, and (iii) to all SXL common unitholders, Class E unitholders and Class G unitholders, pro rata, a percentage equal to
100% less the percentages applicable to the general partner and holders of the incentive distribution rights, until each SXL common unit has received $0.0958 per unit for such quarter, also known as the second target distribution;
second, (i) to the
general partner in accordance with its percentage interest, (ii) 35% to the holders of the incentive distribution rights, pro rata, and (iii) to all SXL common unitholders, Class E unitholders and Class G unitholders, pro rata, a percentage equal to
100% less the percentages applicable to the general partner and holders of the incentive distribution rights, until each SXL common unit has received $0.2638 per unit for such quarter, also known as the third target distribution; and
thereafter, (i) to
the general partner in accordance with its percentage interest, (ii) 48% to the holders of the incentive distribution rights, pro rata, and (iii) to all SXL common unitholders, Class E unitholders and Class G unitholders, pro rata, a percentage
equal to 100% less the percentages applicable to the general partner and holders of the incentive distribution rights.
The incentive distributions described above do not reflect the impact of incentive distribution subsidies previously agreed to by ETP in connection with
previous transactions.
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ETP
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SXL
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amounts previously distributed with respect to the Class G units.
The incentive distributions described above do not reflect the impact of incentive
distribution subsidies previously agreed to by ETE in connection with previous transactions.
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Adjustment to the Minimum Quarterly Distribution and Target Distribution Levels
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ETP
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SXL
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If ETP combines its units into fewer units or subdivides its units into a greater number of units, it will proportionately adjust:
the minimum
quarterly distribution;
the target distribution levels; and
the unrecovered
initial unit price.
For example, if a two-for-one split of the common units should
occur, the minimum quarterly distribution, the target distribution and the unrecovered capital would be reduced to 50% of its initial level. ETP will not make any adjustment by reason of our issuance of additional units for cash or property.
In addition, if legislation is enacted or if existing law is modified or interpreted in a
manner that causes ETP to become taxable as a corporation or otherwise subject to taxation as an entity for federal, state or local income tax purposes, under the terms of the ETP partnership agreement, ETP can reduce its minimum quarterly
distribution and the target cash distribution levels by multiplying the same by one minus the sum of the highest marginal federal corporate income tax rate that could apply and any increase in the effective overall state and local income tax
rates.
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If SXL combines its units into fewer units or subdivides its units into a greater number of units, it will proportionately adjust:
the minimum
quarterly distribution;
the target distribution levels; and
the unrecovered
initial unit price.
For example, if a two-for-one split of the common units should
occur, the minimum quarterly distribution, the target distribution levels and the unrecovered capital would be reduced to 50% of its initial level. SXL will not make any adjustment by reason of the issuance of additional units for cash or
property.
In addition, if legislation is enacted or if existing law is modified or
interpreted in a manner that causes SXL to become taxable as a corporation or otherwise subject to taxation as an entity for federal, state or local income tax purposes, SXL can reduce its minimum quarterly distribution and the target cash
distribution levels by multiplying the same by one minus the sum of the highest marginal federal corporate income tax rate that could apply and any increase in the effective overall state and local income tax rates.
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Distributions of Cash upon Liquidation
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ETP
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SXL
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If ETP dissolves in accordance with the ETP partnership agreement, it will sell or otherwise dispose of its assets in a process called a liquidation. Upon dissolution, subject to Section 17-804 of the Delaware LP Act, ETP will first
apply the proceeds of liquidation to the payment of its creditors and the creation of a reserve for contingent liabilities. ETP will distribute any remaining proceeds to the unitholders, in accordance with the positive balance in their
respective capital accounts.
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If SXL dissolves in accordance with the SXL partnership agreement, it will sell or otherwise dispose of its assets in a process called a liquidation. Upon dissolution, subject to Section 17-804 of the Delaware LP Act, SXL will
first apply the proceeds of liquidation to the payment of its creditors and the creation of a reserve for contingent liabilities. SXL will distribute any remaining proceeds to the unitholders, in accordance with the positive balance in their
respective capital accounts.
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Merger, Sale or Other Disposition of Assets
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ETP
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SXL
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A merger or consolidation of ETP requires the prior consent of the general partner. The general partner has discretion to consent to any
merger or consolidation.
The ETP partnership agreement generally prohibits the
general partner, without the prior approval of the holders of a unit majority, from causing ETP to sell, exchange or otherwise dispose of all or substantially all of its assets in a single transaction or a series of related transactions, including
by way of merger, consolidation or other combination, or approving on ETPs behalf the sale, exchange or other disposition of all or substantially all of its assets or the assets of its subsidiaries. The general partner may mortgage, pledge,
hypothecate or grant a security interest in all or substantially all of ETPs assets without such approval. The general partner may also sell all or substantially all of ETPs assets under a foreclosure or other realization upon the
encumbrances above without such approval.
If the conditions specified in the ETP
partnership agreement are satisfied, the general partner may merge ETP or any of its subsidiaries into, or convey some or all of their assets to, a newly formed entity if the sole purpose of that merger or conveyance is to effect a mere change in
ETPs legal form into another limited liability entity.
Unitholders are not
entitled to dissenters rights of appraisal under the ETP partnership agreement or applicable Delaware law in the event of a merger or consolidation, a sale of substantially all of ETPs assets or any other transaction or event.
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A merger or consolidation of SXL requires the prior consent of the general partner. The general partner has discretion to consent to any
merger or consolidation.
The SXL partnership agreement generally prohibits the
general partner, without the prior approval of the holders of a unit majority, from causing SXL to sell, exchange or otherwise dispose of all or substantially all of its assets in a single transaction or a series of related transactions, including
by way of merger, consolidation or other combination, or approving on SXLs behalf the sale, exchange or other disposition of all or substantially all of its assets or the assets of its subsidiaries. The general partner may mortgage, pledge,
hypothecate or grant a security interest in all or substantially all of SXLs assets without such approval. The general partner may also sell all or substantially all of SXLs assets under a foreclosure or other realization upon the
encumbrances above without such approval.
If the conditions specified in the SXL
partnership agreement are satisfied, the general partner may merge SXL or any of its subsidiaries into, or convey some or all of their assets to, a newly formed entity if the sole purpose of that merger or conveyance is to effect a mere change in
SXLs legal form into another limited liability entity.
Unitholders are not
entitled to dissenters rights of appraisal under the SXL partnership agreement or applicable Delaware law in the event of a merger or consolidation, a sale of substantially all of SXLs assets or any other transaction or
event.
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Election of General Partner and Directors of the General Partner
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ETP
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SXL
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Unitholders are not entitled to elect the general partner or its directors.
Unitholders are not entitled to remove directors.
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Unitholders are not entitled to elect the general partner or its directors.
Unitholders are not entitled to remove directors.
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166
Meetings; Voting
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ETP
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SXL
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Except as described below regarding a person or group owning 20% or more of any class of units then outstanding, unitholders or assignees who
are record holders of units on the record date will be entitled to notice of, and to vote at, meetings of the limited partners and to act upon matters for which approvals may be solicited. Common units that are owned by an assignee who is a record
holder, but who has not yet been admitted as a limited partner, will be voted by the general partner at the written direction of the record holder. Absent direction of this kind, the common units will not be voted, except that, in the case of common
units held by the general partner on behalf of non-citizen assignees, the general partner will distribute the votes on those common units in the same ratios as the votes of limited partners on other units are cast.
If authorized by the general partner, any action that is required or permitted to be
taken by the unitholders may be taken either at a meeting of the unitholders or without a meeting if consents in writing describing the action so taken are signed by holders of the number of units as would be necessary to authorize or take that
action at a meeting. Meetings of the unitholders may be called by the general partner or by unitholders owning at least 20% of the outstanding units of the class for which a meeting is proposed. Unitholders may vote either in person or by proxy at
meetings. The holders of a majority of the outstanding units of the class or classes for which a meeting has been called represented in person or by proxy shall constitute a quorum unless an action by the unitholders requires approval by holders of
a greater percentage of the units, in which case the quorum will be the greater percentage.
Each record holder of a unit has a vote according to his percentage interest in the partnership, although additional limited partner interests having special
voting rights could be issued. However, if at any time any person or group, other than the general partner and its affiliates owns, in the aggregate, beneficial ownership of 20% or more of any class of units then outstanding, the person or group
will lose voting rights on all of its units and the units may not be voted on any matter and will not be considered to be outstanding when sending notices of a meeting of unitholders, calculating required votes, determining the presence of a quorum
or for other similar purposes.
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Except as described below regarding a person or group owning 20% or more of any class of units then outstanding, limited partners or
assignees who are record holders of units on the record date will be entitled to notice of, and to vote at, meetings of the limited partners and to act upon matters for which approvals may be solicited. Limited partners interests that are owned by
an assignee who is a record holder, but who has not yet been admitted as a limited partner, will be voted by the general partner at the written direction of the record holder. Absent direction of this kind, the limited partner interests will not be
voted, except that, in the case of limited partner interests held by the general partner on behalf of non-citizen assignees, the general partner will distribute the votes on those limited partner interests in the same ratios as the votes of limited
partners on other limited partner interests are cast.
If authorized by the general
partner, any action that is required or permitted to be taken by the limited partners may be taken either at a meeting of the limited partners or without a meeting if consents in writing describing the action so taken are signed by limited partners
owning not less than the minimum percentage of the outstanding units as would be necessary to authorize or take that action at a meeting. Meetings of the limited partners may be called by the general partner or by limited partners owning at least
20% of the outstanding units of the class for which a meeting is proposed. Limited partners may vote either in person or by proxy at meetings. The holders of a majority of the outstanding units of the class or classes for which a meeting has been
called represented in person or by proxy shall constitute a quorum unless an action by the limited partners requires approval by holders of a greater percentage of the units, in which case the quorum will be the greater percentage.
Each record holder of a unit has a vote according to his percentage interest in the
partnership, although additional limited partner interests having special voting rights could be issued. However, if at any time any person or group, other than the general partner and its affiliates owns, in the aggregate, beneficial ownership of
20% or more of any class of units then outstanding, the person or group will lose voting rights on all of its units and the units may not be voted on
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167
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ETP
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SXL
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Except as required by Delaware law, the Class E, Class G, Class H, Class I, Class J and Class K units are not entitled to vote on any
matters related to ETP other than any amendment to the ETP partnership agreement that would adversely affect the Class E, Class G, Class H, Class I, Class J and Class K units, respectively, in any material respect.
Common units held in nominee or street name account will be voted by the broker or other
nominee in accordance with the instruction of the beneficial owner unless the arrangement between the beneficial owner and his nominee provides otherwise.
Any notice, demand, request, report or proxy material required or permitted to be given or made to record holders of common units under the ETP partnership
agreement will be delivered to the record holder by ETP or by the transfer agent.
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any matter and will not be considered to be outstanding when sending notices of a meeting of unitholders, calculating required votes,
determining the presence of a quorum or for other similar purposes. The foregoing limitation will not apply (i) to any person or group who acquired 20% or more of any outstanding partnership securities of any class then outstanding directly
from the general partner or its affiliates, or (ii) to any person or group who acquired 20% or more of any outstanding partnership securities of any class then outstanding directly or indirectly from a person or group described in
clause (i).
Except as required by Delaware law, the SXL Class E units, SXL Class
G units, SXL Class I units, SXL Class J units and SXL Class K units will not be entitled to vote on any matters related to SXL other than any amendment to the SXL partnership agreement that would adversely affect the SXL Class E units, SXL Class G
units, SXL Class I units, SXL Class J units and SXL Class K units, respectively, in any material respect.
Common units held in nominee or street name account will be voted by the broker or other nominee in accordance with the instruction of the beneficial owner
unless the arrangement between the beneficial owner and his nominee provides otherwise.
Any notice, demand, request, report or proxy material required or permitted to be given or made to record holders of common units under the SXL partnership
agreement will be delivered to the record holder by SXL or by the transfer agent.
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Advance Notice Requirements for Nominations and Other Proposals
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ETP
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SXL
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Not applicable.
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Not applicable.
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Withdrawal or Removal of the General Partner
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ETP
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SXL
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ETP GP may withdraw as general partner without first obtaining approval of any unitholder by giving 90 days written notice, and that
withdrawal will not constitute a violation of the ETP partnership agreement.
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SXL GP may withdraw as general partner without first obtaining approval of any unitholder by giving 90 days written notice, and that withdrawal will not constitute a violation of the SXL partnership
agreement.
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168
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ETP
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SXL
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Upon the withdrawal of the general partner under any circumstances, other than as a result of a transfer by the general partner of all or a
part of its general partner interest, the holders of a majority of the outstanding units entitled to vote may select a successor to that withdrawing general partner. If a successor is not elected, or is elected but an opinion of counsel regarding
limited liability and tax matters cannot be obtained, the partnership will be dissolved, wound up and liquidated, unless within 90 days after that withdrawal, the holders of a majority of the outstanding units agree in writing to continue ETPs
business and to appoint a successor general partner. See Termination and Dissolution.
The general partner may not be removed unless that removal is approved by the vote of the holders of not less than 66 2/3% of the outstanding units,
including units held by the general partner and its affiliates, and ETP receives an opinion of counsel regarding limited liability and tax matters, and, in certain circumstances, the approval of a successor general partner by the vote of the holders
of a majority of the outstanding common units (including common units held by the general partner and its affiliates). The ownership of more than 33 1/3% of the outstanding units by the general partner and its affiliates would give them the
practical ability to prevent the general partners removal.
The ETP partnership
agreement also provides that if (i) the general partner is removed as the general partner under circumstances where cause does not exist or (ii) the general partner withdraws and such withdrawal does not violate the ETP partnership
agreement, if a successor general partner is elected, the general partner has an option to require its successor to purchase its partnership interest as the general partner in ETP and ETPs subsidiaries, and its incentive distribution rights in
an amount in cash equal to the fair market value of those interests.
In the event of
removal of a general partner under circumstances where cause exists or withdrawal of a general partner where that withdrawal violates the ETP partnership agreement, if a successor general partner is elected, a successor general partner will have the
option to purchase the general partner interest in ETP and ETPs subsidiaries and incentive distribution rights of the general partner for a cash payment equal to the fair market value of those interests.
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Upon the withdrawal of the general partner under any circumstances, other than as a result of a transfer by the general partner of all or a
part of its general partner interest, the holders of a majority of the outstanding units entitled to vote may select a successor to that withdrawing general partner. If a successor is not elected, or is elected but an opinion of counsel regarding
limited liability and tax matters cannot be obtained, the partnership will be dissolved, wound up and liquidated, unless within 90 days after that withdrawal, the holders of a majority of the outstanding units agree in writing to continue SXLs
business and to appoint a successor general partner. See Termination and Dissolution.
The general partner may not be removed unless that removal is approved by the vote of the holders of not less than 66 2/3% of the outstanding units,
including units held by the general partner and its affiliates, and SXL receives an opinion of counsel regarding limited liability and tax matters, and, in certain circumstances, the approval of a successor general partner by the vote of the holders
of a majority of the outstanding common units (including common units held by the general partner and its affiliates). The ownership of more than 33 1/3% of the outstanding units by the general partner and its affiliates would give them the
practical ability to prevent the general partners removal.
The SXL partnership
agreement also provides that if the general partner is removed as the general partner under circumstances where cause does not exist or the general partner withdraws and such withdrawal does not violate the SXL partnership agreement, if a successor
general partner is elected, the general partner has an option to require its successor to purchase its partnership interest (or equivalent interest) as the general partner in SXL and SXLs subsidiaries, and its incentive distribution rights for
an amount in cash equal to the fair market value of those interests.
In the event of
removal of a general partner under circumstances where cause exists or withdrawal of a general partner where that withdrawal violates the SXL partnership agreement, if a successor general partner is elected (or if SXL is reconstituted and the
successor general partner is not the former general
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169
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ETP
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SXL
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If the options described above are not exercised, the general partner will become a limited partner and the general partners interest will be converted into common units. The successor will contribute to ETP cash in an amount
equal to the product of the percentage interest of the general partner in ETP and the net agreed value of the ETPs assets.
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partner), a successor general partner will have the option to purchase the general partner interest in SXL and SXLs subsidiaries and
incentive distribution rights of the general partner for a cash payment equal to the fair market value of those interests.
If the options described above are not exercised, the general partner will become a limited partner and the general partners interest will be converted
into common units. The successor will contribute to SXL cash in an amount equal to the product of the percentage interest of the general partner in SXL and the net agreed value of SXLs assets.
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Transfer of General Partner Interests
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ETP
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SXL
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The general partner may not transfer all or any part of its general partner interest unless:
the transferee
agrees to assume the rights and duties of the general partner under the ETP partnership agreement;
ETP receives an opinion of counsel that such transfer would not result in the loss of
limited liability of any limited partner, or cause ETP to be treated as an association taxable as a corporation or otherwise to be taxed as an entity for federal income tax purposes; and
such transferee
also agrees to purchase all (or the appropriate portion thereof, if applicable) of the partnership interest of the general partner.
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The general partner may not transfer all or any part of its general partner interest unless:
the transferee
agrees to assume the rights and duties of the general partner under the SXL partnership agreement;
SXL receives an opinion of counsel that such transfer would not result in the loss of
limited liability of any limited partner, or cause SXL to be treated as an association taxable as a corporation or otherwise to be taxed as an entity for federal income tax purposes; and
such transferee
also agrees to purchase all (or the appropriate portion thereof, if applicable) of the partnership or membership interest of the general partner or managing member, if any.
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Transfer of Incentive Distribution Rights
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ETP
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SXL
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A holder of incentive distribution rights may transfer any or all of the incentive distribution rights held by such holder without the consent of unitholders to one or more of its affiliates or one or more persons in connection with
the merger or consolidation of such holder with and into another person or the transfer by such holder of all or substantially all of its assets to another person. Any other transfer of incentive distribution rights requires the prior approval of
holders of at least a unit majority.
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A holder of incentive distribution rights may transfer any or all of the incentive distribution rights held by such holder without the consent of unitholders if the transferee agrees to be bound by the SXL partnership
agreement.
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170
Limited Preemptive Right
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ETP
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SXL
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Upon issuance of additional partnership securities, the general partner will be entitled, but not required, to make additional capital
contributions to the extent necessary to maintain its percentage interest in ETP. The general partners percentage interest in ETP will be reduced if ETP issues additional units in the future and the general partner does not contribute a
proportionate amount of capital to ETP to maintain its percentage interest. Moreover, the general partner will have the right, which it may from time to time assign in whole or in part to any of its affiliates, to purchase partnership securities
from ETP whenever, and on the same terms that, ETP issues partnership securities to persons other than the general partner and its affiliates, to the extent necessary to maintain the percentage interests of the general partner and its affiliates
equal to that which existed immediately prior to the issuance of such partnership securities. The holders of common units will not have preemptive rights to acquire additional common units or other partnership securities.
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Upon issuance of additional partnership securities, the general partner will be entitled, but not required, to make additional capital
contributions to the extent necessary to maintain its percentage interest in SXL. The general partners percentage interest in SXL will be reduced if SXL issues additional units in the future and the general partner does not contribute a
proportionate amount of capital to SXL to maintain its percentage interest. Moreover, the general partner will have the right, which it may from time to time assign in whole or in part to any of its affiliates, to purchase partnership securities
from SXL whenever, and on the same terms that, SXL issues partnership securities to persons other than the general partner and its affiliates, to the extent necessary to maintain the percentage interests of the general partner and its affiliates
equal to that which existed immediately prior to the issuance of such partnership securities. The holders of common units will not have preemptive rights to acquire additional common units or other partnership securities.
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Limited Call Right
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ETP
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SXL
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If at any time persons other than the general partner and its affiliates do not own more than 20% of the total limited partner interests of any class, the general partner will have the right, which it may assign to any of its
affiliates or to ETP, to acquire all, but not less than all, of those common units at a price no less than their then-current market price.
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If at any time the general partner and its affiliates hold more than 80% of the total limited partner interests of any class then outstanding, the general partner will have the right, which it may assign to any of its affiliates or
to SXL, to acquire all, but not less than all, of those limited partner interests at a price no less than their then-current market price.
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Amendment of Partnership Agreement
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ETP
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SXL
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General
. Amendments to the ETP partnership agreement may be proposed only by or with the consent of the general partner. Certain amendments require the approval of a majority of the outstanding common units, including common
units owned by the general partner and its affiliates. Any amendment that materially and adversely affects the rights or preferences of any class of partnership interest in relation to other classes requires the approval of at least a majority of
the partnership class so affected. Except as described below, an amendment must be approved by a majority of the outstanding units.
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General
. Amendments to the SXL partnership agreement may be proposed only by the general partner. Any amendment that materially and adversely affects the rights or preferences of any class of partnership interest in relation
to other classes requires the approval of at least a majority of the partnership class so affected. Except as described below, an amendment must be approved by a majority of the outstanding
units.
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171
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ETP
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SXL
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Prohibited Amendments
. Without the consent of the holders of at least 90% of the outstanding units, the ETP partnership agreement may
not be amended to:
enlarge the obligations of any limited partner without its consent, unless approved by
at least a majority of the type or class of limited partner interests so affected; or
enlarge the obligations of, restrict in any way any action by or rights of, or reduce
in any way the amounts distributable, reimbursable or otherwise payable by ETP to the general partner or any of its affiliates without the consent of the general partner, which may be given or withheld in its sole discretion.
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Prohibited Amendments
. Without the consent of the holders of at least 90% of the outstanding units, the SXL partnership agreement may
not be amended to:
enlarge the obligations of any limited partner without its consent, unless approved by
at least a majority of the type or class of limited partner interests so affected;
enlarge the obligations of, restrict in any way any action by or rights of, or reduce
in any way the amounts distributable, reimbursable or otherwise payable by SXL to the general partner or any of its affiliates without the consent of the general partner, which may be given or withheld at its option; or
change the
provision regarding the dissolution of SXL upon election by the general partner that is approved by holders of a unit majority.
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No Unitholder Approval
. The general partner may generally make amendments to the ETP partnership agreement without the approval of any
limited partner or assignee to reflect:
a change in ETPs name, the location of its principal place of business, the
registered agent or registered office;
the admission, substitution, withdrawal or removal of partners in accordance with the
ETP partnership agreement;
a change that, in the sole discretion of ETPs general partner, is necessary or
advisable for the partnership to qualify or to continue its qualification as a limited partnership or a partnership in which the limited partners have limited liability under the laws of any state or to ensure that the partnership and operating
partnership will not be treated as an association taxable as a corporation or otherwise taxed as an entity for federal income tax purposes;
a change that, in the discretion of the general partner, (i) does not adversely affect
the unitholders in any material respect, (ii) is necessary or advisable to (A) satisfy any requirements, conditions or guidelines contained in any opinion, directive, order, ruling or regulation of any federal or state agency or judicial authority
or contained in any federal or state statute (including the Delaware LP Act) or (B) facilitate the trading of the common
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No Unitholder Approval
. The general partner may generally make amendments to the SXL partnership agreement without the approval of any
limited partner or assignee to reflect:
a change in SXLs name, the location of its principal place of business, the
registered agent or registered office;
the admission, substitution, withdrawal or removal of partners in accordance with the
SXL partnership agreement;
a change that SXLs general partner determines to be necessary or appropriate for
the partnership to qualify or to continue its qualification as a limited partnership or a partnership in which the limited partners have limited liability under the laws of any state or to ensure that the partnership, SXL Operating Partnership and
their subsidiaries will not be treated as associations taxable as corporations or otherwise taxed as an entities for federal income tax purposes;
a change that the general partner determines (i) does not adversely affect the
limited partners in any material respect, (ii) to be necessary or appropriate to (A) satisfy any requirements, conditions or guidelines contained in any opinion, directive, order, ruling or regulation of any federal or state agency or judicial
authority or contained in any federal or state statute (including the Delaware LP Act) or (B) facilitate
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172
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ETP
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SXL
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units (including the division of any class or classes of outstanding common units into different classes to facilitate
uniformity of tax consequences within such classes of units) or comply with any rule, regulation, guideline or requirement of any national securities exchange on which the common units are or will be listed for trading, (iii) is necessary or
advisable in connection with action taken by the general partner pursuant to a split or combination of units authorized under the ETP partnership agreement, or (iv) is required to effect the intent expressed in the registration statement related to
ETPs initial public offering or the intent of the provisions of the ETP partnership agreement or is otherwise contemplated by the ETP partnership agreement;
a change in ETPs fiscal year or taxable year and related changes;
an amendment that
is necessary, in the opinion of ETPs counsel, to prevent the partnership or ETPs general partner or its directors, officers, agents or trustees, from in any manner being subjected to the provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940,
as amended, the Investment Advisors Act of 1940, as amended, or plan asset regulations adopted under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended, regardless of whether such are substantially similar to plan asset
regulations currently applied or proposed by the United States Department of Labor;
an amendment that, in the discretion of the general partner, is necessary or advisable
in connection with the authorization of issuance of any class or series of partnership securities;
any amendment expressly permitted in the ETP partnership agreement to be made by
ETPs general partner acting alone;
an amendment effected, necessitated or contemplated by a merger agreement approved in
accordance with the terms of the ETP partnership agreement;
an amendment that, in the discretion of the general partner, is necessary or advisable
to reflect, account for and deal with appropriately the formation by the partnership of, or investment by the partnership in, any corporation, partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or other entity other than ETP Operating
Partnership, in connection with the conduct by the partnership of activities permitted by the terms of the ETP partnership agreement;
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the trading of the common units (including the division of any class or classes of outstanding common units into
different classes to facilitate uniformity of tax consequences within such classes of units) or comply with any rule, regulation, guideline or requirement of any national securities exchange on which the common units are or will be listed for
trading, (iii) to be necessary or appropriate in connection with action taken by the general partner pursuant to a split or combination of units authorized under the SXL partnership agreement, or (iv) is required to effect the intent expressed in
the registration statement related to SXLs initial public offering or the intent of the provisions of the SXL partnership agreement or is otherwise contemplated by the SXL partnership agreement;
a change in
SXLs fiscal year or taxable year and related changes;
an amendment that is necessary, in the opinion of SXLs counsel, to prevent the
partnership or SXLs general partner or its directors, officers, agents or trustees, from in any manner being subjected to the provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, the Investment Advisors Act of 1940, as amended, or
plan asset regulations adopted under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended, regardless of whether such are substantially similar to plan asset regulations currently applied or proposed by the United States
Department of Labor;
an amendment that the general partner determines is necessary or appropriate in
connection with the authorization of issuance of any class or series of partnership securities;
any amendment expressly permitted in the SXL partnership agreement to be made by
SXLs general partner acting alone;
an amendment effected, necessitated or contemplated by a merger agreement approved in
accordance with the terms of the SXL partnership agreement;
an amendment that the general partner determines is necessary or appropriate to reflect
and account for the formation by the partnership of, or investment by the partnership in, any corporation, partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or other entity, in connection with the conduct by the partnership of
activities
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173
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ETP
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SXL
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a merger or conveyance pursuant to the terms of the ETP partnership
agreement; or
any other amendments substantially similar to the foregoing.
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permitted by the terms of the SXL partnership agreement;
a merger or
conveyance pursuant to the terms of the SXL partnership agreement; or
any other amendments substantially similar to the foregoing.
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Opinion of Counsel and Unitholder Approval
. The general partner will not be required to obtain an opinion of counsel that an amendment
will not result in a loss of limited liability to the limited partners or result in the partnership being treated as an entity for federal income tax purposes if one of the amendments described above under No Unitholder Approval
should occur. No other amendments to the ETP partnership agreement will become effective without the approval of holders of at least 90% of the units unless ETP obtains an opinion of counsel to the effect that the amendment will not affect the
limited liability under applicable law of any limited partner in the partnership.
Amendments Affecting Certain Classes of ETP Units.
Any
amendment to the ETP partnership agreement that adversely affects the rights, preferences and privileges of ETPs Class E units, Class G units, Class H units, Class I units, Class J units or Class K units requires the approval of a majority of
such outstanding Class E units, Class G units, Class H units, Class I units, Class J units or Class K units, as applicable, in each case voting separately as a class, with each Class E unit, Class G unit, Class H unit, Class I unit, Class
J unit or Class K unit, as applicable, entitled to one vote.
Amendments
Reducing the Required Voting Percentage
. Any amendment that reduces the voting percentage required to take any action is required to be approved by the affirmative vote of limited partners constituting not less than the voting requirement sought
to be reduced.
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Opinion of Counsel and Unitholder Approval
. The general partner will not be required to obtain an opinion of counsel that an amendment
will not result in a loss of limited liability to the limited partners or result in the partnership being treated as an entity for federal income tax purposes if one of the amendments described above under No Unitholder Approval
should occur. No other amendments to the SXL partnership agreement will become effective without the approval of holders of at least 90% of the units voting as a single class unless SXL obtains an opinion of counsel to the effect that the amendment
will not affect the limited liability under applicable law of any limited partner in the partnership.
Amendments Affecting Certain Classes of SXL Units.
Following the merger, any amendment to the SXL partnership agreement that adversely affects the
rights, preferences and privileges of the SXL Class E units, SXL Class G units, SXL Class I units, SXL Class J units or SXL Class K units will require the approval of a majority of the outstanding SXL Class E units, SXL Class G units,
SXL Class I units, SXL Class J units or SXL Class K units, as applicable, in each case voting separately as a class, with each SXL Class E unit, SXL Class G unit, SXL Class I unit, SXL Class J unit or SXL Class K unit, as applicable,
entitled to one vote.
Amendments Reducing the Required Voting Percentage
. Any
amendment that reduces the voting percentage required to take any action is required to be approved by the affirmative vote of limited partners constituting not less than the voting requirement sought to be reduced.
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174
Indemnification
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ETP
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SXL
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Under the ETP partnership agreement, in most circumstances, ETP will indemnify the following persons, to the fullest extent permitted by law,
from and against all losses, claims, damages or similar events:
the general partner;
any departing
general partner;
any person who is or was an affiliate of a general partner or any departing general
partner;
any
person who is or was a director, officer, employee, agent or trustee of ETP, the ETP Operating Partnership or any other subsidiary;
any person who is or was an officer, director, employee, agent or trustee of the
general partner, any departing general partner or any affiliate of a general partner or any departing general partner; and
any person who is or was serving at the request of the general partner or any departing
general partner or any affiliate of a general partner or any departing general partner as a director, officer, employee, partner, agent, fiduciary or trustee of another person.
Any indemnification under these provisions will only be out of ETPs assets. Unless
it otherwise agrees, the general partner will not be personally liable for, or have any obligation to contribute or loan funds or assets to ETP to enable ETP to effectuate, indemnification. ETP may purchase insurance against liabilities asserted
against and expenses incurred by persons for its activities, regardless of whether it would have the power to indemnify the person against liabilities under the ETP partnership agreement.
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Under the SXL partnership agreement, in most circumstances, SXL will indemnify the following persons, to the fullest extent permitted by law,
from and against all losses, claims, damages or similar events:
the general partner;
any departing
general partner;
any person who is or was an affiliate of a general partner or any departing general
partner;
any
person who is or was a member, partner, officer, director, fiduciary or trustee of SXL, the SXL Operating Partnership, any subsidiary, the general partner, any departing general partner, or any affiliate;
any person who is
or was serving at the request of the general partner or any departing general partner or any such affiliate as an officer, director, member, partner, fiduciary or trustee of another person;
and any person
that the general partner designates as a Indemnitee.
Any indemnification
under these provisions will only be out of SXLs assets. Unless it otherwise agrees, the general partner will not be personally liable for, or have any obligation to contribute or loan funds or assets to SXL to enable SXL to effectuate,
indemnification. SXL may purchase insurance against liabilities asserted against and expenses incurred by persons for its activities, regardless of whether it would have the power to indemnify the person against liabilities under the SXL partnership
agreement.
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Conflicts of Interest
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ETP
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SXL
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The ETP partnership agreement contains provisions that waive or consent to conduct by the general partner and its affiliates and which would
reduce the general partners fiduciary duties to the unitholders. The ETP partnership agreement also restricts the remedies available to unitholders for actions taken by the general partner that might, without those limitations, constitute
breaches of fiduciary duty.
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The SXL partnership agreement contains provisions that waive or consent to conduct by the general partner and its affiliates and which would
reduce the general partners fiduciary duties to the unitholders. The SXL partnership agreement also restricts the remedies available to unitholders for actions taken by the general partner that might, without those limitations, constitute
breaches of fiduciary duty.
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ETP
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SXL
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The ETP partnership agreement generally provides that transactions in which the general partner has a conflict of interests, are permitted
and will not result in a breach of its obligations under the ETP partnership agreement or its duties to ETP or its unitholders if the resolution of the conflict is:
approved by a majority of the members of the conflicts committee of the board of
directors (as long as the material facts known to the general partner or any of its affiliates regarding any proposed transaction were disclosed to the conflicts committee at the time it gave its approval);
is on terms no
less favorable to ETP than those generally being provided to or available from unrelated third parties; or
is fair to ETP, taking into account the totality of the relationships between the
parties involved (including other transactions that may be particularly favorable or advantageous to ETP).
The general partner may, but is not required to, seek the approval of such resolution from the conflicts committee.
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The SXL partnership agreement generally provides that transactions in which the general partner has a conflict of interest, are permitted and
will not result in a breach of its obligations under the SXL partnership agreement or its duties to SXL or its unitholders if the resolution of the conflict is:
approved by a majority of the members of the conflicts committee of the board of
directors;
approved by the vote of a majority of the common units (excluding common units owned by the general partner and its affiliates);
on terms no less favorable to SXL than those generally being provided to or available
from unrelated third parties; or
fair and reasonable to SXL, taking into account the totality of the relationships
between the parties involved (including other transactions that may be particularly favorable or advantageous to SXL).
The general partner may, but is not required to, seek the approval of such resolution from the conflicts committee.
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Change of Management Provisions
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ETP
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SXL
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The ETP partnership agreement contains specific provisions that are intended to discourage a person or group from attempting to remove the general partner or otherwise change ETPs management. If any person or group other than
the general partner and its affiliates acquires beneficial ownership of 20% or more of any class of units, that person or group loses voting rights on all of its units.
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The SXL partnership agreement contains specific provisions that are intended to discourage a person or group from attempting to remove the general partner or otherwise change SXLs management. If any person or group other than
the general partner and its affiliates acquires beneficial ownership of 20% or more of any class of units, that person or group loses voting rights on all of its units. This loss of voting rights does not apply (i) to any person or group that
acquires the units directly from the general partner or its affiliates, (ii) to any person or group that acquires the units directly or indirectly from a person or group described in clause (i);
provided
that the general partner has notified
such person or group in writing that such limitation will not apply, or (iii) to any person or group who acquired 20% or more of any partnership securities issued by the partnership with the prior approval of the board of directors of the general
partner.
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Termination and Dissolution
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ETP
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SXL
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ETP will continue as a limited partnership until terminated under the ETP partnership agreement. ETP will dissolve upon:
the expiration of
its term on September 30, 2085;
an event of withdrawal of the general partner;
an election to
dissolve the partnership by the general partner that is approved by the holders of a unit majority;
the entry of a decree of judicial dissolution of the partnership; or
the sale, exchange
or other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets and properties of the partnership and its subsidiaries.
Upon a dissolution under an event of withdrawal caused by the voluntary withdrawal or removal of the general partner and the failure of the partners to select
a successor or upon the dissolution of the partnership upon an event constituting withdrawal, the holders of a unit majority may also elect, within specific time limitations, to reconstitute the partnership and continue its business on the same
terms and conditions described in the ETP partnership agreement by forming a new limited partnership on terms identical to those in the existing ETP partnership agreement and having as general partner an entity approved by a unit majority, subject
to ETPs receipt of an opinion of counsel to the effect that:
the action would not result in the loss of limited liability of any limited partner;
and
neither
the partnership, the reconstituted limited partnership, nor the ETP Operating Partnership would be treated as an association taxable as a corporation or otherwise be taxable as an entity for federal income tax purposes upon the exercise of that
right to continue.
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SXL will continue as a limited partnership until terminated under the SXL partnership agreement. SXL will dissolve upon:
an event of
withdrawal of the general partner;
an election to dissolve the partnership by the general partner that is approved by the
holders of a unit majority;
the entry of a decree of judicial dissolution of the partnership; or
the sale, exchange
or other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets and properties of SXL and its subsidiaries.
Upon a dissolution under an event of withdrawal caused by the voluntary withdrawal or removal of the general partner and the failure of the partners to select
a successor or upon the dissolution of the partnership upon an event constituting withdrawal, the holders of a unit majority may also elect, within specific time limitations, to reconstitute the partnership and continue its business on the same
terms and conditions described in the SXL partnership agreement by forming a new limited partnership on terms identical to those in the existing SXL partnership agreement and having as general partner an entity approved by a unit majority, subject
to SXLs receipt of an opinion of counsel to the effect that:
the action would not result in the loss of limited liability of any limited partner;
and
neither
the partnership, the reconstituted limited partnership, nor the SXL Operating Partnership or any subsidiary of any such entity would be treated as an association taxable as a corporation or otherwise be taxable as an entity for federal income tax
purposes upon the exercise of that right to continue (to the extent not already so treated or taxed).
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Liquidation
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ETP
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SXL
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Upon dissolution of the partnership, unless it is reconstituted and continued as a new limited partnership, the liquidator authorized to wind up ETPs affairs will, acting with all of the powers of the general
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Upon dissolution of the partnership, unless it is reconstituted and continued as a new limited partnership, the liquidator authorized to wind up SXLs affairs will, acting with all of the powers of
the
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ETP
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SXL
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partner that the liquidator deems necessary or desirable in its good faith judgment, liquidate ETPs assets and apply the proceeds of the liquidation as provided in Distributions of Cash upon Liquidation.
Under some circumstances, the liquidator may defer liquidation or distribution of ETPs assets for a reasonable period of time or distribute assets to partners in kind if it determines that a sale would be impractical or would cause undue loss
to the partners.
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general partner that the liquidator deems necessary or appropriate, liquidate SXLs assets and apply the proceeds of the liquidation as provided in Distributions of Cash upon Liquidation. Under some
circumstances, the liquidator may defer liquidation or distribution of SXLs assets for a reasonable period of time or distribute assets to partners in kind if it determines that a sale would be impractical or would cause undue loss to the
partners.
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Non-Citizen Assignees; Redemption
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ETP
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SXL
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If ETP is or becomes subject to federal, state or local laws or regulations that, in the reasonable determination of the general partner, create a substantial risk of cancellation or forfeiture of any property that it has an
interest in because of the nationality, citizenship or other related status of any limited partner or assignee, ETP may redeem the units held by the limited partner at their current market price. In order to avoid any cancellation or forfeiture, the
general partner may require each limited partner to furnish information about his nationality, citizenship or related status. If a limited partner fails to furnish information about his nationality, citizenship or other related status within 30 days
after a request for the information or the general partner determines after receipt of the information that the limited partner is not an eligible citizen, the limited partner may be treated as a non-citizen assignee. A non-citizen assignee, is
entitled to an interest equivalent to that of a limited partner for the right to share in allocations and distributions from ETP, including liquidating distributions. A non-citizen assignee may, by written instruction, direct the general partner to
vote such non-citizen assignees units. If no such written direction is received, such units held by the non-citizen assignee will not be voted.
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If SXL is or becomes subject to federal, state or local laws or regulations that the general partner determines would create a substantial risk of cancellation or forfeiture of any property that it has an interest in because of the
nationality, citizenship or other related status of any limited partner, SXL may redeem the units held by the limited partner at their current market price. In order to avoid any cancellation or forfeiture, the general partner may require each
limited partner to furnish information about his nationality, citizenship or related status. If a limited partner fails to furnish information about his nationality, citizenship or other related status within 30 days after a request for the
information or the general partner determines after receipt of the information that the limited partner is not an eligible citizen, the limited partner may be treated as a non-citizen assignee. A non-citizen assignee, is entitled to an interest
equivalent to that of a limited partner for the right to share in allocations and distributions from SXL, including liquidating distributions. A non-citizen assignee may, by written instruction, direct the general partner to vote such non-citizen
assignees units. If no such written direction is received, such units held by the non-citizen assignee will not be voted.
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Transfer of Common Units; Status as Unitholder or Assignee
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ETP
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SXL
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Each purchaser of ETP common units must execute a transfer application. By executing and delivering a transfer application, the purchaser of
common units:
becomes the record holder of the common units and is an assignee until admitted into the partnership as a substituted limited partner;
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Each purchaser of SXL common units must execute a transfer application. By executing and delivering a transfer application, the purchaser of
common units:
becomes the record holder of the common units and is an assignee until admitted into the partnership as a substituted limited partner;
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178
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ETP
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SXL
|
automatically requests admission as a substituted limited partner in
the partnership;
agrees to be bound by the terms and conditions of, and executes, the ETP partnership
agreement;
represents that such transferee has the capacity, power and authority to enter into the ETP partnership agreement;
grants powers of attorney to the general partner of the partnership as specified in the
ETP partnership agreement; and
makes the consents and waivers contained in the ETP partnership agreement.
An assignee will become a substituted limited partner of the partnership for the
transferred common units upon the consent of the general partner and the recording of the name of the assignee on ETPs books and records. The general partner may withhold its consent in its sole discretion.
Transfer applications may be completed, executed and delivered by a purchasers
broker, agent or nominee. ETP is entitled to treat the nominee holder of a common unit as the absolute owner. In that case, the beneficial holders owners are limited solely to those that it has against the nominee holder as a result of any
agreement between the beneficial owner and the nominee holder.
Common units are
securities and are transferable according to the laws governing transfer of securities. In addition to other rights acquired, the purchaser has the right to request admission as a substituted limited partner in the partnership for the purchased
common units. A purchaser of common units who does not execute and deliver a transfer application obtains only:
the right to assign the common unit to a purchaser or transferee; and
the right to
transfer the right to seek admission as a substituted limited partner in the partnership for the purchased common units.
Thus, a purchaser of common units who does not execute and deliver a transfer application:
will not receive
cash distributions or federal income tax allocations, unless the common units are held in a nominee or street name account and the nominee or broker has executed and delivered a transfer application; and
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automatically requests admission as a substituted limited partner in
the partnership;
agrees to be bound by the terms and conditions of, and executes, the SXL partnership
agreement;
represents that such transferee has the capacity, power and authority to enter into the SXL partnership agreement;
grants powers of attorney to the general partner of the partnership as specified in the
SXL partnership agreement; and
makes the consents and waivers contained in the SXL partnership agreement.
An assignee will become a substituted limited partner of the partnership for the
transferred common units upon the recording of the name of the assignee on SXLs books and records. The general partner will periodically, but not less frequently than on the first business day of each calendar quarter, cause any unrecorded
transfers of common units with respect to which a completed and duly executed transfer application has been received to be recorded in the books and records of the partnership.
Transfer applications may be completed, executed and delivered by a purchasers
broker, agent or nominee. SXL is entitled to treat the nominee holder of a common unit as the absolute owner. In that case, the beneficial holders owners are limited solely to those that it has against the nominee holder as a result of any
agreement between the beneficial owner and the nominee holder.
Common units are
securities and are transferable according to the laws governing transfer of securities. In addition to other rights acquired, the purchaser has the right to request admission as a substituted limited partner in the partnership for the purchased
common units. A purchaser of common units who does not execute and deliver a transfer application obtains only:
the right to assign the common unit to a purchaser or transferee; and
the right to
transfer the right to seek admission as a substituted limited partner in the partnership for the purchased common units.
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179
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ETP
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SXL
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may not receive some federal income tax information or reports
furnished to record holders of common units.
Until a common unit has been transferred
on its books, ETP and the transfer agent, notwithstanding any notice to the contrary, may treat the record holder of the unit as the absolute owner for all purposes, except as otherwise required by law or stock exchange regulations.
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Thus, a purchaser of common units who does not execute and deliver a transfer application:
will not receive
cash distributions or federal income tax allocations, unless the common units are held in a nominee or street name account and the nominee or broker has executed and delivered a transfer application; and
may not receive
some federal income tax information or reports furnished to record holders of common units.
Until a common unit has been transferred on its books, SXL and the transfer agent, notwithstanding any notice to the contrary, may treat the record holder of
the unit as the absolute owner for all purposes, except as otherwise required by law or stock exchange regulations.
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180
PROPOSAL 3: ADVISORY VOTE ON RELATED COMPENSATION
ETP is providing its common unitholders with the opportunity to cast an advisory (non-binding) vote to approve the payments that will or may
be made by ETP to its named executive officers in connection with the merger, as required by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010. The payments that ETPs named executive officers will or may be entitled to
receive in connection with the merger are summarized in the table under The MergerInterests of Directors and Executive Officers of ETP in the MergerQuantification of Payments and Benefits to ETPs Named Executive
Officers and the related narrative disclosures.
The ETP Board encourages you to review carefully the related compensation
information disclosed in this proxy statement/prospectus.
The ETP Board unanimously recommends that the common unitholders of ETP approve
the following resolution:
RESOLVED, that the common unitholders of ETP approve, on an advisory (non-binding) basis, the
compensation that will or may become payable to its named executive officers in connection with the merger, as disclosed pursuant to 402(t) of Regulation S-K in the table in the section of the proxy statement entitled The MergerInterests
of Directors and Executive Officers of ETP in the MergerQuantification of Payments and Benefits to ETPs Named Executive Officers and the related narrative disclosures.
The vote on the advisory compensation proposal is a vote separate and apart from the vote on the adoption of the merger agreement.
Accordingly, ETP common unitholders may vote to approve the adoption of the merger agreement and vote not to approve the advisory compensation proposal and vice versa. Because the vote on the advisory compensation proposal is advisory only, it will
not be binding on either ETP or SXL. Accordingly, if the merger agreement is adopted and the merger is completed, the compensation payments that are contractually required to be paid by ETP or the surviving partnership to ETPs named executive
officers will or may be paid, subject only to the conditions applicable thereto, regardless of the outcome of the advisory (non-binding) vote of ETP common unitholders.
To approve, on an advisory (non-binding) basis, the payments that will or may be paid by ETP to its named executive officers in connection
with the merger, the affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast on the advisory compensation proposal by the holders of ETP common units is required. Because approval of this proposal is based on the affirmative vote of at least a majority of
the votes cast by the holders of the ETP common units, an ETP common unitholders failure to vote, an abstention from voting or a broker non-vote will have no effect on the outcome of the proposal.
The ETP Board unanimously recommends that you vote FOR the payments that will or may be paid by ETP to its named executive
officers in connection with the merger.
182
LEGAL MATTERS
The validity of the SXL common units to be issued in connection with the merger and being offered hereby, certain tax matters relating to
those common units and certain U.S. federal income tax consequences of the merger will be passed upon for SXL by Vinson & Elkins L.L.P., Houston, Texas. Certain U.S. federal income tax consequences of the merger will be passed upon for ETP by
Latham & Watkins LLP, Houston, Texas.
EXPERTS
SXL
The consolidated financial
statements of Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P. and subsidiaries as of December 31, 2016 and 2015 and for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2016, and managements assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over
financial reporting as of December 31, 2016, incorporated by reference in this proxy statement/prospectus and elsewhere in the registration statement have been so incorporated by reference in reliance upon the reports of Grant Thornton LLP,
independent registered public accountants, upon the authority of said firm as experts in accounting and auditing.
ETP
The consolidated financial statements of Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. and subsidiaries as of December 31, 2016 and 2015 and for each of the
three years in the period ended December 31, 2016, and managements assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2016, incorporated by reference in this proxy statement/prospectus and elsewhere
in the registration statement have been so incorporated by reference in reliance upon the reports of Grant Thornton LLP, independent registered public accountants, upon the authority of said firm as experts in accounting and auditing.
WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION
SXL has filed with the SEC a registration statement under the Securities Act of which this proxy statement/prospectus forms a part, which
registers the SXL common units to be issued to ETP unitholders in connection with the merger. The registration statement, including the exhibits and schedules attached to the registration statement, contains additional relevant information about SXL
and its common units. The rules and regulations of the SEC allow SXL and ETP to omit certain information that is included in the registration statement from this proxy statement/prospectus.
SXL and ETP file annual, quarterly and special reports and other information with the SEC. The SEC allows SXL and ETP to
incorporate by reference into this proxy statement/prospectus the information they file with the SEC, which means that they can disclose important information to you by referring you to those documents. This proxy statement/prospectus
contains summaries of certain provisions contained in some of the documents described herein, but reference is made to the actual documents for complete information. All of the summaries are qualified in their entirety by reference to the actual
documents. The information incorporated by reference is an important part of this proxy statement/prospectus, and information that SXL or ETP files later with the SEC will automatically update and supersede this information as well as the
information included in this proxy statement/prospectus. Some documents or information, such as that called for by Items 2.02 and 7.01 of
Form 8-K,
or the exhibits related thereto under Item 9.01 of Form
8-K, are deemed furnished and not filed in accordance with SEC rules. None of those documents and none of that information is incorporated by reference into this proxy statement/prospectus. SXL and ETP incorporate by reference the documents listed
below and any future filings they make with the SEC under Sections 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act after the date of the initial registration statement (of which this proxy statement/prospectus forms a part) and prior to the
183
effectiveness of the registration statement, as well as between the date of this proxy statement/prospectus and the date on which the special meeting of ETPs unitholders is held:
SXLs Filings (SEC File No. 001-31219)
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Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2016, filed on February 24, 2017;
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Current Reports on Form 8-K filed on January 5, 2017 and January 27, 2017; and
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the description of the SXL common units contained in the Registration Statement filed on Form 8-A filed on January 28, 2002, and including any other amendments or reports filed for the purpose of updating such
description.
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SXL will provide a copy of any document incorporated by reference in this proxy statement/prospectus and any
exhibit specifically incorporated by reference in the documents it incorporates by reference, without charge, by written or oral request directed to SXL at the following address and telephone number:
Investor Relations Department
Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.
3807 West Chester Pike
Newtown
Square, Pennsylvania 19073
(866) 248-4344
ETPs Filings (SEC File No. 001-11727)
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Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2016, filed on February 24, 2017;
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Current Reports on Form 8-K filed on January 4, 2017, January 5, 2017, January 12, 2017 and January 17, 2017; and
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the description of the ETP common units contained in the Registration Statement filed on Form 8-A filed on May 16, 1996, and including any other amendments or reports filed for the purpose of updating such description.
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ETP will provide a copy of any document incorporated by reference in this proxy statement/prospectus and any exhibit
specifically incorporated by reference in the documents it incorporates by reference, without charge, by written or oral request directed to ETP at the following address and telephone number:
Energy Transfer Partners, L.P.
Investor Relations
8111
Westchester Drive, Suite 600
Dallas, Texas 75225
(214) 981-0795
SXL and ETP also
make available free of charge on their internet websites at www.sunocologistics.com and www.energytransfer.com, respectively, the reports and other information filed by SXL and ETP with the SEC, as soon as reasonably practicable after such material
is electronically filed or furnished to the SEC. Neither SXLs nor ETPs websites, nor the information contained on their websites, is part of this proxy statement/prospectus or the documents incorporated by reference.
The SEC maintains an Internet website that contains reports, proxy and information statements and other material that are filed through the
SECs Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis and Retrieval (EDGAR) System. This system can be accessed at www.sec.gov. You can find information that SXL and ETP file with the SEC by reference to their names or to their SEC file numbers. You also
may read and copy any document SXL or ETP files with the SEC at the SECs public reference room located at 100 F Street, N.E., Room 1580, Washington,
184
D.C. 20549. Please call the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330 for further information about the public reference room and its copy charges. SXLs and ETPs SEC filings are also available to
the public through the New York Stock Exchange at 20 Broad Street, New York, New York 10005.
The information concerning SXL contained in
this proxy statement/prospectus or incorporated by reference has been provided by SXL, and the information concerning ETP contained in this proxy statement/prospectus or incorporated by reference has been provided by ETP.
In order to receive timely delivery of requested documents in advance of the special meeting your request should be received no later
than April 19, 2017. If you request any documents, SXL or ETP will mail them to you by first class mail, or another equally prompt means, within one business day after receipt of your request.
Neither SXL nor ETP has authorized anyone to give any information or make any representation about the merger, SXL or ETP that is different
from, or in addition to, that contained in this proxy statement/prospectus or in any of the materials that have been incorporated by reference. Therefore, if any one distributes this type of information, you should not rely on it. If you are in a
jurisdiction where offers to exchange or sell, or solicitations of offers to exchange or purchase, the securities offered by this proxy statement/prospectus or the solicitation of proxies is unlawful, or you are a person to whom it is unlawful to
direct these types or activities, then the offer presented in this proxy statement/prospectus does not extend to you. The information contained in this proxy statement/prospectus speaks only as of its date, or in the case of information in a
document incorporated by reference, as of the date of such document, unless the information specifically indicates that another date applies.
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ANNEX A
Composite Agreement and Plan of Merger
Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of November 20, 2016, as amended as of December 16, 2016, by and among Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., Energy Transfer
Partners GP, L.P., Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P., Sunoco Partners LLC and, solely for purposes of certain provisions therein, Energy Transfer Equity, L.P. (composite copy incorporating the Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of November 20, 2016
and Amendment No. 1 to Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of December 16, 2016).
Each reference in the Agreement and Plan of Merger to this
Agreement, hereof, hereunder or words of like import referring to the Agreement and Plan of Merger shall mean and be a reference to the Agreement and Plan of Merger as amended by Amendment No. 1 to Agreement and Plan of
Merger. All references in the Agreement and Plan of Merger to the date hereof or the date of this Agreement shall refer to November 20, 2016.
A-1
AGREEMENT AND PLAN OF MERGER
Dated as of November 20, 2016
among
ENERGY TRANSFER
PARTNERS
,
L.P.
,
ENERGY TRANSFER PARTNERS GP
,
L.P.
,
SUNOCO LOGISTICS PARTNERS L.P.
,
SUNOCO PARTNERS LLC,
SXL ACQUISITION SUB LLC,
SXL ACQUISITION SUB LP,
and
,
solely for
purposes of Section
1.1(b), Section
5.4(a), Section
5.16(a) and Article
VIII
,
ENERGY TRANSFER EQUITY
,
L.P.
A-2
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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ARTICLE I THE MERGER
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A-10
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Section 1.1
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Pre-Closing Transaction; Merger and Additional Transactions
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A-10
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Section 1.2
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Closing
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A-11
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Section 1.3
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Effective Time
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A-11
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Section 1.4
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Effects of the Mergers
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A-11
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Section 1.5
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Organizational Documents of the Surviving Entity; GP Surviving Entity and SXL
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A-11
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ARTICLE II EFFECT ON UNITS
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A-12
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Section 2.1
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Effect of Merger and GP Merger
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A-12
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Section 2.2
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Exchange of Certificates
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A-14
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Section 2.3
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Treatment of ETP Restricted Units, ETP Cash Units and ETP Equity Plans
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A-17
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Section 2.4
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Adjustments
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A-18
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Section 2.5
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No Dissenters Rights
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A-18
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ARTICLE III REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES OF THE ETP ENTITIES
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A-18
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Section 3.1
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Organization, Standing and Power
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A-19
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Section 3.2
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Capitalization
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A-19
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Section 3.3
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Authority; Noncontravention; Voting Requirements
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A-20
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Section 3.4
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Governmental Approvals
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A-21
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Section 3.5
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ETP SEC Documents; Undisclosed Liabilities
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A-22
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Section 3.6
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Absence of Certain Changes or Events
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A-23
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Section 3.7
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Legal Proceedings
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A-23
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Section 3.8
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Compliance with Laws; Permits
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A-23
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Section 3.9
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Information Supplied
|
|
|
A-24
|
|
Section 3.10
|
|
Tax Matters
|
|
|
A-24
|
|
Section 3.11
|
|
Employee Benefits
|
|
|
A-25
|
|
Section 3.12
|
|
Labor Matters
|
|
|
A-27
|
|
Section 3.13
|
|
Environmental Matters
|
|
|
A-27
|
|
Section 3.14
|
|
Contracts
|
|
|
A-27
|
|
Section 3.15
|
|
Property
|
|
|
A-29
|
|
Section 3.16
|
|
Intellectual Property
|
|
|
A-29
|
|
Section 3.17
|
|
Insurance
|
|
|
A-29
|
|
Section 3.18
|
|
Opinion of Financial Advisor
|
|
|
A-30
|
|
Section 3.19
|
|
Brokers and Other Advisors
|
|
|
A-30
|
|
Section 3.20
|
|
State Takeover Statutes
|
|
|
A-30
|
|
Section 3.21
|
|
Regulatory Matters
|
|
|
A-30
|
|
Section 3.22
|
|
No Other Representations or Warranties
|
|
|
A-30
|
|
|
|
ARTICLE IV REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES OF THE SXL ENTITIES
|
|
|
A-30
|
|
|
|
|
Section 4.1
|
|
Organization, Standing and Power
|
|
|
A-31
|
|
Section 4.2
|
|
Capitalization
|
|
|
A-31
|
|
Section 4.3
|
|
Authority; Noncontravention
|
|
|
A-32
|
|
Section 4.4
|
|
Governmental Approvals
|
|
|
A-33
|
|
Section 4.5
|
|
SXL SEC Documents; Undisclosed Liabilities
|
|
|
A-33
|
|
Section 4.6
|
|
Absence of Certain Changes or Events
|
|
|
A-35
|
|
Section 4.7
|
|
Legal Proceedings
|
|
|
A-35
|
|
Section 4.8
|
|
Compliance with Laws; Permits
|
|
|
A-35
|
|
Section 4.9
|
|
Information Supplied
|
|
|
A-36
|
|
Section 4.10
|
|
Tax Matters
|
|
|
A-36
|
|
Section 4.11
|
|
Environmental Matters
|
|
|
A-37
|
|
A-3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Section 4.12
|
|
Contracts
|
|
|
A-37
|
|
Section 4.13
|
|
Property
|
|
|
A-37
|
|
Section 4.14
|
|
Brokers and Other Advisors
|
|
|
A-38
|
|
Section 4.15
|
|
State Takeover Statutes
|
|
|
A-38
|
|
Section 4.16
|
|
Regulatory Matters
|
|
|
A-38
|
|
Section 4.17
|
|
No Other Representations or Warranties
|
|
|
A-38
|
|
|
|
ARTICLE V ADDITIONAL COVENANTS AND AGREEMENTS
|
|
|
A-39
|
|
|
|
|
Section 5.1
|
|
Preparation of the Registration Statement and the Proxy Statement; ETP Unitholders Meeting
|
|
|
A-39
|
|
Section 5.2
|
|
Conduct of Business
|
|
|
A-39
|
|
Section 5.3
|
|
No Solicitation by ETP
|
|
|
A-44
|
|
Section 5.4
|
|
Reasonable Best Efforts
|
|
|
A-47
|
|
Section 5.5
|
|
Public Announcements
|
|
|
A-48
|
|
Section 5.6
|
|
Access to Information; Confidentiality
|
|
|
A-48
|
|
Section 5.7
|
|
Notification of Certain Matters
|
|
|
A-49
|
|
Section 5.8
|
|
Indemnification and Insurance
|
|
|
A-50
|
|
Section 5.9
|
|
Securityholder Litigation
|
|
|
A-51
|
|
Section 5.10
|
|
Financing Matters
|
|
|
A-51
|
|
Section 5.11
|
|
Fees and Expenses
|
|
|
A-51
|
|
Section 5.12
|
|
Section 16 Matters
|
|
|
A-51
|
|
Section 5.13
|
|
Listing
|
|
|
A-52
|
|
Section 5.14
|
|
Distributions
|
|
|
A-52
|
|
Section 5.15
|
|
Conflicts Committees
|
|
|
A-52
|
|
Section 5.16
|
|
Voting and Consent
|
|
|
A-52
|
|
|
|
ARTICLE VI CONDITIONS PRECEDENT
|
|
|
A-53
|
|
|
|
|
Section 6.1
|
|
Conditions to Each Partys Obligation to Effect the Merger and the GP Merger
|
|
|
A-53
|
|
Section 6.2
|
|
Conditions to Obligations of SXL, SXL Merger Sub LP and SXL Merger Sub to Effect the Merger and the GP Merger
|
|
|
A-54
|
|
Section 6.3
|
|
Conditions to Obligation of ETP to Effect the Merger and the GP Merger
|
|
|
A-54
|
|
Section 6.4
|
|
Frustration of Closing Conditions
|
|
|
A-55
|
|
|
|
ARTICLE VII TERMINATION
|
|
|
A-55
|
|
|
|
|
Section 7.1
|
|
Termination
|
|
|
A-55
|
|
Section 7.2
|
|
Effect of Termination
|
|
|
A-56
|
|
Section 7.3
|
|
Fees and Expenses
|
|
|
A-56
|
|
|
|
ARTICLE VIII MISCELLANEOUS
|
|
|
A-57
|
|
|
|
|
Section 8.1
|
|
No Survival
|
|
|
A-57
|
|
Section 8.2
|
|
Amendment or Supplement
|
|
|
A-58
|
|
Section 8.3
|
|
Extension of Time, Waiver
|
|
|
A-58
|
|
Section 8.4
|
|
Assignment
|
|
|
A-59
|
|
Section 8.5
|
|
Counterparts
|
|
|
A-59
|
|
Section 8.6
|
|
Entire Agreement; No Third-Party Beneficiaries
|
|
|
A-59
|
|
Section 8.7
|
|
Governing Law; Jurisdiction; Waiver of Jury Trial
|
|
|
A-59
|
|
Section 8.8
|
|
Specific Enforcement
|
|
|
A-60
|
|
Section 8.9
|
|
Notices
|
|
|
A-60
|
|
Section 8.10
|
|
Severability
|
|
|
A-61
|
|
Section 8.11
|
|
Interpretation
|
|
|
A-62
|
|
Section 8.12
|
|
Non-Recourse
|
|
|
A-62
|
|
Section 8.13
|
|
Definitions
|
|
|
A-62
|
|
A-4
INDEX OF DEFINED TERMS
|
|
|
Defined Term
|
|
Where Defined
|
Affiliate
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Agreement
|
|
Preamble
|
Amended SXL Partnership Agreement
|
|
Recitals
|
Antitrust Laws
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Balance Sheet Date
|
|
Section 3.5(d)
|
Benefit Plan
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Book-Entry Units
|
|
Section 2.1(f)
|
business day
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Certificate
|
|
Section 2.1(f)
|
Certificates of GP Merger
|
|
Section 1.3(a)
|
Certificate of Merger
|
|
Section 1.3(b)
|
Class E Units
|
|
Section 3.2(a)
|
Class G Units
|
|
Section 3.2(a)
|
Class H Units
|
|
Section 3.2(a)
|
Class I Units
|
|
Section 3.2(a)
|
Class J Units
|
|
Section 3.2(a)
|
Class K Units
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Clayton Act
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Closing
|
|
Section 1.2
|
Closing Date
|
|
Section 1.2
|
Code
|
|
Section 2.2(j)
|
Converted ETP Cash Unit Award
|
|
Section 2.3(b)
|
Converted ETP Restricted Unit Award
|
|
Section 2.3(a)
|
Commodity Derivative Instrument
|
|
Section 3.14(a)(viii)
|
Common Unit
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Common Unitholders
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Contract
|
|
Section 3.3(b)
|
DLLCA
|
|
Section 8.13
|
DRULPA
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Effective Time
|
|
Section 1.3(b)
|
Environmental Law
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Environmental Permit
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ERISA
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ERISA Affiliates
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETE
|
|
Preamble
|
ETE Credit Documents
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETE SXL GP Interest
|
|
Section 1.1(b)(i)
|
ETP
|
|
Preamble
|
ETP Acquisition Agreement
|
|
Section 5.3(a)
|
ETP Adverse Recommendation Change
|
|
Section 5.3(a)
|
ETP Alternative Proposal
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Benefit Plans
|
|
Section 3.11(a)
|
ETP Board Recommendation
|
|
Section 5.1(b)
|
ETP Cash Unit Plan
|
|
Section 2.3(b)
|
ETP Cash Units
|
|
Section 2.3(b)
|
ETP Changed Circumstance
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Charter Documents
|
|
Section 3.1(d)
|
ETP Conflicts Committee
|
|
Recitals
|
ETP Disclosure Schedule
|
|
Article III
|
A-5
|
|
|
Defined Term
|
|
Where Defined
|
ETP Entities
|
|
Preamble
|
ETP Equity Plans
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Existing Credit Facility
|
|
Section 5.2(a)(ii)
|
ETP Fairness Opinion
|
|
Section 3.18
|
ETP Financial Advisor
|
|
Section 3.18
|
ETP GP
|
|
Preamble
|
ETP GP Charter Documents
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Incentive Distribution Right
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Intellectual Property
|
|
Section 3.16
|
ETP Joint Ventures
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Limited Partner
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Limited Partner Interest
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Managing GP
|
|
Recitals
|
ETP Managing GP Agreement
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Managing GP Board
|
|
Recitals
|
ETP Managing GP Charter Documents
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Material Adverse Effect
|
|
Section 3.1(a)
|
ETP Material Contract
|
|
Section 3.14(a)
|
ETP Partnership Agreement
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Partnership Interest
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Permits
|
|
Section 3.8(b)
|
ETP Recommendation Change Notice
|
|
Section 5.3(d)(ii)
|
ETP Recommendation Change Notice Period
|
|
Section 5.3(d)(ii)
|
ETP Restricted Units
|
|
Section 2.3(a)
|
ETP Superior Proposal
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Superior Proposal Notice
|
|
Section 5.3(d)(i)
|
ETP Superior Proposal Notice Period
|
|
Section 5.3(d)(i)
|
ETP Risk Management Policy
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP SEC Documents
|
|
Section 3.5(a)
|
ETP Security
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Special Approval
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Subsidiary Documents
|
|
Section 3.1(d)
|
ETP Termination Fee
|
|
Section 7.3(a)
|
ETP Unaffiliated Unitholders
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Unitholder
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ETP Unitholder Approval
|
|
Section 3.3(c)
|
ETP Unitholders Meeting
|
|
Section 5.1(b)
|
Exchange Act
|
|
Section 3.4
|
Exchange Agent
|
|
Section 2.2(a)
|
Exchange Fund
|
|
Section 2.2(b)
|
Exchange Ratio
|
|
Section 2.1(a)(i)
|
FCPA
|
|
Section 3.8(c)
|
Federal Trade Commission Act
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Foreign ETP Benefit Plan
|
|
Section 3.11(j)
|
FPA
|
|
Section 3.21
|
GAAP
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Governmental Authority
|
|
Section 8.13
|
General Partner Interest
|
|
Section 1.1(f)
|
GP Merger
|
|
Recitals
|
GP Merger Effective Time
|
|
Section 1.3(a)
|
GP Surviving Entity
|
|
Section 1.1(c)
|
A-6
|
|
|
Defined Term
|
|
Where Defined
|
Hazardous Substance
|
|
Section 8.13
|
HSR Act
|
|
Section 8.13
|
ICA
|
|
Section 3.21
|
Indemnified Person
|
|
Section 5.8(a)
|
Intended Tax Treatment
|
|
Section 2.2(k)
|
Knowledge
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Law
|
|
Section 3.8(a)
|
Laws
|
|
Section 3.8(a)
|
Liens
|
|
Section 3.1(c)
|
Material Adverse Effect
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Maximum Amount
|
|
Section 5.8(c)
|
Merger
|
|
Recitals
|
Merger Consideration
|
|
Section 2.1(a)(i)
|
Multiemployer Plan
|
|
Section 8.13
|
NGA
|
|
Section 3.21
|
NGPA
|
|
Section 3.21
|
Non-Competition Agreement
|
|
Section 3.14(a)(vi)
|
NYSE
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Outside Date
|
|
Section 7.1(b)(i)
|
PBGC
|
|
Section 3.11(d)
|
Permit
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Person
|
|
Section 8.13
|
PLLCL
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Pre-Closing Transactions
|
|
Section 1.1(b)
|
Proceeding
|
|
Section 5.8(a)
|
Proxy Statement
|
|
Section 3.4
|
PUHCA
|
|
Section 3.21
|
qualifying income
|
|
Section 3.10
|
Registration Statement
|
|
Section 3.9
|
Representatives
|
|
Section 5.3(a)
|
Restraints
|
|
Section 6.1(c)
|
rights-of-way
|
|
Section 3.15(b)
|
Sarbanes-Oxley Act
|
|
Section 3.5(a)
|
SEC
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Securities Act
|
|
Section 3.1(c)
|
Series A Unit
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Series A Unit Consideration
|
|
Section 2.1(a)(ii)
|
Series A Unitholders
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Sherman Act
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Subsidiary
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SUN Entities
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Surviving Entity
|
|
Section 1.1(e)
|
SXL
|
|
Preamble
|
SXL Acquisition Transaction
|
|
Section 5.2(b)(i)
|
SXL Charter Documents
|
|
Section 4.1(d)
|
SXL Class B Units
|
|
Section 3.2(g)
|
SXL Class E Unit
|
|
Section 2.1(a)(iii)
|
SXL Class G Unit
|
|
Section 2.1(a)(iv)
|
SXL Class I Unit
|
|
Section 2.1(a)(v)
|
SXL Class J Unit
|
|
Section 2.1(a)(vi)
|
SXL Class K Unit
|
|
Section 2.1(a)(vii)
|
A-7
|
|
|
Defined Term
|
|
Where Defined
|
SXL Confidentiality Agreement
|
|
Section 5.6(a)
|
SXL Conflicts Committee
|
|
Recitals
|
SXL Disclosure Schedule
|
|
Article IV
|
SXL Entities
|
|
Preamble
|
SXL Equity Plans
|
|
Section 4.2(a)
|
SXL Existing Credit Facility
|
|
Section 5.2(b)(ii)(A)
|
SXL Expenses
|
|
Section 7.3(e)
|
SXL GP
|
|
Preamble
|
SXL GP Agreement
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SXL GP Board
|
|
Recitals
|
SXL GP Charter Documents
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SXL GP Interest
|
|
Section 3.2(g)
|
SXL Incentive Distribution Rights
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SXL Joint Ventures
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SXL Limited Partner
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SXL Limited Partner Interest
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SXL Material Adverse Effect
|
|
Section 4.1(a)
|
SXL Material Contracts
|
|
Section 4.12(a)
|
SXL Merger Sub
|
|
Preamble
|
SXL Merger Sub Charter Documents
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SXL Merger Sub LP
|
|
Preamble
|
SXL Partnership Agreement
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SXL Partnership Interest
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SXL Permits
|
|
Section 4.8(b)
|
SXL Preferred Unit
|
|
Section 2.1(a)(ii)
|
SXL Risk Management Policy
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SXL SEC Documents
|
|
Section 4.5(a)
|
SXL Security
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SXL Special Approval
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SXL Subsidiary Documents
|
|
Section 4.1(d)
|
SXL Unaffiliated Unitholders
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SXL Unit
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SXL Unit Majority
|
|
Section 8.13
|
SXL Unitholders
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Tax
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Tax Return
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Taxes
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Treasury Regulations
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Unit Majority
|
|
Section 8.13
|
WARN Act
|
|
Section 3.12
|
Willful Breach
|
|
Section 8.13
|
Exhibit A
Form of Amended SXL Partnership Agreement
Exhibit B
Form of Amendment No. 15 to ETP Partnership Agreement
Exhibit C
[Reserved]
A-8
AGREEMENT AND PLAN OF MERGER
This AGREEMENT AND PLAN OF MERGER, dated as of November 20, 2016 (this
Agreement
), is by and among Sunoco Logistics
Partners L.P., a Delaware limited partnership (
SXL
), Sunoco Partners LLC, a Pennsylvania limited liability company and the general partner of SXL (
SXL GP
), SXL Acquisition Sub LLC, a Delaware
limited liability company and wholly owned subsidiary of SXL (
SXL Merger Sub
), SXL Acquisition Sub LP, a Delaware limited partnership and wholly owned subsidiary of SXL (
SXL Merger Sub LP
and,
together with SXL, SXL GP and SXL Merger Sub, the
SXL Entities
), Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., a Delaware limited partnership (
ETP
), Energy Transfer Partners GP, L.P., a Delaware limited
partnership and the general partner of ETP (
ETP GP
and, together with ETP, the
ETP Entities
), and, solely for purposes of
Section
1.1(b)
,
Section
5.4(a)
,
Section
5.16(a)
and
Article
VIII
, Energy Transfer Equity, L.P., a Delaware limited partnership (
ETE
).
W I T N E S S E T H:
WHEREAS, the Conflicts Committee (
SXL Conflicts Committee
) of the Board of Directors (the
SXL GP
Board
) of SXL GP, by unanimous vote, in good faith (a) determined that this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby are advisable, fair and reasonable to, and in the best interests of SXL and the SXL Unaffiliated Unitholders
(as defined herein), (b) approved this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby, including the Merger (as defined herein), the issuance of the Merger Consideration (as defined herein) and the adoption of the Amended SXL Partnership
Agreement (as defined herein) (the foregoing constituting SXL Special Approval (as defined herein)), and (c) resolved to approve, and to recommend to the SXL GP Board the approval of, this Agreement and the consummation of the transactions
contemplated hereby, including the Merger, the issuance of the Merger Consideration and the adoption of the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement;
WHEREAS, upon the receipt of such approval and recommendation of the SXL Conflicts Committee, at a meeting duly called and held, the SXL GP
Board approved this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby, including the Merger and the GP Merger, the issuance of the Merger Consideration and the adoption of the fourth amended and restated agreement of limited partnership of SXL, in
the form attached hereto as
Exhibit A
(the
Amended SXL Partnership Agreement
);
WHEREAS, the Conflicts
Committee (the
ETP Conflicts Committee
) of the Board of Directors (the
ETP Managing GP Board
) of Energy Transfer Partners, L.L.C., a Delaware limited liability company and the general partner of
ETP GP (
ETP Managing GP
), by unanimous vote, in good faith (a) determined that this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby are advisable and fair and reasonable to, and in the best interests of ETP, and the ETP
Unaffiliated Unitholders, (b) approved this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby, including the Merger (the foregoing constituting ETP Special Approval (as defined herein)) and (c) recommended to the ETP Managing GP Board the approval
of, this Agreement and the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby, including the Merger;
WHEREAS, upon the receipt of such
approval and recommendation of the ETP Conflicts Committee, at a meeting duly called and held, the ETP Managing GP Board (a) approved this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby, including the Merger and the GP Merger, (b) directed that
this Agreement be submitted to a vote of the ETP Limited Partners and the limited partner of ETP GP, and (c) resolved to recommend adoption of this Agreement by the ETP Limited Partners;
WHEREAS, the parties intend that SXL Merger Sub LP be merged with and into ETP (the
Merger
), with ETP surviving the
Merger as a wholly owned subsidiary of SXL;
WHEREAS, the parties intend that SXL GP be merged with and into ETP GP (the
GP
Merger
), with ETP GP surviving the GP Merger as an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of ETE; and
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WHEREAS, the Board of Directors of LE GP, a Delaware limited liability company and the general
partner of ETE approved this Agreement solely with respect to
Section
1.1(b)
,
Section
5.4(a)
,
Section
5.16(a)
and
Article
VIII
of the Agreement
and the transactions contemplated thereby.
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the foregoing and the representations, warranties,
covenants and agreements contained herein, and intending to be legally bound hereby, the ETP Entities, the SXL Entities and, solely for purposes of
Section
1.1(b)
,
Section
5.4(a)
,
Section
5.16(a)
and
Article
VIII
, ETE agree as follows:
ARTICLE I
THE MERGER
Section 1.1
Pre-Closing Transactions; GP Merger and Merger
.
(a) [Reserved.]
(b) The
following shall occur immediately prior to the Closing (collectively, the
Pre-Closing Transactions
) with such Pre-Closing Transactions to take effect in the order set forth below:
(i) (A) ETE shall cause ETE Common Holdings, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company and wholly owned subsidiary of ETE, to
distribute its 0.1% limited liability company interest in SXL GP (the
ETE SXL GP Interest
) to ETE, (B) immediately upon receipt thereof, ETE shall contribute (1) 99.99% of the ETE SXL GP Interest to ETP GP and (2) 0.01% of
the ETE SXL GP Interest to ETP Managing GP, (C) immediately upon receipt thereof, ETE shall cause ETP Managing GP to contribute 0.01% of the ETE SXL GP Interest to ETP GP and (D) immediately upon receipt thereof, ETP GP shall contribute 100% of the
ETE SXL GP Interest to ETP; and
(ii) (A) ETE shall contribute (1) 99.99% of the Class H Units and Class I Units held by
ETE to ETP GP and (2) 0.01% of the Class H Units and Class I Units held by ETE to ETP Managing GP and (B) immediately upon receipt thereof, ETE shall cause ETP Managing GP to contribute all of the Class H Units and Class I Units received by ETP
Managing GP pursuant to clause (A)(2) to ETP GP.
(c) Upon the terms and subject to the conditions set forth in this Agreement, and in
accordance with the PLLCL and DRULPA, at the GP Merger Effective Time, in connection with the GP Merger, SXL GP shall be merged with and into ETP GP, the separate limited liability company existence of SXL GP will cease, and ETP GP will continue its
existence as a limited partnership under Delaware law as the surviving entity in the GP Merger (the
GP Surviving Entity
).
(d) At the GP Merger Effective Time, ETP GP agrees to assume the rights and duties of the general partner of SXL under the partnership
agreement of SXL in effect at such time and to be bound by the provisions of the partnership agreement of SXL in effect at such time. At the GP Merger Effective Time, SXL GP will cease to be, and ETP GP will be admitted as, the general partner of
SXL in accordance with the partnership agreement of SXL in effect at such time and SXL shall be continued without dissolution.
(e) Upon
the terms and subject to the conditions set forth in this Agreement, and in accordance with the DRULPA, at the Effective Time, in connection with the Merger, SXL Merger Sub LP shall be merged with and into ETP, the separate limited partnership
existence of SXL Merger Sub LP will cease, and ETP will continue its existence as a limited partnership under Delaware law as the surviving entity in the Merger (the
Surviving Entity
).
(f) At the Effective Time, in connection with the Merger, ETP GP will transfer to SXL Merger Sub all of the general partner interest in ETP
(the
General Partner Interest
) in accordance with Section 4.6 of the ETP Partnership Agreement.
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(g) At the Effective Time, SXL Merger Sub agrees to assume the rights and duties of the general
partner of the Surviving Entity under the partnership agreement of the Surviving Entity in effect at such time and to be bound by the provisions of the partnership agreement of the Surviving Entity in effect at such time. At the Effective Time, ETP
GP will cease to be, and SXL Merger Sub will be admitted as, the general partner of the Surviving Entity in accordance with the partnership agreement of the Surviving Entity in effect at such time, and the Surviving Entity shall be continued without
dissolution.
Section 1.2
Closing
. Subject to the provisions of
Article
VI
, the closing of the
Merger and the GP Merger (the
Closing
) shall take place at the offices of Vinson & Elkins L.L.P., 666 Fifth Avenue, 26th Floor, New York, New York at 9:00 A.M., Eastern Time, on the second business
day after the satisfaction or waiver of the conditions set forth in
Article
VI
(other than conditions that by their nature are to be satisfied at the Closing, but subject to the satisfaction or waiver of those conditions),
or at such other place, date and time as ETP and SXL shall agree. The date on which the Closing actually occurs is referred to as the
Closing Date.
Section 1.3
Effective
Time
.
(a) Subject to the provisions of this Agreement, at the Closing, SXL GP and ETP GP will cause certificates of merger, executed in accordance
with the relevant provisions of the PLLCL and DRULPA (the
Certificates of GP Merger
), in such form as necessary to effect the GP Merger, to be duly filed with the Secretary of State of the State of Pennsylvania and the
Secretary of State of the State of Delaware. The GP Merger will become effective at such time as the Certificates of GP Merger have been duly filed with the Secretary of State of the State of Pennsylvania and the Secretary of State of the State of
Delaware or at such later date or time as may be agreed by SXL GP and ETP GP in writing and specified in the Certificates of GP Merger (the effective time of the GP Merger being hereinafter referred to as the
GP Merger Effective
Time
). The Parties shall take, and cause their applicable subsidiaries to take, all actions such that the GP Merger Effective Time shall be the same date and time as the Effective Time.
(b) Subject to the provisions of this Agreement, at the Closing, ETP will cause a certificate of merger, executed in accordance with the
relevant provisions of the DRULPA (the
Certificate of Merger
), in such form as necessary to effect the Merger, to be duly filed with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware. The Merger will become effective at such
time as the Certificate of Merger has been duly filed with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware or at such later date or time as may be agreed by SXL Merger Sub LP and ETP in writing and specified in the Certificate of Merger (the
effective time of the Merger being hereinafter referred to as the
Effective Time
).
Section 1.4
Effects
of the Mergers
. The Merger and the GP Merger shall have the effects set forth herein and in the applicable provisions of the DRULPA and PLLCL.
Section 1.5
Organizational Documents of the Surviving Entity; GP Surviving Entity and SXL
.
(a) At the Effective Time, the certificate of limited partnership of ETP as in effect immediately prior to the Effective Time shall remain
unchanged and shall be the certificate of limited partnership of the Surviving Entity from and after the Effective Time, and thereafter may be amended as provided therein or by Law, in each case consistent with the obligations set forth in
Section 5.8.
(b) At the Effective Time, other than changes related to the assumption of the rights and duties of the general
partner by SXL Merger Sub and the withdrawal of ETP GP as the general partner, in each case in accordance with Section 4.6 of the ETP Partnership Agreement, the ETP Partnership Agreement as in effect immediately prior to the Effective Time shall
remain unchanged and shall be the agreement of limited partnership of the Surviving Entity from and after the Effective Time, and thereafter may be amended as provided therein or by Law.
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(c) At the GP Merger Effective Time, the certificate of limited partnership of ETP GP as in
effect immediately prior to the GP Merger Effective Time shall remain unchanged and shall be the certificate of limited partnership of the GP Surviving Entity from and after the GP Merger Effective Time, and thereafter may be amended as provided
therein or by Law, in each case consistent with the obligations set forth in
Section 5.8
.
(d) At the GP Merger Effective Time, the
agreement of limited partnership of ETP GP as in effect immediately prior to the GP Merger Effective Time shall remain unchanged and shall be the agreement of limited partnership of the GP Surviving Entity from and after the GP Merger Effective
Time, and thereafter may be amended as provided therein or by Law, in each case consistent with the obligations set forth in
Section 5.8
.
(e) At the Effective Time, the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement shall replace the SXL Partnership Agreement and be the agreement of limited
partnership of SXL from and after the Effective Time, and thereafter may be amended as provided therein or by Law, in each case consistent with the obligations set forth in
Section 5.8.
ARTICLE II
EFFECT
ON UNITS
Section 2.1
Effect of Merger and GP Merger
. At the Effective Time, by virtue of the Merger and the GP Merger and
without any action on the part of the parties or the holder of any securities of the parties:
(a) (i)
Conversion of Common Units
.
Subject to
Section
2.2(h)
and
Section
2.4
, each Common Unit issued and outstanding or deemed issued and outstanding in accordance with
Section
2.3
as of immediately prior
to the Effective Time shall be converted into the right to receive 1.50 (the
Exchange Ratio
) SXL Units (the
Merger Consideration
).
(ii)
Conversion of Series
A Units
. Subject to
Section
2.4
, each
Series A Unit issued and outstanding as of immediately prior to the Effective Time shall be converted into the right to receive a unit representing a limited partner interest in SXL (an
SXL Preferred Unit
), which
constitutes a share of a new class of units in SXL containing provisions substantially equivalent to the provisions set forth in
Section
5.14
of the ETP Partnership Agreement without abridgement, including the same powers,
preferences, rights to distributions, rights to accumulation and compounding upon failure to pay distributions, and relative participating, optional or other special rights and the qualifications, limitations or restrictions thereon, that the
Series A Units have immediately prior to the Closing, subject to adjustment in accordance with Section 5.14(b)(viii)(I) of the ETP Partnership Agreement (the
Series
A Unit
Consideration
).
(iii)
Conversion of Class E Units
. Subject to
Section 2.4
, each Class E Unit
(as defined herein) issued and outstanding as of immediately prior to the Effective Time shall be converted into a unit representing a limited partner interest in SXL (an
SXL Class E Unit
), which constitutes a share of a new class
of units in SXL containing provisions substantially equivalent to the provisions set forth in the ETP Partnership Agreement governing Class E Units, all as set forth in the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement. At Closing, SXL GP (or ETP GP, as
successor general partner of SXL) shall cause the SXL Class E Units to be issued to the Persons who held Class E Units immediately prior to the Effective Time in book-entry form.
(iv)
Conversion
of Class G Units
. Subject to
Section 2.4
, each Class G Unit (as defined herein)
issued and outstanding as of immediately prior to the Effective Time shall be converted into a unit representing a limited partner interest in SXL (an
SXL Class G Unit
), which constitutes a share of a new class of units in SXL
containing provisions substantially equivalent to the provisions set forth in Section 5.11 of the ETP Partnership Agreement, all as set forth in the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement. At Closing, SXL GP (or ETP GP, as successor general partner of
SXL) shall cause the SXL Class G Units to be issued to the Persons who held Class G Units immediately prior to the Effective Time in book-entry form.
(v)
Conversion of Class I Units
. Subject to
Section 2.4
, each Class I Unit (as defined herein) issued and
outstanding as of immediately prior to the Effective Time shall be converted into a unit representing a
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limited partner interest in SXL (an
SXL Class I Unit
), which constitutes a share of a new class of units in SXL containing provisions substantially equivalent to the provisions
set forth in Section 5.12 of the ETP Partnership Agreement, all as set forth in the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement. At Closing, SXL GP (or ETP GP, as successor general partner of SXL) shall cause the SXL Class I Units to be issued to the Persons
who held Class I Units immediately prior to the Effective Time in book-entry form.
(vi)
Conversion of Class J
Units
. Subject to
Section 2.4
, each Class J Unit (as defined herein) issued and outstanding as of immediately prior to the Effective Time shall be converted into a unit representing a limited partner interest in SXL (an
SXL
Class J Unit
), which constitutes a share of a new class of units in SXL containing provisions substantially equivalent to the provisions set forth in Section 5.15 of the ETP Partnership Agreement, all as set forth in the Amended
SXL Partnership Agreement. At Closing, SXL GP (or ETP GP, as successor general partner of SXL) shall cause the SXL Class J Units to be issued to the Persons who held Class J Units immediately prior to the Effective Time in book-entry form.
(vii)
Conversion of Class K Units
. Subject to
Section 2.4
, each Class K Unit (as defined herein) issued and
outstanding as of immediately prior to the Effective Time shall be converted into a unit representing a limited partner interest in SXL (an
SXL Class K Unit
), which constitutes a share of a new class of units in SXL
containing provisions substantially equivalent to the provisions set forth in a form of amendment to the ETP Partnership Agreement, attached hereto as
Exhibit B
, all as set forth in the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement. At Closing, SXL GP
(or ETP GP, as successor general partner of SXL) shall cause the SXL Class K Units to be issued to the Persons who held Class K Units immediately prior to the Effective Time in book-entry form.
(b)
Cancellation of ETP Incentive Distribution Rights and Class H Units; Treatment of General Partner Interest
. In exchange for the
transactions contemplated by the Merger, the ETP Incentive Distribution Rights and Class H Units (as defined herein), in each case outstanding immediately prior to the Effective Time (after giving effect to the Pre-Closing Transactions), shall be
automatically canceled and shall cease to exist. The General Partner Interest outstanding immediately prior to the Effective Time shall remain outstanding and continue to exist following the Effective Time but will be held by SXL Merger Sub.
(c)
Conversion of SXL Merger Sub LP Interests
. By virtue of the Merger and without any action on the part of SXL or SXL Merger Sub, the
limited partner interests in SXL Merger Sub LP issued and outstanding as of immediately prior to the Effective Time shall be converted in the aggregate into the number of Common Units outstanding as of immediately prior to the Effective Time, and
the non-economic general partner interest in SXL Merger Sub LP issued and outstanding as of immediately prior to the Effective Time shall be cancelled for no consideration, such that following the Effective Time, SXL shall be the sole limited
partner of the Surviving Entity and, as a result of the transfer of the General Partner Interest contemplated by
Section 1.1(f)
, SXL Merger Sub shall be the general partner of the Surviving Entity.
(d)
SXL Securities and SXL GP Securities.
(i) Any SXL Securities that are owned immediately prior to the Effective Time by ETP or any Subsidiary of ETP shall be
automatically canceled and shall cease to exist and no consideration shall be delivered in exchange for such canceled SXL Securities;
provided
,
however
, that the SXL Incentive Distribution Rights and the SXL GP Interest that had been
issued and are outstanding as of immediately prior to the Effective Time shall be unchanged and remain outstanding, such that following the GP Merger Effective Time, the SXL Incentive Distribution Rights and the SXL GP Interest shall be owned by ETP
GP, as the GP Surviving Entity.
(ii) In exchange for the transactions contemplated by the GP Merger, the limited liability
company interests in SXL GP outstanding immediately prior to the GP Merger Effective Time (after giving effect to the Pre-Closing Transactions), shall be automatically canceled and shall cease to exist and no consideration shall be delivered in
exchange for such canceled interests.
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(e)
ETP GP Interest
. The limited partner interests in ETP GP and the general partner
interest in ETP GP that have been issued and are outstanding as of immediately prior to the GP Merger Effective Time shall be unchanged and remain outstanding.
(f)
Certificates
. As of the Effective Time, all Common Units converted into the Merger Consideration and all Series A Units converted
into the Series A Unit Consideration, as applicable, pursuant to this
Article II
shall no longer be outstanding and shall automatically be canceled and shall cease to exist, and each holder of a certificate (or evidence of units in book-entry
form (
Book-Entry Units
)) that immediately prior to the Effective Time represented any such Common Units or Series A Units (a
Certificate
) shall cease to have any rights with respect thereto, except
the right to receive the Merger Consideration or Series A Unit Consideration, as applicable, and any distributions to which such holder is entitled pursuant to
Section 2.2(g)
, in each case to be issued or paid in consideration therefor upon
surrender of such Certificate in accordance with
Section 2.2(c)
, without interest, and the right to be admitted as an SXL Limited Partner. Each of SXL GP and ETP GP (as successor general partner of SXL) hereby consents to the admission (as an
SXL Limited Partner) of each ETP Unitholder who is issued SXL Units or SXL Preferred Units in accordance with this
Article II
, upon the proper surrender of the Certificate representing Common Units or Series A Units as applicable. Upon such
surrender of the Certificate (or upon a waiver of the requirement to surrender a Certificate granted by the general partner of SXL in its sole discretion) and the recording of the name of such Person as a limited partner of SXL on the books and
records of SXL, such Person shall automatically and effective as of the Effective Time be admitted as a SXL Limited Partner and be bound by the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement as such. By its surrender of a Certificate, or by its acceptance of SXL
Units or SXL Preferred Units, as applicable, an ETP Unitholder confirms its agreement to be bound by all of the terms and conditions of the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement.
Section 2.2
Exchange of Certificates
.
(a)
Exchange Agent
. Prior to the Closing Date, SXL shall appoint an exchange agent reasonably acceptable to ETP (the
Exchange Agent
) for the purpose of exchanging Certificates and Book-Entry Units with respect to Common Units or Series A Units for the Merger Consideration and Series A Unit Consideration, as applicable. As soon as
reasonably practicable after the Effective Time, but in no event more than three business days following the Effective Time, SXL will send, or will cause the Exchange Agent to send, to each holder of record of Common Units and Series A Units as
of the Effective Time (and, to the extent commercially practicable, to make available for collection by hand, during customary business hours commencing immediately after the Effective Time, if so elected by such holder of record), whose Common
Units and Series A Units, as applicable, were converted into the right to receive the Merger Consideration or Series A Unit Consideration, as applicable, a letter of transmittal (which shall specify that the delivery shall be effected, and
risk of loss and title shall pass, only upon proper delivery of the Certificates and Book-Entry Units (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof) to the Exchange Agent) in such forms as ETP and SXL may reasonably agree, including, as
applicable, instructions for use in effecting the surrender of Certificates and Book-Entry Units (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof) to the Exchange Agent in exchange for the Merger Consideration or Series A Unit Consideration, as
applicable.
(b)
Deposit
. At or prior to the Closing, SXL shall cause to be deposited with the Exchange Agent, in trust for the
benefit of the holders of Common Units and Series A Units, an amount of (x) SXL Units (which shall be in non-certificated book-entry form), and (y) SXL Preferred Units (which shall be in certificated form as set forth in the Amended SXL
Partnership Agreement), issuable upon due surrender of the Certificates or Book-Entry Units (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof) pursuant to the provisions of this
Article
II
. Following the Effective Time, SXL
agrees to make available to the Exchange Agent, from time to time as needed, cash in U.S. dollars sufficient to pay any distributions pursuant to
Section
2.2(g)
, any SXL Units sufficient to pay any Merger Consideration and
any SXL Preferred Units sufficient to pay any Series A Unit Consideration, in each case, that may be payable from time to time following the Effective Time. All book-entry units representing SXL Units and SXL Preferred Units deposited with the
Exchange Agent (including pursuant to
Section
2.2(h)
) shall be referred to in this Agreement as the
Exchange Fund.
The Exchange Agent shall, pursuant to irrevocable instructions,
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deliver the Merger Consideration and Series A Unit Consideration contemplated to be issued or paid pursuant to this
Article
II
out of the Exchange Fund. The
Exchange Fund shall not be used for any other purpose. The Exchange Agent shall invest any cash included in the Exchange Fund as directed by SXL;
provided
,
that (i) no such investment or losses thereon shall affect the Merger
Consideration payable to holders of Common Units or Series A Units and SXL shall promptly cause to be provided additional funds to the Exchange Agent for the benefit of holders of Common Units or Series A Units in the amount of any such
losses; and (ii) such investments shall be in short-term obligations of the United States of America with maturities of no more than 30 days.
(c)
Exchange
. Each holder of Common Units and Series A Units that have been converted into the right to receive the Merger
Consideration or Series A Unit Consideration, as applicable, upon surrender to the Exchange Agent of a properly completed letter of transmittal, duly executed and completed in accordance with the instructions thereto, a Certificate (or
effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof), or Book-Entry Unit (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof) and such other documents as may reasonably be required by the Exchange Agent, will be entitled to receive in exchange therefor
(i) in the case of a Common Unitholder the number of SXL Units representing, in the aggregate, the whole number of SXL Units that such holder has the right to receive in accordance with the provisions of this
Article
II
and (ii) in the case of a Series A Unitholder, the number of SXL Preferred Units representing, in the aggregate, the whole number of SXL Preferred Units that such holder has the right to receive in
accordance with the provisions of this
Article
II
. The Merger Consideration and Series A Unit Consideration shall be paid as promptly as practicable by mail after receipt by the Exchange Agent of the Certificate (or
effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof) or Book-Entry Units and letter of transmittal in accordance with the foregoing. No interest shall be paid or accrued on any Merger Consideration, Series A Unit Consideration or on any unpaid
distributions payable to holders of Certificates. Until so surrendered, each such Certificate shall, after the Effective Time, represent for all purposes only the right to receive such Merger Consideration or Series A Unit Consideration, as
applicable. The Merger Consideration and Series A Unit Consideration paid upon surrender of Certificates or Book-Entry Units (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof) shall be deemed to have been paid in full satisfaction of all rights
pertaining to the Common Units, Series A Units or Book-Entry Units (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof), as the case may be, formerly represented by such Certificates or Book-Entry Units (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu
thereof).
(d)
Other Payees
. If any cash payment is to be made to a Person other than the Person in whose name the applicable
surrendered Certificate or Book-Entry Unit (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof) is registered, it shall be a condition of such payment that the Person requesting such payment shall pay any transfer or other similar Taxes required by
reason of the making of such cash payment to a Person other than the registered holder of the surrendered Certificate or Book-Entry Unit (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof) or shall establish to the satisfaction of the Exchange Agent
that such Tax has been paid or is not payable. If any portion of the Merger Consideration or Series A Unit Consideration is to be registered in the name of a Person other than the Person in whose name the applicable surrendered Certificate or
Book-Entry Unit (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof) is registered, it shall be a condition to the registration thereof that the surrendered Certificate shall be properly endorsed or otherwise be in proper form for transfer and that the
Person requesting such delivery of the Merger Consideration or Series A Unit Consideration, as applicable, shall pay to the Exchange Agent any transfer or other similar Taxes required as a result of such registration in the name of a Person
other than the registered holder of such Certificate or Book-Entry Unit (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof) or establish to the satisfaction of the Exchange Agent that such Tax has been paid or is not payable.
(e)
No Further Transfers
. From and after the Effective Time, there shall be no further registration on the books of ETP of transfers of
Common Units or Series A Units. From and after the Effective Time, the holders of Certificates or Book-Entry Units (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof) representing Common Units or Series A Units outstanding immediately prior
to the Effective Time shall cease to have any rights with respect to such Common Units or Series A Units, as applicable, except as otherwise provided in this Agreement or by applicable Law. If, after the Effective Time, Certificates or
Book-Entry Units (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof) are presented to the Exchange Agent or SXL, they shall be canceled and exchanged for the consideration provided for, and in accordance with the procedures set forth, in this
Article
II
.
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(f)
Termination of Exchange Fund
. Any portion of the Exchange Fund that remains unclaimed
by the Common Unitholders or Series A Unitholders 12 months after the Effective Time shall be returned to SXL, upon demand, and any such holder who has not exchanged such holders Common Units or Series A Units for the Merger
Consideration or Series A Unit Consideration, as applicable, in accordance with this
Section
2.2
prior to that time shall thereafter look only to SXL for delivery of the Merger Consideration or Series A Unit
Consideration, as applicable, in respect of such holders Common Units or Series A Units. Notwithstanding the foregoing, SXL, ETP and the Surviving Entity shall not be liable to any Common Unitholder or Series A Unitholder for any
Merger Consideration or Series A Unit Consideration, as applicable, duly delivered to a public official pursuant to applicable abandoned property Laws. Any Merger Consideration or Series A Unit Consideration remaining unclaimed by Common
Unitholders or Series A Unitholders immediately prior to such time as such amounts would otherwise escheat to, or become property of, any Governmental Authority shall, to the extent permitted by applicable Law, become the property of SXL free
and clear of any claims or interest of any Person previously entitled thereto.
(g)
Distributions
. No distributions with respect to
SXL Units or SXL Preferred Units issued in the Merger shall be paid to the holder of any unsurrendered Certificates, or Book-Entry Units (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof) until such Certificates or Book-Entry Units (or effective
affidavits of loss in lieu thereof) are surrendered as provided in this
Section
2.2
. Following such surrender, subject to the effect of escheat, Tax or other applicable Law, there shall be paid, without interest, to the
record holder of the SXL Units or SXL Preferred Units, if any, issued in exchange therefor (i) at the time of such surrender, all distributions payable in respect of any such SXL Units or SXL Preferred Units with a record date after the Effective
Time and a payment date on or prior to the date of such surrender and not previously paid and (ii) at the appropriate payment date, the distributions payable with respect to such SXL Units or SXL Preferred Units with a record date after the
Effective Time but with a payment date subsequent to such surrender. For purposes of distributions in respect of SXL Units or SXL Preferred Units, all SXL Units or SXL Preferred Units to be issued pursuant to the Merger shall be entitled to
distributions pursuant to the immediately preceding sentence as if issued and outstanding as of the Effective Time.
(h)
No Fractional
Units
. No certificates or scrip representing fractional SXL Units or SXL Preferred Units shall be issued upon the surrender for exchange of Certificates or Book-Entry Units (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof). Notwithstanding any
other provision of this Agreement, all fractional SXL Units that a holder of Common Units converted pursuant to the Merger would otherwise be entitled to receive as Consideration in the Merger (after taking into account all Certificates (or
effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof), Book-Entry Units (or effective affidavits of loss in lieu thereof)) will be aggregated and then, if a fractional SXL Unit results from that aggregation, be rounded up to the nearest whole SXL Unit.
(i)
Lost, Stolen or Destroyed Certificates
. If any Certificate shall have been lost, stolen or destroyed, upon the making of an
affidavit of that fact by the Person claiming such Certificate to be lost, stolen or destroyed and, if required by SXL, the posting by such Person of a bond, in such reasonable amount as SXL may direct, as indemnity against any claim that may be
made against it with respect to such Certificate, the Exchange Agent will issue in exchange for such lost, stolen or destroyed Certificate the Merger Consideration or Series A Unit Consideration to be paid in respect of the Common Units or
Series A Units, as applicable, represented by such Certificate as contemplated by this
Article
II
.
(j)
Withholding Taxes
. SXL and the Exchange Agent may deduct and withhold as necessary from the consideration otherwise payable to any Person pursuant to this Agreement such amounts as are required to be deducted and withheld with respect to the
making of such payment under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code
) and the Treasury Regulations promulgated thereunder, or under any provision of applicable state, local or non-U.S. Tax Law (and to the
extent deduction and withholding is required, such deduction and withholding may be taken in SXL Units). To the extent amounts are so withheld and paid over to the appropriate Tax authority, such withheld amounts shall be treated for the purposes of
this Agreement as having been paid to the Person in respect of whom such withholding was made. If withholding is taken in SXL
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Units, SXL and the Exchange Agent shall be treated as having sold such SXL Units for an amount of cash equal to the fair market value of such SXL Units at the time of such deemed sale and paid
such cash proceeds to the appropriate Tax authority.
(k)
Tax Characterization of Merger and Cash Received
. ETP and SXL each
acknowledges and agrees that, for U.S. federal income and applicable state and local tax purposes, (i) the Merger is intended to be treated as an assets-over partnership merger transaction under Treasury Regulations
Sections 1.708-1(c)(1) and 1.708-1(c)(3)(i), whereby SXL is intended to be the terminating partnership and ETP is intended to be the resulting partnership, and as a result, the Merger is intended to be treated for U.S. federal income and
applicable state and local tax purposes as (A) a contribution of all of the assets and liabilities of SXL to ETP in exchange for partnership interests in ETP, immediately followed by (B) a liquidating distribution by SXL of such partnership
interests in ETP to the partners of SXL, and (ii) none of ETP, SXL, nor any partner of ETP or SXL is intended to recognize taxable gain (other than any gain resulting from (A) any decrease in partnership liabilities pursuant to Section 752
of the Code and (B) a disguised sale attributable to contributions of cash or other property to SXL after the date of this Agreement and prior to the Effective Time) (the
Intended Tax Treatment
). Unless required to do so as
a result of a determination as defined in Section 1313 of the Code, each of ETP and SXL agrees not to make any tax filings or otherwise take any position inconsistent with the Intended Tax Treatment and to cooperate with the other
party to make any filings, statements, or reports required to effect, disclose or report the Intended Tax Treatment.
Section 2.3
Treatment of ETP Restricted Units, ETP Cash Units and ETP Equity Plans
. Effective immediately prior to the Effective Time, the ETP Managing GP Board (or, if appropriate, any committee administering any ETP Equity Plans) and the SXL GP Board
(or the appropriate committee thereof) will adopt resolutions, and will take all other actions as may be necessary or required in accordance with applicable Law and each ETP Equity Plan (including, the award agreements in respect of awards granted
thereunder) and this
Section
2.3
, including (i) the SXL GP Board (or the appropriate committee thereof) shall take all limited liability company action necessary or advisable to assume and continue the ETP Equity Plans
(including for purposes of employing such plans to make grants of equity-based awards on SXL Units following the Closing); (ii) the SXL GP Board (or the appropriate committee thereof) shall take all limited liability company action necessary or
advisable to reserve for issuance a sufficient number of SXL Units for delivery upon vesting of a Converted ETP Restricted Unit Award or with respect to future awards granted under the ETP Equity Plans; and (iii) the ETP Managing GP Board (or the
appropriate committee thereof) shall take all corporate action necessary or advisable to ensure that after the Effective Time, neither ETP nor the Surviving Entity will be required to deliver its common units or any other securities to any person
pursuant to or in settlement of ETP Restricted Units, in each case, to give effect to this
Section
2.3
and provide that:
(a)
Treatment of ETP Restricted Units
. Each award of restricted units to acquire Common Units, on defined vesting dates, granted under
any ETP Equity Plan that is outstanding immediately prior to the Effective Time (collectively, the
ETP Restricted Units
) shall, as of the Effective Time, by virtue of the Merger and without any action on the part of the
holder of any such ETP Restricted Units, cease to relate to or represent a right to receive Common Units and shall be converted into a right to receive an award of SXL Units (a
Converted ETP Restricted Unit Award
), on the
same terms and conditions as were applicable to the corresponding award of ETP Restricted Units (including the right to receive distribution equivalents with respect to such award), except that the number of ETP Restricted Units covered by each such
Converted ETP Restricted Unit Award shall be equal to the number of Common Units subject to the corresponding award of ETP Restricted Units multiplied by the Exchange Ratio, rounded up to the nearest whole unit. With respect to each ETP Restricted
Unit, any distribution equivalent amounts accrued but unpaid as of the Closing will carry over and be paid to the holder as soon as practicable following the Closing.
(b)
Treatment of ETP Cash Units
.
Each award of cash units to receive an amount of cash, on defined vesting dates, granted under
the Energy Transfer Partners L.P. Long-Term Incentive Cash Restricted Unit Plan (the
ETP Cash Unit Plan
) that is outstanding immediately prior to the Effective Time (collectively, the
ETP
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Cash Units
) shall, as of the Effective Time, automatically and without any action on the part of the holder thereof, cease to relate to or represent a right to receive an
amount of cash based on the fair market value of the Common Units and shall be converted, at the Effective Time, into the right to receive an award of restricted cash units relating to SXL Units (a
Converted ETP Cash Unit
Award
) on the same terms and conditions as were applicable to the corresponding award of ETP Cash Units, except that the number of notional units that upon vesting entitles the holder to receive an amount of cash equal to the fair
market value of an SXL Unit shall be equal to the number of notional Common Units related to the corresponding award of ETP Cash Units multiplied by the Exchange Ratio, rounded up to the nearest whole notional unit. The ETP Managing GP Board (or, if
appropriate, any committee administering the ETP Cash Unit Plan) will adopt, prior to the Effective Time, an amendment to the ETP Cash Unit Plan to permit the treatment of ETP Cash Units as provided herein.
(c) As soon as practicable following the Effective Time, SXL shall file a Form S-8 registration statement (or such other appropriate form)
with respect to the SXL Units available for grant and delivery under the ETP Equity Plans from and after the Effective Time and shall use its reasonable best efforts to maintain the effectiveness of such registration statement (and maintain the
current status of the prospectus contained therein) for so long as such SXL Units are available for grant and delivery under the ETP Equity Plans. As soon as practicable following the Effective Time, ETP shall file a post-effective amendment to the
Form S-8 registration statements filed by ETP on September 26, 2007, June 10, 2009, December 11, 2014 and May 4, 2015, in each case, deregistering all shares of Common Units thereunder.
Section 2.4
Adjustments
. Notwithstanding any provision of this
Article
II
to the contrary (but without
in any way limiting the covenants in
Section
5.2
), if between the date of this Agreement and the Effective Time the number of outstanding Common Units, Series A Units, Class E Units, Class G Units, Class I Units, Class
J Units, Class K Units or SXL Units shall have been changed into a different number of units or a different class by reason of the occurrence or record date of any unit dividend, subdivision, reclassification, recapitalization, split, split-up, unit
distribution, combination, exchange of units or similar transaction, each of the Exchange Ratio, the Series A Unit Consideration, the SXL Class E Units, the SXL Class G Units, the SXL Class I Units, the SXL Class J Units and the SXL Class K
Units shall be appropriately adjusted to reflect fully the effect of such unit dividend, subdivision, reclassification, recapitalization, split, split-up, unit distribution, combination, exchange of units or similar transaction and to provide the
holders of Common Units, Series A Units, Class E Units, Class G Units, Class I Units, Class J Units and Class K Units the same economic effect as contemplated by this Agreement prior to such event.
Section 2.5
No Dissenters
Rights
. No dissenters or appraisal rights shall be available with respect to
the Merger, the GP Merger or the other transactions contemplated hereby.
ARTICLE III
REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES OF THE ETP ENTITIES
Except as disclosed in (a) the ETP SEC Documents filed with the SEC on or after December 31, 2014 and prior to the date of this Agreement
(but excluding any disclosure contained in any such ETP SEC Documents under the heading Risk Factors or Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements or similar heading (other than any factual information contained
within such headings, disclosure or statements)) or (b) the disclosure letter delivered by ETP to SXL (the
ETP Disclosure Schedule
) prior to the execution of this Agreement (
provided
that (i) disclosure in any
section of such ETP Disclosure Schedule shall be deemed to be disclosed with respect to any other section of this Agreement to the extent that it is reasonably apparent to SXL on the face of such disclosure that it is applicable to such other
section notwithstanding the omission of a reference or cross reference thereto and (ii) the mere inclusion of an item in such ETP Disclosure Schedule as an exception to a representation or warranty shall not be deemed an admission that such item
represents a material exception or material fact, event or circumstance or that such item has had, would have or would reasonably be
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expected to have, an ETP Material Adverse Effect), the ETP Entities hereby represent and warrant to SXL as follows:
Section 3.1
Organization, Standing and Power
.
(a) Each of the ETP Entities and their respective Subsidiaries is a legal entity duly organized, validly existing and in good standing under
the Laws of the jurisdiction in which it is incorporated, formed or organized, as applicable, and has all requisite partnership, corporate, limited liability company or other applicable power and authority necessary to own or lease all of its
properties and assets and to carry on its business as it is now being conducted, except where the failure to have such power or authority would not, individually or in the aggregate, have a Material Adverse Effect on ETP (an
ETP Material
Adverse Effect
).
(b) Each of the ETP Entities and their respective Subsidiaries is duly licensed or qualified to do
business and is in good standing in each jurisdiction in which the nature of the business conducted by it or the character or location of the properties and assets owned or leased by it makes such licensing or qualification necessary, except where
the failure to be so licensed, qualified or in good standing would not, individually or in the aggregate, have an ETP Material Adverse Effect.
(c) Except as set forth on
Section 3.1(c)
of the ETP Disclosure Schedule, all of the outstanding partnership interests, limited
liability company interests, shares of capital stock of, or other equity interests in, each material Subsidiary of ETP that are owned directly or indirectly by ETP have been duly authorized and validly issued and are fully paid and nonassessable and
are owned free and clear of all liens, pledges, charges, mortgages, encumbrances, options, rights of first refusal or other preferential purchase rights, adverse rights or claims and security interests of any kind or nature whatsoever (including any
restriction on the right to vote or transfer the same, except for such transfer restrictions of general applicability as may be provided under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder (the
Securities Act
), and the blue sky laws of the various States of the United States) (collectively,
Liens
). Except for those of the ETP Joint Ventures, all such interests and shares of
capital stock of each Subsidiary are owned directly or indirectly by ETP.
(d) ETP has made available to SXL correct and complete copies
of its certificate of limited partnership and the ETP Partnership Agreement (the
ETP Charter Documents
), and correct and complete copies of the comparable organizational documents of each of its material Subsidiaries (the
ETP Subsidiary Documents
) and of ETP GP and ETP Managing GP, in each case as amended to the date of this Agreement. All such ETP Charter Documents are in full force and effect and ETP is not in violation of any of their
provisions.
Section 3.2
Capitalization
.
(a) As of the close of business on November 18, 2016, ETP has no ETP Partnership Interests or other partnership interests or equity
interests issued and outstanding, other than: (i) 544,565,775 Common Units; (ii) no Common Units held by ETP in its treasury; (iii) 8,853,832 Class E Units representing limited partner interests in ETP (
Class E
Units
); (iv) 90,706,500 Class G Units representing limited partner interests in ETP (
Class G Units
); (v) 81,001,069 Class H Units representing limited partner interests in ETP (
Class H
Units
); (vi) 100 Class I Units representing limited partner interests in ETP (
Class I Units
); (vii) 90 Class J Units representing limited partner interests in ETP (
Class J
Units
); (viii) 1,912,569 Series A Units; (ix) the ETP Incentive Distribution Rights; (x) the General Partner Interest; and (xi) 4,625,055 ETP Restricted Units granted under the ETP Equity Plans. All outstanding Common Units,
Class E Units, Class G Units, Class H Units, Class I Units, Class J Units, Series A Units, and ETP Incentive Distribution Rights have been and at the Effective Time all outstanding Class K Units will be duly authorized and validly issued and
are fully paid, nonassessable (except as such nonassessability may be affected by matters described in Sections 17-303, 17-607 and 17-804 of the DRULPA) and except as set forth in the ETP Partnership Agreement, free of preemptive rights. Except
(A) as set forth above in this
Section
3.2(a)
and (B) as otherwise expressly permitted by
Section
5.2(a)
, as of the date of this Agreement there are not, and, as of the Effective Time there will
not be, any ETP Partnership Interests or other partnership interests, voting securities or other equity interests of ETP issued and outstanding or any
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subscriptions, options, warrants, calls, convertible or exchangeable securities, rights, commitments or agreements of any character providing for the issuance of any ETP Partnership Interests or
other partnership interests, voting securities or other equity interests of ETP, including any representing the right to purchase or otherwise receive any of the foregoing.
(b) Since the Balance Sheet Date (as defined herein) to the date of this Agreement, ETP has not issued any ETP Partnership Interests or other
partnership interests, voting securities or other equity interests, or any securities convertible into or exchangeable or exercisable for any ETP Partnership Interests or other partnership interests, voting securities or other equity interests,
other than as set forth above in
Section
3.2(a)
. None of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries has issued or is bound by any outstanding subscriptions, options, warrants, calls, convertible or exchangeable securities, rights,
commitments or agreements of any character providing for the issuance or disposition of any partnership interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity interests of any Subsidiary of ETP (other than, with respect to the ETP Joint
Ventures, as set forth in the definitive agreements for such ETP Joint Ventures). Except (i) as set forth in the ETP Charter Documents, as in effect as of the date of this Agreement, or (ii) in connection with the vesting, settlement or forfeiture
of, or Tax withholding with respect to, any equity or equity-based awards granted under ETP Equity Plans disclosed in
Section
3.2(a)
and outstanding as of the date of this Agreement, there are no outstanding obligations of
ETP or any of its Subsidiaries to repurchase, redeem or otherwise acquire any ETP Partnership Interests or other partnership interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity interests (or any options, warrants or other rights to
acquire any ETP Partnership Interests or other partnership interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity interests) of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries (other than, with respect to the ETP Joint Ventures, as set forth in the
definitive agreements for such ETP Joint Ventures).
(c) [Reserved.]
(d) [Reserved.]
(e) ETP GP is
the sole general partner of ETP. ETP GP is the sole record and beneficial owner of the General Partner Interest, and such General Partner Interest has been duly authorized and validly issued in accordance with applicable Law and the ETP Partnership
Agreement. ETP GP owns the General Partner Interest free and clear of any Liens.
(f) ETP Managing GP is the sole general partner of ETP
GP. ETP Managing GP is the sole record and beneficial owner of the general partner interest in ETP GP and such general partner interest has been duly authorized and validly issued in accordance with applicable Law and the partnership agreement of
ETP GP. ETP Managing GP owns the general partner interest in ETP GP free and clear of any Liens except for those Liens arising under the ETE Credit Documents. ETE is the sole limited partner of ETP GP. ETE is the sole record and beneficial owner of
the limited partner interests in ETP GP and such limited partner interests have been duly authorized and validly issued in accordance with applicable Law and the partnership agreement of ETP GP. ETE owns the limited partner interests in ETP GP free
and clear of any Liens except for those Liens arising under the ETE Credit Documents.
(g) ETP owns as of the date of this Agreement and
immediately prior to the consummation of the Pre-Closing Transactions, beneficially and of record, 67,061,274 SXL Units, 9,416,196 Class B Units representing limited partner interests in SXL (
SXL Class B Units
), and a
99.99% limited liability company interest in SXL GP, in each case, free and clear of any Liens. SXL GP owns, beneficially and of record, all of the SXL Incentive Distribution Rights and the general partner interest in SXL (
SXL GP
Interest
), in each case, free and clear of any Liens.
Section 3.3
Authority;
Noncontravention
; Voting
Requirements
.
(a) Each of the ETP Entities has all necessary power and authority to execute and deliver this Agreement and to
consummate the transactions contemplated hereby, including the Merger and the GP Merger, subject to
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obtaining the ETP Unitholder Approval for the Merger. The execution, delivery and performance by the ETP Entities of this Agreement, and the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby,
including the Merger and the GP Merger, have been duly authorized and approved by the ETP Managing GP Board, which, at a meeting duly called and held, has, on behalf of ETP and ETP GP, (i) approved and declared advisable this Agreement and the
transactions contemplated hereby, including the Merger and the GP Merger, and (ii) resolved to submit the Agreement to a vote of the ETP Limited Partners and limited partner of ETP GP and to recommend adoption of this Agreement by the ETP Limited
Partners, and except for obtaining the ETP Unitholder Approval for the adoption of this Agreement, and consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby, no other entity action on the part of the ETP Entities is necessary to authorize the
execution, delivery and performance by the ETP Entities of this Agreement and the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby, including the Merger and the GP Merger. ETP Managing GP, in its capacity as general partner of ETP GP, and ETE,
in its capacity as limited partner of ETP GP, have each approved the adoption of this Agreement and the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby. The members of SXL GP have unanimously approved the adoption of this Agreement and the
consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby. This Agreement has been duly executed and delivered by the ETP Entities and, assuming due authorization, execution and delivery of this Agreement by the other parties hereto, constitutes the
legal, valid and binding obligation of each of the ETP Entities, enforceable against each of them in accordance with its terms.
(b)
Neither the execution and delivery of this Agreement by the ETP Entities nor the consummation by the ETP Entities of the transactions contemplated hereby, nor compliance by the ETP Entities with any of the terms or provisions of this Agreement, will
(i) assuming that the ETP Unitholder Approval is obtained, conflict with or violate any provision of the ETP Charter Documents, the ETP GP Charter Documents, the ETP Managing GP Charter Documents or any of the ETP Subsidiary Documents, (ii) except
as set forth on
Section 3.3(b)
of the ETP Disclosure Schedule and assuming that the authorizations, consents and approvals referred to in
Section
3.4
and the ETP Unitholder Approval are obtained and the filings
referred to in
Section
3.4
are made, (x) violate any Law, judgment, writ or injunction of any Governmental Authority applicable to ETP or any of its Subsidiaries or any of their respective properties or assets, or (y)
violate, conflict with, result in the loss of any benefit under, constitute a default (or an event which, with notice or lapse of time, or both, would constitute a default) under, result in the termination of or a right of termination or
cancellation under, accelerate the performance required by, or result in the creation of any Lien upon any of the respective properties or assets of, ETP or any of its Subsidiaries under any of the terms, conditions or provisions of any loan or
credit agreement, debenture, note, bond, mortgage, indenture, deed of trust, license, lease, contract or other agreement, instrument or obligation (each, a
Contract
), or ETP Permit (including any Environmental Permit) to
which ETP or any of its Subsidiaries is a party, or by which they or any of their respective properties or assets may be bound or affected or (iii) result in the exercisability of any right to purchase or acquire any material asset of ETP or any of
its Subsidiaries, except, in the case of clauses (ii)(x) and (ii)(y), for such violations, conflicts, losses, defaults, terminations, cancellations, accelerations or Liens as, individually or in the aggregate, would not reasonably be expected
to have an ETP Material Adverse Effect.
(c) The affirmative vote or consent of the holders of a Unit Majority at the ETP Unitholders
Meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof in favor of the adoption of this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby (the
ETP
Unitholder
Approval
) is the only vote or approval
of the holders of any class or series of ETP Partnership Interests or other partnership interests, equity interests or capital stock of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries which is necessary to adopt this Agreement and the transactions contemplated
hereby.
Section 3.4
Governmental Approvals
. Except for (a) filings required under, and in compliance with other applicable
requirements of, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder (the
Exchange Act
), and the Securities Act, including the filing of a proxy statement with the SEC in
connection with the Merger (the
Proxy Statement
), (b) the filing of the Certificate of Merger with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware and the Certificates of GP Merger with the Secretary of State of the State
of Pennsylvania and the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware, (c) any filings required under, and in compliance with other applicable requirements of, the HSR Act and other Antitrust Laws or (d) any
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consents, authorizations, approvals, filings or exemptions in connection with compliance with the rules of the NYSE, no consents or approvals of, or filings, declarations or registrations with,
any Governmental Authority are necessary for the execution, delivery and performance of this Agreement by the ETP Entities and the consummation by the ETP Entities of the transactions contemplated hereby, other than such other consents, approvals,
filings, declarations or registrations that, if not obtained, made or given, would not, individually or in the aggregate, reasonably be expected to result in an ETP Material Adverse Effect.
Section 3.5
ETP SEC Documents; Undisclosed Liabilities
.
(a) ETP and its Subsidiaries have filed and furnished all reports, schedules, forms, certifications, prospectuses, and registration, proxy and
other statements required to be filed by them with the SEC since December 31, 2014 (collectively and together with all documents filed on a voluntary basis on Form 8-K, and in each case including all exhibits and schedules thereto and documents
incorporated by reference therein, the
ETP SEC Documents
). The ETP SEC Documents, as of their respective effective dates (in the case of the ETP SEC Documents that are registration statements filed pursuant to the
requirements of the Securities Act) and as of their respective SEC filing dates (in the case of all other ETP SEC Documents), or, if amended, as finally amended prior to the date of this Agreement, complied in all material respects with the
requirements of the Exchange Act, the Securities Act and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, as amended, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder (the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act
), as the case may be, applicable to such ETP
SEC Documents, and none of the ETP SEC Documents as of such respective dates contained any untrue statement of a material fact or omitted to state a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary in order to make the statements therein, in
light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading. As of the date of this Agreement, there are no outstanding or unresolved comments received from the SEC staff with respect to the ETP SEC Documents. To the Knowledge of ETP, none
of the ETP SEC Documents is the subject of ongoing SEC review or investigation.
(b) The consolidated financial statements of ETP included
in the ETP SEC Documents as of their respective dates (if amended, as of the date of the last such amendment) comply as to form in all material respects with applicable accounting requirements and the published rules and regulations of the SEC with
respect thereto, have been prepared in accordance with GAAP (except, in the case of unaudited quarterly statements, as indicated in the notes thereto) applied on a consistent basis during the periods involved (except as may be indicated in the notes
thereto) and fairly present in all material respects the consolidated financial position of ETP and its consolidated Subsidiaries as of the dates thereof and the consolidated results of their operations, cash flows and changes in partners
equity for the periods then ended (subject, in the case of unaudited quarterly statements, to normal year-end audit adjustments, none of which has been or will be, individually or in the aggregate, material to ETP and its consolidated Subsidiaries,
taken as a whole).
(c) ETP has established and maintains internal control over financial reporting and disclosure controls and procedures
(as such terms are defined in Rule 13a-15 and Rule 15d-15 under the Exchange Act); such disclosure controls and procedures are designed to ensure that material information relating to ETP, including its consolidated Subsidiaries, required
to be disclosed by ETP in the reports that it files or submits under the Exchange Act is accumulated and communicated to ETPs principal executive officer and its principal financial officer to allow timely decisions regarding required
disclosure; and such disclosure controls and procedures are effective to ensure that information required to be disclosed by ETP in the reports that it files or submits under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within
the time periods specified in SEC rules and forms. ETPs principal executive officer and its principal financial officer have disclosed, based on their most recent evaluation, to ETPs auditors and the audit committee of the ETP Managing
GP Board (i) all significant deficiencies in the design or operation of internal controls which could adversely affect ETPs ability to record, process, summarize and report financial data and have identified for ETPs auditors any
material weaknesses in internal controls and (ii) any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in ETPs internal controls. The principal executive officer and the principal
financial officer of ETP have made all certifications required by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, the Exchange
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Act and any related rules and regulations promulgated by the SEC with respect to the ETP SEC Documents, and the statements contained in such certifications were complete and correct when made.
The management of ETP has completed its assessment of the effectiveness of ETPs internal control over financial reporting in compliance with the requirements of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act for the year ended December 31,
2015, and such assessment concluded that such controls were effective. To the Knowledge of ETP, as of the date of this Agreement there are no facts or circumstances that would prevent its principal executive officer and principal financial officer
from giving the certifications and attestations required pursuant to the rules and regulations adopted pursuant to Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, without qualification, when next due.
(d) Except (i) as reflected or otherwise reserved against on the balance sheet of ETP and its Subsidiaries as of December 31, 2015 (the
Balance Sheet Date
) (including the notes thereto) included in the ETP SEC Documents filed by ETP and publicly available prior to the date of this Agreement, (ii) for liabilities and obligations incurred since the Balance
Sheet Date in the ordinary course of business and (iii) for liabilities and obligations incurred under or in accordance with this Agreement or in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby, neither ETP nor any of its Subsidiaries has any
liabilities or obligations of any nature (whether or not accrued or contingent), that would be required to be reflected or reserved against on a consolidated balance sheet of ETP prepared in accordance with GAAP or the notes thereto, other than as
have not and would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect.
(e) Neither ETP
nor any of its Subsidiaries is a party to, or has any commitment to become a party to, any joint venture, off-balance sheet partnership or any similar Contract (including any Contract or arrangement relating to any transaction or relationship
between or among ETP and any of its Subsidiaries, on the one hand, and any unconsolidated Affiliate, including any structured finance, special purpose or limited purpose entity or Person, on the other hand, or any off-balance sheet
arrangements (as defined in Item 303(a) of Regulation S-K of the SEC)), where the purpose of such Contract is to avoid disclosure of any material transaction involving, or material liabilities of, ETP in ETPs published
financial statements or any ETP SEC Documents.
Section 3.6
Absence of Certain Changes or Events
.
(a) Since the Balance Sheet Date, there has not been an ETP Material Adverse Effect.
(b) Since the Balance Sheet Date, (i) except for this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby, ETP and its Subsidiaries have
carried on and operated their respective businesses in all material respects in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice and (ii) neither ETP nor any of its Subsidiaries has taken any action described in
Section
5.2(a)(ii)
,
(iii)
,
(v)
,
(vi)
,
(vii)
,
(viii)
,
(xiii)
or
(xv)
(but, with respect to
(vii)
, disregarding the proviso to
Section
5.2(a)(vii)(A)(1)
, and with respect to
(xv)
, only to the extent applicable to the other clauses designated in this
Section
3.6(b)(ii)
) that, if taken after the date of this Agreement
and prior to the Effective Time without the prior written consent of SXL, would violate such provisions.
Section 3.7
Legal
Proceedings
. There are no investigations or proceedings pending (or, to the Knowledge of ETP, threatened) by any Governmental Authority with respect to ETP or any of its Subsidiaries or actions, suits or proceedings pending (or, to the Knowledge
of ETP, threatened) against ETP or any of its Subsidiaries or any of their respective properties, at law or in equity before any Governmental Authority, and there are no orders, judgments or decrees of any Governmental Authority against ETP or any
of its Subsidiaries, in each case except for those that would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect.
Section 3.8
Compliance with Laws; Permits
.
(a) ETP and its Subsidiaries are, and since the later of December 31, 2014 and their respective dates of incorporation, formation or
organization have been, in compliance with and are not in default under or in violation of any applicable federal, state, local or foreign or provincial law, statute, tariff, ordinance, rule,
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regulation, judgment, order, injunction, stipulation, determination, award or decree or agency requirement of or undertaking to any Governmental Authority, including common law (collectively,
Laws
and each, a
Law
), except where such non-compliance, default or violation would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect.
(b) ETP and its Subsidiaries are in possession of all Permits (including Environmental Permits) necessary for ETP and its Subsidiaries to own,
lease and operate their properties and assets or to carry on their businesses as they are now being conducted (the
ETP Permits
), except where the failure to have any of the ETP Permits would not have, individually or in the
aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect. All ETP Permits are in full force and effect, except where the failure to be in full force and effect would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect. No suspension or
cancellation of any of the ETP Permits is pending or, to the Knowledge of ETP, threatened, except where such suspension or cancellation would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect. ETP and its Subsidiaries are
not, and since December 31, 2014 have not been, in violation or breach of, or default under, any ETP Permit, except where such violation, breach or default would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect. As of
the date of this Agreement, to the Knowledge of ETP, no event or condition has occurred or exists which would result in a violation of, breach, default or loss of a benefit under, or acceleration of an obligation of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries
under, any ETP Permit, or has caused (or would cause) an applicable Governmental Authority to fail or refuse to issue, renew or extend any ETP Permit (in each case, with or without notice or lapse of time or both), except for violations, breaches,
defaults, losses, accelerations or failures that would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect.
(c)
Without limiting the generality of
Section
3.8(a)
, ETP, each of its Subsidiaries, and, to the Knowledge of ETP, each joint venture partner, joint interest owner, consultant, agent, or representative of any of the foregoing
(in their respective capacities as such), (i) has not violated the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (the
FCPA
), and any other U.S. and foreign anti-corruption Laws that are applicable to ETP or its Subsidiaries; (ii) has
not, to the Knowledge of ETP, been given written notice by any Governmental Authority of any facts which, if true, would constitute a violation of the FCPA or any other U.S. or foreign anti-corruption Laws by any such person; and (iii) to the
Knowledge of ETP, is not being (and has not been) investigated by any Governmental Authority except, in each case of the foregoing clauses (i) through (iii), as would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect.
Section 3.9
Information Supplied
. Subject to the accuracy of the representations and warranties of SXL set forth in
Section
4.9
, none of the information supplied (or to be supplied) in writing by or on behalf of ETP specifically for inclusion or incorporation by reference in (a) the registration statement on Form S-4 to be filed
with the SEC by SXL in connection with the issuance of SXL Units in connection with the Merger (as amended or supplemented from time to time, the
Registration Statement
) will, at the time the Registration Statement, or any
amendment or supplement thereto, is filed with the SEC or at the time it becomes effective under the Securities Act, contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state any material fact required to be stated therein or necessary in
order to make the statements made therein, in light of the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading, and (b) the Proxy Statement will, on the date it is first mailed to ETP Unitholders, and at the time of the ETP Unitholders Meeting,
contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state any material fact required to be stated therein or necessary in order to make the statements therein, in light of the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading. The Proxy
Statement will comply as to form in all material respects with the applicable requirements of the Exchange Act. Notwithstanding the foregoing, ETP makes no representation or warranty with respect to information supplied by or on behalf of SXL for
inclusion or incorporation by reference in any of the foregoing documents.
Section 3.10
Tax Matters
. Except as would not
have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect: (a) all Tax Returns that were required to be filed by or with respect to ETP or any of its Subsidiaries have been duly filed, and all such Tax Returns are complete and accurate,
(b) all Taxes owed by ETP or any of its Subsidiaries, or for which ETP or any of its Subsidiaries may be liable, that are or have become
A-24
due have been timely paid in full or an adequate reserve for the payment of such Taxes has been established, (c) all Tax withholding and deposit requirements imposed on or with respect to ETP or
any of its Subsidiaries have been satisfied in full in all respects, (d) there are no Liens (other than statutory Liens for current-period Taxes that are not yet due and payable or that are being contested in good faith and for which adequate
reserves have been established in accordance with GAAP) on any of the assets of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries that arose in connection with any failure (or alleged failure) to pay any Tax, (e) there are no audits, examinations, investigations or
other proceedings pending or threatened in writing in respect of Taxes or Tax matters of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries, (f) there is no written claim against ETP or any of its Subsidiaries for any Taxes, and no assessment, deficiency or adjustment
has been asserted, proposed, or threatened in writing with respect to any Tax Return of or with respect to ETP or any of its Subsidiaries, (g) no claim has ever been made by an authority in a jurisdiction where ETP or any of its Subsidiaries does
not file Tax Returns that ETP or such Subsidiary is or may be subject to taxation in that jurisdiction, (h) there is not in force any extension of time (other than customary extensions) with respect to the due date for the filing of any Tax Return
of or with respect to ETP or any of its Subsidiaries or any waiver or agreement for any extension of time for the assessment or payment of any Tax of or with respect to any of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries, (i) none of ETP or any of its
Subsidiaries will be required to include any amount in income for any taxable period as a result of a change in accounting method or adjustment under Section 482 of the Code for any taxable period ending on or before the Closing Date, pursuant to
any agreement with any Tax authority with respect to any such taxable period, or as a result of an intercompany transaction, an installment sale or open transaction disposition entered into on or prior to the Closing Date, or the cash method of
accounting or long-term contract method of accounting utilized prior to the Closing Date, (j) none of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries is a party to a Tax allocation or sharing agreement, and no payments are due or will become due by ETP or any of its
Subsidiaries pursuant to any such agreement or arrangement or any Tax indemnification agreement, (k) none of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries has been a member of an affiliated, combined, consolidated, unitary or similar group with respect to Taxes
(including any affiliated group within the meaning of Section 1504 of the Code and any similar group under state, local or non-U.S. law), other than the members of the consolidated group of which ETP Holdco Corporation is the common parent, or has
any liability for the Taxes of any Person (other than ETP or any of its Subsidiaries), as a transferee or successor, by contract, or otherwise (other than Taxes arising in ordinary course commercial arrangements not primarily related to Taxes), (l)
ETP and each of its Subsidiaries that is classified as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes has in effect a valid election under Section 754 of the Code, (m) ETP is properly classified as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax
purposes, and not as an association or a publicly traded partnership taxable as a corporation under Section 7704 of the Code, and has been properly treated as such since its formation, and (n) at least 90% of the gross income of ETP for each
taxable year since its formation has been from sources that are treated as qualifying income within the meaning of Section 7704(d) of the Code.
Section 3.11
Employee Benefits
.
(a) ETP has made available to SXL all material ETP Benefit Plans.
ETP Benefit Plans
means all Benefit Plans that are
sponsored, maintained, contributed to or required to be contributed to by ETP or any of its Affiliates, or under which ETP or any of its Affiliates has any obligation or liability, whether actual or contingent, in each case, for the benefit of
current or former officers, employees, directors or consultants of ETP or its Subsidiaries.
(b) Except as would not have, individually or
in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect, none of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries contributes to, is required to contribute to, or has in the last six years contributed to or been required to contribute to a Multiemployer Plan and none of ETP
or any of its Subsidiaries has incurred any withdrawal liability (within the meaning of Section 4201 of ERISA) to a Multiemployer Plan that has not been satisfied in full or has (or is reasonably expected to have) any other actual
or contingent liability with respect to any Multiemployer Plan.
(c) Except as would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP
Material Adverse Effect, none of ETP, any of its Subsidiaries, or any of their respective ERISA Affiliates has in the last six years sponsored, maintained, contributed to or been required to contribute to, or has (or is reasonably expected to have)
any actual or contingent liability with respect to any Benefit Plan that is subject to Title IV or Section 302 of ERISA or Section 412 of the Code.
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(d) With respect to each ETP Benefit Plan that is subject to Section 302 or Title IV of ERISA,
except as would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect: (A) the minimum funding standard under Section 302 of ERISA and Sections 412 and 430 of the Code has been satisfied and no waiver of any minimum funding
standard or any extension of any amortization period has been requested or granted; (B) all premiums to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (
PBGC
) have been timely paid in full, and (C) no liability (other than for
premiums to the PBGC) under Title IV of ERISA has been or is expected to be incurred by ETP or any of its Subsidiaries.
(e) Except for
such claims which would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect, no action, dispute, suit, claim, arbitration, or legal, administrative or other proceeding or governmental action is pending or, to the Knowledge of
ETP, threatened with respect to any ETP Benefit Plan, other than claims for benefits in the ordinary course, (i) alleging any breach of the material terms of such plan or any fiduciary duties with respect thereto or (ii) alleging any violation
of any applicable Law with respect to such plan.
(f) Each ETP Benefit Plan has been maintained, funded and administered in compliance
with its terms and with applicable Law, including ERISA and the Code, except for such non-compliance which would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect.
(g) Except as would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect, with respect to any ETP Benefit Plan, all
contributions, premiums and other payments due from any of ETP or its Subsidiaries required by applicable Law or the terms of any ETP Benefit Plan have been made or properly accrued under any such plan to any fund, trust or account established
thereunder or in connection therewith by the due date thereof.
(h) Except as would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP
Material Adverse Effect, neither ETP nor any of its Subsidiaries has any liability for post-termination or retiree life or medical benefits to former officers, employees, directors or consultants, or beneficiaries or dependents of any of the
foregoing, except for continuation coverage as required by Section 4980B of the Code or Part 6 of Title I of ERISA provided at no expense to ETP or any of its Subsidiaries.
(i) Except as would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect, none of ETP, its ERISA Affiliates or any other
Person, including any fiduciary, has engaged in any prohibited transaction (as defined in Section 4975 of the Code or Section 406 of ERISA), which would reasonably be expected to subject any of the ETP Benefit Plans or their related
trusts, ETP, any of its ERISA Affiliates or any Person that ETP or any of its ERISA Affiliates has an obligation to indemnify, to any Tax or penalty imposed under Section 4975 of the Code or Section 502 of ERISA.
(j) With respect to any ETP Benefit Plan that is maintained primarily for the benefit of employees outside of the United States (a
Foreign ETP Benefit Plan
), (i) if intended to qualify for special tax treatment, any such Foreign ETP Benefit Plan meets the requirements for such treatment in all material respects, (ii) the financial statements of ETP and
its Subsidiaries accurately reflect the Foreign ETP Benefit Plan liabilities and accruals for contributions required to be paid to any Foreign ETP Benefit Plan, in accordance with GAAP (or other accounting principles required under applicable Law)
consistently applied, and (iii) there have not occurred, nor are there continuing, any transactions or breaches of fiduciary duty under any applicable Law or regulation in connection with a Foreign ETP Benefit Plan, in each case, that have resulted
or would reasonably be expected to result in an ETP Material Adverse Effect.
(k) Except as set forth on
Section 3.11(m)
of the ETP
Disclosure Schedule or pursuant to retention or other arrangements put in place after the date of this Agreement in compliance with
Section
5.2
, the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby will not, either
alone or in combination with any other event, (i) accelerate the time of payment or vesting, or increase the amount of any compensation or benefits due to any employee, consultant or officer of ETP, ETP GP, ETP Managing GP or any of their respective
Subsidiaries or (ii) result in any forgiveness of indebtedness or an obligation to fund benefits with respect to any such individual.
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Section 3.12
Labor Matters
. Except for such matters which would not have,
individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect, none of ETP, ETP GP, ETP Managing GP or any of their respective Subsidiaries has received written notice during the past two years of the intent of any Governmental Authority
responsible for the enforcement of labor, employment, occupational health and safety or workplace safety and insurance/workers compensation laws to conduct an investigation of ETP, ETP GP, ETP Managing GP or any of their respective Subsidiaries with
respect to such matters and, to the Knowledge of ETP and ETP GP, no such investigation is in progress. Except for such matters which would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect, (i) there are no (and have not
been during the two-year period preceding the date of this Agreement) strikes or lockouts with respect to any employees of ETP, ETP GP, ETP Managing GP or any of their respective Subsidiaries, (ii) to the Knowledge of ETP and ETP GP, there is no
(and has not been during the two-year period preceding the date of this Agreement) union organizing effort pending or threatened against ETP, ETP GP, ETP Managing GP or any of their respective Subsidiaries, (iii) there is no (and has not been during
the two-year period preceding the date of this Agreement) unfair labor practice, labor dispute (other than routine individual grievances) or labor arbitration proceeding pending or, to the Knowledge of ETP or ETP GP, threatened against ETP, ETP GP,
ETP Managing GP or any of their respective Subsidiaries and (iv) there is no (and has not been during the two year period preceding the date of this Agreement) slowdown, or work stoppage in effect or, to the Knowledge of ETP or ETP GP, threatened
with respect to any employees of ETP, ETP GP, ETP Managing GP or any of their respective Subsidiaries. None of ETP, ETP GP, ETP Managing GP or any of their respective Subsidiaries has any liabilities under the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Act of
1988 (the
WARN Act
) as a result of any action taken by ETP, ETP GP, ETP Managing GP or any of their respective Subsidiaries that would have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect. Except for such
non-compliance which would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect, ETP, ETP GP, ETP Managing GP and each of their respective Subsidiaries is, and during the two year period preceding the date of this Agreement has
been, in compliance with all applicable Laws in respect of employment and employment practices, terms and conditions of employment, wages and hours and occupational safety and health (including classifications of service providers as employees
and/or independent contractors).
Section 3.13
Environmental Matters
. Except as would not, individually or in the aggregate,
have an ETP Material Adverse Effect: (a) each of ETP and its Subsidiaries is and has been in compliance with all applicable Environmental Laws, which compliance includes obtaining, maintaining and complying with all Environmental Permits, (b) there
has been no release of any Hazardous Substance by ETP or any of its Subsidiaries, or to the Knowledge of ETP, any other Person in any manner that would reasonably be expected to give rise to ETP or any of its Subsidiaries incurring any remedial
obligation or corrective action requirement under applicable Environmental Laws, (c) there are no investigations, actions, suits or proceedings pending or, to the Knowledge of ETP, threatened against ETP or any of its Subsidiaries or involving any
real property currently or, to the Knowledge of ETP, formerly owned, operated or leased by or for ETP or any Subsidiary alleging noncompliance with or liability under, any Environmental Law and (d) to ETPs Knowledge, no Hazardous Substance has
been disposed of, released or transported in violation of any applicable Environmental Law, from any properties owned or operated by ETP or any of its Subsidiaries or as a result of any operations or activities of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries.
Section 3.14
Contracts
.
(a)
Section
3.14(a)
of the ETP Disclosure Schedule contains a true and complete listing of the following Contracts
(which term, for purposes of this
Section
3.14
, shall not include any ETP Benefit Plan) to which any of ETP or its Subsidiaries is a party in effect on the date of this Agreement (each Contract that is described in this
Section
3.14(a)
being an
ETP Material Contract
):
(i) each Contract
that constitutes a commitment relating to indebtedness for borrowed money or the deferred purchase price of property (in either case, whether incurred, assumed, guaranteed or secured by any asset) in excess of $100,000,000, other than Contracts
solely between or among ETP and one or more of its Subsidiaries;
A-27
(ii) each guarantee by ETP of any obligation of any Person that is not ETP or one
of its Subsidiaries under any Contract of the type described in
Section
3.14(a)(
i
)
;
(iii) each natural gas or oil transportation, gathering, treating, processing or other Contract, each natural gas liquids or
oil fractionation, transportation, purchase, sales or storage Contract and each natural gas, oil, coal or mineral purchase and sales or lease Contract that during the 12 months ended September 30, 2016 individually involved, or is reasonably
expected in the future to involve, annual revenues or payments by ETP and its Subsidiaries in excess of $100,000,000 in the aggregate;
(iv) each Contract for lease of personal property or real property involving aggregate payments in excess of $40,000,000 in any
calendar year;
(v) each Contract between any of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries, on the one hand, and any ETP Unitholder
holding 5% or more of ETPs issued and outstanding Common Units, on the other hand;
(vi) each Contract containing a
non-compete or similar type of provision that, following the Effective Time, would by its terms materially restrict the ability of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries (including ETPs Subsidiaries) to compete in any line of business or with any
Person or in any geographic area during any period of time after the Closing (each Contract described in this
Section
3.14(a
)(
vi)
, a
Non-Competition Agreement
);
(vii) each Contract involving the pending acquisition or sale of (or option to purchase or sell) any assets or properties that
are material to ETP and its Subsidiaries, taken as a whole;
(viii) each Contract for futures, swap, collar, put, call,
floor, cap, option, or other Contract that is intended to reduce or eliminate the fluctuations in the prices of commodities, including natural gas, natural gas liquids, crude oil, condensate and coal (each Contract described in this
Section
3.14(a)(viii)
, a
Commodity Derivative Instrument
);
(ix) each
material partnership, joint venture or limited liability company agreement to which ETP or any of its Subsidiaries is a party, and each Contract between ETP or any of its Subsidiaries and an ETP Joint Venture;
(x) each Contract under which any of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries has advanced or loaned any amount of money to any of its
officers, directors, employees or consultants, in each case with a principal amount in excess of $10,000; and
(xi) each
material contract (as such term is defined in Item 601(b)(10) of Regulation S-K of the SEC).
(b) Except as would
not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect: (i) each ETP Material Contract is valid and binding on ETP and its Subsidiaries, as applicable, and is in full force and effect; (ii) ETP and each of its Subsidiaries has in
all material respects performed all obligations required to be performed by it to date under each ETP Material Contract; (iii) neither ETP nor any of its Subsidiaries has received written notice of, or to the Knowledge of ETP, knows of, the
existence of any event or condition which constitutes, or, after notice or lapse of time or both, will constitute, a material default on the part of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries under any such ETP Material Contract; and (iv) to the Knowledge of
ETP, as of the date of this Agreement no other party to any ETP Material Contract is in default thereunder, nor does any condition exist that with notice or lapse of time or both would constitute a default by any such other party thereunder.
(c) Neither the execution and delivery of this Agreement by ETP, nor the consummation by ETP of the transactions contemplated hereby, nor
compliance by ETP with any of the terms or provisions of this Agreement, will violate, conflict with, result in the loss of any benefit under, constitute a default (or an event which, with notice or lapse of time, or both, would constitute a
default) under, result in the termination of or a right of termination or cancellation under, accelerate the performance required by ETP or any of its Subsidiaries under any of the terms, conditions or provisions of any governing document of an ETP
Joint Venture.
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Section 3.15
Property
.
(a) Except as would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect, ETP or a Subsidiary of ETP owns and has good
title to all of its owned real property (other than severed oil, gas and/or mineral rights and other hydrocarbon interests) and good title to all its owned personal property, and has valid leasehold interests in all of its leased real properties
(other than hydrocarbon interests) free and clear of all Liens, in each case, sufficient to conduct their respective businesses as currently conducted (except in all cases for Liens permissible under or not prohibited by any applicable material loan
agreements and indentures (together with all related mortgages, deeds of trust and other security agreements)). Except as would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect, all leases under which ETP or any of its
Subsidiaries lease any real or personal property (other than hydrocarbon interests) are valid and effective against ETP or any of its Subsidiaries and, to the Knowledge of ETP, the counterparties thereto, in accordance with their respective terms
and there is not, under any of such leases, any existing material default by ETP or any of its Subsidiaries or, to the Knowledge of ETP, the counterparties thereto, or, to the Knowledge of ETP, any event which, with notice or lapse of time or both,
would become a material default by ETP or any of its Subsidiaries, or, to the Knowledge of ETP, the counterparties thereto.
(b) ETP and
its Subsidiaries have such consents, easements, rights-of-way, permits or licenses from each person (collectively,
rights-of-way
) as are sufficient to conduct their businesses in all material respects as currently
conducted, except such rights-of-way that, if not obtained (or which, if obtained, if the same were to expire or be revoked or terminated), would not, individually or in the aggregate, have an ETP Material Adverse Effect. Except as would not,
individually or in the aggregate, have an ETP Material Adverse Effect, each of ETP and its Subsidiaries has fulfilled and performed all its obligations with respect to such rights-of-way which are required to be fulfilled or performed as of the date
of this Agreement (subject to all applicable waivers, modifications, grace periods and extensions) and no event has occurred that allows, or after notice or lapse of time would allow, revocation or termination thereof or would result in any
impairment of the rights of the holder of any such rights-of-way, except for rights reserved to, or vested in, any municipality or other Governmental Authority or any railroad by the terms of any right, power, franchise, grant, license, permit, or
by any other provision of any applicable Law, to terminate or to require annual or other periodic payments as a condition to the continuance of such right.
Section 3.16
Intellectual Property
. Except as would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect,
either ETP or a Subsidiary of ETP owns, or is licensed or otherwise possesses adequate rights to use, all material trademarks, trade names, service marks, service names, mark registrations, logos, assumed names, domain names, registered and
unregistered copyrights, patents or applications and registrations, and trade secrets (collectively, the
ETP Intellectual Property
) used in their respective businesses as currently conducted. Except as would not have,
individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect, (a) there are no pending or, to the Knowledge of ETP, threatened claims by any Person alleging infringement or misappropriation by ETP or any of its Subsidiaries of such Persons
intellectual property, (b) to the Knowledge of ETP, the conduct of the business of ETP and its Subsidiaries does not infringe or misappropriate any intellectual property rights of any Person, (c) neither ETP nor any of its Subsidiaries has made any
claim of a violation or infringement, or misappropriation by others of its rights to or in connection with the ETP Intellectual Property, and (d) to the Knowledge of ETP, no Person is infringing or misappropriating any ETP Intellectual Property.
Section 3.17
Insurance
. ETP and its Subsidiaries maintain, or are entitled to the benefits of, insurance covering their
properties, operations, personnel and businesses in amounts customary for the businesses in which they operate.
Section
3.17
of the ETP Disclosure Schedule lists the annual premiums paid by ETP for directors and officers
liability insurance policies. Except as would not have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect, none of ETP or its Subsidiaries has received notice from any insurer or agent of such insurer that substantial capital
improvements or other expenditures will have to be made in order to continue such insurance, and all such insurance is outstanding and duly in force.
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Section 3.18
Opinion of Financial Advisor
. The ETP Conflicts Committee has received
the opinion of Barclays Capital Inc. (the
ETP Financial Advisor
), dated the date of this Agreement, to the effect that, as of such date, and subject to the assumptions and qualifications set forth therein, from a financial
point of view, the Exchange Ratio is fair to the ETP Unaffiliated Unitholders (the
ETP Fairness Opinion
). ETP has been authorized by the ETP Financial Advisor to permit the inclusion of the ETP Fairness Opinion in the
Registration Statement and the Proxy Statement.
Section 3.19
Brokers and Other Advisors
. Except for the ETP Financial
Advisor, the fees and expenses of which will be paid by ETP, no broker, investment banker or financial advisor is entitled to any brokers, finders or financial advisors fee or commission, or the reimbursement of expenses, in
connection with the Merger or the transactions contemplated hereby based on arrangements made by or on behalf of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries. ETP has heretofore made available to SXL a correct and complete copy of ETPs engagement letters
with the ETP Financial Advisor, which letters describe all fees payable to the ETP Financial Advisor, in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby and all agreements under which any such fees or any expenses are payable and all
indemnification and other agreements with the ETP Financial Advisor, entered into in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby.
Section 3.20
State Takeover Statutes
. The action of the ETP Managing GP Board in approving this Agreement and the transactions
contemplated hereby is sufficient to render inapplicable to this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby any state takeover laws and any applicable provision of the ETP Partnership Agreement. There is no unitholder rights plan in effect,
to which ETP is a party or otherwise bound.
Section 3.21
Regulatory Matters
. Except as would not, individually or in the
aggregate, have an ETP Material Adverse Effect, there are no proceedings pending, or to the Knowledge of ETP, threatened, alleging that ETP or any of its Subsidiaries is in material violation of the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. § 717,
et
seq
. (the
NGA
), the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978, 15 U.S.C. § 3301,
et seq
. (the
NGPA
), the Interstate Commerce Act, 49 U.S.C. App. § 1,
et seq
. (1988) (the
ICA
), the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. § 791a,
et seq
. (the
FPA
), or the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 2005, 42 U.S.C. §§ 16451-16453
(
PUHCA
), or the laws, rules and regulations of any applicable state public utility commission or department, as the case may be.
Section 3.22
No Other Representations or Warranties
. Except for the representations and warranties set forth in this
Article
III
, none of ETP, ETP GP or any other Person makes or has made any express or implied representation or warranty with respect to ETP or ETP GP or with respect to any other information provided to any SXL Entity in
connection with the Merger or the GP Merger or the other transactions contemplated hereby. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, none of ETP, ETP GP or any other Person will have or be subject to any liability or other obligation to any
SXL Entity or any other Person resulting from the distribution to any SXL Entity (including their respective Representatives), or any SXL Entitys (or such Representatives) use of, any such information, including any information,
documents, projections, forecasts or other materials made available to any SXL Entity in certain data rooms or management presentations in expectation of the Merger or the GP Merger.
ARTICLE IV
REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES OF THE SXL ENTITIES
Except as disclosed in (a) the SXL SEC Documents filed with the SEC on or after December 31, 2014 and prior to the date of this Agreement
(but excluding any disclosure contained in any such SXL SEC Documents under the heading Risk Factors or Forward-Looking Statements or similar heading (other than any factual information contained within such headings,
disclosure or statements)) or (b) the disclosure letter delivered by SXL to ETP (the
SXL Disclosure Schedule
) prior to the execution of this Agreement (
provided
that (i) disclosure in any section of such SXL
Disclosure Schedule shall be deemed to be disclosed with respect to any other section of this Agreement to the extent that it is reasonably apparent to ETP on the face of such disclosure
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that it is applicable to such other section notwithstanding the omission of a reference or cross reference thereto and (ii) the mere inclusion of an item in such SXL Disclosure Schedule as an
exception to a representation or warranty shall not be deemed an admission that such item represents a material exception or material fact, event or circumstance or that such item has had, would have or would reasonably be expected to have, a SXL
Material Adverse Effect), the SXL Entities hereby represent and warrant to ETP as follows:
Section 4.1
Organization, Standing and
Power
.
(a) Each of the SXL Entities and their respective Subsidiaries is a legal entity duly organized, validly existing and in good
standing under the Laws of the jurisdiction in which it is incorporated, formed or organized, as applicable, and has all requisite partnership, corporate, limited liability company or other applicable power and authority necessary to own or lease
all of its properties and assets and to carry on its business as it is now being conducted, except where the failure to have such power or authority would not, individually or in the aggregate, have a Material Adverse Effect on SXL (a
SXL Material Adverse Effect
).
(b) Each of the SXL Entities and their respective Subsidiaries is duly licensed
or qualified to do business and is in good standing in each jurisdiction in which the nature of the business conducted by it or the character or location of the properties and assets owned or leased by it makes such licensing or qualification
necessary, except where the failure to be so licensed, qualified or in good standing would not, individually or in the aggregate, have a SXL Material Adverse Effect.
(c) All the outstanding partnership interests, limited liability company interests, shares of capital stock of, or other equity interests in,
each material Subsidiary of SXL that are owned directly or indirectly by SXL have been duly authorized and validly issued and are fully paid and nonassessable and are owned free and clear of all Liens. Except for those of the SXL Joint Ventures, all
such interests and shares of capital stock of each Subsidiary are owned directly or indirectly by SXL.
(d) SXL has made available to ETP
correct and complete copies of its certificate of limited partnership and the SXL Partnership Agreement (the
SXL Charter Documents
) and correct and complete copies of the comparable organizational documents of each of its
material Subsidiaries (the
SXL Subsidiary Documents
), in each case as amended to the date of this Agreement. All such SXL Charter Documents are in full force and effect and SXL is not in violation of any of their
provisions.
Section 4.2
Capitalization
.
(a) As of the close of business on November 18, 2016, the issued and outstanding limited partner interests and general partner interests
of SXL consisted of (i) 322,054,475 SXL Units, (ii) 9,416,196 SXL Class B Units, (iii) the SXL Incentive Distribution Rights and (iv) the SXL GP Interest.
Section
4.2(a)
of the SXL Disclosure Schedule sets forth the number
of SXL Units that were issuable pursuant to employee and director equity plans of SXL (
SXL Equity Plans
) as of November 18, 2016, including the number of SXL Units that were subject to outstanding awards under the SXL
Equity Plans as of such date. Except (A) as set forth above in this
Section
4.2(a)
or (B) as otherwise expressly permitted by
Section
5.2(b)
, as of the date of this Agreement there are not, and as
of the Effective Time there will not be, any partnership interests, voting securities or other equity interests of SXL issued and outstanding or any subscriptions, options, warrants, calls, convertible or exchangeable securities, rights, commitments
or agreements of any character providing for the issuance of any SXL Partnership Interests or other partnership interests, voting securities or other equity interests of SXL, including any representing the right to purchase or otherwise receive any
of the foregoing.
(b) None of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries has issued or is bound by any outstanding subscriptions, options, warrants,
calls, convertible or exchangeable securities, rights, commitments or agreements of any character providing for the issuance or disposition of any partnership interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity interests of any
Subsidiary of SXL (other than, with respect to the SXL Joint Ventures, as set forth in the
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definitive agreements for such SXL Joint Ventures). Except (i) as set forth in the SXL Charter Documents, as in effect as of the date of this Agreement or (ii) in connection with the vesting,
settlement or forfeiture of, or Tax withholding with respect to, any equity or equity-based awards outstanding as of the date of this Agreement , there are no outstanding obligations of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries to repurchase, redeem or
otherwise acquire any partnership interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity interests (or any options, warrants or other rights to acquire any partnership interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity
interests) of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries (other than, with respect to the SXL Joint Ventures, as set forth in the definitive agreements for such SXL Joint Ventures).
(c) SXL GP is the sole general partner of SXL. The SXL GP Interest and the SXL Incentive Distribution Rights have been duly authorized and
validly issued in accordance with applicable Law and the SXL Partnership Agreement.
(d) (i)
All of the issued and
outstanding limited liability company interests of SXL Merger Sub are owned, beneficially and of record, by SXL, (ii) the general partner interest in SXL Merger Sub LP is owned, beneficially and of record, by SXL Merger Sub, and (iii) all of the
limited partner interests in SXL Merger Sub LP are owned, beneficially and of record, by SXL, and, in each case, such interests have been duly authorized and validly issued in accordance with applicable Law and the organizational documents of each
such entity and are free and clear of any Liens. SXL Merger Sub and SXL Merger Sub LP have been formed solely for the purpose of engaging in the Merger and the other transactions contemplated by this Agreement. Except for obligations and liabilities
incurred in connection with its formation and the Merger and the other transactions contemplated by this Agreement, each of SXL Merger Sub and SXL Merger Sub LP has not and will not have incurred, directly or indirectly, any obligations or engaged
in any business activities of any type or kind whatsoever or entered into any agreements or arrangements with any Person.
Section 4.3
Authority;
Noncontravention
.
(a) Each of the SXL Entities has all necessary power and authority to execute and deliver this Agreement and to consummate the transactions
contemplated hereby, including the Merger, the GP Merger and the adoption of the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement. The execution, delivery and performance by the SXL Entities of this Agreement, and the consummation of the transactions contemplated
hereby, including the Merger, the GP Merger and the adoption of the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement have been duly authorized and approved by the SXL GP Board, which, at a meeting duly called and held, has, on behalf of SXL, SXL GP, SXL Merger Sub
and SXL Merger Sub LP, unanimously approved and declared advisable this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby, including the Merger, the GP Merger and the adoption of the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement, and no other entity action on
the part of the SXL Entities is necessary to authorize the execution, delivery and performance by the SXL Entities of this Agreement and the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby, including the Merger, the GP Merger and the adoption
of the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement. This Agreement has been, and the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement will be, duly executed and delivered by the applicable SXL Entities and, assuming due authorization, execution and delivery of this
Agreement by the other parties hereto, this Agreement constitutes, and the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement will constitute, a legal, valid and binding obligation of each of the applicable SXL Entities, enforceable against each of them in
accordance with its terms.
(b) Neither the execution and delivery of this Agreement by the SXL Entities, nor the consummation by the SXL
Entities of the transactions contemplated hereby, nor compliance by the SXL Entities with any of the terms or provisions of this Agreement, will (i) conflict with or violate any provision of the SXL Charter Documents, the SXL GP Charter Documents,
the SXL Merger Sub Charter Documents or any of the SXL Subsidiary Documents, (ii) assuming that the authorizations, consents and approvals referred to in
Section
4.4
are obtained and the filings referred to in
Section
4.4
are made, (x) violate any Law, judgment, writ or injunction of any Governmental Authority applicable to SXL or any of its Subsidiaries or any of their respective properties or assets, or (y) violate, conflict
with, result in the loss of any benefit under, constitute a default (or an event which,
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with notice or lapse of time, or both, would constitute a default) under, result in the termination of or a right of termination or cancellation under, accelerate the performance required by, or
result in the creation of any Lien upon any of the respective properties or assets of, SXL or any of its Subsidiaries under any of the terms, conditions or provisions of any Contract or SXL Permit (including any Environmental Permit) to which SXL or
any of its Subsidiaries is a party, or by which they or any of their respective properties or assets may be bound or affected or (iii) result in the exercisability of any right to purchase or acquire any material asset of SXL or any of its
Subsidiaries, except, in the case of clauses (ii)(x) and (ii)(y), for such violations, conflicts, losses, defaults, terminations, cancellations, accelerations or Liens as, individually or in the aggregate, would not reasonably be expected to
have a SXL Material Adverse Effect.
(c) No vote or approval of the holders of any class or series of SXL Partnership Interests or other
partnership interests, equity interests or capital stock of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries is necessary (i) to adopt this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby in accordance with the SXL Partnership Agreement or applicable Law or (ii)
to adopt the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement (other than holders of the SXL GP Interest and the SXL Incentive Distribution Rights).
(d)
None of the SXL Entities nor any of their respective Subsidiaries holds any limited partner interests, capital stock, voting securities or equity interests of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries, or holds any securities or rights convertible into,
exchangeable or exercisable for, or evidencing the right to subscribe for any such limited partner interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity interests, or any rights, warrants, options, calls, commitments or any other
agreements of any character to purchase or acquire any such limited partner interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity interests or any securities or rights convertible into, exchangeable or exercisable for, or evidencing the
right to subscribe for, any such limited partner interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity interests.
Section 4.4
Governmental Approvals
. Except for (a) filings required under, and compliance with other applicable requirements of,
the Exchange Act and the Securities Act, including the filing of the Registration Statement and the Proxy Statement with the SEC, (b) the filing of the Certificate of Merger with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware and the Certificates
of GP Merger with the Secretary of State of the State of Pennsylvania and the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware, (c) any filings required under, and compliance with other applicable requirements of, the HSR Act and other Antitrust Laws or
(d) any consents, authorizations, approvals, filings or exemptions in connection with compliance with the rules of the NYSE, no consents or approvals of, or filings, declarations or registrations with, any Governmental Authority are necessary for
the execution, delivery and performance of this Agreement by the SXL Entities and the consummation by the SXL Entities of the transactions contemplated hereby, other than such other consents, approvals, filings, declarations or registrations that,
if not obtained, made or given, would not, individually or in the aggregate, reasonably be expected to result in a SXL Material Adverse Effect.
Section 4.5
SXL SEC Documents; Undisclosed Liabilities
.
(a) SXL and its Subsidiaries have filed and furnished all reports, schedules, forms, certifications, prospectuses, and registration, proxy and
other statements required to be filed by them with the SEC since December 31, 2014 (collectively and together with all documents filed on a voluntary basis on Form 8-K, and in each case including all exhibits and schedules thereto and
documents incorporated by reference therein, the
SXL SEC Documents
). The SXL SEC Documents, as of their respective effective dates (in the case of the SXL SEC Documents that are registration statements filed pursuant to the
requirements of the Securities Act) and as of their respective SEC filing dates (in the case of all other SXL SEC Documents), or, if amended, as finally amended prior to the date of this Agreement, complied in all material respects with the
requirements of the Exchange Act, the Securities Act and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, as the case may be, applicable to such SXL SEC Documents, and none of the SXL SEC Documents as of such respective dates contained any untrue statement of a material
fact or omitted to state a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary in order to make the statements therein, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading. As of the date of
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this Agreement, there are no outstanding or unresolved comments received from the SEC staff with respect to the SXL SEC Documents. To the Knowledge of SXL, none of the SXL SEC Documents is the
subject of ongoing SEC review or investigation.
(b) The consolidated financial statements of SXL included in the SXL SEC Documents as of
their respective dates (if amended, as of the date of the last such amendment) comply as to form in all material respects with applicable accounting requirements and the published rules and regulations of the SEC with respect thereto, have been
prepared in accordance with GAAP (except, in the case of unaudited quarterly statements, as indicated in the notes thereto) applied on a consistent basis during the periods involved (except as may be indicated in the notes thereto) and fairly
present in all material respects the consolidated financial position of SXL and its consolidated Subsidiaries as of the dates thereof and the consolidated results of their operations, cash flows and changes in partners equity for the periods
then ended (subject, in the case of unaudited quarterly statements, to normal year-end audit adjustments, none of which has been or will be, individually or in the aggregate, material to SXL and its consolidated Subsidiaries, taken as a whole).
(c) SXL has established and maintains internal control over financial reporting and disclosure controls and procedures (as such terms are
defined in Rule 13a-15 and Rule 15d-15 under the Exchange Act); such disclosure controls and procedures are designed to ensure that material information relating to SXL, including its consolidated Subsidiaries, required to be disclosed by
SXL in the reports that it files or submits under the Exchange Act is accumulated and communicated to SXLs principal executive officer and its principal financial officer to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure; and such
disclosure controls and procedures are effective to ensure that information required to be disclosed by SXL in the reports that it files or submits under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods
specified in SEC rules and forms. SXLs principal executive officer and its principal financial officer have disclosed, based on their most recent evaluation, to SXLs auditors and the audit and risk committee of the SXL GP Board (i) all
significant deficiencies in the design or operation of internal controls which could adversely affect SXLs ability to record, process, summarize and report financial data and have identified for SXLs auditors any material weaknesses in
internal controls and (ii) any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in SXLs internal controls. The principal executive officer and the principal financial officer of SXL have
made all certifications required by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, the Exchange Act and any related rules and regulations promulgated by the SEC with respect to the SXL SEC Documents, and the statements contained in such certifications were complete and
correct when made. The management of SXL has completed its assessment of the effectiveness of SXLs internal control over financial reporting in compliance with the requirements of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act for the year ended
December 31, 2015, and such assessment concluded that such controls were effective. To the Knowledge of SXL, as of the date of this Agreement, there are no facts or circumstances that would prevent its principal executive officer and principal
financial officer from giving the certifications and attestations required pursuant to the rules and regulations adopted pursuant to Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, without qualification, when next due.
(d) Except (i) as reflected or otherwise reserved against on the balance sheet of SXL and its Subsidiaries as of the Balance Sheet Date
(including the notes thereto) included in the SXL SEC Documents filed by SXL and publicly available prior to the date of this Agreement, (ii) for liabilities and obligations incurred since the Balance Sheet Date in the ordinary course of business
and (iii) for liabilities and obligations incurred under or in accordance with this Agreement or in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby, neither SXL nor any of its Subsidiaries has any liabilities or obligations of any nature
(whether or not accrued or contingent), that would be required to be reflected or reserved against on a consolidated balance sheet of SXL prepared in accordance with GAAP or the notes thereto, other than as have not and would not reasonably be
expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect.
(e) Neither SXL nor any of its Subsidiaries is a party
to, or has any commitment to become a party to, any joint venture, off-balance sheet partnership or any similar Contract (including any Contract or arrangement relating to any transaction or relationship between or among SXL and any of its
Subsidiaries, on the one hand,
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and any unconsolidated Affiliate, including any structured finance, special purpose or limited purpose entity or Person, on the other hand, or any off-balance sheet arrangements (as
defined in Item 303(a) of Regulation S-K of the SEC)), where the purpose of such Contract is to avoid disclosure of any material transaction involving, or material liabilities of, SXL in SXLs published financial statements or any SXL
SEC Documents.
Section 4.6
Absence of Certain Changes or Events
.
(a) Since the Balance Sheet Date, there has not been a SXL Material Adverse Effect.
(b) Since the Balance Sheet Date, (i) except for this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby, SXL and its Subsidiaries have
carried on and operated their respective businesses in all material respects in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice and (ii) neither SXL nor any of its Subsidiaries has taken any action described in
Section
5.2(b)
that, if taken after the date of this Agreement and prior to the Effective Time without the prior written consent of SXL, would violate such provisions.
Section 4.7
Legal Proceedings
. There are no investigations or proceedings pending (or, to the Knowledge of SXL, threatened) by any
Governmental Authority with respect to SXL or any of its Subsidiaries or actions, suits or proceedings pending (or, to the Knowledge of SXL, threatened) against SXL or any of its Subsidiaries or any of their respective properties, at law or in
equity before any Governmental Authority, and there are no orders, judgments or decrees of any Governmental Authority against SXL or any of its Subsidiaries, in each case except for those that would not reasonably be expected to have, individually
or in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect.
Section 4.8
Compliance with Laws; Permits
.
(a) SXL and its Subsidiaries are, and since the later of December 31, 2014 and their respective dates of incorporation, formation or
organization have been, in compliance with and are not in default under or in violation of any applicable Laws, except where such non-compliance, default or violation would not have, individually or in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect.
(b) SXL and its Subsidiaries are in possession of all Permits (including Environmental Permits) necessary for SXL and its Subsidiaries to
own, lease and operate their properties and assets or to carry on their businesses as they are now being conducted (the
SXL Permits
), except where the failure to have any of the SXL Permits would not have, individually or
in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect. All SXL Permits are in full force and effect, except where the failure to be in full force and effect would not have, individually or in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect. No suspension or
cancellation of any of SXL Permits is pending or, to the Knowledge of SXL, threatened, except where such suspension or cancellation would not have, individually or in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect. SXL and its Subsidiaries are not,
and since December 31, 2014 have not been, in violation or breach of, or default under, any SXL Permit, except where such violation, breach or default would not have, individually or in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect. As of the
date of this Agreement, to the Knowledge of SXL, no event or condition has occurred or exists which would result in a violation of, breach, default or loss of a benefit under, or acceleration of an obligation of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries under,
any SXL Permit, or has caused (or would cause) an applicable Governmental Authority to fail or refuse to issue, renew or extend any SXL Permit (in each case, with or without notice or lapse of time or both), except for violations, breaches,
defaults, losses, accelerations or failures that would not have, individually or in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect.
(c)
Without limiting the generality of
Section
4.8(a)
, SXL, each of its Subsidiaries, and, to the Knowledge of SXL, each joint venture partner, joint interest owner, consultant, agent or representative of any of the foregoing
(in their respective capacities as such), (i) has not violated the FCPA, and any other U.S. and foreign anti-corruption Laws that are applicable to SXL or its Subsidiaries; (ii) has not, to the Knowledge of SXL, been given written notice by any
Governmental Authority of any facts which, if true, would constitute a violation of the FCPA or any other U.S. or foreign anti-corruption Laws by any such person; and (iii) to the Knowledge of SXL, is not being (and has not been) investigated by any
Governmental Authority except, in each case of the foregoing clauses (i) through (iii), as would not have, individually or in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect.
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(d) None of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries has any liabilities under the WARN Act that would
have, individually or in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect. Except for such non-compliance which would not have, individually or in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect, SXL and each of its Subsidiaries is, and during the two year
period preceding the date of this Agreement has been, in compliance with all applicable Laws in respect of employment and employment practices, terms and conditions of employment, wages and hours and occupational safety and health (including
classifications of service providers as employees and/or independent contractors).
Section 4.9
Information Supplied
. Subject
to the accuracy of the representations and warranties of ETP set forth in
Section
3.9
, none of the information supplied (or to be supplied) in writing by or on behalf of SXL specifically for inclusion or incorporation by
reference in (a) the Registration Statement will, at the time the Registration Statement, or any amendment or supplement thereto, is filed with the SEC or at the time it becomes effective under the Securities Act, contain any untrue statement of a
material fact or omit to state any material fact required to be stated therein or necessary in order to make the statements made therein, in light of the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading, and (b) the Proxy Statement will, on
the date it is first mailed to ETP Unitholders, and at the time of the ETP Unitholders Meeting, contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state any material fact required to be stated therein or necessary in order to make the
statements therein, in light of the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading. The Registration Statement and Proxy Statement will comply as to form in all material respects with the applicable requirements of the Securities Act or
Exchange Act, as applicable. Notwithstanding the foregoing, SXL makes no representation or warranty with respect to information supplied by or on behalf of ETP for inclusion or incorporation by reference in any of the foregoing documents.
Section 4.10
Tax Matters
. Except as would not have, individually or in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect: (a) all Tax
Returns that were required to be filed by or with respect to SXL or any of its Subsidiaries have been duly filed, and all such Tax Returns are complete and accurate, (b) all Taxes owed by SXL or any of its Subsidiaries, or for which SXL or any of
its Subsidiaries may be liable, that are or have become due have been timely paid in full or an adequate reserve for the payment of such Taxes has been established, (c) all Tax withholding and deposit requirements imposed on or with respect to SXL
or any of its Subsidiaries have been satisfied in full in all respects, (d) there are no Liens (other than statutory Liens for current-period Taxes that are not yet due and payable or that are being contested in good faith and for which adequate
reserves have been established in accordance with GAAP) on any of the assets of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries that arose in connection with any failure (or alleged failure) to pay any Tax, (e) there are no audits, examinations, investigations or
other proceedings pending or threatened in writing in respect of Taxes or Tax matters of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries, (f) there is no written claim against SXL or any of its Subsidiaries for any Taxes, and no assessment, deficiency or adjustment
has been asserted, proposed, or threatened in writing with respect to any Tax Return of or with respect to SXL or any of its Subsidiaries, (g) no claim has ever been made by an authority in a jurisdiction where SXL or any of its Subsidiaries does
not file Tax Returns that SXL or such Subsidiary is or may be subject to taxation in that jurisdiction, (h) there is not in force any extension of time (other than customary extensions) with respect to the due date for the filing of any Tax Return
of or with respect to SXL or any of its Subsidiaries or any waiver or agreement for any extension of time for the assessment or payment of any Tax of or with respect to any of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries, (i) none of SXL or any of its
Subsidiaries will be required to include any amount in income for any taxable period as a result of a change in accounting method or adjustment under Section 482 of the Code for any taxable period ending on or before the Closing Date or pursuant to
any agreement with any Tax authority with respect to any such taxable period, or as a result of an intercompany transaction, an installment sale or open transaction disposition entered into on or prior to the Closing Date, or the cash method of
accounting or long-term contract method of accounting utilized prior to the Closing Date, (j) none of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries is a party to a Tax allocation or sharing agreement, and no payments are due or will become due by SXL or any of its
Subsidiaries pursuant to any such agreement or arrangement or any Tax indemnification agreement, (k) none of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries has been a member of an affiliated, combined, consolidated, unitary or similar group with respect to Taxes
(including any affiliated group within the meaning of Section 1504 of the Code and any similar group under state, local or non-
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U.S. law), or has any liability for the Taxes of any Person (other than SXL or any of its Subsidiaries), as a transferee or successor, by contract, or otherwise (other than Taxes arising in
ordinary course commercial arrangements not primarily related to Taxes), (l) SXL and each of its Subsidiaries that is classified as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes has in effect a valid election under Section 754 of the Code,
(m) SXL is properly classified as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes, and not as an association or a publicly traded partnership taxable as a corporation under Section 7704 of the Code, and has been properly treated as such
since its formation, and (n) at least 90% of the gross income of SXL for each taxable year since its formation has been from sources that are treated as qualifying income within the meaning of Section 7704(d) of the Code.
Section 4.11
Environmental Matters
. Except as would not, individually or in the aggregate, have a SXL Material Adverse Effect: (a)
each of SXL and its Subsidiaries is and has been in compliance with all applicable Environmental Laws, which compliance includes obtaining, maintaining and complying with all Environmental Permits, (b) there has been no release of any Hazardous
Substance by SXL or any of its Subsidiaries, or to the Knowledge of SXL, any other Person in any manner that would reasonably be expected to give rise to SXL or any of its Subsidiaries incurring any remedial obligation or corrective action
requirement under applicable Environmental Laws, (c) there are no investigations, actions, suits or proceedings pending or, to the Knowledge of SXL, threatened against SXL or any of its Subsidiaries or involving any real property currently or, to
the Knowledge of SXL, formerly owned, operated or leased by or for SXL or any Subsidiary alleging noncompliance with or liability under, any Environmental Law and (d) to the Knowledge of SXL, no Hazardous Substance has been disposed of, released or
transported in violation of any applicable Environmental Law, from any properties owned or operated by SXL or any of its Subsidiaries or as a result of any operations or activities of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries.
Section 4.12
Contracts
.
(a) Except for this Agreement, any SXL Benefit Plans, or as filed with the SEC prior to the date of this Agreement, neither SXL nor any of its
Subsidiaries is a party to or bound by, as of the date of this Agreement, any Contract (whether written or oral) (i) which is a material contract (as such term is defined in Item 601(b)(10) of Regulation S-K of the SEC) to SXL;
or (ii) which constitutes a contract or commitment relating to indebtedness for borrowed money or the deferred purchase price of property (in either case, whether incurred, assumed, guaranteed or secured by any asset) in excess of $100,000,000 (all
contracts of the type described in this
Section
4.12(a)
being referred to herein as
SXL Material Contracts
).
(b) Except as would not have, individually or in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect: (i) each SXL Material Contract is valid and
binding on SXL and any of its Subsidiaries, as applicable, and is in full force and effect; (ii) SXL and each of its Subsidiaries has in all material respects performed all obligations required to be performed by it to date under each SXL Material
Contract; (iii) neither SXL nor any of its Subsidiaries has received written notice of, or to the Knowledge of SXL, knows of, the existence of any event or condition which constitutes, or, after notice or lapse of time or both, will constitute, a
material default on the part of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries under any such SXL Material Contract; and (iv) there is no (and has not been during the two year period preceding the date of this Agreement) slowdown, or work stoppage in effect or, to
the Knowledge of SXL, threatened with respect to any employees of SXL and any of its Subsidiaries.
Section 4.13
Property
.
(a) Except as would not have, individually or in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect, SXL or a Subsidiary of SXL owns and has
good title to all of its owned real property (other than severed oil, gas and/or mineral rights and other hydrocarbon interests) and good title to all its owned personal property, and has valid leasehold interests in all of its leased real
properties (other than hydrocarbon interests) free and clear of all Liens, in each case, sufficient to conduct their respective businesses as currently conducted (except in all cases for Liens permissible under or not prohibited by any applicable
material loan agreements and indentures (together with all
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related mortgages, deeds of trust and other security agreements)). Except as would not have, individually or in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect, all leases under which SXL or any of
its Subsidiaries lease any real or personal property (other than hydrocarbon interests) are valid and effective against SXL or any of its Subsidiaries and, to the Knowledge of SXL, the counterparties thereto, in accordance with their respective
terms and there is not, under any of such leases, any existing material default by SXL or any of its Subsidiaries or, to the Knowledge of SXL, the counterparties thereto, or, to the Knowledge of SXL, any event which, with notice or lapse of time or
both, would become a material default by SXL or any of its Subsidiaries, or, to the Knowledge of SXL, the counterparties thereto.
(b) SXL
and its Subsidiaries have such rights-of-way as are sufficient to conduct their businesses in all material respects as currently conducted, except such rights-of-way that, if not obtained (or which, if obtained, if the same were to expire or be
revoked or terminated), would not, individually or in the aggregate, have a SXL Material Adverse Effect. Except as would not, individually or in the aggregate, have a SXL Material Adverse Effect, each of SXL and its Subsidiaries has fulfilled and
performed all its obligations with respect to such rights-of-way which are required to be fulfilled or performed as of the date of this Agreement (subject to all applicable waivers, modifications, grace periods and extensions) and no event has
occurred that allows, or after notice or lapse of time would allow, revocation or termination thereof or would result in any impairment of the rights of the holder of any such rights-of-way, except for rights reserved to, or vested in, any
municipality or other Governmental Authority or any railroad by the terms of any right, power, franchise, grant, license, permit, or by any other provision of any applicable Law, to terminate or to require annual or other periodic payments as a
condition to the continuance of such right.
Section 4.14
Brokers and Other Advisors
. Except for Citigroup Global Markets
Inc., the fees and expenses of which will be paid by SXL, no broker, investment banker or financial advisor is entitled to any brokers, finders or financial advisors fee or commission, or the reimbursement of expenses, in
connection with the Merger or the transactions contemplated hereby based on arrangements made by or on behalf of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries. The SXL Conflicts Committees engagement letter with Citigroup Global Markets Inc. provided to the
SXL GP Board describes all fees payable to Citigroup Global Markets Inc., in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby and all agreements under which any such fees or any expenses are payable and all indemnification and other agreements
with Citigroup Global Markets Inc., entered into in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby.
Section 4.15
State
Takeover Statutes
. The action of the SXL GP Board in approving this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby is sufficient to render inapplicable to this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby any state takeover laws and
any applicable provision of the SXL Partnership Agreement.
Section 4.16
Regulatory Matters
.
(a) Except as would not, individually or in the aggregate, have a SXL Material Adverse Effect, there are no proceedings pending, or to the
Knowledge of SXL, threatened, alleging that SXL or any of its Subsidiaries is in material violation of the NGA, the NGPA, the ICA, the FPA, or PUHCA, or the laws, rules and regulations of any applicable state public utility commission or department,
as the case may be.
Section 4.17
No Other Representations or Warranties
. Except for the representations and warranties set
forth in this Article IV, none of SXL, SXL Merger Sub, SXL Merger Sub LP or any other Person makes or has made any express or implied representation or warranty with respect to the SXL Entities or with respect to any other information provided to
ETP in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, none of SXL, SXL Merger Sub, SXL Merger Sub LP or any other Person will have or be subject to any liability or other obligation to ETP or
any other Person resulting from the distribution to ETP (including its Representatives), or ETPs (or such Representatives) use of, any such information, including any information, documents, projections, forecasts or other materials made
available to ETP in any data rooms or management presentations in expectation of the Merger.
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ARTICLE V
ADDITIONAL COVENANTS AND AGREEMENTS
Section 5.1
Preparation of the Registration Statement and the Proxy Statement; ETP
Unitholders
Meeting
.
(a) As soon as practicable following the date of this Agreement, ETP and SXL shall jointly prepare and ETP shall file with the SEC the Proxy
Statement, and ETP and SXL shall jointly prepare and SXL shall file with the SEC the Registration Statement, in which the Proxy Statement will be included as a prospectus. Each of ETP and SXL shall use its reasonable best efforts to have the
Registration Statement declared effective under the Securities Act as promptly as practicable after such filing and keep the Registration Statement effective for so long as necessary to consummate the transactions contemplated hereby. ETP and SXL
shall use their respective reasonable best efforts to cause the Proxy Statement to be mailed to the ETP Unitholders as promptly as practicable after the Registration Statement is declared effective under the Securities Act. No filing of, or
amendment or supplement to, the Registration Statement will be made by SXL, and no filing of, or amendment or supplement to, the Proxy Statement will be made by ETP, without providing the other party a reasonable opportunity to review and comment
thereon. If at any time prior to the Effective Time any information relating to ETP or SXL, or any of their respective Affiliates, directors or officers, is discovered by ETP or SXL that should be set forth in an amendment or supplement to any of
the Registration Statement or the Proxy Statement, so that any such document would not include any misstatement of a material fact or omit to state any material fact necessary to make the statements therein, in light of the circumstances under which
they were made, not misleading, the party that discovers such information shall promptly notify the other parties hereto and an appropriate amendment or supplement describing such information shall be jointly prepared and promptly filed with the SEC
and, to the extent required by Law, disseminated to the ETP Unitholders. The parties shall notify each other promptly of the receipt of any comments from the SEC or the staff of the SEC and of any request by the SEC or the staff of the SEC for
amendments or supplements to either the Proxy Statement or the Registration Statement or for additional information and shall supply each other with copies of (i) all correspondence between it or any of its Representatives, on the one hand, and the
SEC or the staff of the SEC, on the other hand, with respect to the Proxy Statement, the Registration Statement or the transactions contemplated hereby and (ii) all orders of the SEC relating to the Registration Statement.
(b) ETP shall, as soon as practicable following the date of this Agreement, establish a record date for, duly call, give notice of, convene
and hold a special meeting of the ETP Unitholders (the
ETP
Unitholders
Meeting
) for the purpose of obtaining the ETP Unitholder Approval. Subject to
Section
5.3
, ETP
shall, through the ETP Managing GP Board, recommend to the ETP Unitholders adoption of this Agreement (the
ETP Board Recommendation
). Unless the ETP Managing GP Board has effected an ETP Adverse Recommendation Change in
accordance with
Section
5.3
, ETP shall use its reasonable best efforts to solicit from the ETP Unitholders proxies in favor of the Merger and to take all other action necessary or advisable to secure the ETP Unitholder
Approval. The Proxy Statement shall include a copy of the ETP Fairness Opinion and (subject to
Section
5.3
) the ETP Board Recommendation. Notwithstanding anything in this Agreement to the contrary, unless this Agreement is
terminated in accordance with
Section
7.1
, ETP shall submit this Agreement for approval by the ETP Unitholders at such ETP Unitholders Meeting. Notwithstanding anything in this Agreement to the contrary, ETP may postpone or
adjourn the ETP Unitholders Meeting (i) to solicit additional proxies for the purpose of obtaining the ETP Unitholder Approval, (ii) for the absence of quorum, (iii) to allow reasonable additional time for the filing and/or mailing of any
supplemental or amended disclosure that ETP has determined after consultation with outside legal counsel is necessary under applicable Law and for such supplemental or amended disclosure to be disseminated and reviewed by the ETP Unitholders prior
to the ETP Unitholders Meeting and (iv) if ETP has delivered any notice contemplated by
Section
5.3(d)
and the time periods contemplated by
Section
5.3(d)
have not expired.
Section 5.2
Conduct of Business
.
(a) Except (i) as expressly permitted by this Agreement, (ii) as set forth in
Section
5.2(a)
of the ETP Disclosure
Schedule, (iii) as required by applicable Law, (iv) as provided for or contemplated by any ETP Material Contract in effect as of the date of this Agreement (including the ETP Partnership Agreement) or (v) as
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agreed in writing by SXL (which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld, delayed or conditioned), during the period from the date of this Agreement until the Effective Time, ETP shall, and
shall cause each of its Subsidiaries and the ETP Joint Ventures to, (A) conduct its business in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice, (B) use commercially reasonable efforts to maintain and preserve intact its business
organization and the goodwill of those having business relationships with it and retain the services of its present officers and key employees, (C) use commercially reasonable efforts to keep in full force and effect all material ETP Permits and all
material insurance policies maintained by ETP, its Subsidiaries and the ETP Joint Ventures, other than changes to such policies made in the ordinary course of business, and (D) use commercially reasonable efforts to comply in all material respects
with all applicable Laws and the requirements of all ETP Material Contracts. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, except (1) as expressly permitted by this Agreement, (2) as set forth in the corresponding provision of
Section
5.2(a)
of the ETP Disclosure Schedule, (3) as required by applicable Law, (4) as required by any ETP Material Contract in effect as of the date of this Agreement (including the ETP Partnership Agreement) or (5) as
agreed in writing by SXL (in the case of clauses (iii), (iv), (v), (vi), (vii), (xi), (xii), (xiii) and (xv) below (but, with respect to (xv), only to the extent applicable to the other clauses designated in this
Section
5.2(a)(v)
, such consent shall not be unreasonably withheld, delayed or conditioned)), during the period from the date of this Agreement to the Effective Time, ETP shall not, and shall not permit any of its
Subsidiaries and the ETP Joint Ventures to:
(i) (A) issue, sell, grant, dispose of, accelerate the vesting of or
modify, as applicable, any of its Partnership Interests, partnership interests, limited liability company interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity interests, or any securities or rights convertible into, exchangeable or
exercisable for, or evidencing the right to subscribe for, any Partnership Interests, partnership interests, limited liability company interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity interests, or any rights, warrants, options,
calls, commitments or any other agreements of any character to purchase or acquire any of its Partnership Interests, partnership interests, limited liability company interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity interests or any
securities or rights convertible into, exchangeable or exercisable for, or evidencing the right to subscribe for, any of the foregoing, other than (i) in connection with the vesting or settlement of any equity or equity-based award that is
outstanding on, or granted after, the date of this Agreement in accordance with the terms thereof , (ii) in connection with the granting of any awards under the ETP Equity Plans or the ETP Cash Unit Plan in the ordinary course of business, (iii)
issuances of Class K Units with the powers, preferences, rights and obligations as set forth in the amendment to the ETP Partnership Agreement, in the form attached hereto as
Exhibit B
and (iv) issuances of Common Units upon the conversion of
the Series A Units to Common Units in accordance with the ETP Partnership Agreement; (B) redeem, purchase or otherwise acquire any of its outstanding partnership interests, limited liability company interests, shares of capital stock, voting
securities or equity interests, or any rights, warrants, options, calls, commitments or any other agreements of any character to acquire any of its partnership interests, limited liability company interests, shares of capital stock, voting
securities or equity interests, other than Tax withholding with respect to any equity or equity-based award that is outstanding on, or granted after, the date of this Agreement in accordance with the terms thereof, (C) declare, set aside for
payment or pay any distribution on any Common Units, Series A Units or other Partnership Interests, or otherwise make any payments to the ETP Unitholders in their capacity as such (other than distributions by a direct or indirect Subsidiary of
ETP to its parent), or (D) split, combine, subdivide or reclassify any Common Units, Series A Units or other Partnership Interests;
(ii) (A) incur, refinance or assume any indebtedness for borrowed money or guarantee any such indebtedness for borrowed
money (or enter into a keep well or similar agreement with respect to such indebtedness) or issue or sell any debt securities or options, warrants, calls or other rights to acquire any debt securities of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries or
the ETP Joint Ventures, other than (w) borrowings under ETPs Second Amended and Restated Credit Agreement, dated as of October 27, 2011, by and among ETP, Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as administrative agent, and the other
financial institutions party thereto, as it may be amended, modified or supplemented from time to time (including to increase the aggregate lender commitments thereunder) (the
ETP Existing Credit Facility
), or any
replacement thereof, and additional borrowings, in each case in this
Section
5.2(a)(ii)(A)(w)
not in excess of the amount set forth in
Section
5.2(a)(ii)(A)(w)
of the ETP Disclosure Schedule
(
provided
that except with respect to
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clause (w) above (other than with respect to any additional borrowings pursuant to clause (B) not under the ETP Existing Credit Facility), ETP and its Subsidiaries shall not be permitted to
incur or assume any indebtedness for borrowed money or sell any debt securities to the extent that the terms of such indebtedness or debt securities would be breached by, conflict with or require the consent of any third party in order to continue
in full force following, the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby), (x) borrowings by ETP in addition to borrowings permitted by the preceding clause (w) in amounts not in excess of $200,000,000 in the aggregate, (y) borrowings from
ETP or any of its Subsidiaries by ETP or any of its Subsidiaries and (z) repayments of borrowings from ETP or any of its Subsidiaries by ETP or any of its Subsidiaries and guarantees by ETP or any of its Subsidiaries of indebtedness of ETP or any of
its Subsidiaries, or (B) except as permitted pursuant to clause (A) above, prepay or repurchase any long-term indebtedness for borrowed money or debt securities of ETP or any of its Subsidiaries (other than (x) revolving indebtedness, (y)
borrowings from ETP or any of its Subsidiaries and (z) repayments or repurchases required pursuant to the terms of such indebtedness or debt securities);
(iii) sell, transfer, lease, farmout or otherwise dispose of (including pursuant to a sale leaseback transaction or an asset
securitization transaction) (A) any of its properties or assets that do not generate cash on a recurring basis with a fair market value in excess of $100,000,000 in the aggregate and (B) any of its properties or assets that generate cash on a
recurring basis (including securities of Subsidiaries), except in the case of clause (A), (w) pursuant to Contracts in force at the date of this Agreement and listed on
Section
5.2(a)(iii)(w)
of the ETP Disclosure
Schedule, correct and complete copies of which have been made available to SXL and other potential transactions listed on
Section
5.2(a)(iii)(w)
of the ETP Disclosure Schedule, (x) dispositions of obsolete or worthless
equipment which is replaced with equipment and materials of comparable or better value and utility, (y) transactions (including sales of natural gas, natural gas liquids and other produced hydrocarbons and minerals) in the ordinary course of
business consistent with past practice or (z) sales, transfers, leases, farmouts or other disposals to ETP or any of its Subsidiaries;
(iv) make any capital expenditure or capital expenditures (which shall include, any investments by contribution to capital,
property transfers, purchase of securities or otherwise) in excess of $400,000,000 in the aggregate, except for any such capital expenditures set forth in
Section
5.2(a)(iv)
of the ETP Disclosure Schedule or except as may
be reasonably required to conduct emergency operations, repairs or replacements on any well, pipeline, or other facility;
(v) directly or indirectly acquire (A) by merging or consolidating with, or by purchasing all of or a substantial equity
interest in, or by any other manner, any Person or division, business or equity interest of any Person or (B) except in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice, any assets that, in the aggregate, have a purchase price in excess
of $200,000,000;
(vi) make any loans or advances to any Person (other than (A) to its employees in the ordinary course of
business consistent with past practice, (B) loans and advances to ETP or any of its Subsidiaries and (C) trade credit granted in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice);
(vii) (A) except (x) for Contracts relating to indebtedness permitted under
Section
5.2(a)(ii)
,
(y) for Commodity Derivative Instruments entered into in compliance with the ETP Risk Management Policy and (z) as in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice (
provided
,
however
, that this clause (z) shall not
apply in respect of any Non-Competition Agreement), (1) enter into any contract or agreement that would be an ETP Material Contract (other than those already contemplated as of the date of this Agreement or as are approved as part of any previously
announced project of an ETP Joint Venture) in which the annual revenues or payments are anticipated to be in excess of $400,000,000 or (2) terminate or amend in any material respect any ETP Material Contract, or (B) (w) waive any material rights
under any ETP Material Contract, (x) enter into or extend the term or scope of any ETP Material Contract that materially restricts ETP or any of its Subsidiaries from engaging in any line of business or in any geographic area, (y) enter into any ETP
Material Contract that would be breached by, or require the consent of any third party in order to continue in full force following, consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby, or (z) release any Person from, or modify or waive any
provision of, any standstill, confidentiality or similar agreement, in each case, related to a sale of ETP or any of its material Subsidiaries;
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(viii) except in the ordinary course of business or as required by applicable
Law, (A) change its fiscal year or any method of Tax accounting, (B) make, change or revoke any material Tax election, (C) settle or compromise any material liability for Taxes or (D) file any material amended Tax Return;
(ix) make any changes in financial accounting methods, principles or practices (or change an annual accounting period), except
insofar as may be required by a change in GAAP or applicable Law;
(x) amend the ETP Charter Documents;
(xi) adopt a plan or agreement of complete or partial liquidation, dissolution, restructuring, recapitalization, merger,
consolidation or other reorganization (other than transactions exclusively between wholly owned Subsidiaries of ETP);
(xii) except as provided under any agreement entered into prior to the date of this Agreement, pay, discharge, settle or
satisfy any suit, action, claims or proceeding, in excess of $20,000,000 individually or $40,000,000 in the aggregate;
(xiii) take any action which would in any material respect impede or delay the ability of the parties to satisfy any of the
conditions to the transactions contemplated hereby, in each case to a date after the Outside Date;
(xiv) engage in any
activity or conduct its business in a manner that would cause less than 90% of the gross income of ETP for any calendar quarter since its formation and prior to the Effective Time to be treated as qualifying income within the meaning of
Section 7704(d) of the Code; or
(xv) agree, in writing or otherwise, to take any of the foregoing actions.
(b) Except (i) as expressly permitted by this Agreement, (ii) as set forth in
Section
5.2(b)
of the SXL Disclosure
Schedule, (iii) as required by applicable Law, (iv) as provided for or contemplated by any SXL Material Contract in effect as of the date of this Agreement or (v) as agreed in writing by ETP (which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld, delayed
or conditioned), during the period from the date of this Agreement until the Effective Time SXL shall, and shall cause each of its Subsidiaries to: (w) conduct its business in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice, (x) use
commercially reasonable efforts to comply in all material respects with all applicable Laws and the requirements of all SXL Material Contracts, (y) use commercially reasonable efforts to maintain and preserve intact its business organization and the
goodwill of those having business relationships with it and retain the services of its present officers and key employees, and (z) use its commercially reasonable efforts to keep in full force and effect all material SXL Permits and all material
insurance policies maintained by SXL, its Subsidiaries, other than changes to such policies made in the ordinary course of business. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, except (A) as expressly permitted by this Agreement, (B) as set
forth in the corresponding provision of
Section
5.2(b)
of the SXL Disclosure Schedule, (C) as required by applicable Law, (D) as required by any SXL Material Contract in effect as of the date of this Agreement or (E) as
agreed in writing by ETP (in the case of clauses (iii), (iv), (v), (vi), and (x) below (but, with respect to (x), only to the extent applicable to the other clauses designated in this
Section
5.2(b)(v)
), such consent shall
not be unreasonably withheld, delayed or conditioned) during the period from the date of this Agreement to the Effective Time, SXL shall not and shall not permit any of its Subsidiaries to:
(i) (A) issue, sell, grant, or dispose of, accelerate the vesting of or modify, as applicable, any of its partnership
interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity interests, or any securities or rights convertible into, exchangeable or exercisable for, or evidencing the right to subscribe for any of its partnership interests, shares of capital
stock, voting securities or equity interests, or any rights, warrants, options, calls, commitments or any other agreements of any character to purchase or acquire any of its partnership interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity
interests or any securities or rights convertible into, exchangeable or exercisable for, or evidencing the right to subscribe for any of the foregoing, other than (w) in connection with the vesting or settlement of any equity or equity-based award
that is outstanding on, or granted after, the date of this Agreement in accordance with the terms thereof (it being understood that nothing in this Agreement shall restrict the granting of any awards under the SXL Equity Plans); (x) issuances of up
to $200,000,000 in connection with a transaction involving the acquisition
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of assets or equity interests; and (y) issuances exceeding $200,000,000 in connection with a transaction involving the acquisition of assets or equity interests as to which the SXL GP Board has
received an opinion from a nationally recognized investment banking firm to the effect that such transaction is fair, from a financial point of view, to the SXL Unitholders (any transaction referred to in clauses (x) or (y), a
SXL
Acquisition Transaction
); (B) redeem, purchase or otherwise acquire any of its outstanding partnership interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity interests, or any rights, warrants, options, calls, commitments or
any other agreements of any character to acquire any of its partnership interests, shares of capital stock, voting securities or equity interests, other than Tax withholding with respect to, any equity or equity-based award that is outstanding on,
or granted after, the date of this Agreement in accordance with the terms thereof; (C) declare, set aside for payment or pay any distribution on any SXL Units, or otherwise make any payments to the SXL Unitholders in their capacity as such (other
than (w) distributions by a direct or indirect Subsidiary of SXL to its parent, (x) SXLs regular quarterly distributions and associated distributions to the SXL GP or (y) in connection with any SXL Acquisition Transaction); or (D) split,
combine, subdivide or reclassify any of its partnership units or other interests;
(ii) (A) incur, refinance or assume
any indebtedness for borrowed money or guarantee any such indebtedness for borrowed money (or enter into a keep well or similar agreement with respect to such indebtedness) or issue or sell any debt securities or options, warrants, calls
or other rights to acquire any debt securities of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries or the SXL Joint Ventures, other than (w) borrowings under SXLs Amended and Restated Credit Agreement, dated as of March 20, 2015, by and among Sunoco Logistics
Partners Operations L.P., SXL, Citibank, N.A., as Administrative Agent, Swingline Lender and a LC Issuer; and the other LC Issuers and Lenders party thereto, as it may be amended, modified or supplemented from time to time (including to increase the
aggregate lender commitments thereunder) (the
SXL Existing Credit Facility
), or any replacement thereof, and additional borrowings, in each case in this
Section 5.2(b)(ii)(A)(w)
not in excess of the amount set forth
in
Section 5.2(b)(ii)(A)(w)
of the SXL Disclosure Schedule (
provided
that except with respect to clause (w) above (other than with respect to any additional borrowings pursuant to clause (B) not under the SXL Existing Credit
Facility), SXL and its Subsidiaries shall not be permitted to incur or assume any indebtedness for borrowed money or sell any debt securities to the extent that the terms of such indebtedness or debt securities would be breached by, conflict with or
require the consent of any third party in order to continue in full force following, the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby), (x) borrowings by SXL in addition to borrowings permitted by the preceding clause (w) in amounts not in
excess of $200,000,000 in the aggregate, (y) borrowings from SXL or any of its Subsidiaries by SXL or any of its Subsidiaries and (z) repayments of borrowings from SXL or any of its Subsidiaries by SXL or any of its Subsidiaries and guarantees by
SXL or any of its Subsidiaries of indebtedness of SXL or any of its Subsidiaries, or (B) except as permitted pursuant to clause (A) above, prepay or repurchase any long-term indebtedness for borrowed money or debt securities of SXL or any of
its Subsidiaries (other than (x) revolving indebtedness, (y) borrowings from SXL or any of its Subsidiaries and (z) repayments or repurchases required pursuant to the terms of such indebtedness or debt securities);
(iii) make any capital expenditure or capital expenditures (which shall include, any investments by contribution to capital,
property transfers, purchase of securities or otherwise) in excess of $150,000,000 in the aggregate, except for any such capital expenditures set forth in
Section 5.2(b)(iii)
of the SXL Disclosure Schedule or except as may be reasonably
required to conduct emergency operations, repairs or replacements on any well, pipeline, or other facility;
(iv)
(A) except (x) for Contracts relating to indebtedness permitted under
Section 5.2(b)(ii)
, (y) for Commodity Derivative Instruments entered into in compliance with the SXL Risk Management Policy and (z) as in the ordinary course of
business consistent with past practice (
provided
,
however
, that this clause (z) shall not apply in respect of any Non-Competition Agreement), (1) enter into any contract or agreement that would be an SXL Material Contract if
in existence as of the date of this Agreement or (2) terminate or amend in any material respect any SXL Material Contract, or (B) (w) waive any material rights under any SXL Material Contract, (x) enter into or extend the term or scope of any SXL
Material Contract that materially restricts SXL or any of its Subsidiaries from engaging in any line of business or in any
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geographic area, (y) enter into any SXL Material Contract that would be breached by, or require the consent of any third party in order to continue in full force following, consummation of the
transactions contemplated hereby, or (z) release any Person from, or modify or waive any provision of, any standstill, confidentiality or similar agreement, in each case, related to a sale of SXL or any of its material Subsidiaries;
(v) amend the SXL Charter Documents (other than amendments to the SXL Charter Documents (A) in connection with any SXL
Acquisition Transaction or (B) that are approved by the General Partner or a SXL Unit Majority);
(vi) adopt a plan or
agreement of complete or partial liquidation, dissolution, restructuring, recapitalization or other reorganization (other than transactions exclusively between wholly owned Subsidiaries of SXL);
(vii) except in the ordinary course of business or as required by applicable Law, (A) change its fiscal year or any method
of Tax accounting, (B) make, change or revoke any material Tax election, (C) settle or compromise any material liability for Taxes or (D) file any material amended Tax Return;
(viii) make, or permit any of its Subsidiaries to make, any acquisition of any other person or business that would reasonably
be expected to prevent, materially impede or materially delay the consummation of the Merger;
(ix) engage in any activity
or conduct its business in a manner that would cause less than 90% of the gross income of SXL for any calendar quarter since its formation and prior to the Effective Time to be treated as qualifying income within the meaning of Section
7704(d) of the Code; or
(x) agree, in writing or otherwise, to take any of the foregoing actions.
Section 5.3
No Solicitation by ETP
.
(a) ETP shall, and shall cause its Subsidiaries and shall use its reasonable best efforts to cause ETPs and its Subsidiaries
respective directors, officers, employees, investment bankers, financial advisors, attorneys, accountants, agents and other representatives (collectively,
Representatives
) to, immediately cease and cause to be terminated
any discussions or negotiations with any Person conducted heretofore with respect to an ETP Alternative Proposal, request the return or destruction of all confidential information previously provided to such parties by or on behalf of ETP or its
Subsidiaries and immediately prohibit any access by any Person (other than SXL and its Representatives) to any physical or electronic data room relating to a possible ETP Alternative Proposal. Except as permitted by this
Section
5.3
, (x) without the prior written consent of SXL, ETP shall not, and shall cause its Subsidiaries not to, and use its reasonable best efforts to cause its Representatives not to, directly or indirectly (i) solicit,
initiate, knowingly facilitate, knowingly encourage (including by way of furnishing confidential information) or knowingly induce or take any other action intended to lead to any inquiries or any proposals that constitute or could reasonably be
expected to lead to an ETP Alternative Proposal, (ii) grant any waiver or release of any standstill or similar agreement with respect to any units of ETP or of any of its Subsidiaries, (iii) enter into any confidentiality agreement, merger
agreement, letter of intent, agreement in principle, unit purchase agreement, asset purchase agreement or unit exchange agreement, option agreement or other similar agreement relating to an ETP Alternative Proposal (an
ETP Acquisition
Agreement
), or (iv) withdraw, modify or qualify, or propose publicly to withdraw, modify or qualify, in a manner adverse to SXL, the ETP Board Recommendation or publicly recommend the approval or adoption of, or publicly approve or
adopt, or propose to publicly recommend, approve or adopt, any ETP Alternative Proposal, or fail to recommend against acceptance of any tender offer or exchange offer for ETP Units within ten (10) business days after commencement of such offer, or
resolving or agreeing to take any of the foregoing actions, and (y) subject to
Section
5.3(b)
, within five business days of receipt of a written request of SXL following the receipt by ETP of any ETP Alternative Proposal,
ETP shall publicly reconfirm the ETP Board Recommendation;
provided
,
that, in the event that SXL requests such public reconfirmation of the ETP Board Recommendation, then ETP may not unreasonably withhold, delay (beyond the five
business day period) or condition the public reconfirmation of the
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ETP Board Recommendation and
provided
,
further
, that SXL shall not be permitted to make such request on more than one occasion in respect of each ETP Alternative Proposal and each
material modification to an ETP Alternative Proposal, if any (the taking of any action described in clause (x)(iii) or the failure to take the action described in clause (y) being referred to as an
ETP Adverse Recommendation
Change
). Without limiting the foregoing, it is understood that any violation of the foregoing restrictions by ETPs Subsidiaries or Representatives shall be deemed to be a breach of this
Section
5.3
by
ETP unless such violation is committed without the Knowledge of ETP and ETP uses its reasonable best efforts to promptly cure such violation once ETP is made aware of such violation.
(b) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in
Section
5.3(a)
, if at any time following the date of this
Agreement and prior to obtaining the ETP Unitholder Approval, (i) ETP has received a written ETP Alternative Proposal that the ETP Managing GP Board (upon the recommendation of the ETP Conflicts Committee) believes is bona fide, (ii) the ETP
Managing GP Board (upon the recommendation of the ETP Conflicts Committee), after consultation with its financial advisors and outside legal counsel, determines in good faith that (A) such ETP Alternative Proposal constitutes or could reasonably be
expected to lead to or result in an ETP Superior Proposal and (B) failure to take such action would be inconsistent with its duties under the ETP Partnership Agreement or applicable Law and (iii) such ETP Alternative Proposal did not result from a
material breach of this
Section
5.3
, then ETP may, subject to clauses (x) and (y) below, (A) furnish information, including confidential information, with respect to ETP and its Subsidiaries to the Person making such ETP
Alternative Proposal and (B) participate in discussions or negotiations regarding such ETP Alternative Proposal;
provided
that (x) ETP will not, and will use reasonable best efforts to cause its Representatives not to, disclose any
non-public information to such Person unless ETP has, or first enters into, a confidentiality agreement with such Person with confidentiality provisions that are not less restrictive to such Person than the provisions of the SXL Confidentiality
Agreement are to SXL and (y) ETP will provide to SXL non-public information about ETP or its Subsidiaries that was not previously provided or made available to SXL prior to or substantially concurrently with providing or making available such
non-public information to such other Person.
(c) In addition to the other obligations of ETP set forth in this
Section
5.3
, ETP shall promptly advise SXL, orally and in writing, and in no event later than 24 hours after receipt, if any proposal, offer, inquiry or other contact is received by, any information is requested from, or
any discussions or negotiations are sought to be initiated or continued with, ETP in respect of any ETP Alternative Proposal, and shall, in any such notice to SXL, indicate the identity of the Person making such proposal, offer, inquiry or other
contact and the terms and conditions of any proposals or offers or the nature of any inquiries or contacts (and shall include with such notice copies of any written materials received from or on behalf of such Person relating to such proposal,
offer, inquiry or request), and thereafter shall promptly keep SXL reasonably informed of all material developments affecting the status and terms of any such proposals, offers, inquiries or requests (and ETP shall promptly provide SXL with copies
of any additional written materials received by ETP or that ETP has delivered to any third party making an ETP Alternative Proposal that relate to such proposals, offers, inquiries or requests) and of the status of any such discussions or
negotiations.
(d) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, at any time prior to obtaining the ETP Unitholder Approval, the
ETP Managing GP Board and the ETP Conflicts Committee may effect an ETP Adverse Recommendation Change in response to an ETP Alternative Proposal or an ETP Changed Circumstance if the ETP Managing GP Board (upon the recommendation of the ETP
Conflicts Committee), after consultation with its outside legal counsel and financial advisors, determines in good faith that the failure to take such action would be inconsistent with its duties under the ETP Partnership Agreement or applicable Law
and:
(i) if the ETP Managing GP Board (upon the recommendation of the ETP Conflicts Committee) intends to effect such ETP
Adverse Recommendation Change in response to an ETP Alternative Proposal:
A. such ETP Alternative Proposal is bona fide,
in writing and has not been withdrawn or abandoned;
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B. the ETP Managing GP Board (upon the recommendation of the ETP Conflicts
Committee) has determined, after consultation with its outside legal counsel and financial advisors, that such ETP Alternative Proposal constitutes an ETP Superior Proposal after giving effect to all of the adjustments offered by SXL pursuant to
clause (E) below;
C. ETP has provided prior written notice to SXL in accordance with
Section
8.9
(the
ETP Superior Proposal Notice
) of the ETP Managing GP Boards intention to effect an ETP Adverse Recommendation Change, and such ETP Superior Proposal Notice has specified the identity of the Person making such ETP
Alternative Proposal, the material terms and conditions of such ETP Alternative Proposal, and complete copies of any written proposal or offers (including proposed agreements) received by ETP in connection with such ETP Alternative Proposal;
D. during the period that commences on the date of delivery of the ETP Superior Proposal Notice as determined in accordance
with
Section
8.9
and ends at 11:59 p.m. Central time on the date that is the fifth calendar day following the date of such delivery (the
ETP Superior Proposal Notice Period
), ETP shall (1)
negotiate with SXL in good faith to make such adjustments to the terms and conditions of this Agreement as would permit the ETP Managing GP Board not to effect an ETP Adverse Recommendation Change; and (2) keep SXL reasonably informed with respect
to the status and changes in the material terms and conditions of such ETP Alternative Proposal or other change in circumstances related thereto;
provided
,
however
, that any material revisions to such ETP Alternative Proposal (it being
agreed that any change in the purchase price in such ETP Alternative Proposal shall be deemed a material revision) shall require delivery of a subsequent ETP Superior Proposal Notice and a subsequent ETP Superior Proposal Notice Period in respect of
such revised ETP Alternative Proposal, except that such subsequent ETP Superior Proposal Notice Period shall expire upon the later of (x) the end of the initial ETP Superior Proposal Notice Period and (y) 11:59 p.m. Central time on the date that is
the third calendar day following the date of the delivery of such subsequent ETP Superior Proposal Notice; and
E. the ETP
Managing GP Board shall have considered all revisions to the terms of this Agreement irrevocably offered in writing by SXL and, at the end of the ETP Superior Proposal Notice Period, shall have determined in good faith that (i) such ETP Alternative
Proposal continues to constitute an ETP Superior Proposal even if such revisions were to be given effect and (ii) failure to effect an ETP Adverse Recommendation Change would be inconsistent with its duties under the ETP Partnership Agreement or
applicable Law even if such revisions were to be given effect; or
(ii) if the ETP Managing GP Board intends to effect such
ETP Adverse Recommendation Change in response to an ETP Changed Circumstance:
A. ETP shall provide prior written notice to
SXL in accordance with
Section
8.9
(the
ETP Recommendation Change Notice
) of the ETP Managing GP Boards intention to effect an ETP Adverse Recommendation Change, and such ETP Recommendation
Change Notice shall specify the details of such ETP Changed Circumstance and the reasons for the ETP Adverse Recommendation Change;
B. during the period that commences on the date of delivery of the ETP Recommendation Change Notice as determined in accordance
with
Section
8.9
and ends at 11:59 p.m. Central time on the date that is the fifth calendar day following the date of such delivery (the
ETP Recommendation Change Notice Period
), ETP shall (i)
negotiate with SXL in good faith to make such adjustments to the terms and conditions of this Agreement as would permit the ETP Managing GP Board, not to effect an ETP Adverse Recommendation Change; and (ii) keep SXL reasonably informed of any
change in circumstances related thereto; and
C. the ETP Managing GP Board shall have considered all revisions to the terms
of this Agreement irrevocably offered in writing by SXL and, at the end of the ETP Adverse Recommendation Change Notice Period, shall have determined (upon the recommendation of the ETP Conflicts Committee) in
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good faith that the failure to effect an ETP Adverse Recommendation Change would be inconsistent with its duties under the ETP Partnership Agreement or applicable Law even if such revisions were
to be given effect.
(e) Nothing contained in this Agreement shall prevent ETP or the ETP Managing GP Board from issuing a stop,
look and listen communication pursuant to Rule 14d-9(f) under the Exchange Act or complying with Rule 14d-9 and Rule 14e-2 under the Exchange Act with respect to an ETP Alternative Proposal if the ETP Managing GP Board
determines in good faith (after consultation with outside legal counsel) that its failure to do so would be reasonably likely to constitute a violation of applicable Law;
provided
that any ETP Adverse Recommendation Change may only be made in
accordance with
Section
5.3(d)
. For the avoidance of doubt, a public statement that describes ETPs receipt of an ETP Alternative Proposal and the operation of this Agreement with respect thereto shall not be deemed an
ETP Adverse Recommendation Change.
Section 5.4
Reasonable Best Efforts
.
(a) Subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement (including
Section
5.4(d)
), each of the SXL Entities, on
the one hand, and the ETP Entities, on the other hand, shall cooperate with the other and use (and shall cause their respective Subsidiaries to use) its reasonable best efforts to (i) take, or cause to be taken, all actions, and do, or cause to
be done, all things, necessary, proper or advisable to cause the conditions to the Closing to be satisfied as promptly as practicable (and in any event no later than the Outside Date) and to consummate and make effective, in the most expeditious
manner practicable, the transactions contemplated hereby, including preparing and filing promptly and fully all documentation to effect all necessary filings, notifications, notices, petitions, statements, registrations, submissions of information,
applications and other documents (including any required or recommended filings under applicable Antitrust Laws), (ii) obtain promptly (and in any event no later than the Outside Date) all approvals, consents, clearances, expirations or
terminations of waiting periods, registrations, permits, authorizations and other confirmations from any Governmental Authority or third party necessary, proper or advisable to consummate the transactions contemplated hereby, (iii) defend any
lawsuits or other legal proceedings, whether judicial or administrative, challenging this Agreement or the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby or seek to have lifted or rescinded any injunction or restraining order or other order
adversely affecting the ability of the parties to consummate the transactions contemplated hereby and (iv) obtain all necessary consents, approvals or waivers from third parties. The parties agree to cooperate in good faith and use their
reasonable best efforts to pursue and facilitate possible alternative transaction structures to those contemplated by this Agreement to the extent necessary or desirable in connection with obtaining third party consents in connection with the
transactions contemplated by this Agreement, but no party shall have any obligation to undertake any alternative transaction structure that is materially adverse to any party or such partys unitholders or members, as the case may be.
(b) In furtherance and not in limitation of the foregoing, (i) each party hereto (including by their respective Subsidiaries) agrees to
make an appropriate filing (if required) of a Notification and Report Form pursuant to the HSR Act with respect to the transactions contemplated hereby as promptly as practicable and in any event within 15 business days after the date of this
Agreement or any later date on which the parties agree that there is an HSR filing requirement (unless a later date is mutually agreed to by the parties hereto) and to supply as promptly as practicable any additional information and documentary
material that may be requested by any Governmental Authority pursuant to the HSR Act or any other Antitrust Law and use its reasonable best efforts to take, or cause to be taken (including by their respective Subsidiaries), all other actions
consistent with this
Section
5.4
necessary to cause the expiration or termination of any applicable waiting periods under the HSR Act and to obtain approvals or consents under any other applicable Antitrust Laws as soon as
practicable (and in any event no later than the Outside Date); and (ii) ETP and SXL shall each use its reasonable best efforts to (A) take all action necessary to ensure that no state takeover statute or similar Law is or becomes
applicable to any of the transactions contemplated hereby and (B) if any state takeover statute or similar Law becomes applicable to any of the transactions contemplated hereby, take all action necessary to ensure that such transaction may be
consummated as promptly as practicable on the terms contemplated by this Agreement and otherwise minimize the effect of such Law on the transaction.
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(c) Each of the parties hereto shall use (and shall cause their respective Subsidiaries to use)
its reasonable best efforts to (i) cooperate in all respects with each other in connection with any filing or submission with a Governmental Authority in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby, including by providing the other
parties a reasonable opportunity to review and comment thereon, and in connection with any investigation or other inquiry by or before a Governmental Authority relating to the transactions contemplated hereby, including any proceeding initiated by a
private Person, (ii) promptly inform the other party of (and supply to the other party) any communication received by such party from, or given by such party to, the Federal Trade Commission, the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice,
or any other Governmental Authority and any material communication received or given in connection with any proceeding by a private Person, in each case regarding any of the transactions contemplated hereby, (iii) permit the other party to
review in advance and incorporate the other partys reasonable comments in any communication to be given by it to any Governmental Authority with respect to obtaining any clearances required under any Antitrust Law in connection with the
transactions contemplated hereby and (iv) consult with the other party in advance of any meeting or teleconference with any Governmental Authority or, in connection with any proceeding by a private Person, with any other Person, and, to the
extent not prohibited by the Governmental Authority or other Person, give the other party the opportunity to attend and participate in such meetings and teleconferences. Subject to
Section
5.6(b)
, the parties shall take
reasonable efforts to share information protected from disclosure under the attorney-client privilege, work product doctrine, joint defense privilege or any other privilege pursuant to this
Section
5.4
in a manner so as to
preserve the applicable privilege.
(d) SXL and ETP (including by causing their respective Subsidiaries) agree to use their reasonable
best efforts to (i) resolve any objections that a Governmental Authority or other Person may assert under any Antitrust Law with respect to the transactions contemplated hereby, and (ii) avoid or eliminate each and every impediment under
any Antitrust Law that may be asserted by any Governmental Authority with respect to the transactions contemplated hereby, in each case, so as to enable the Closing to occur as promptly as practicable and in any event no later than the Outside Date,
and including offering, accepting and agreeing to (A) dispose or hold separate any part of ETPs, SXLs or their respective Subsidiaries businesses, operations or assets (or a combination thereof) or (B) restrict the manner
in which SXL, ETP or any of their respective Subsidiaries may carry on business in any part of the world. Neither SXL nor ETP shall, without the other partys prior written consent, commit to any disposal, hold separate, or other restriction
related to its or its Subsidiaries businesses, operations or assets.
Section 5.5
Public Announcements
. The initial
press release with respect to the execution of this Agreement shall be a joint press release to be reasonably agreed upon by SXL and ETP. Thereafter, neither ETP nor SXL shall issue or cause the publication of any press release or other public
announcement (to the extent not previously issued or made in accordance with this Agreement) with respect to this Agreement or the transactions contemplated hereby without the prior consent of the other party (which consent shall not be unreasonably
withheld or delayed), except as may be required by Law or by any applicable listing agreement with the NYSE or other national securities exchange as determined in the good faith judgment of the party proposing to make such release (in which case
such party shall not issue or cause the publication of such press release or other public announcement without prior consultation with the other party);
provided, however
, that ETP shall not be required by this
Section
5.5
to consult with any other party with respect to a public announcement in connection with the receipt and existence of an ETP Alternative Proposal that the ETP Managing GP Board (upon the recommendation of the
ETP Conflicts Committee) believes is bona fide and matters related thereto or an ETP Adverse Recommendation Change but nothing in this proviso shall limit any obligation of ETP under
Section
5.3(d)
to negotiate with SXL in
good faith;
provided, further
, that each party and their respective controlled affiliates may make statements that are consistent with statements made in previous press releases, public disclosures or public statements made by SXL or ETP in
compliance with this
Section
5.5
.
Section 5.6
Access to Information; Confidentiality
.
(a) Upon reasonable notice and subject to applicable Laws relating to the exchange of information, each party shall, and shall cause each of
its Subsidiaries to afford to the other party and its Representatives reasonable access during normal business hours (and, with respect to books and records, the right to copy) to all of its and its
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Subsidiaries properties, commitments, books, Contracts, records and correspondence (in each case, whether in physical or electronic form), officers, employees, accountants, counsel,
financial advisors and other Representatives. Each party shall furnish promptly to the other party (i) a copy of each report, schedule and other document filed or submitted by it pursuant to the requirements of federal or state securities Laws
and a copy of any communication (including comment letters) received by such party from the SEC concerning compliance with securities Laws and (ii) all other information concerning its and its Subsidiaries business, properties
and personnel as the other party may reasonably request (including information necessary to prepare the Proxy Statement). Except for disclosure permitted by the terms of the Confidentiality Agreement, dated as of November 15, 2016, between SXL and
ETP (as it may be amended from time to time, the
SXL Confidentiality Agreement
), each party and its Representatives shall hold information received from the other party pursuant to this
Section
5.6
in confidence in accordance with the terms of the SXL Confidentiality Agreement.
(b) This
Section
5.6
shall not
require either party to permit any access, or to disclose any information, that in the reasonable, good faith judgment (after consultation with counsel, which may be in-house counsel) of such party would reasonably be expected to result in
(i) any violation of any contract or Law to which such party or its Subsidiaries is a party or is subject or cause any privilege (including attorney-client privilege) that such party or any of its Subsidiaries would be entitled to assert to be
undermined with respect to such information and such undermining of such privilege could in such partys good faith judgment (after consultation with counsel, which may be in-house counsel) adversely affect in any material respect such
partys position in any pending or, what such party believes in good faith (after consultation with counsel, which may be in-house counsel) could be, future litigation or (ii) if such party or any of its Subsidiaries, on the one hand, and
the other party or any of its Subsidiaries, on the other hand, are adverse parties in a litigation, such information being reasonably pertinent thereto;
provided
that, in the case of clause (i), the parties hereto shall cooperate in
seeking to find a way to allow disclosure of such information (including by entering into a joint-defense or similar agreement) to the extent doing so (A) would not (in the good faith belief of the party being requested to disclose the
information (after consultation with counsel, which may be in-house counsel)) reasonably be likely to result in the violation of any such contract or Law or reasonably be likely to cause such privilege to be undermined with respect to such
information or (B) could reasonably (in the good faith belief of the party being requested to disclose the information (after consultation with counsel, which may be in-house counsel)) be managed through the use of customary
clean-room arrangements pursuant to which appropriately designated Representatives of the other party shall be provided access to such information;
provided
,
further
, that the party being requested to disclose the
information shall (1) notify the other party that such disclosures are reasonably likely to violate its or its Subsidiaries obligations under any such contract or Law or are reasonably likely to cause such privilege to be undermined,
(2) communicate to the other party in reasonable detail the facts giving rise to such notification and the subject matter of such information (to the extent it is able to do so in accordance with the first proviso in this
Section
5.6(b)
) and (3) in the case where such disclosures are reasonably likely to violate its or its Subsidiaries obligations under any contract, use reasonable commercial efforts to seek consent from the
applicable third party to any such contract with respect to the disclosures prohibited thereby (to the extent not otherwise expressly prohibited by the terms of such contract).
(c) No investigation, or information received, pursuant to this
Section
5.6
will modify any of the representations
and warranties of the parties hereto.
Section 5.7
Notification of Certain Matters
. ETP shall give prompt notice to SXL, and
SXL shall give prompt notice to ETP, of (i) any notice or other communication received by such party from any Governmental Authority in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby or from any Person alleging that the consent of such
Person is or may be required in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby, if the subject matter of such communication or the failure of such party to obtain such consent is reasonably likely to be material to ETP or SXL, (ii) any
actions, suits, claims, investigations or proceedings commenced or, to such partys knowledge, threatened against, relating to or involving or otherwise affecting such party or any of its Subsidiaries and that relate to the transactions
contemplated hereby, (iii) the discovery of any fact or circumstance that, or the occurrence or non-occurrence of any event the occurrence or non-occurrence of which, would result in the failure to be satisfied of any of the conditions to the
Closing in
Article
VI
and (iv) any
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material failure of such party to comply with or satisfy any covenant or agreement to be complied with or satisfied by it hereby which would result in the failure to be satisfied of any of the
conditions to the Closing in
Article
VI
;
provided
that, in the case of clauses (iii) and (iv), the failure to comply with this
Section
5.7
shall not result in the failure to be
satisfied of any of the conditions to the Closing in
Article
VI
, or give rise to any right to terminate this Agreement under
Article
VII
, if the underlying fact, circumstance, event or failure
would not in and of itself give rise to such failure or right.
Section 5.8
Indemnification and Insurance
.
(a) For purposes of this
Section
5.8
, (i)
Indemnified Person
shall mean any person
who is now, or has been or becomes at any time prior to the Effective Time, an officer or director of ETP, ETP Managing GP, SXL, SXL GP or any of their respective Subsidiaries and also with respect to any such Person, in their capacity as a
director, officer, employee, member, trustee or fiduciary of another corporation, foundation, partnership, joint venture, trust, pension or other employee benefit plan or enterprise (whether or not such other entity or enterprise is affiliated with
ETP) serving at the request of or on behalf of ETP, ETP Managing GP, SXL, SXL GP or any of their respective Subsidiaries and together with such Persons heirs, executors or administrators and (ii)
Proceeding
shall
mean any actual or threatened claim, action, suit, proceeding or investigation, whether civil, criminal, administrative, investigative or otherwise and whether or not such claim, action, suit, proceeding or investigation results in a formal civil or
criminal litigation or regulatory action.
(b) From and after the Effective Time, to the fullest extent that SXL, SXL GP or any applicable
Subsidiary thereof would be permitted to indemnify an Indemnified Person, SXL and the GP Surviving Entity agree to (i) indemnify and hold harmless against any cost or expenses (including attorneys fees), judgments, fines, losses, claims,
damages or liabilities and amounts paid in settlement (including all interest, assessments and other charges paid or payable in connection with or in respect of any thereof) in connection with any Proceeding, and provide advancement promptly, and in
any event within 10 days after any written request, of expenses to, all Indemnified Persons to the fullest extent permitted under applicable Law and (ii) honor the provisions regarding elimination of liability of directors, indemnification of
officers, directors and employees and advancement of expenses contained in the governing instruments of SXL or SXL GP and any Subsidiary of SXL or SXL GP immediately prior to the Effective Time and ensure that the organizational documents of SXL and
the GP Surviving Entity shall, for a period of six years following the Effective Time, contain provisions no less favorable with respect to indemnification, advancement of expenses and exculpation of present and former directors, officers and agents
of SXL, SXL GP and their respective Subsidiaries than are presently set forth in the governing instruments of SXL or SXL GP (it being acknowledged and agreed that the provisions of the governing instruments of ETP GP currently in effect are no less
favorable with respect to indemnification, advancement of expenses and exculpation of such Persons than are presently in the governing instruments of SXL GP). Any right of indemnification of an Indemnified Person pursuant to this
Section
5.8(b)
shall not be amended, repealed or otherwise modified at any time in a manner that would adversely affect the rights of such Indemnified Person as provided herein.
(c) SXL and the GP Surviving Entity shall maintain in effect for six years from the Effective Time SXL and SXL GPs current
directors and officers liability insurance policies covering acts or omissions occurring at or prior to the Effective Time with respect to Indemnified Persons (provided that SXL or the GP Surviving Entity may substitute therefor policies
with reputable carriers of at least the same coverage containing terms and conditions that are no less favorable to the Indemnified Persons);
provided
,
however
, that in no event shall SXL or the GP Surviving Entity be required to
expend pursuant to this
Section 5.8(c)
more than an amount per year equal to 300% of current annual premiums paid by SXL or SXL GP for such insurance (the Maximum Amount). In the event that, but for the proviso to the immediately
preceding sentence, SXL or the GP Surviving Entity would be required to expend more than the Maximum Amount, SXL or the GP Surviving Entity shall obtain the maximum amount of such insurance as is available for the Maximum Amount. If SXL or SXL GP in
its sole discretion elects, then, in lieu of the obligations of SXL and the GP Surviving Entity under this
Section 5.8(c)
, SXL or SXL GP may, prior to the Effective Time, purchase a tail policy with respect to acts or
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omissions occurring or alleged to have occurred prior to the Effective Time that were committed or alleged to have been committed by such Indemnified Persons in their capacity as such; provided
that in no event shall the cost of such policy exceed six times the Maximum Amount.
(d) The rights of any Indemnified Person under this
Section 5.8
shall be in addition to any other rights such Indemnified Person may have under the organizational documents of ETP, ETP GP, ETP Managing GP, the Surviving Entity, SXL, SXL GP, the GP Surviving Entity, the DRULPA, the PLLCL or the
DLLCA. The provisions of this
Section 5.8
shall survive the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby for a period of six years and are expressly intended to benefit each of the Indemnified Persons and their respective heirs and
representatives; provided, however, that in the event that any claim or claims for indemnification or advancement set forth in this
Section 5.8
are asserted or made within such six-year period, all rights to indemnification and advancement in
respect of any such claim or claims shall continue until disposition of all such claims. If SXL, the GP Surviving Entity or any of their respective successors or assigns (i) consolidates with or merges into any other Person, or (ii) transfers or
conveys all or substantially all of their businesses or assets to any other Person, then, in each such case, to the extent necessary, a proper provision shall be made so that the successors and assigns of SXL or the GP Surviving Entity, as the case
may be, shall assume the obligations of SXL or the GP Surviving Entity set forth in this
Section 5.8
.
Section 5.9
Securityholder
Litigation
. ETP shall give SXL the opportunity to participate in the defense or settlement of any securityholder litigation against ETP and/or its officers and directors relating to the transactions contemplated hereby;
provided
that ETP shall in any event control such defense and/or settlement (subject to
Section
5.2(a
)(
xii)
) and shall not be required to provide information if doing so would be reasonably expected to
threaten the loss of any attorney-client privilege or other applicable legal privilege.
Section 5.10
Financing Matters
.
(a) ETP hereby consents to SXLs use of and reliance on any audited or unaudited financial statements relating to ETP and its
consolidated Subsidiaries, any ETP Joint Ventures or entities or businesses acquired by ETP reasonably requested by SXL to be used in any financing or other activities of SXL, including any filings that SXL desires to make with the SEC. In addition,
ETP will use commercially reasonable efforts, at SXLs sole cost and expense, to obtain the consents of any auditor to the inclusion of the financial statements referenced above in appropriate filings with the SEC. Prior to the Closing, ETP
will provide such assistance (and will cause its Subsidiaries and its and their respective personnel and advisors to provide such assistance), as SXL may reasonably request in order to assist SXL in connection with financing activities, including
any public offerings to be registered under the Securities Act or private offerings. Such assistance shall include, but not be limited to, the following: (i) providing such information, and making available such personnel as SXL may reasonably
request; (ii) participation in, and assistance with, any marketing activities related to such financing; (iii) participation by senior management of ETP in, and their assistance with, the preparation of rating agency presentations and
meetings with rating agencies; (iv) taking such actions as are reasonably requested by SXL or its financing sources to facilitate the satisfaction of all conditions precedent to obtaining such financing; and (v) taking such actions as may
be required to permit any cash and marketable securities of ETP or SXL to be made available to finance the transactions contemplated hereby at the Effective Time.
Section 5.11
Fees and Expenses
. All fees and expenses incurred in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby including
all legal, accounting, financial advisory, consulting and all other fees and expenses of third parties incurred by a party in connection with the negotiation and effectuation of the terms and conditions of this Agreement and the transactions
contemplated hereby, shall be the obligation of the respective party incurring such fees and expenses (other than the filing fee payable to the SEC in connection with the Registration Statement, which shall be borne one half by ETP and one half by
SXL).
Section 5.12
Section 16 Matters
. Prior to the Effective Time, SXL and ETP shall take all such steps as may be required
(to the extent permitted under applicable Law) to cause any dispositions of Common Units (including derivative securities with respect to Common Units) or acquisitions of SXL Units (including derivative securities
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with respect to SXL Units) resulting from the transactions contemplated by this Agreement by each individual who is subject to the reporting requirements of Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act
with respect to ETP, or will become subject to such reporting requirements with respect to SXL, to be exempt under Rule 16b-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act.
Section 5.13
Listing
. SXL shall cause the SXL Units to be issued pursuant to and in accordance with this Agreement to be approved
for listing (subject, if applicable, to notice of issuance) for trading on the NYSE prior to the Closing.
Section 5.14
Distributions
. After the date of this Agreement until the Effective Time, each of SXL and ETP shall coordinate with the other regarding the declaration of any distributions in respect of SXL Units, Common Units and Series A Units and the
record dates and payment dates relating thereto, it being the intention of the parties that holders of Common Units or Series A Units shall not receive, for any quarter, distributions both in respect of Common Units or Series A Units and
also distributions in respect of SXL Units or SXL Preferred Units, as the case may be, that they receive in exchange therefor in the Merger, but that they shall receive for any such quarter either: (a) only distributions in respect of Common
Units or Series A Units or (b) only distributions in respect of SXL Units or SXL Preferred Units, as the case may be, that they receive in exchange therefor in the Merger.
Section 5.15
Conflicts Committees
.
(a) Prior to the Effective Time, none of the ETP Entities shall, without the consent of the ETP Conflicts Committee, eliminate the ETP
Conflicts Committee, or revoke or diminish the authority of the ETP Conflicts Committee, or remove or cause the removal of any director of the ETP Managing GP Board that is a member of the ETP Conflicts Committee either as a member of the ETP
Managing GP Board or the ETP Conflicts Committee, without the affirmative vote of the ETP Conflicts Committee. For the avoidance of doubt, this
Section
5.15(a)
shall not apply to the filling of any vacancies caused by the
death, incapacity or resignation of any director in accordance with the provisions of the ETP Managing GP Agreement.
(b) Prior to the
Effective Time, none of the SXL Entities shall, without the consent of the SXL Conflicts Committee, eliminate the SXL Conflicts Committee, or revoke or diminish the authority of the SXL Conflicts Committee, or remove or cause the removal of any
director of the SXL GP Board that is a member of the SXL Conflicts Committee either as a member of the SXL GP Board or the SXL Conflicts Committee, without the affirmative vote of the SXL Conflicts Committee. For the avoidance of doubt, this
Section
5.15(b)
shall not apply to the filling of any vacancies caused by the death, incapacity or resignation of any director in accordance with the provisions of the SXL GP Agreement.
Section 5.16
Voting and Consent
.
(a) ETE covenants and agrees that, until the Effective Time or the earlier of a termination of this Agreement, at the ETP Unitholders Meeting
or any other meeting of ETP Limited Partners or any vote of ETP Limited Partner Interests in connection with a vote of the ETP Limited Partners, however called, ETE will vote, or cause to be voted, all ETP Limited Partner Interests then owned
beneficially or of record by it or any of its Subsidiaries, as of the record date for such meeting, in favor of the approval of this Agreement (as it may be amended or otherwise modified from time to time) and the Merger and the approval of any
actions required in furtherance thereof. ETE consents to, and has caused or shall cause, to the extent necessary and to the extent permitted by the organizational documents thereof, each of its Subsidiaries to consent to, this Agreement, the Amended
SXL Partnership Agreement and the transactions contemplated by this Agreement.
(b) ETP hereby (i) irrevocably consents, in its capacity
as the sole member of SXL GP immediately after the Pre-Closing Transactions, for all purposes, to this Agreement, the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement (including each amendment set forth therein) and the transactions contemplated by this Agreement,
including the
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Merger and the GP Merger, with such consent constituting all required consents under the limited liability company agreement of SXL GP and (ii) acknowledges that no amendment contained in the
Amended SXL Partnership Agreement is adverse to SXL GP, as the holder of the SXL GP Interest and SXL Incentive Distribution Rights.
ARTICLE VI
CONDITIONS PRECEDENT
Section 6.1
Conditions to Each Party
s Obligation to Effect the Merger and the GP Merger
. The respective
obligations of each party hereto to effect the Merger and the GP Merger shall be subject to the satisfaction (or waiver, if permissible under applicable Law) on or prior to the Closing Date of the following conditions:
(a)
ETP
Unitholder
Approval
. The ETP Unitholder Approval shall have been obtained in accordance with applicable Law and
the ETP Partnership Agreement;
(b)
Regulatory Approval
. Any waiting period applicable to the transactions contemplated hereby
under the HSR Act shall have been terminated or shall have expired, and any approval or consent under any other applicable Antitrust Law shall have been obtained;
(c)
No Injunctions or Restraints
. No Law, injunction, judgment or ruling enacted, promulgated, issued, entered, amended or enforced by
any Governmental Authority (collectively,
Restraints
) shall be in effect enjoining, restraining, preventing or prohibiting consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby or making the consummation of the transactions
contemplated hereby illegal;
(d)
Registration Statement
. The Registration Statement shall have become effective under the
Securities Act and no stop order suspending the effectiveness of the Registration Statement shall have been issued and no proceedings for that purpose shall have been initiated or threatened by the SEC; and
(e)
Unit Listing
. The SXL Units deliverable to the ETP Unitholders as contemplated by this Agreement shall have been approved for
listing on the NYSE, subject to official notice of issuance.
(f)
Tax Opinions
.
(i) SXL shall have received an opinion of Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. dated as of the Closing Date to the effect that (i) at
least 90% of the gross income of SXL for all of the calendar year that immediately precedes the calendar year that includes the Closing Date and each calendar quarter of the calendar year that includes the Closing Date for which the necessary
financial information is available is from sources treated as qualifying income within the meaning of Section 7704(d) of the Code and (ii) at least 90% of the combined gross income of each of SXL and ETP for all of the calendar year that
immediately precedes the calendar year that includes the Closing Date and each calendar quarter of the calendar year that includes the Closing Date for which the necessary financial information is available is from sources treated as
qualifying income within the meaning of Section 7704(d) of the Code. In rendering such opinion, Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. shall be entitled to receive and rely upon representations, warranties and covenants of officers of the SXL
Entities and the ETP Entities and any of their respective affiliates as to such matters as such counsel may reasonably request.
(ii) ETP shall have received an opinion of Latham & Watkins LLP dated as of the Closing Date to the effect that at least
90% of the gross income of ETP for all of the calendar year that immediately precedes the calendar year that includes the Closing Date and each calendar quarter of the calendar year that includes the Closing Date for which the necessary financial
information is available is from sources treated as qualifying income within the meaning of Section 7704(d) of the Code. In rendering such opinion, Latham & Watkins LLP shall be entitled to receive and rely upon representations,
warranties and covenants of officers of the ETP Entities and any of its respective affiliates as to such matters as such counsel may reasonably request.
A-53
Section 6.2
Conditions to Obligations of SXL, SXL Merger Sub LP and SXL Merger Sub to
Effect the Merger and the GP Merger
. The obligations of each of SXL, SXL Merger Sub LP and SXL Merger Sub to effect the Merger and the GP Merger are further subject to the satisfaction (or waiver, if permissible under applicable Law) on or prior
to the Closing Date of the following conditions:
(a)
Representations and Warranties
. (i) The representations and warranties of the
ETP Entities contained in
Section 3.3(a)
,
Section 3.3(c)
and
Section 3.6(a)
, shall be true and correct in all respects, in each case both when made and at and as of the Closing Date, as if made at and as of such time (except to
the extent expressly made as of an earlier date, in which case as of such date); (ii) the representations and warranties of the ETP Entities contained in
Section 3.2(a)
shall be true and correct in all respects, other than immaterial
misstatements or omissions, both when made and at and as of the Closing Date, as if made at and as of such time (except to the extent expressly made as of an earlier date, in which case as of such date); and (iii) all other representations and
warranties of ETP set forth herein shall be true and correct both when made and at and as of the Closing Date, as if made at and as of such time (except to the extent expressly made as of an earlier date, in which case as of such date), except, in
the case of this clause (iii), where the failure of such representations and warranties to be so true and correct (without giving effect to any limitation as to materiality or ETP Material Adverse Effect set forth in any
individual such representation or warranty) does not have, and would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, an ETP Material Adverse Effect. SXL shall have received a certificate signed on behalf of ETP and ETP GP by an
executive officer of ETP and an authorized signatory of ETP GP to such effect.
(b)
Performance of Obligations of the ETP Entities
.
Each of the ETP Entities shall have performed in all material respects all obligations required to be performed by it under this Agreement at or prior to the Closing Date, and SXL shall have received a certificate signed on behalf of ETP and ETP GP
by an executive officer of ETP and an authorized signatory of ETP GP to such effect.
(c)
Tax Opinions
. SXL shall have received an
opinion of Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. dated as of the Closing Date to the effect that for U.S. federal income tax purposes (i) SXL should not recognize any income or gain as a result of the Merger (other than any gain resulting from a disguised
sale attributable to contributions of cash or other property to SXL after the date of this Agreement and prior to the Effective Time), and (ii) no gain or loss should be recognized by holders of SXL Units as a result of the Merger (other than
any gain resulting from (A) any decrease in partnership liabilities pursuant to Section 752 of the Code and (B) a disguised sale attributable to contributions of cash or other property to SXL after the date of this Agreement and prior to the
Effective Time). In rendering such opinion, Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. shall be entitled to receive and rely upon representations, warranties and covenants of officers of the SXL Entities and the ETP Entities and any of their respective affiliates
as to such matters as such counsel may reasonably request.
(d)
Joinder to Amended SXL Partnership Agreement
. ETP GP, as the GP
Surviving Entity and the successor to SXL GP as general partner of SXL and holder of the SXL Incentive Distribution Rights, shall have executed and delivered to SXL a joinder agreement, by which ETP GP agrees to assume the rights and duties of the
general partner of SXL under the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement and to be bound by the provisions therein, with such joinder agreement to be effective as of the Effective Time.
Section 6.3
Conditions to Obligations of ETP and ETP GP to Effect the Merger and the GP Merger
. The obligations of each of ETP and
ETP GP to effect the Merger and the GP Merger are further subject to the satisfaction (or waiver, if permissible under applicable Law) on or prior to the Closing Date of the following conditions:
(a)
Representations and Warranties
. The representations and warranties of the SXL Entities contained in
Section 4.3(a)
and
Section 4.6(a)
shall be true and correct in all respects, in each case both when made and at and as of the Closing Date, as if made at and as of such time (except to the extent expressly made as of an earlier date, in which case as of such
date); (i) the representations and warranties of SXL contained in
Section 4.2(a)
shall be true and correct in all respects, other than immaterial misstatements or omissions, both when made and at and as of the Closing Date, as if made at and
as of such time (except to the extent expressly made as of an earlier
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date, in which case as of such date); and (ii) all other representations and warranties of SXL, SXL Merger Sub and SXL Merger Sub LP set forth herein shall be true and correct both when made and
at and as of the Closing Date, as if made at and as of such time (except to the extent expressly made as of an earlier date, in which case as of such date), except, in the case of this clause (ii), where the failure of such representations and
warranties to be so true and correct (without giving effect to any limitation as to materiality or SXL Material Adverse Effect set forth in any individual such representation or warranty) does not have, and would not
reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a SXL Material Adverse Effect. ETP shall have received a certificate signed on behalf of SXL, SXL GP, SXL Merger Sub LP and SXL Merger Sub by an executive officer of SXL and an
authorized signatory of SXL Merger Sub, SXL Merger Sub LP and SXL GP to such effect.
(b)
Performance of Obligations of the SXL
Entities
. The SXL Entities shall have performed in all material respects all obligations required to be performed by them under this Agreement at or prior to the Closing Date, and ETP shall have received a certificate signed on behalf of SXL,
SXL GP, SXL Merger Sub LP and SXL Merger Sub by an executive officer of SXL and an authorized signatory of SXL Merger Sub, SXL Merger Sub LP and SXL GP to such effect.
(c)
Tax Opinions
. ETP shall have received an opinion of Latham & Watkins LLP dated as of the Closing Date to the effect that for
U.S. federal income tax purposes (i) ETP should not recognize any income or gain as a result of the Merger and (ii) no gain or loss should be recognized by holders of Common Units as a result of the Merger (other than any gain resulting
from the distribution of cash or from any decrease in partnership liabilities pursuant to Section 752 of the Code). In rendering such opinion, Latham & Watkins LLP shall be entitled to receive and rely upon representations, warranties and
covenants of officers of the ETP Entities and the SXL Entities and any of their respective affiliates as to such matters as such counsel may reasonably request.
(d)
Amended SXL Partnership Agreement
. SXL GP shall have executed and delivered to ETP the Amended SXL Partnership Agreement, with such
Amended SXL Partnership Agreement to be effective as of the Effective Time.
Section 6.4
Frustration of Closing Conditions
.
None of ETP or any of the SXL Entities may rely on the failure of any condition set forth in
Section
6.1
,
Section
6.2
or
Section
6.3
, as the case may be, to be satisfied
if such failure was caused by such partys failure to use its reasonable best efforts to consummate the Merger and the other transactions contemplated hereby, or other breach of or noncompliance with this Agreement.
ARTICLE VII
TERMINATION
Section 7.1
Termination
. This Agreement may be terminated and the transactions contemplated hereby abandoned at any time prior to
the Effective Time:
(a) by the mutual written consent of ETP and SXL duly authorized by each of the ETP Managing GP Board and the SXL GP
Board, respectively;
(b) by either of ETP or SXL:
(i) if the Closing shall not have been consummated on or before May 20, 2017 (the
Outside Date
);
provided
,
that the right to terminate this Agreement under this
Section
7.1(b)(
i
)
shall not be available (A) to a party if the inability to satisfy such condition was due to the failure of such
party to perform any of its obligations under this Agreement or (B) to a party if the other party has filed (and is then pursuing) an action seeking specific performance as permitted by
Section
8.8
;
(ii) if any Restraint having the effect set forth in
Section
6.1(c)
shall be in effect and shall have
become final and nonappealable;
provided
,
however
, that the right to terminate this Agreement under this
Section
7.1(b
)(
ii)
shall not be available to a party if such Restraint was due to the
failure of such party to perform any of its obligations under this Agreement; or
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(iii) if the ETP Unitholders Meeting shall have concluded and the ETP Unitholder
Approval shall not have been obtained; or
(c) by SXL:
(i) if an ETP Adverse Recommendation Change shall have occurred;
(ii) prior to the receipt of the ETP Unitholder Approval, if ETP shall be in Willful Breach of its obligations pursuant to the
first three sentences of
Section
5.1(b)
or
Section
5.3
;
provided
that SXL shall not have the right to terminate this Agreement pursuant to this
Section
7.1(c
)(
ii)
if SXL is then in material breach of any of its representations, warranties, covenants or agreements contained in this Agreement; or
(iii) if ETP shall have breached or failed to perform any of its representations, warranties, covenants or agreements set forth
in this Agreement (or if any of the representations or warranties of ETP set forth in this Agreement shall fail to be true), which breach or failure (A) would (if it occurred or was continuing as of the Closing Date) give rise to the failure of
a condition set forth in
Section
6.2(a)
or
(b)
and (B) is incapable of being cured, or is not cured by ETP within 30 days following receipt of written notice from SXL of such breach or failure;
provided
that SXL shall not have the right to terminate this Agreement pursuant to this
Section
7.1(c)(iii)
if SXL is then in material breach of any of its representations, warranties, covenants or agreements contained in this
Agreement.
(d) by ETP:
(i) if SXL shall have breached or failed to perform any of its representations, warranties, covenants or agreements set forth
in this Agreement (or if any of the representations or warranties of SXL set forth in this Agreement shall fail to be true), which breach or failure (A) would (if it occurred or was continuing as of the Closing Date) give rise to the failure of
a condition set forth in
Section
6.3(a)
or
(b)
and (B) is incapable of being cured, or is not cured, by SXL within 30 days following receipt of written notice from ETP of such breach or failure;
provided
,
that ETP shall not have the right to terminate this Agreement pursuant to this
Section
7.1(d)(
i
)
if ETP is then in material breach of any of its other representations, warranties,
covenants or agreements contained in this Agreement.
(ii) prior to the receipt of the ETP Unitholder Approval, in order to
enter into (concurrently with such termination) any agreement, understanding or arrangement providing for an ETP Superior Proposal in accordance with
Section
5.3
;
provided
, that ETP shall concurrently with such
termination pay to SXL the ETP Termination Fee in accordance with
Section
7.3
.
Section 7.2
Effect of
Termination
. In the event of the termination of this Agreement as provided in
Section
7.1
, written notice thereof shall be given to the other party or parties, specifying the provision of this Agreement pursuant to
which such termination is made, and this Agreement shall forthwith become null and void (other than the provisions in
Section
5.11
,
Section
7.2
and
Section
7.3
and in the
last sentence of
Section
5.6(a)
, and the provisions in
Article
VIII
, all of which shall survive termination of this Agreement), and there shall be no liability on the part of any SXL Entity or ETP
Entity or their respective directors, officers and Affiliates, except (a) ETP may have liability as provided in
Section
7.3
, and (b) subject to
Sections
7.3(d)
and
(e)
, nothing
shall relieve any party hereto from any liability or damages for any failure to consummate the Merger and the other transactions contemplated hereby when required pursuant to this Agreement or any party from liability for fraud or a Willful Breach
of any covenant or other agreement contained in this Agreement.
Section 7.3
Fees and Expenses
.
(a) In the event that (A) an ETP Alternative Proposal shall have been publicly proposed or publicly disclosed prior to, and not withdrawn
at the time of, the date of the ETP Unitholders Meeting (or, if the ETP Unitholders Meeting shall not have occurred, prior to the termination of this Agreement pursuant to
Section
7.1(b)(i)
[
Outside Date
]),
(B) this Agreement is terminated by ETP or SXL pursuant to
Section
7.1(b)(i)
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[
Outside Date
] or
Section
7.1(b)(iii)
[
Failed ETP Unitholder Vote
], and (C) ETP enters into a definitive agreement with respect to, or consummates,
any ETP Alternative Proposal within 12 months after the date this Agreement is terminated (whether or not such ETP Alternative Proposal is the same ETP Alternative Proposal referred to in clause (A)), then ETP shall pay to SXL a termination fee
equal to $630,000,000, less any SXL Expenses previously paid by ETP pursuant to
Section
7.3(e)
(the
ETP Termination Fee
), upon the earlier of the public announcement that ETP has entered into such
definitive agreement or the consummation of any such transaction. For purposes of this
Section
7.3(a)
, the term
ETP Alternative Proposal
shall have the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
8.13
, except that the references to 15% or more shall be deemed to be references to 50% or more.
(b) In the event this Agreement is terminated by ETP or SXL pursuant to
Section
7.1(b)(iii)
[
Failed ETP
Unitholder
Vote
] in a case where an ETP Adverse Recommendation Change has occurred by ETP pursuant to
Section
7.1(d)(ii)
[
ETP Superior Proposal
], or by SXL pursuant to
Section
7.1(c)(
i
)
[
ETP Adverse Recommendation Change
] or
Section
7.1(c)(ii)
[
ETP Willful Breach
] (without limiting SXLs remedies described in
Section
8.8
), then ETP shall pay to SXL, within two business days after the date of termination, the ETP Termination Fee.
(c) Any payment of the ETP Termination Fee shall be made in cash by wire transfer of same day funds to an account designated in writing by
SXL.
(d) In the event that ETP shall fail to pay the ETP Termination Fee required pursuant to this
Section
7.3
when due, such fee shall accrue interest for the period commencing on the date such fee became past due, at a rate equal to the legal rate of interest provided for in Section 2301 of Title 6 of the
Delaware Code. In addition, if ETP shall fail to pay the ETP Termination Fee when due, ETP shall also pay all of SXLs reasonable costs and expenses (including attorneys fees) in connection with efforts to collect such fee. The ETP
Entities and the SXL Entities acknowledge that the provisions of this
Section
7.3
are an integral part of the transactions contemplated hereby and that, without these agreements, neither the ETP Entities nor the SXL
Entities would enter into this Agreement. The parties agree that in the event that ETP pays the ETP Termination Fee to SXL, no ETP Entity shall have any further liability to any SXL Entity of any kind in respect of this Agreement and the
transactions contemplated hereby, and that in no event shall ETP be required to pay the ETP Termination Fee on more than one occasion.
(e) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement, in the event of termination of this Agreement by (i) either party
pursuant to
Section
7.1(b)(iii)
[
Failed ETP
Unitholder
Vote
] (or a termination by ETP pursuant to a different provision of
Section
7.1
at a time when this Agreement was
terminable pursuant to
Section
7.1(b)(iii)
[
Failed ETP
Unitholder
Vote
]) or (ii) SXL pursuant to
Section
7.1(c)(ii)
[
ETP Willful Breach
], then ETP shall promptly,
but in no event later than three business days after receipt of an invoice (with supporting documentation) therefor from SXL, pay SXLs designee all of the reasonably documented out-of-pocket expenses (including all fees and expenses of
counsel, accountants, investment bankers, financing sources, hedging counterparties, experts and consultants) incurred by SXL and its Affiliates in connection with this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby up to a maximum amount of
$30.0 million (the
SXL Expenses
);
provided
,
however
, that in no event shall ETP have any obligation to make any such payment if, at the time of such termination, this Agreement was terminable by ETP pursuant
to
Section
7.1(d)(i)
[
SXL Uncured Breach
].
ARTICLE VIII
MISCELLANEOUS
Section 8.1
No Survival
. Except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, the representations, warranties and agreements of each
party hereto shall remain operative and in full force and effect regardless of any investigation made by or on behalf of any other party hereto, whether prior to or after the execution of this Agreement. The representations, warranties and
agreements in this Agreement shall terminate at the Effective
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Time or, except as otherwise provided in
Section
7.2
, upon the termination of this Agreement pursuant to
Section
7.1
, as the case may be,
except that the agreements set forth in
Article
II
and
Section
5.8
,
Section
5.11
and
Section
5.14
and any other agreement in this Agreement that
contemplates performance after the Effective Time shall survive the Effective Time and those set forth in
Section
5.11
,
Section
7.2
and
Section
7.3
, in the last sentence
of
Section
5.6(a)
and this
Article
VIII
shall survive termination of this Agreement.
Section 8.2
Amendment or Supplement
. At any time prior to the Effective Time, this Agreement may be amended or supplemented in any
and all respects, whether before or after receipt of the ETP Unitholder Approval, by written agreement of the parties, by action taken or authorized by the ETP Managing GP Board and the SXL GP Board;
provided
,
however
, that the ETP
Managing GP Board and SXL GP Board may not take or authorize any such action unless it has first referred such action to the ETP Conflicts Committee and SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, for its consideration, and permitted the ETP Conflicts
Committee and SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, not less than two business days to make a recommendation to the ETP Managing GP Board and SXL GP Board, as applicable, with respect thereto (for the avoidance of doubt, the ETP Managing GP Board
and SXL GP Board shall in no way be obligated to follow the recommendation of the ETP Conflicts Committee and SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, and the ETP Managing GP Board and SXL GP Board, as applicable, shall be permitted to take action
following the expiration of such two business day period;
provided
,
however
, that in the event the ETP Managing GP Board or SXL GP Board takes or authorizes any action under this
Section
8.2
that is counter to
any recommendation by the ETP Conflicts Committee or the SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, then the ETP Conflicts Committee or the SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, may rescind its approval of this Agreement, with such rescission
resulting in the rescission of Special Approval under Section 7.9 of the ETP Partnership Agreement or the SXL Partnership Agreement, as applicable,
provided
,
further
, that following approval of the Merger and the other
transactions contemplated hereunder by the ETP Unitholders, there shall be no amendment or change to the provisions of this Agreement which by Law would require further approval by the ETP Unitholders without such approval. Unless otherwise
expressly set forth in this Agreement, whenever a determination, decision, approval or consent of ETP or the ETP Managing GP Board or of SXL or the SXL GP Board is required pursuant to this Agreement, such determination, decision, approval or
consent must be authorized by the ETP Managing GP Board and SXL GP Board, as applicable;
provided
,
however
, that the ETP Managing GP Board and SXL GP Board, as applicable, may not take or authorize any such action unless it has first
referred such action to the ETP Conflicts Committee and SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, for its consideration, and permitted the ETP Conflicts Committee and SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, not less than two business days to make a
recommendation to the ETP Managing GP Board and SXL GP Board, as applicable, with respect thereto (for the avoidance of doubt, the ETP Managing GP Board and SXL GP Board, as applicable, shall in no way be obligated to follow the recommendation of
the ETP Conflicts Committee or SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, and the ETP Managing GP Board and SXL GP Board, as applicable, shall be permitted to take action following the expiration of such two business day period).
Section 8.3
Extension of Time, Waiver
. At any time prior to the Effective Time, any party may, subject to applicable Law,
(a) waive any inaccuracies in the representations and warranties of any other party hereto, (b) extend the time for the performance of any of the obligations or acts of any other party hereto or (c) waive compliance by the other party
with any of the agreements contained herein or, except as otherwise provided herein, waive any of such partys conditions;
provided
,
however
, that in the event the ETP Managing GP Board or the SXL GP Board takes or authorizes any
action under this
Section
8.3
or otherwise grants any consent under this Agreement without the concurrence of the ETP Conflicts Committee or the SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, then the ETP Conflicts Committee or
the SXL Conflicts Committee, as applicable, may rescind its approval of this Agreement, with such rescission resulting in the rescission of Special Approval under Section 7.9 of the ETP Partnership Agreement or the SXL Partnership
Agreement, as applicable. Notwithstanding the foregoing, no failure or delay by any ETP Entity or any SXL Entity in exercising any right hereunder shall operate as a waiver thereof nor shall any single or partial exercise thereof preclude any other
or further exercise thereof or the exercise of any other right hereunder. Any agreement on the part of a party hereto to any such extension or waiver shall be valid only if set forth in an instrument in writing signed on behalf of such party.
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Section 8.4
Assignment
. Neither this Agreement nor any of the rights, interests or
obligations hereunder shall be assigned, in whole or in part, by operation of Law or otherwise, by any of the parties without the prior written consent of the other parties except that (a) SXL may assign, in its sole discretion, any of or all
its rights, interests and obligations under this Agreement to any wholly owned Subsidiary of SXL, but no such assignment shall relieve SXL of any of its obligations hereunder, (b) SXL Merger Sub may assign, in its sole discretion, any of or all
its rights, interests and obligations under this Agreement to any wholly owned Subsidiary of SXL, but no such assignment shall relieve SXL or SXL Merger Sub of any of its obligations hereunder, (c) ETP may assign, in its sole discretion, any or all
its rights and interests under this Agreement to any wholly owned Subsidiary of ETP, but not such assignment shall relieve ETP of any of its obligations hereunder, and (d) SXL Merger Sub LP may assign, in its sole discretion, any of or all its
rights, interests and obligations under this Agreement to any wholly owned Subsidiary of SXL, but no such assignment shall relieve SXL or SXL Merger Sub LP of any of its obligations hereunder. Subject to the preceding sentence, this Agreement shall
be binding upon, inure to the benefit of, and be enforceable by, the parties hereto and their respective successors and permitted assigns. Any purported assignment not permitted under this
Section
8.4
shall be null and
void.
Section 8.5
Counterparts
. This Agreement may be executed in counterparts (each of which shall be deemed to be an
original but all of which taken together shall constitute one and the same agreement) and shall become effective when one or more counterparts have been signed by each of the parties and delivered to the other parties.
Section 8.6
Entire Agreement; No Third-Party Beneficiaries
. This Agreement, the ETP Disclosure Schedule, the SXL Disclosure
Schedule and the SXL Confidentiality Agreement (a) constitute the entire agreement, and supersede all other prior agreements and understandings, both written and oral, among the parties with respect to the subject matter of this Agreement
and thereof and (b) shall not confer upon any Person other than the parties hereto any rights (including third-party beneficiary rights or otherwise) or remedies hereunder, except for, in the case of clause (b), (i) the provisions of
Section
5.8
and
Section
8.12
and (ii) the right of the ETP Unitholders to receive the Merger Consideration and the Series A Unit Consideration, as applicable, after the Closing (a claim
by the Unitholders with respect to which may not be made unless and until the Closing shall have occurred) and the right of holders of ETP Restricted Units or Converted ETP Restricted Unit Awards and other equity awards to receive the Merger
Consideration to which they are entitled pursuant to this Agreement after the Closing (a claim by such holders with respect to which may not be made unless and until the Closing shall have occurred).
Section 8.7
Governing Law; Jurisdiction; Waiver of Jury Trial
.
(a) This Agreement shall be governed by, and construed in accordance with, the laws of the State of Delaware, applicable to contracts executed
in and to be performed entirely within that State.
(b) Each of the parties hereto irrevocably agrees that any legal action or proceeding
with respect to this Agreement and the rights and obligations arising hereunder, or for recognition and enforcement of any judgment in respect of this Agreement and the rights and obligations arising hereunder brought by the other party hereto or
its successors or assigns, shall be brought and determined exclusively in the Delaware Court of Chancery and any state appellate court therefrom within the State of Delaware (or, if the Delaware Court of Chancery declines to accept jurisdiction over
a particular matter, any state or federal court within the State of Delaware). Each of the parties hereto hereby irrevocably submits with regard to any such action or proceeding for itself and in respect of its property, generally and
unconditionally, to the personal jurisdiction of the aforesaid courts and agrees that it will not bring any action relating to this Agreement or any of the transactions contemplated by this Agreement in any court other than the aforesaid courts.
Each of the parties hereto hereby irrevocably waives, and agrees not to assert as a defense, counterclaim or otherwise, in any action or proceeding with respect to this Agreement, (i) any claim that it is not personally subject to the
jurisdiction of the above named courts for any reason other than the failure to serve in accordance with this
Section
8.7
, (ii) any claim that it or its property is exempt or immune from the jurisdiction of any such
court or from any legal process commenced in such courts (whether through
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service of notice, attachment prior to judgment, attachment in aid of execution of judgment, execution of judgment or otherwise) and (iii) to the fullest extent permitted by the applicable
Law, any claim that (A) the suit, action or proceeding in such court is brought in an inconvenient forum, (B) the venue of such suit, action or proceeding is improper or (C) this Agreement, or the subject matter hereof, may not be
enforced in or by such courts.
(c) EACH PARTY HEREBY IRREVOCABLY WAIVES ALL RIGHT TO TRIAL BY JURY IN ANY ACTION, PROCEEDING OR
COUNTERCLAIM (WHETHER BASED ON CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE) ARISING OUT OF OR RELATING TO THIS AGREEMENT OR THE TRANSACTIONS CONTEMPLATED HEREBY OR THE ACTIONS OF ANY PARTY IN THE NEGOTIATION, ADMINISTRATION, PERFORMANCE AND ENFORCEMENT OF THIS
AGREEMENT AND THE TRANSACTIONS CONTEMPLATED BY THIS AGREEMENT.
Section 8.8
Specific Enforcement
. The parties agree that
irreparable damage would occur and that the parties would not have any adequate remedy at law in the event that any of the provisions of this Agreement were not performed in accordance with their specific terms or were otherwise breached and it is
accordingly agreed that the parties shall be entitled to an injunction or injunctions to prevent breaches of this Agreement and to enforce specifically the terms and provisions of this Agreement, in each case, in accordance with this
Section
8.8
in the Delaware Court of Chancery or any federal court sitting in the State of Delaware, this being in addition to any other remedy to which they are entitled at law or in equity. Each of the parties agrees that
it will not oppose the granting of an injunction, specific performance and other equitable relief as provided herein on the basis that (a) either party has an adequate remedy at law or (b) an award of specific performance is not an
appropriate remedy for any reason at law or equity. Each party further agrees that no party shall be required to obtain, furnish or post any bond or similar instrument in connection with or as a condition to obtaining any remedy referred to in this
Section
8.8
, and each party irrevocably waives any right it may have to require the obtaining, furnishing or posting of any such bond or similar instrument. The parties agree that in the event that SXL receives the ETP
Termination Fee, SXL may not seek any award of specific performance under this
Section
8.8
.
Section 8.9
Notices
. All notices, requests and other communications to any party hereunder shall be in writing and shall be deemed given if delivered personally, by facsimile (which is confirmed) or electronic transmission, or sent by overnight courier
(providing proof of delivery) to the parties at the following addresses:
If to the SXL Entities, to:
Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.
3807 West Chester Pike
Newtown
Square, PA 19073
Fax No.: (866) 244-5696
Attn: Kathleen Shea-Ballay, Senior Vice President, General Counsel and
Secretary
with a copy (which shall not constitute notice) to:
Vinson & Elkins L.L.P.
666
Fifth Avenue, 26th Floor
Suite 2500
New York, New York 10103
Fax
No.: (713) 615-5650
Attn: Michael J. Swidler
Lande A. Spottswood
Email: mswidler@velaw.com
lspottswood@velaw.com
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and to:
Richards, Layton & Finger, P.A.
One Rodney Square
920 North King
Street
Wilmington, DE 19801
Fax No.: (302) 651-7701
Attn: Srinivas M. Raju
Gregory W. Ladner
Kenneth E. Jackman
If to the ETP Entities, to:
Energy Transfer Partners, L.P.
3738 Oak Lawn Avenue
Dallas,
Texas 75219
Fax No.: (214) 981-0706
Attn: James M. Wright, Jr. General Counsel
with a copy (which shall not constitute notice) to:
Latham & Watkins LLP
811
Main Street, Suite 3700
Houston, Texas 77002
Fax No.: (713) 546-5401
Attn:
William N. Finnegan IV
Ryan J. Maierson
Debbie Yee
and to:
Potter Anderson &
Corroon LLP
1313 N Market St.
Wilmington, Delaware 19801
Fax
No.: 302.984.6078
Attn: Mark A. Morton
Thomas Mullen
If to ETE, to:
Energy Transfer
Equity, L.P.
3738 Oak Lawn Avenue
Dallas, Texas 75219
Fax No.:
(214) 981-0706
Attn: Tom Long, Group Chief Financial Officer
Thomas P. Mason, Executive Vice President and General Counsel
or such other address or facsimile number as such party may hereafter specify by like notice to the other parties hereto. All such notices, requests and other
communications shall be deemed received on the date of receipt by the recipient thereof if received prior to 5:00 P.M. in the place of receipt and such day is a business day in the place of receipt. Otherwise, any such notice, request or
communication shall be deemed not to have been received until the next succeeding business day in the place of receipt.
Section 8.10
Severability
. If any term or other provision of this Agreement is determined by a court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid, illegal or incapable of being enforced by any rule of law or public policy, all other terms, provisions and
conditions of this Agreement shall nevertheless remain in full force and effect. Upon such determination that any term or other provision is invalid, illegal or incapable of being enforced, the parties
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hereto shall negotiate in good faith to modify this Agreement so as to effect the original intent of the parties as closely as possible to the fullest extent permitted by applicable law in an
acceptable manner to the end that the transactions contemplated hereby are fulfilled to the extent possible.
Section 8.11
Interpretation
.
(a) When a reference is made in this Agreement to an Article, a Section, Exhibit or Schedule, such reference shall
be to an Article of, a Section of, or an Exhibit or Schedule to, this Agreement unless otherwise indicated. The table of contents and headings contained in this Agreement are for reference purposes only and shall not affect in any way the meaning or
interpretation of this Agreement. Whenever the words include, includes or including are used in this Agreement, they shall be deemed to be followed by the words without limitation. The words
hereof, herein and hereunder and words of similar import when used in this Agreement shall refer to this Agreement as a whole and not to any particular provision of this Agreement. All terms defined in this
Agreement shall have the defined meanings when used in any certificate or other document made or delivered pursuant hereto unless otherwise defined therein. The definitions contained in this Agreement are applicable to the singular as well as the
plural forms of such terms and to the masculine as well as to the feminine and neuter genders of such term. Any agreement, instrument or statute defined or referred to herein or in any agreement or instrument that is referred to herein means such
agreement, instrument or statute as from time to time amended, modified or supplemented, including (in the case of agreements or instruments) by waiver or consent and (in the case of statutes) by succession of comparable successor statutes and
references to all attachments thereto and instruments incorporated therein. References to a Person are also to its permitted successors and assigns.
(b) The parties hereto have participated jointly in the negotiation and drafting of this Agreement with the assistance of counsel and other
advisors and, in the event an ambiguity or question of intent or interpretation arises, this Agreement shall be construed as jointly drafted by the parties hereto and no presumption or burden of proof shall arise favoring or disfavoring any party by
virtue of the authorship of any provision of this Agreement or interim drafts of this Agreement.
Section 8.12
Non-Recourse
.
No past, present or future director, officer, employee, incorporator, member, partner, stockholder, agent, attorney, representative or affiliate of any party hereto or any of their respective Affiliates (unless such Affiliate is expressly a party to
this Agreement) shall have any liability (whether in contract or in tort) for any obligations or liabilities of such party arising under, in connection with or related to this Agreement or for any claim based on, in respect of, or by reason of, the
transactions contemplated hereby;
provided
,
however
, that nothing in this
Section
8.12
shall limit any liability of the parties to this Agreement for breaches of the terms and conditions of this Agreement.
Section 8.13
Definitions
. As used in this Agreement, the following terms have the meanings ascribed thereto below:
Affiliate
means, as to any Person, any other Person that, directly or indirectly, controls, or is controlled by, or
is under common control with, such Person. For this purpose, control (including, with its correlative meanings, controlled by and under common control with) means the possession, directly or indirectly, of the
power to direct or cause the direction of management or policies of a Person, whether through the ownership of securities or partnership or other ownership interests, by contract or otherwise;
provided
,
however
, that for purposes of
this Agreement, ETP and its Subsidiaries shall not be considered Affiliates of SXL or any of SXLs other Affiliates, nor shall any such persons be considered Affiliates of ETP or its Subsidiaries.
Antitrust Laws
means the Sherman Act, as amended, the Clayton Act, as amended, the HSR Act, the Federal Trade
Commission Act, as amended, and all other applicable Laws issued by a Governmental Authority that are designed or intended to prohibit, restrict or regulate actions having the purpose or effect of monopolization or restraint of trade or lessening of
competition.
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Benefit Plan
means (i) any employee benefit plan (within
the meaning of Section 3(3) of ERISA), whether or not subject to ERISA, and (ii) all other plans, programs, policies, agreements, understandings or other arrangements providing compensation or other benefits, including but not limited to, all
cash or equity-based, employment, retention, consulting, change of control, incentive, bonus, deferred compensation, health, medical, dental, disability, accident, life insurance, cafeteria, vacation, holiday, severance, retirement, pension,
savings, or termination plans, programs, policies, agreements, understandings or arrangements.
business day
means a day except a Saturday, a Sunday or other day on which the SEC or banks in the City of New York are authorized or required by Law to be closed.
Class K Units
means a limited partner interest in ETP having the rights and preferences set forth on
Section
8.13
of the ETP Disclosure Schedule.
Clayton Act
means the Clayton Antitrust
Act of 1914, as amended, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder.
Common Unit
means an ETP
Security representing a fractional part of the ETP Partnership Interests of all ETP Limited Partners and assignees, and having the rights and obligations specified with respect to Common Units in the ETP Partnership Agreement.
Common Unitholders
mean the holders of the Common Units.
DLLCA
mean the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act.
DRULPA
means the Delaware Revised Uniform Limited Partnership Act.
Environmental Law
means any Law relating to (i) the protection, preservation or restoration of the environment
(including air, surface water, groundwater, drinking water supply, surface land, subsurface land, plant and animal life or any other natural resource), or (ii) the exposure to, or the use, storage, recycling, treatment, generation,
transportation, processing, handling, labeling, production, release or disposal of Hazardous Substances, in each case as in effect at the date of this Agreement.
Environmental Permit
means all Permits required under Environmental Laws.
ERISA
means the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended.
ERISA Affiliates
means, with respect to any Person, any trade or business, whether or not incorporated, that
together with such Person, would be deemed at the relevant time to be a single employer for purpose of Section 414(b), (c), (m) or (o) of the Code. When used with respect to ETP, the term ERISA Affiliates shall not include the SUN
Entities or the SXL Entities.
ETE Credit Documents
means, collectively, that certain (i) Credit Agreement dated
as of December 2, 2013 among ETE, Credit Suisse AG, Cayman Islands Branch, as administrative agent, and the other lenders party thereto, as amended, (ii) Senior Secured Term Loan Agreement dated as of December 2, 2013 among ETE, Credit Suisse AG,
Cayman Islands Branch, as administrative agent, and the other lenders party thereto, as amended, (iii) Senior Secured Term Loan C Agreement dated as of March 5, 2015 among ETE, Credit Suisse AG, Cayman Islands Branch, as administrative agent, and
the other lenders party thereto, as amended, and (iv) Indenture dated as of September 20, 2010 between ETE and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee, as amended and supplemented, relating to ETEs 7.50% Senior Notes due 2020, 5.875% Senior
Notes due 2024 and 5.500% Senior Notes due 2027.
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ETP Alternative Proposal
means any inquiry, proposal or offer from, or
indication of interest in seeking a proposal or offer by, any Person or group (as defined in Section 13(d) of the Exchange Act), other than SXL, its Subsidiaries and their Affiliates, relating to any (i) direct or indirect
acquisition (whether in a single transaction or a series of related transactions), of assets of ETP and its Subsidiaries (including securities of Subsidiaries) equal to 15% or more of ETPs consolidated assets or to which 15% or more of
ETPs revenues or earnings on a consolidated basis are attributable, (ii) direct or indirect acquisition (whether in a single transaction or a series of related transactions) of beneficial ownership (within the meaning of Section 13
under the Exchange Act) of 15% or more of any class of equity securities of ETP, (iii) tender offer or exchange offer that if consummated would result in any Person or group (as defined in Section 13(d) of the Exchange Act)
beneficially owning 15% or more of any class of equity securities of ETP or (iv) merger, consolidation, unit exchange, share exchange, business combination, recapitalization, liquidation, dissolution or similar transaction involving ETP or any
of its Subsidiaries which is structured to permit any Person or group (as defined in Section 13(d) of the Exchange Act) to acquire beneficial ownership of at least 15% of ETPs consolidated assets, net income, net expenses,
revenue or equity interests; in each case, other than the transactions contemplated hereby.
ETP Changed
Circumstance
means a material event, circumstance, effect, condition, change or development, in each case that arises or occurs after the date of this Agreement and was not, prior to the date of this Agreement, known to or reasonably
foreseeable by the ETP Managing GP Board and did not result from or arise out of the announcement or pendency of, or any actions required to be taken by (or to be refrained from being taken by) ETP pursuant to this Agreement;
provided
,
however
, that in no event shall the following events, circumstances, or changes in circumstances constitute an ETP Changed Circumstance: (i) any change in the price, or change in trading volume, of the Common Units or the fact that ETP meets or
exceeds internal or published projections, budgets, forecasts or estimates of revenues, earnings or other financial results for any period (provided, however, that the exception to this clause (i) shall not apply to the underlying causes giving rise
to or contributing to such change or prevent any of such underlying causes from being taken into account in determining whether an ETP Changed Circumstance has occurred) or (ii) any matters generally affecting the industry in which ETP operates as a
whole that have not had or would not reasonably be expected to have a disproportionate effect on ETP and/or its Subsidiaries.
ETP Equity Plans
means any plans or arrangements of ETP providing for the grant of awards of Common Units or awards
valued, in whole or in part, by reference to Common Units, or otherwise relating thereto, including but not limited to, the Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. Amended and Restated 2004 Unit Plan, the Second Amended and Restated Energy Transfer Partners,
L.P. 2008 Long-Term Incentive Plan and the Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. Amended and Restated 2011 Long-Term Incentive Plan.
ETP GP Charter Documents
means, collectively, the certificate of limited partnership of ETP GP, and the Third
Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Energy Transfer Partners GP, L.P., as amended or supplemented from time to time.
ETP Incentive Distribution Right
means Incentive Distribution Right as defined in the ETP Partnership
Agreement.
ETP Joint Ventures
means each entity listed on
Section
8.13
of the ETP
Disclosure Schedule and any other joint venture entity of ETP, if any, described on the ETP SEC Documents filed with the SEC on or after December 31, 2014 and prior to the date of this Agreement;
provided
, that with respect to any reference
in this Agreement to ETP causing any ETP Joint Venture to take any action, such reference shall only require ETP to cause such ETP Joint Venture to take such action to the maximum extent permitted by the organizational documents and governance
arrangements of such ETP Joint Venture and, to the extent applicable, its fiduciary duties in relation to such ETP Joint Venture.
ETP Limited Partner
means Limited Partner as defined in the ETP Partnership Agreement.
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ETP Limited Partner Interest
means a Limited Partner
Interest as defined in the ETP Partnership Agreement.
ETP Managing GP Agreement
means the Fourth Amended
and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of Energy Transfer Partners, L.L.C. dated as of August 10, 2010, as amended or supplemented from time to time.
ETP Managing GP Charter Documents
means, collectively, the certificate of formation of ETP Managing GP, and the ETP
Managing GP Agreement, as amended or supplemented from time to time.
ETP Partnership Agreement
means the Second
Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., as amended or supplemented from time to time.
ETP Partnership Interest
means an interest in ETP, which shall include the General Partner Interest (as defined in
the ETP Partnership Agreement) and ETP Limited Partner Interests.
ETP Risk Management Policy
means the
Commodity Risk Management Policy of ETP as adopted by the ETP Managing GP Board and in effect on the date of this Agreement;
provided
, that the Risk Management Policy may only be amended or modified after the date of this Agreement by the ETP
Managing GP Board or a committee thereof with the prior written consent of SXL.
ETP Security
means any class or
series of equity interest in ETP (but excluding any options, rights, warrants and appreciation rights relating to an equity interest in ETP), including without limitation, Common Units, Class E Units, Class G Units, Class H Units, Class I Units, and
Class J Units, Class K Units and Series A Units, which are separate classes of ETP Partnership Interests.
ETP Special
Approval
means Special Approval as defined in the ETP Partnership Agreement.
ETP Superior
Proposal
means a bona fide unsolicited written offer, obtained after the date of this Agreement and not in breach of
Section
5.3
(other than an immaterial breach), to acquire, directly or indirectly, 80% or
more of the outstanding equity securities of ETP or 80% or more of the assets of ETP and its Subsidiaries on a consolidated basis, made by a third party (other than ETE or any of its Affiliates), which is on terms and conditions which the ETP
Managing GP Board determines in its good faith to be (i) reasonably capable of being consummated in accordance with its terms, taking into account legal, regulatory, financial, financing and timing aspects of the proposal, and (ii) if consummated,
more favorable to the ETP Unitholders (in their capacity as ETP Unitholders) from a financial point of view than the transactions contemplated hereby, taking into account at the time of determination any changes to the terms of this Agreement that
as of that time had been committed to by SXL in writing.
ETP Unaffiliated Unitholders
means Common Unitholders
excluding ETE, SXL and their Affiliates.
ETP Unitholder
means the Common Unitholders, the Class E Unitholders,
the Class G Unitholders, the Class H Unitholders, the Class I Unitholders, the Class J Unitholders, the Class K Unitholders and the Series A Unitholders.
Federal Trade Commission Act
means the Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914.
GAAP
means generally accepted accounting principles in the United States.
Governmental Authority
means any government, court, arbitrator, regulatory or administrative agency, commission or
authority or other governmental instrumentality, federal, state or local, domestic, tribal, foreign or multinational.
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Hazardous Substance
means any substance, material or waste that is
listed, defined, designated or classified as hazardous, toxic, radioactive, dangerous or a pollutant or contaminant or words of similar meaning under any Environmental Law or are otherwise regulated by any Governmental
Authority with jurisdiction over the environment or natural resources, including without limitation petroleum or any derivative or byproduct thereof, radon, radioactive material, asbestos or asbestos containing material, urea formaldehyde, foam
insulation or polychlorinated biphenyls.
HSR Act
means the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act of
1976, as amended, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder.
Knowledge
(i) when used with
respect to ETP, means the actual knowledge of those individuals listed on
Section
8.13
of the ETP Disclosure Schedule and (ii) when used with respect to SXL, means the actual knowledge of those individuals listed on
Section
8.13
of the SXL Disclosure Schedule.
Material Adverse Effect
means, when used
with respect to a Person, any change, effect, event or occurrence that, individually or in the aggregate, (x) has had or would reasonably be expected to have a material adverse effect on the business, financial condition or results of
operations of such Person and its Subsidiaries, taken as a whole, or (y) prevents or materially impedes, interferes with or hinders the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby, including the Merger, on or before the Outside Date;
provided
,
however
, that any adverse changes, effects, events or occurrences resulting from or due to any of the following shall be disregarded in determining whether there has been a Material Adverse Effect: (i) changes, effects,
events or occurrences generally affecting the United States or global economy, the financial, credit, debt, securities or other capital markets or political, legislative or regulatory conditions or changes in the industries in which such Person
operates; (ii) the announcement or pendency of this Agreement or the transactions contemplated hereby or the performance of this Agreement (including, for the avoidance of doubt, performance of the parties obligations under
Section
5.4
) (
provided
that the exception in this clause (ii) shall not be deemed to apply to references to ETP Material Adverse Effect or SXL Material Adverse Effect in
Section
3.3(b)
or
Section
4.4
, as applicable, and to the extent related thereto,
Section
6.2(a)
and
Section
6.3(a)
); (iii) any change in the
market price or trading volume of the partnership interests, shares of common stock or other equity securities of such Person (it being understood and agreed that the foregoing shall not preclude any other party to this Agreement from asserting that
any facts or occurrences giving rise to or contributing to such change that are not otherwise excluded from the definition of Material Adverse Effect should be deemed to constitute, or be taken into account in determining whether there has been, or
would reasonably be expected to be, a Material Adverse Effect); (iv) acts of war or terrorism (or the escalation of the foregoing) or natural disasters or other force majeure events; (v) changes in any Laws or regulations applicable to
such Person or applicable accounting regulations or principles or the interpretation thereof; (vi) any legal proceedings commenced by or involving any current or former member, partner or stockholder of such Person (on their own or on behalf of
such Person) arising out of or related to this Agreement or the transactions contemplated hereby; (vii) changes, effects, events or occurrences generally affecting the prices of oil, natural gas, natural gas liquids or coal or other commodities
and (viii) any failure of a Person to meet any internal or external projections, forecasts or estimates of revenues, earnings or other financial or operating metrics for any period (it being understood and agreed that the foregoing shall not
preclude any other party to this Agreement from asserting that any facts or occurrences giving rise to or contributing to such failure that are not otherwise excluded from the definition of Material Adverse Effect should be deemed to constitute, or
be taken into account in determining whether there has been, or would reasonably be expected to be, a Material Adverse Effect); and (ix) the taking of any action required by this Agreement;
provided
,
however
, that changes,
effects, events or occurrences referred to in clauses (i), (iv), (v) and (vii) above shall be considered for purposes of determining whether there has been or would reasonably be expected to be a Material Adverse Effect if and to the extent
such state of affairs, changes, effects, events or occurrences has had or would reasonably be expected to have a disproportionate adverse effect on such Person and its Subsidiaries, taken as a whole, as compared to other companies of similar size
operating in the industries in which such Person and its Subsidiaries operate.
Multiemployer Plan
means a
multiemployer plan as defined in Section 4001(a)(3) of ERISA.
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NYSE
means the New York Stock Exchange.
Permit
means franchises, tariffs, grants, authorizations, licenses, permits, easements, variances, exceptions,
consents, certificates, approvals and orders of any Governmental Authority.
Person
means an individual, a
corporation, a limited liability company, a partnership, an association, a trust or any other entity, including a Governmental Authority.
PLLCL
mean the Pennsylvania Limited Liability Company Law of 1994.
SEC
means the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Series
A Unit
means an ETP Security representing a fractional part of the ETP
Securities of all Limited Partners and assignees, and having the rights and obligations specified with respect to Series A Cumulative Convertible Preferred Units in the ETP Partnership Agreement.
Series
A Unitholders
means the holders of the Series A Units.
Sherman Act
means the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890, as amended, and the rules and regulations promulgated
thereunder.
Subsidiary
when used with respect to any party, means any corporation, limited liability company,
partnership, association, trust or other entity the accounts of which would be consolidated with those of such party in such partys consolidated financial statements if such financial statements were prepared in accordance with GAAP, as well
as any other corporation, limited liability company, partnership, association, trust or other entity of which securities or other ownership interests representing more than 50% of the equity or more than 50% of the ordinary voting power (or, in the
case of a partnership, more than 50% of the general partner interests or, in the case of a limited liability company, the managing member) are, as of such date, owned by such party or one or more Subsidiaries of such party or by such party and one
or more Subsidiaries of such party. When used with respect to ETP, the term Subsidiary shall include the ETP Joint Ventures, but shall not include the SUN Entities or the SXL Entities. When used with respect to SXL, the term
Subsidiary shall include the SXL Joint Ventures.
SUN Entities
means Sunoco GP LLC, a Delaware
limited liability company, and its Subsidiaries, including Sunoco LP, a Delaware limited partnership, and its Subsidiaries.
SXL GP Agreement
means the Fifth Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of SXL GP dated as of
October 31, 2013, as amended or supplemented from time to time.
SXL GP Charter Documents
means,
collectively, the certificate of organization of SXL GP, and the SXL GP Agreement, as amended or supplemented from time to time.
SXL Incentive Distribution Rights
means an Incentive Distribution Right as defined in the SXL
Partnership Agreement.
SXL Joint Ventures
means each entity listed on
Section
8.13
of
the SXL Disclosure Schedule;
provided
, that with respect to any reference in this Agreement to SXL causing any SXL Joint Venture to take any action, such reference shall only require SXL to cause such SXL Joint Venture to take such action to
the maximum extent permitted by the organizational documents and governance arrangements of such SXL Joint Venture and, to the extent applicable, its fiduciary duties in relation to such SXL Joint Venture.
SXL Limited Partner
means a Limited Partner as defined in the SXL Partnership Agreement.
SXL Limited Partner Interest
means a Limited Partner Interest as defined in the SXL Partnership
Agreement.
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SXL Merger Sub Charter Documents
means, collectively, the certificate
of formation of SXL Acquisition Sub, LLC, and the Limited Liability Company Agreement of SXL Acquisition Sub, LLC, as amended or supplemented from time to time.
SXL Partnership Agreement
means the Third Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Sunoco Logistics
Partners L.P., as amended or supplemented from time to time.
SXL Partnership Interest
means Partnership
Interest as defined in the SXL Partnership Agreement.
SXL Risk Management Policy
means the Risk
Management Policy of SXL as adopted by the SXL GP Board and in effect on the date of this Agreement;
provided
, that the Risk Management Policy may only be amended or modified after the date of this Agreement by the SXL GP Board or a committee
thereof with the prior written consent of ETP.
SXL Security
means any class or series of equity interest in
SXL, including without limitation, SXL Units and SXL Class B Units, but excluding the SXL GP Interest and SXL Incentive Distribution Rights.
SXL Special Approval
means Special Approval as defined in the SXL Partnership Agreement.
SXL Unaffiliated Unitholders
means SXL Unitholders excluding ETP, SXL GP and their Affiliates.
SXL Unit
means a Common Unit as defined in the SXL Partnership Agreement.
SXL Unit Majority
means Unit Majority as defined in the SXL Partnership Agreement.
SXL Unitholders
means the holders of SXL Units.
Tax
or
Taxes
means any and all U.S. federal, state or local or non-U.S. or provincial
taxes, charges, imposts, levies or other assessments, including all net income, gross receipts, capital, sales, use, ad valorem, value added, transfer, franchise, profits, inventory, capital stock, license, withholding, payroll, employment, social
security, unemployment, excise, severance, stamp, occupation, property and estimated taxes, customs duties, fees, assessments and similar charges, including any and all interest, penalties, fines, additions to tax or additional amounts imposed by
any Governmental Authority in connection or with respect thereto.
Tax Return
means any return, report or
similar filing (including any attached schedules, supplements and additional or supporting material) filed or required to be filed with respect to Taxes, including any information return, claim for refund, amended return or declaration of estimated
Taxes (and including any amendments with respect thereto).
Treasury Regulations
means the regulations
(including temporary regulations) promulgated by the United States Department of the Treasury pursuant to and in respect of provisions of the Code. All references in this Agreement to sections of the Treasury Regulations shall include any
corresponding provision or provisions of succeeding, similar or substitute, temporary or final Treasury Regulations.
Unit
Majority
means a Unit Majority as defined in the ETP Partnership Agreement.
Willful
Breach
means (i) with respect to any breaches or failures to perform any of the covenants or other agreements contained in this Agreement, a material breach that is a consequence of an act or intentional omission undertaken by the
breaching party (or in the case of
Section
5.3
with respect to ETP, the consequence of an act or omission of a Subsidiary of ETP, or of a Representative of ETP at the direction of ETP) with the Knowledge that the taking of,
or failure to take, such act would, or would be reasonably expected to, cause a material breach of such covenant or agreement and (ii) the failure by any party to consummate the transactions contemplated hereby after all of the conditions set
forth in
Article
VI
have been satisfied or waived (by the party entitled to waive any such applicable conditions).
[
signature pages follow
]
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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this Agreement to be duly executed and
delivered as of the date first above written.
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ETP:
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ENERGY TRANSFER PARTNERS, L.P.
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By:
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Energy Transfer Partners GP, L.P.,
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its general partner
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By:
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Energy Transfer Partners, L.L.C.,
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its general partner
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By:
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|
|
|
Name:
|
|
Thomas E. Long
|
Title:
|
|
Chief Financial Officer
|
|
|
|
ETP GP:
|
|
ENERGY TRANSFER PARTNERS GP, L.P.
|
|
|
By:
|
|
Energy Transfer Partners, L.L.C.,
|
|
|
its general partner
|
|
|
By:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Name:
|
|
Thomas E. Long
|
Title:
|
|
Chief Financial Officer
|
|
|
|
|
ETE:
|
|
ENERGY TRANSFER EQUITY, L.P.
|
|
|
By:
|
|
LE GP, LLC,
|
|
|
its general partner
|
|
|
By:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Name:
|
|
Thomas P. Mason
|
Title:
|
|
Executive Vice President and General Counsel
|
[S
IGNATURE
P
AGE
TO
A
GREEMENT
AND
P
LAN
OF
M
ERGER
]
A-69
|
|
|
SXL:
|
|
SUNOCO LOGISTICS PARTNERS L.P.,
|
|
|
By:
|
|
Sunoco Partners LLC,
|
|
|
its general partner
|
|
|
By:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Name:
|
|
Michael J. Hennigan
|
Title:
|
|
President and Chief Executive Officer
|
|
SXL GP:
|
|
Sunoco Partners LLC
|
|
|
By:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Name:
|
|
Michael J. Hennigan
|
Title:
|
|
President and Chief Executive Officer
|
|
SXL Merger Sub:
|
|
SXL ACQUISITION SUB LLC
|
|
|
By:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Name:
|
|
Michael J. Hennigan
|
Title:
|
|
President
|
|
SXL Merger Sub LP:
|
|
SXL ACQUISITION SUB LP
|
|
|
By:
|
|
SXL Acquisition Sub LLC, its general partner
|
|
|
By:
|
|
|
Name:
|
|
Michael J. Hennigan
|
Title:
|
|
President
|
[S
IGNATURE
P
AGE
TO
A
GREEMENT
AND
P
LAN
OF
M
ERGER
]
A-70
Page
1
of 4
ANNEX B
November 20, 2016
The Conflicts Committee of the
Board of Directors
Energy Transfer Partners, L.L.C.
3738 Oak Lawn Avenue
Dallas, TX 75219
Members of the Conflicts Committee of the Board of Directors:
We understand that Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. (the Partnership) intends to enter into a transaction (the Proposed
Transaction) with Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P. (SXL) pursuant to which, among other things (i) (a) a to be created entity expected to be named SXL Acquisition Sub, LLC (SXL Merger Sub), a wholly owned subsidiary of
SXL, will merge with and into the Partnership, with the Partnership continuing as the surviving entity in such merger (the Merger), (b) a to be created entity, expected to be named ETP Acquisition Sub, LLC (ETP Merger Sub), a
wholly owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer Partners, L.L.C. (ETP Managing GP), will merge with and into Sunoco Partners LLC (SXL GP) with SXL GP continuing as the surviving entity in such merger (the GP Merger);
(ii) upon the effectiveness of the Merger, (a) each common unit of the Partnership (the Common Units) then issued and outstanding will be converted into the right to receive 1.50 common units (the Exchange Ratio) of SXL (the
SXL Units); (b) each Series A Unit of the Partnership then issued and outstanding will be converted into the right to receive an SXL Preferred Unit (as defined in the Agreement (as defined below)); (c) each Class E Unit of the
Partnership then issued and outstanding will be converted into an SXL Class E Unit (as defined in the Agreement); (d) each Class G Unit of the Partnership then issued and outstanding will be converted into an SXL Class G Unit (as defined in the
Agreement); (e) each Class I Unit of the Partnership then issued and outstanding will be converted into an SXL Class I Unit (as defined in the Agreement); (f) each Class J Unit of the Partnership will be converted into an SXL Class J Unit (as
defined in the Agreement); (g) each Class K Unit of the Partnership will be converted into an SXL Class K Unit (as defined in the Agreement); and (h) ETP Incentive Distribution Rights (as defined in the Agreement) and Class H Units (as defined
in the Agreement) will be automatically cancelled and will cease to exist; (iii) upon effectiveness of the GP Merger, (a) each limited liability company interest in ETP Merger Sub then issued and outstanding will be converted into a limited
liability company interest in SXL GP and (b) each limited liability company interest in SXL GP will be cancelled and (iv) the ETP GP Interest (as defined in the Agreement) then issued and outstanding will be unchanged and remain
outstanding. The terms and conditions of the Proposed Transaction are set forth in more detail in the
Agreement and Plan of Merger, by and among the Partnership, ETP GP, SXL, SXL GP, and, solely for the purposes of certain sections therein,
Energy Transfer Equity, L.P. (ETE), dated as of November 20, 2016
(the Agreement). The summary of the Proposed Transaction set forth above is qualified in its entirety by the terms of the Agreement.
We have been requested by the Conflicts Committee (the Conflicts Committee) of the Board of Directors of ETP Managing GP, which is
the general partner of Energy Transfer Partners GP, L.P. (ETP GP), which is the general partner of the Partnership, to render our opinion with respect to the fairness, from a financial point of view, to the holders of the Common Units,
other than ETE, SXL and their Affiliates (as defined in the Agreement) (the ETP Unaffiliated Unitholders), of the Exchange Ratio to be offered to such ETP Unaffiliated Unitholders in the Proposed Transaction. We have not been
requested to opine as to, and our opinion does not in any manner address, the underlying business decision to proceed with or effect the Proposed Transaction or the likelihood of consummation of the Proposed Transaction. In addition, we express
no opinion on, and our opinion does not in any manner address, the fairness of the amount or the nature of (i) any compensation to any officers,
B-1
Page
2
of 4
directors or employees of any parties to the Proposed Transaction, or any class of such persons, relative to the Exchange Ratio in the Proposed Transaction or otherwise; (ii) the fairness of any
portion or aspect of the Proposed Transaction to the holders of any class of securities, creditors or other constituencies of the Partnership or any other person, or to any other person, other than the fairness, from a financial point of view, of
the Exchange Ratio to be offered to the ETP Unaffiliated Unitholders; or (iii) of any portion or aspect of the Proposed Transaction to any one class or group of the Partnerships or any other persons equity security holders vis a vis any
other class or group of the Partnerships or any other persons security holders (including, without limitation, the allocation of any consideration amongst or within such classes or groups of security holders). Our opinion does not
address the relative merits of the Proposed Transaction as compared to any other transaction or business strategy in which the Partnership might engage.
In arriving at our opinion, we reviewed and analyzed: (1) a draft of the Agreement, dated as of November 20 2016, and the specific terms
of the Proposed Transaction; (2) publicly available information concerning the Partnership and SXL that we believe to be relevant to our analysis, including the Partnerships Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
2015, and SXLs Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2015 and SXLs Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q for the fiscal quarters ended March 31, 2016, June 30, 2016 and September 30, 2016; (3) financial and operating
information with respect to the business, operations and prospects of the Partnership furnished to us by the Partnership, including financial projections of the Partnership, prepared by management of the Partnership (collectively, the
Partnership Projections); (4) the Partnerships expectations with respect to the potential impact of the Proposed Transaction on the Partnerships credit ratings; (5) financial and operating information with respect to the
business, operations and prospects of SXL furnished to us by the Partnership, including financial projections of SXL initially prepared by management of SXL and furnished by SXL to the management of the Partnership (the SXL Projections,
and together with the Partnership Projections, the Projections); (6) a schedule of the incentive distribution rights subsidies provided by, and projected to be provided by, ETE to each of the Partnership and SXL and the expectation that
following completion of the Proposed Transaction that ETE will maintain such incentive distribution rights subsidies at the projected levels (the IDR Projected Subsidies); (7) a comparison of the ratio of the trading price of SXL to the
trading price of the Partnership from 5/18/2016 to 11/18/2016; (8) a comparison of the historical financial results and present financial condition of the Partnership and SXL with each other and with those of other companies that we deemed relevant;
(9) a comparison of the financial terms of the Proposed Transaction with the financial terms of certain other transactions that we deemed relevant; and (10) certain estimates provided to us by the Partnership as to the amount and timing of cost
savings and revenue enhancements (collectively, the Expected Synergies) anticipated by the management of the Partnership to result from the Proposed Transaction. In addition, we have had discussions with the managements of the
Partnership and SXL concerning their respective businesses, operations, assets, liabilities, financial condition and prospects and have undertaken such other studies, analyses and investigations as we deemed appropriate.
In arriving at our opinion, we have assumed and relied upon the accuracy and completeness of the financial and other information used by us
without any independent verification of such information (and have not assumed responsibility or liability for any independent verification of such information) and have further relied upon the assurances of the management of the Partnership that
they are not aware of any facts or circumstances that would make such information inaccurate or misleading. With respect to the Partnership Projections, upon the advice of the Partnership, we have assumed that such Partnership Projections have
been reasonably prepared on a basis reflecting the best currently available estimates and judgments of the management of the Partnership as to the future financial performance of the Partnership and that the Partnership will perform substantially in
accordance with such Partnership Projections. With respect to the Expected Synergies, upon the advice of the Partnership, we have assumed that the amounts and timing of the Expected Synergies are reasonable and that the Expected Synergies will be
realized in accordance with such estimates. In addition, upon the advice of the
B-2
Page
3
of 4
Partnership, we have assumed that the IDR Projected Subsidies have been reasonably prepared on a basis reflecting the best currently available estimates and judgments of the management of the
Partnership, that, assuming the Proposed Transaction is consummated, the amounts and timing of the subsidies set forth in the IDR Projected Subsidies are reasonable, achievable and sustainable, and that such subsidies as set forth in the IDR
Projected Subsidies will continue to inure to the benefit of each of the Partnership and SXL in the amounts and at the times contemplated by the IDR Projected Subsidies. We have assumed, upon the advice of the Partnership, that if the Proposed
Transaction is not consummated, the Partnership would likely reduce the amount of its quarterly distributions to holders of Common Units by 15%-25% and that in light of the detrimental impact that such reduction would have on ETEs credit
profile, ETE would likely seek to negotiate a reduction in the incentive distribution rights subsidies that currently inure to the benefit of the Partnership. With respect to the financial projections of SXL, upon the advice of the Partnership,
we have assumed that such projections have been reasonably prepared on a basis reflecting the best currently available estimates and judgments of the management of SXL, as confirmed to us by management of the Partnership, as to the future financial
performance of SXL and that SXL will perform substantially in accordance with such projections. We assume no responsibility for and we express no view as to any such projections or estimates or the assumptions on which they are based. In
arriving at our opinion, we have not conducted a physical inspection of the properties and facilities of either the Partnership or SXL and have not made or obtained any evaluations or appraisals of the assets or liabilities of either the Partnership
or SXL. In addition, you have not authorized us to solicit, and we have not solicited, any indications of interest from any third party with respect to the purchase of all or a part of the Partnerships business. Our opinion necessarily is
based upon market, economic and other conditions as they exist on, and can be evaluated as of, the date of this letter. We assume no responsibility for updating or revising our opinion based on events or circumstances that may occur after the
date of this letter. We express no opinion as to the prices at which either the Partnership Units or the SXL Units would trade following the announcement or consummation of the Proposed Transaction. Our opinion should not be viewed as
providing any assurance that the market value of the SXL Units to be held by the ETP Unaffiliated Unitholders after the consummation of the Proposed Transaction will be in excess of the market value of Partnership Units owned by such ETP
Unaffiliated Unitholders at any time prior to the announcement or consummation of the Proposed Transaction.
We have assumed that the
executed Agreement will conform in all material respects to the last draft reviewed by us. In addition, we have assumed the accuracy of the representations and warranties contained in the Agreement and all agreements related thereto. We
have also assumed, upon the advice of the Partnership, that all material governmental, regulatory and third party approvals, consents and releases for the Proposed Transaction will be obtained within the constraints contemplated by the Agreement and
that the Proposed Transaction will be consummated in accordance with the terms of the Agreement without waiver, modification or amendment of any material term, condition or agreement thereof. We do not express any opinion as to any tax or other
consequences that might result from the Proposed Transaction, nor does our opinion address any legal, tax, regulatory or accounting matters, as to which we understand that the Partnership has obtained such advice as it deemed necessary from
qualified professionals.
Based upon and subject to the foregoing, we are of the opinion as of the date hereof that, from a financial
point of view, the Exchange Ratio to be offered to the ETP Unaffiliated Unitholders in the Proposed Transaction is fair to such ETP Unaffiliated Unitholders.
We have acted as financial advisor to the Conflicts Committee in connection with the Proposed Transaction and will receive a fee for our
services a portion of which is payable upon rendering this opinion and a substantial portion of which is contingent upon the consummation of the Proposed Transaction. In addition, the Partnership has agreed to reimburse our expenses and
indemnify us for certain liabilities that may arise out of our engagement. We have performed various investment banking services for the Partnership, ETE and SXL in the
B-3
Page
4
of 4
past, and expect to perform such services in the future, and have received, and expect to receive, customary fees for such services. Specifically, in the past two years, we have performed
the following investment banking and financial services: (i) agent on the Partnerships $1.5 billion 2016 ATM equity offering program; (ii) bookrunner on the Partnerships approximately $3 billion senior notes offering; (iii) financial
advisor to the Conflicts Committee on the Partnerships acquisition of Regency Energy Partners L.P.; (iv) agent on the Partnerships $1.5 billion 2015 ATM equity offering program; (v) financial advisor to the Conflicts Committee on the
Partnerships acquisition of the Bakken Pipeline project from ETE; (vi) financial advisor to the Conflicts Committee on the Partnerships divestiture of Mid-Atlantic Convenience Stores, LLC to Sunoco L.P.; (vii) agent on the
Partnerships $1.5 billion 2014 ATM equity offering program; (viii) financial advisor to the Partnership on its acquisition of Susser Holdings Corp.; (ix) bookrunner for a $400 million term loan offering for ETE in 2014; (x) bookrunner on
SXLs 2015 approximately $560mm Overnight Follow-on equity offering; (xi) bookrunner on SXLs 2016 approximately $650mm Block equity offering; (xii) placement agent on SXLs $1.0 billion 2014 ATM Program; (xiii) bookrunner on
SXLs 2014 approximately $373mm equity offering; (xiv) bookrunner on SXLs 2014 $1 billion notes offering; and (xv) we are currently a lender under the Partnerships, ETEs and SXLs existing revolving credit facilities.
Barclays Capital Inc., its subsidiaries and its affiliates engage in a wide range of businesses from investment and commercial banking,
lending, asset management and other financial and non-financial services. In the ordinary course of our business, we, our subsidiaries and our affiliates may actively trade and effect transactions in the equity, debt and/or other securities
(and any derivatives thereof) and financial instruments (including loans and other obligations) of the Partnership, ETE, SXL or any of their respective affiliates for our own account and for the accounts of our customers and, accordingly, may at any
time hold long or short positions and investments in such securities and financial instruments.
This opinion, the issuance of which has
been approved by our Fairness Opinion Committee, is for the use and benefit of the Conflicts Committee and is rendered to the Conflicts Committee in connection with its consideration of the Proposed Transaction. This opinion is not intended to
be and does not constitute a recommendation to the ETP Unaffiliated Unitholders as to how such ETP Unaffiliated Unitholders should vote or act with respect to the Proposed Transaction.
Very truly yours,
BARCLAYS CAPITAL INC.
B-4
ANNEX C
FORM OF
FOURTH AMENDED AND RESTATED
AGREEMENT OF LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
OF
[SUNOCO LOGISTICS
PARTNERS L.P.]
1
1
|
NTD: To be revised to the extent the Partnerships name will be changed in connection with the ETP-SXL Merger.
|
C-1
TABLE OF CONTENTS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ARTICLE I
|
|
|
DEFINITIONS
|
|
|
|
|
Section 1.1
|
|
Definitions
|
|
|
C-7
|
|
Section 1.2
|
|
Construction
|
|
|
C-24
|
|
|
ARTICLE II
|
|
|
ORGANIZATION
|
|
|
|
|
Section 2.1
|
|
Formation
|
|
|
C-25
|
|
Section 2.2
|
|
Name
|
|
|
C-25
|
|
Section 2.3
|
|
Registered Office; Registered Agent; Principal Office; Other Offices
|
|
|
C-25
|
|
Section 2.4
|
|
Purpose and Business
|
|
|
C-25
|
|
Section 2.5
|
|
Powers
|
|
|
C-26
|
|
Section 2.6
|
|
Power of Attorney
|
|
|
C-26
|
|
Section 2.7
|
|
Term
|
|
|
C-27
|
|
Section 2.8
|
|
Title to Partnership Assets
|
|
|
C-27
|
|
|
ARTICLE III
|
|
|
RIGHTS OF LIMITED PARTNERS
|
|
|
|
|
Section 3.1
|
|
Limitation of Liability
|
|
|
C-27
|
|
Section 3.2
|
|
Management of Business
|
|
|
C-28
|
|
Section 3.3
|
|
Outside Activities of the Limited Partners
|
|
|
C-28
|
|
Section 3.4
|
|
Rights of Limited Partners
|
|
|
C-28
|
|
|
ARTICLE IV
|
|
|
CERTIFICATES; RECORD HOLDERS; ISSUANCE AND TRANSFER OF PARTNERSHIP
INTERESTS; REDEMPTION OF PARTNERSHIP INTERESTS
|
|
|
|
|
Section 4.1
|
|
Certificates
|
|
|
C-29
|
|
Section 4.2
|
|
Mutilated, Destroyed, Lost or Stolen Certificates
|
|
|
C-29
|
|
Section 4.3
|
|
Record Holders
|
|
|
C-30
|
|
Section 4.4
|
|
Transfer Generally
|
|
|
C-30
|
|
Section 4.5
|
|
Registration and Transfer of Limited Partner Interests
|
|
|
C-30
|
|
Section 4.6
|
|
Transfer of the General Partners General Partner Interest
|
|
|
C-31
|
|
Section 4.7
|
|
Transfer of Incentive Distribution Rights
|
|
|
C-31
|
|
Section 4.8
|
|
Restrictions on Transfers
|
|
|
C-31
|
|
Section 4.9
|
|
Citizenship Certificates; Non-citizen Assignees
|
|
|
C-32
|
|
Section 4.10
|
|
Redemption of Partnership Interests of Non-citizen Assignees
|
|
|
C-33
|
|
|
ARTICLE V
|
|
|
CAPITAL CONTRIBUTIONS AND ISSUANCE OF PARTNERSHIP INTERESTS
|
|
|
|
|
Section 5.1
|
|
Organizational Contributions
|
|
|
C-33
|
|
Section 5.2
|
|
Contributions by the General Partner and its Affiliates
|
|
|
C-34
|
|
Section 5.3
|
|
[Reserved]
|
|
|
C-34
|
|
C-2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Section 5.4
|
|
Interest and Withdrawal
|
|
|
C-34
|
|
Section 5.5
|
|
Capital Accounts
|
|
|
C-34
|
|
Section 5.6
|
|
Issuances of Additional Partnership Securities
|
|
|
C-37
|
|
Section 5.7
|
|
[Reserved]
|
|
|
C-37
|
|
Section 5.8
|
|
Limited Preemptive Right
|
|
|
C-38
|
|
Section 5.9
|
|
Splits and Combinations
|
|
|
C-38
|
|
Section 5.10
|
|
Fully Paid and Non-Assessable Nature of Limited Partner Interests
|
|
|
C-38
|
|
Section 5.11
|
|
Establishment of Class G Units
|
|
|
C-38
|
|
Section 5.12
|
|
[Intentionally Omitted]
|
|
|
C-41
|
|
Section 5.13
|
|
Establishment of Class I Units
|
|
|
C-41
|
|
Section 5.14
|
|
Establishment of Class J Units
|
|
|
C-42
|
|
Section 5.15
|
|
Establishment of Class K Units
|
|
|
C-43
|
|
|
ARTICLE VI
|
|
|
ALLOCATIONS AND DISTRIBUTIONS
|
|
|
|
|
Section 6.1
|
|
Allocations for Capital Account Purposes
|
|
|
C-45
|
|
Section 6.2
|
|
Allocations for Tax Purposes
|
|
|
C-51
|
|
Section 6.3
|
|
Requirement and Characterization of Distributions; Distributions to Record Holders
|
|
|
C-53
|
|
Section 6.4
|
|
Distributions of Available Cash from Operating Surplus
|
|
|
C-54
|
|
Section 6.5
|
|
Distributions of Available Cash from Capital Surplus
|
|
|
C-54
|
|
Section 6.6
|
|
Adjustment of Minimum Quarterly Distribution and Target Distribution Levels
|
|
|
C-55
|
|
Section 6.7
|
|
Special Provisions Relating to the Holders of Incentive Distribution Rights
|
|
|
C-55
|
|
Section 6.8
|
|
Entity-Level Taxation
|
|
|
C-55
|
|
Section 6.9
|
|
[Intentionally Omitted]
|
|
|
C-55
|
|
|
ARTICLE VII
|
|
|
MANAGEMENT AND OPERATION OF BUSINESS
|
|
|
|
|
Section 7.1
|
|
Management
|
|
|
C-56
|
|
Section 7.2
|
|
Certificate of Limited Partnership
|
|
|
C-57
|
|
Section 7.3
|
|
Restrictions on the General Partners Authority
|
|
|
C-57
|
|
Section 7.4
|
|
Reimbursement of the General Partner
|
|
|
C-58
|
|
Section 7.5
|
|
Outside Activities
|
|
|
C-59
|
|
Section 7.6
|
|
Loans from the General Partner; Loans or Contributions from the Partnership or Group Members
|
|
|
C-60
|
|
Section 7.7
|
|
Indemnification
|
|
|
C-60
|
|
Section 7.8
|
|
Liability of Indemnitees
|
|
|
C-62
|
|
Section 7.9
|
|
Resolution of Conflicts of Interest; Standards of Conduct and Modification of Duties
|
|
|
C-62
|
|
Section 7.10
|
|
Other Matters Concerning the General Partner
|
|
|
C-63
|
|
Section 7.11
|
|
Purchase or Sale of Partnership Securities
|
|
|
C-64
|
|
Section 7.12
|
|
Registration Rights of the General Partner and its Affiliates
|
|
|
C-64
|
|
Section 7.13
|
|
Reliance by Third Parties
|
|
|
C-66
|
|
|
ARTICLE VIII
|
|
|
BOOKS, RECORDS, ACCOUNTING AND REPORTS
|
|
|
|
|
Section 8.1
|
|
Records and Accounting
|
|
|
C-66
|
|
Section 8.2
|
|
Fiscal Year
|
|
|
C-66
|
|
Section 8.3
|
|
Reports
|
|
|
C-66
|
|
C-3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ARTICLE IX
|
|
|
TAX MATTERS
|
|
|
|
|
Section 9.1
|
|
Tax Returns and Information
|
|
|
C-67
|
|
Section 9.2
|
|
Tax Elections
|
|
|
C-67
|
|
Section 9.3
|
|
Tax Controversies
|
|
|
C-67
|
|
Section 9.4
|
|
Withholding
|
|
|
C-67
|
|
|
ARTICLE X
|
|
|
ADMISSION OF PARTNERS
|
|
|
|
|
Section 10.1
|
|
Admission of Initial Limited Partners
|
|
|
C-68
|
|
Section 10.2
|
|
Admission of Substituted Limited Partners
|
|
|
C-68
|
|
Section 10.3
|
|
Admission of Successor General Partner
|
|
|
C-68
|
|
Section 10.4
|
|
Admission of Additional Limited Partners
|
|
|
C-68
|
|
Section 10.5
|
|
Amendment of Agreement and Certificate of Limited Partnership
|
|
|
C-69
|
|
|
ARTICLE XI
|
|
|
WITHDRAWAL OR REMOVAL OF PARTNERS
|
|
|
|
|
Section 11.1
|
|
Withdrawal of the General Partner
|
|
|
C-69
|
|
Section 11.2
|
|
Removal of the General Partner
|
|
|
C-70
|
|
Section 11.3
|
|
Interest of Departing Partner and Successor General Partner
|
|
|
C-71
|
|
Section 11.4
|
|
Withdrawal of Limited Partners
|
|
|
C-72
|
|
|
ARTICLE XII
|
|
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DISSOLUTION AND LIQUIDATION
|
|
|
|
|
Section 12.1
|
|
Dissolution
|
|
|
C-72
|
|
Section 12.2
|
|
Continuation of the Business of the Partnership After Dissolution
|
|
|
C-73
|
|
Section 12.3
|
|
Liquidator
|
|
|
C-73
|
|
Section 12.4
|
|
Liquidation
|
|
|
C-74
|
|
Section 12.5
|
|
Cancellation of Certificate of Limited Partnership
|
|
|
C-74
|
|
Section 12.6
|
|
Return of Contributions
|
|
|
C-74
|
|
Section 12.7
|
|
Waiver of Partition
|
|
|
C-74
|
|
Section 12.8
|
|
Capital Account Restoration
|
|
|
C-75
|
|
Section 12.9
|
|
[Intentionally Omitted]
|
|
|
C-75
|
|
|
ARTICLE XIII
|
|
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AMENDMENT OF PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT; MEETINGS; RECORD DATE
|
|
|
|
|
Section 13.1
|
|
Amendments to be Adopted Solely by the General Partner
|
|
|
C-75
|
|
Section 13.2
|
|
Amendment Procedures
|
|
|
C-76
|
|
Section 13.3
|
|
Amendment Requirements
|
|
|
C-76
|
|
Section 13.4
|
|
Special Meetings
|
|
|
C-77
|
|
Section 13.5
|
|
Notice of a Meeting
|
|
|
C-77
|
|
C-4
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Section 13.6
|
|
Record Date
|
|
|
C-77
|
|
Section 13.7
|
|
Adjournment
|
|
|
C-77
|
|
Section 13.8
|
|
Waiver of Notice; Approval of Meeting; Approval of Minutes
|
|
|
C-78
|
|
Section 13.9
|
|
Quorum and Voting
|
|
|
C-78
|
|
Section 13.10
|
|
Conduct of a Meeting
|
|
|
C-78
|
|
Section 13.11
|
|
Action Without a Meeting
|
|
|
C-79
|
|
Section 13.12
|
|
Right to Vote and Related Matters
|
|
|
C-79
|
|
|
ARTICLE XIV
|
|
|
MERGER
|
|
|
|
|
Section 14.1
|
|
Authority
|
|
|
C-79
|
|
Section 14.2
|
|
Procedure for Merger or Consolidation
|
|
|
C-80
|
|
Section 14.3
|
|
Approval by Limited Partners of Merger or Consolidation
|
|
|
C-81
|
|
Section 14.4
|
|
Certificate of Merger
|
|
|
C-81
|
|
Section 14.5
|
|
Effect of Merger
|
|
|
C-81
|
|
|
ARTICLE XV
|
|
|
RIGHT TO ACQUIRE LIMITED PARTNER INTERESTS
|
|
|
|
|
Section 15.1
|
|
Right to Acquire Limited Partner Interests
|
|
|
C-82
|
|
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ARTICLE XVI
|
|
|
GENERAL PROVISIONS
|
|
|
|
|
Section 16.1
|
|
Addresses and Notices
|
|
|
C-83
|
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Section 16.2
|
|
Further Action
|
|
|
C-84
|
|
Section 16.3
|
|
Binding Effect
|
|
|
C-84
|
|
Section 16.4
|
|
Integration
|
|
|
C-84
|
|
Section 16.5
|
|
Creditors
|
|
|
C-84
|
|
Section 16.6
|
|
Waiver
|
|
|
C-84
|
|
Section 16.7
|
|
Counterparts
|
|
|
C-84
|
|
Section 16.8
|
|
Applicable Law
|
|
|
C-84
|
|
Section 16.9
|
|
Invalidity of Provisions
|
|
|
C-84
|
|
Section 16.10
|
|
Consent of Partners
|
|
|
C-84
|
|
C-5
FORM OF
FOURTH AMENDED AND RESTATED AGREEMENT OF LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP OF [SUNOCO LOGISTICS PARTNERS L.P.]
THIS FOURTH AMENDED AND RESTATED AGREEMENT OF LIMITED PARTNERSHIP OF [SUNOCO LOGISTICS PARTNERS L.P.], dated as of
[ ] and effective as of the Effective Time, is entered into by and among Sunoco Partners LLC, a Pennsylvania limited liability company, as the General Partner, together with any
other Persons who are or become Partners in the Partnership or parties hereto as provided herein. In consideration of the covenants, conditions and agreements contained herein, the parties hereto hereby agree as follows:
RECITALS
A. The General
Partner, for itself and on behalf of the limited partners of the Partnership, previously entered into that certain Third Amended and Restated Agreement of the Limited Partnership of the Partnership, dated as of January 26, 2010, as amended by
Amendment No. 1 thereto, dated as of July 1, 2011, Amendment No. 2 thereto dated as of November 21, 2011, Amendment No. 3 thereto dated as of June 12, 2014, Amendment No. 4 thereto dated as of July 30, 2014, Amendment No. 5 thereto dated as of
August 28, 2015, Amendment No. 6 thereto dated as of October 8, 2015 and Amendment No. 7 thereto dated as of September 26, 2016 (as so amended, the
Previous Agreement
).
B. On the date hereof, pursuant to the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement, (a) SXL Acquisition Sub LP, a Delaware limited partnership (
SXL
Acquisition Sub LP
), is merging with and into ETP, with ETP surviving as an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of the Partnership, and certain limited partner interests in ETP are converting into the right to receive Partnership
Interests and (b) Sunoco Partners LLC is merging with Energy Transfer Partners GP, L.P., with Energy Transfer Partners GP, L.P. surviving as an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of ETE, in each case in accordance with, and with the terms specified
in, the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement.
C. The General Partner, in its capacity as holder of the Incentive Distribution Rights, has and hereby
ratifies the approval of the amendments set forth herein.
D. Pursuant to Section 13.1 of the Previous Agreement, the General Partner
has the authority to adopt certain amendments to the Previous Agreement without the approval of any Partner or Assignee to reflect, among other things, (i) an amendment the General Partner determines to be necessary or appropriate in connection
with the authorization of issuance of any class or series of Partnership Securities pursuant to Section 5.6 of the Previous Agreement, or (ii) a change that the General Partner determines does not adversely affect the Limited Partners
(including any particular class of Partnership Interests as compared to other classes of Partnership Interests) in any material respect.
E. The General Partner has adopted this Agreement pursuant to Section 13.1 of the Previous Agreement after having determined that the
changes to the Previous Agreement effected by the adoption of this Agreement (i) are necessary or appropriate in connection with the authorization of issuance of the classes of Partnership Securities under this Agreement in accordance with, and
with the terms specified in, the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement, and (ii) to the extent not necessary or appropriate in connection with the authorization of issuance of such classes of Partnership Securities under this Agreement, do not adversely
affect the Limited Partners (including any particular class of Partnership Interests as compared to other classes of Partnership Interests) in any material respect.
C-6
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the covenants and agreements made herein, the Previous
Agreement is hereby amended and restated in its entirety as follows:
ARTICLE I
DEFINITIONS
Section 1.1
Definitions
.
The following definitions shall be for all purposes, unless otherwise clearly indicated to the contrary, applied to the terms used in this
Agreement.
2011 Unit Split
means the three-for-one split of the Common Units effected on December 2, 2011 by
way of a dividend and distribution of two Common Units for each Common Unit outstanding to Record Holders as of November 18, 2011.
2014 Unit Split
means the two-for-one split of the Common Units effected on June 12, 2014 by way of a dividend and
distribution of one Common Unit for each Common Unit outstanding to Record Holders as of June 5, 2014.
2014 Unit Split
Date
means June 12, 2014.
Acquisition
means any transaction in which any Group Member acquires
(through an asset acquisition, merger, stock acquisition or other form of investment) control over all or a portion of the assets, properties or business of another Person for the purpose of increasing the operating capacity or revenues of the
Partnership Group from the operating capacity or revenues of the Partnership Group existing immediately prior to such transaction.
Additional Book Basis
means the portion of any remaining Carrying Value of an Adjusted Property that is attributable
to positive adjustments made to such Carrying Value as a result of Book-Up Events. For purposes of determining the extent that Carrying Value constitutes Additional Book Basis:
(i) Any negative adjustment made to the Carrying Value of an Adjusted Property as a result of either a Book-Down Event or a
Book-Up Event shall first be deemed to offset or decrease that portion of the Carrying Value of such Adjusted Property that is attributable to any prior positive adjustments made thereto pursuant to a Book-Up Event or Book-Down Event.
(ii) If Carrying Value that constitutes Additional Book Basis is reduced as a result of a Book-Down Event and the Carrying
Value of other property is increased as a result of such Book-Down Event, an allocable portion of any such increase in Carrying Value shall be treated as Additional Book Basis;
provided
that the amount treated as Additional Book Basis
pursuant hereto as a result of such Book-Down Event shall not exceed the amount by which the Aggregate Remaining Net Positive Adjustments after such Book-Down Event exceeds the remaining Additional Book Basis attributable to all of the
Partnerships Adjusted Property after such Book-Down Event (determined without regard to the application of this
clause
(ii)
to such Book-Down Event).
Additional Book Basis Derivative Items
means any Book Basis Derivative Items that are computed with reference to
Additional Book Basis. To the extent that the Additional Book Basis attributable to all of the Partnerships Adjusted Property as of the beginning of any taxable period exceeds the Aggregate Remaining Net Positive Adjustments as of the
beginning of such period (the
Excess Additional Book Basis
), the Additional Book Basis Derivative Items for such period shall be reduced by the amount that bears the same ratio to the amount of Additional Book Basis
Derivative Items determined without regard to this sentence as the Excess Additional Book Basis bears to the Additional Book Basis as of the beginning of such period.
C-7
Additional Limited Partner
means a Person admitted to the Partnership
as a Limited Partner pursuant to
Section
10.4
and who is shown as such on the books and records of the Partnership.
Adjusted Capital Account
means the Capital Account maintained for each Partner as of the end of each fiscal year of
the Partnership, (a) increased by any amounts that such Partner is obligated to restore under the standards set by Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(c) (or is deemed obligated to restore under Treasury Regulation Sections 1.704-2(g)
and 1.704-2(i)(5)) and (b) decreased by (i) the amount of all losses and deductions that, as of the end of such fiscal year, are reasonably expected to be allocated to such Partner in subsequent years under Sections 704(e)(2) and 706(d) of
the Code and Treasury Regulation Section 1.751-1(b)(2)(ii), and (ii) the amount of all distributions that, as of the end of such fiscal year, are reasonably expected to be made to such Partner in subsequent years in accordance with the terms of
this Agreement or otherwise to the extent they exceed offsetting increases to such Partners Capital Account that are reasonably expected to occur during (or prior to) the year in which such distributions are reasonably expected to be made
(other than increases as a result of a minimum gain chargeback pursuant to
Section
6.1(d)(i)
or
Section
6.1(d)(ii)
). The foregoing definition of Adjusted Capital Account is intended to comply
with the provisions of Treasury Regulation Section 1.704- 1(b)(2)(ii)(d) and shall be interpreted consistently therewith. The Adjusted Capital Account of a Partner in respect of any Partnership Interest (other than a Class J Unit)
shall be the amount that such Adjusted Capital Account would be if such Partnership Interest were the only interest in the Partnership held by such Partner from and after the date on which such Partnership Interest was first issued.
Adjusted Property
means any property the Carrying Value of which has been adjusted pursuant to
Section
5.5(d)(i)
or
5.5(d)(ii)
.
Affiliate
means, with respect to any Person,
any other Person that directly or indirectly through one or more intermediaries controls, is controlled by or is under common control with, the Person in question. As used herein, the term control means the possession, direct or
indirect, of the power to direct or cause the direction of the management and policies of a Person, whether through ownership of voting securities, by contract or otherwise.
Aggregate Remaining Net Positive Adjustments
means, as of the end of any taxable period, the sum of the Remaining
Net Positive Adjustments of all the Partners.
Agreed Allocation
means any allocation, other than a Required
Allocation, of an item of income, gain, loss or deduction pursuant to the provisions of
Section
6.1
, including, without limitation, a Curative Allocation (if appropriate to the context in which the term Agreed
Allocation is used).
Agreed Value
of any Contributed Property means the fair market value of such
property or other consideration at the time of contribution and in the case of an Adjusted Property, the fair market value of such Adjusted Property on the date of the revaluation event as described in
Section 5.5(d)(i)
, in both cases as
determined by the General Partner using such reasonable method of valuation as it may adopt. The General Partner shall use such method as it determines to be reasonable and appropriate to allocate the aggregate Agreed Value of Adjusted Properties or
Contributed Properties contributed to the Partnership in a single or integrated transaction among each separate property on a basis proportional to the fair market value of each such property.
Agreement
means this Fourth Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of [Sunoco Logistics Partners
L.P.], as it may be amended, supplemented or restated from time to time.
Assignee
means a Non-citizen Assignee
or a Person to whom one or more Limited Partner Interests have been transferred in a manner permitted under this Agreement and who has executed and delivered a Transfer Application as required by this Agreement, but who has not been admitted as a
Substituted Limited Partner.
Associate
means, when used to indicate a relationship with any Person,
(a) any corporation or organization of which such Person is a director, officer or partner or is, directly or indirectly, the owner of 20%
C-8
or more of any class of voting stock or other voting interest; (b) any trust or other estate in which such Person has at least a 20% beneficial interest or as to which such Person serves as
trustee or in a similar fiduciary capacity; and (c) any relative or spouse of such Person, or any relative of such spouse, who has the same principal residence as such Person.
Available Cash
means, with respect to any Quarter ending prior to the Liquidation Date:
(a) the sum of (i) all cash and cash equivalents of the Partnership Group on hand at the end of such Quarter, and (ii) all
additional cash and cash equivalents of the Partnership Group on hand on the date of determination of Available Cash with respect to such Quarter resulting from Working Capital Borrowings made subsequent to the end of such Quarter, less
(b) the amount of any cash reserves established by the General Partner to (i) provide for the proper conduct of the business of the
Partnership Group (including reserves for future capital expenditures and for anticipated future credit needs of the Partnership Group) subsequent to such Quarter, (ii) comply with applicable law or any loan agreement, security agreement,
mortgage, debt instrument or other agreement or obligation to which any Group Member is a party or by which it is bound or its assets are subject or (iii) provide funds for distributions under
Section
6.4
or
Section
6.5
in respect of any one or more of the next four Quarters;
provided
,
however
, that the General Partner may not establish cash reserves pursuant to (iii) above if the effect of such reserves
would be that the Partnership is unable to distribute the Minimum Quarterly Distribution on all Common Units; and,
provided further
, that disbursements made by a Group Member or cash reserves established, increased or reduced after the end of
such Quarter but on or before the date of determination of Available Cash with respect to such Quarter shall be deemed to have been made, established, increased or reduced, for purposes of determining Available Cash, within such Quarter if the
General Partner so determines.
Notwithstanding the foregoing,
Available Cash
with respect to the Quarter in
which the Liquidation Date occurs and any subsequent Quarter shall equal zero.
beneficial owner
has the meaning
assigned to such term in Rule 13d-3 and Rule 13d-5 under the Securities Exchange Act, except that, in calculating the beneficial ownership of any particular person (as that term is used in Section 13(d)(3) of the Securities Exchange
Act), such person will be deemed to have beneficial ownership of all securities that such person has the right to acquire by conversion or exercise of other securities, whether such right is currently exercisable or is
exercisable only after the passage of time. The terms beneficially owns, beneficially owning and beneficially owned have a corresponding meaning.
Board of Directors
means with respect to the General Partner, its board of directors or board of managers if the
General Partner is a corporation or limited liability company, or, if the General Partner is a limited partnership and its general partner is a corporation or limited liability company, the board of directors or board of managers of the general
partner of the General Partner.
Book Basis Derivative Items
means any item of income, deduction, gain or loss
that is computed with reference to the Carrying Value of an Adjusted Property (e.g., depreciation, depletion, or gain or loss with respect to an Adjusted Property).
Book-Down Event
means an event that triggers a negative adjustment to the Capital Accounts of the Partners pursuant
to
Section
5.5(d)
.
Book-Tax Disparity
means with respect to any item of Contributed
Property or Adjusted Property, as of the date of any determination, the difference between the Carrying Value of such Contributed Property or Adjusted Property and the adjusted basis thereof for federal income tax purposes as of such date. A
Partners share of the Partnerships Book-Tax Disparities in all of its Contributed Property and Adjusted Property will be reflected by the difference between such Partners Capital Account balance as maintained pursuant to
Section
5.5
and the hypothetical balance of such Partners Capital Account computed as if it had been maintained strictly in accordance with federal income tax accounting principles.
C-9
Book-Up Event
means an event that triggers a positive adjustment to the
Capital Accounts of the Partners pursuant to
Section
5.5(d)
.
Business Day
means
Monday through Friday of each week, except that a legal holiday recognized as such by the government of the United States of America or the State of Texas shall not be regarded as a Business Day.
Capital Account
means the capital account maintained for a Partner (other than in respect of Class J Units) pursuant
to
Section
5.5
. The Capital Account of a Partner in respect of any Partnership Interest (other than a Class J Unit) shall be the amount that such Capital Account would be if such Partnership Interest was
the only interest in the Partnership held by such Partner from and after the date on which such Partnership Interest was first issued.
Capital Contribution
means any cash, cash equivalents or the Net Agreed Value of Contributed Property that a Partner
contributes to the Partnership or any payment made by the General Partner to the Partnership described in
Section
5.2(c)
.
Capital Improvement
means any (a) addition or improvement to the capital assets owned by any Group Member or
(b) acquisition of existing, or the construction of new, capital assets (including, without limitation, pipeline systems, terminal storage facilities and related assets), in each case if such addition, improvement, acquisition or construction
is made to increase the operating capacity or revenues of the Partnership Group from the operating capacity or revenues of the Partnership Group existing immediately prior to such addition, improvement, acquisition or construction.
Capital Surplus
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
6.3(a)
.
Carrying Value
means (a) with respect to a Contributed Property, the Agreed Value of such property reduced (but
not below zero) by all depreciation, amortization and cost recovery deductions charged to the Partners and Assignees Capital Accounts in respect of such Contributed Property, and (b) with respect to any other Partnership property,
the adjusted basis of such property for federal income tax purposes, all as of the time of determination. The Carrying Value of any property shall be adjusted from time to time in accordance with
Sections
5.5(d)(i)
and
5.5(d)(ii)
and to reflect changes, additions or other adjustments to the Carrying Value for dispositions and acquisitions of Partnership properties, as deemed appropriate by the General Partner.
Cause
means a court of competent jurisdiction has entered a final, non-appealable judgment finding the General
Partner liable for actual fraud, gross negligence or willful or wanton misconduct in its capacity as a general partner of the Partnership.
Certificate
means a certificate (i) substantially in the form of
Exhibit
A
to this
Agreement, (ii) issued in global form in accordance with the rules and regulations of the Depositary or (iii) in such other form as may be adopted by the General Partner, issued by the Partnership evidencing ownership of one or more Common
Units or a certificate, in such form as may be adopted by the General Partner, issued by the Partnership evidencing ownership of one or more other Partnership Securities.
Certificate of Limited Partnership
means the Certificate of Limited Partnership of the Partnership filed with the
Secretary of State of the State of Delaware as referenced in
Section
7.2
, as such Certificate of Limited Partnership may be amended, supplemented or restated from time to time.
Citizenship Certification
means a properly completed certificate in such form as may be specified by the General
Partner by which an Assignee or a Limited Partner certifies that he (and if he is a nominee holding for the account of another Person, that to the best of his knowledge such other Person) is an Eligible Citizen.
Claim
(as used in
Section
7.12(c)
) has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
7.12(c)
.
C-10
Class
E Percentage
with respect to the
Class E Units for any date of determination shall equal the relative unit percentage of the Class E Units as determined based on their Share of Additional Book Basis Derivative Items and the number of Class E Units Outstanding divided by the total
number of Units Outstanding (in each case, treating all Class E Units held by any Group Member as Outstanding, notwithstanding
Section 7.11
).
Class
E Unit
means a Partnership Security representing a fractional part of the
Partnership Interests of all Limited Partners and Assignees, and having the rights and obligations specified with respect to Class E Units in this Agreement.
Class G Percentage
with respect to the Class G Units for any date of determination, shall equal the percentage
determined by multiplying (a) twenty-six percent (26 %) by (b) the quotient obtained by dividing (A) the number of Class G Units Outstanding on such date, by (B) 90,706,000;
provided
that in the event the Partnership issues additional Class G
Units in the future, the General Partner may increase the Class G Percentage to reflect the issuance of the additional Class G Units.
Class G Issue Price
means $50.00.
Class G Unit
means a Partnership Security representing a fractional part of the Partnership Interests of all Limited
Partners and Assignees, and having the rights and obligations specified with respect to Class G Units in this Agreement.
Class I Unit
means a Partnership Security representing a fractional part of the Partnership Interests of all Limited
Partners and Assignees, and having the rights and obligations specified with respect to Class I Units in this Agreement.
Class J Unit
means a Partnership Security representing a fractional part of the Partnership Interests of all Limited
Partners and Assignees, and having the rights and obligations specified with respect to Class J Units in this Agreement.
Class K Unit
means a Partnership Security representing a fractional part of the Partnership Interests of all Limited
Partners and Assignees, and having the rights and obligations specified with respect to Class K Units in this Agreement.
Class K Unit Distribution Rate
means an amount per Class K Unit equal to
[7.50]
% per annum (
[1.875]
%
per Quarter), of the Class K Unit Issue Price.
Class K Unit Issuance Date
means
[ ], 2017.
Class K Unit Issue Price
means $[ ].
Class K Unit Quarterly Distribution
has the
meaning set forth in
Section
5.15(b)(iii)(C)
.
Closing Date
means the first date on
which Common Units were sold by the Partnership to the Underwriters pursuant to the provisions of the Underwriting Agreement.
Closing Price
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
15.1(a)
.
Code
means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended and in effect from time to time. Any reference herein to a
specific section or sections of the Code shall be deemed to include a reference to any corresponding provision of any successor law.
Combined Interest
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
11.3(a)
.
C-11
Commission
means the United States Securities and Exchange Commission.
Common Unit
means a Partnership Security representing a fractional part of the Partnership Interests of all
Limited Partners and Assignees, and having the rights and obligations specified with respect to Common Units in this Agreement.
Conflicts Committee
means a committee of the Board of Directors of the General Partner composed entirely of two or
more directors who are not (a) security holders, officers or employees of the General Partner, (b) officers, directors (other than members of the Board of Directors of the General Partner) or employees of any Affiliate of the General
Partner or (c) holders of any ownership interest in the Partnership Group other than Common Units and who also meet the independence standards required of directors who serve on an audit committee of a board of directors established by the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and the rules and regulations of the Commission thereunder and by the National Securities Exchange on which the Common Units are listed for trading.
Contributed Property
means each property or other asset, in such form as may be permitted by the Delaware Act, but
excluding cash, contributed to the Partnership. Once the Carrying Value of a Contributed Property is adjusted pursuant to
Section
5.5(d)
, such property shall no longer constitute a Contributed Property, but shall be deemed
an Adjusted Property.
Contribution Agreement
means that certain Contribution Agreement dated June 29, 2011 and
effective July 1, 2011 among Sunoco R&M, the General Partner, the Partnership and certain subsidiaries of the Partnership.
Contribution Agreement Closing Date
means July 1, 2011.
Conversion Unit
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
6.1(d)(xiv)
.
Curative Allocation
means any allocation of an item of income, gain, deduction, loss or credit pursuant to the
provisions of
Section
6.1(d)(xi)
.
Current Market Price
has the meaning assigned to
such term in
Section
15.1(a)
.
Delaware Act
means the Delaware Revised Uniform Limited
Partnership Act, 6 Del. C. Section 17-101,
et seq.
, as amended, supplemented or restated from time to time, and any successor to such statute.
Departing Partner
means a former General Partner from and after the effective date of any withdrawal or removal of
such former General Partner pursuant to
Section
11.1
or
11.2
.
Depositary
means, with respect to any Units issued in global form, The Depository Trust Company and its successors and permitted assigns.
Disposed of Adjusted Property
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
6.1(d)(xii)(B)
.
Economic Risk of Loss
has the meaning set forth in Treasury
Regulation Section 1.752-2(a).
Effective Time
means the Effective Time (as defined in the ETP-SXL Merger
Agreement).
Eligible Citizen
means a Person qualified to own interests in real property in jurisdictions in
which any Group Member does business or proposes to do business from time to time, and whose status as a Limited Partner or Assignee does not or would not subject such Group Member to a significant risk of cancellation or forfeiture of any of its
properties or any interest therein.
C-12
ETE
means Energy Transfer Equity, L.P., a Delaware limited partnership.
ETP
means Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., a Delaware limited partnership.
ETP Class E Unit
means a limited partner interest issued by ETP and designated a Class E Unit under the
ETP Partnership Agreement. The ETP Class E Units were cancelled in the transactions contemplated by the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement and the holders thereof were issued Class E Units.
ETP Class F Unit
means a limited partner interest issued by ETP and designated a Class F Unit under the
ETP Partnership Agreement. The ETP Class F Units were exchanged for ETP Class G Units pursuant to Amendment No. 3 to the ETP Partnership Agreement.
ETP Class G Unit
means a limited partner interest issued by ETP and designated a Class G Unit under the
ETP Partnership Agreement. The ETP Class G Units were cancelled in the transactions contemplated by the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement and the holders thereof were issued Class G Units.
ETP Class I Unit
means a limited partner interest issued by ETP and designated a Class I Unit under the
ETP Partnership Agreement. The ETP Class I Units were cancelled in the transactions contemplated by the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement and the holders thereof were issued Class I Units.
ETP Class J Unit
means a limited partner interest issued by ETP and designated a Class J Unit under the
ETP Partnership Agreement. The ETP Class J Units were cancelled in the transactions contemplated by the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement and the holders thereof were issued Class J Units.
ETP Class K Unit
means a limited partner interest issued by ETP and designated a Class K Unit under the
ETP Partnership Agreement. The ETP Class K Units were cancelled in the transactions contemplated by the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement and the holders thereof were issued Class K Units.
ETP General Partner Interest
means the general partner interest in ETP that existed prior to the ETP-SXL Merger.
ETP Holdco
means ETP Holdco Corporation, a Delaware corporation.
ETP Holdco Distributions
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
5.11(b)(iii)(A)
.
ETP Holdco Items
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section 5.11(b)(ii)(A)
.
ETP Incentive Distribution Right
means a limited partner interest issued by ETP and designated as Incentive
Distribution Rights under the ETP Partnership Agreement.
ETP Operating Surplus Amount
means an amount
equal to the Operating Surplus (as defined in the ETP Partnership Agreement) of ETP immediately prior to the closing of the transactions contemplated by the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement.
ETP Partnership Agreement
means the Second Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Energy Transfer
Partners, L.P., dated as of July 28, 2009, as amended by Amendments Nos. 1 through [15] thereto.
ETP-SXL Merger
Agreement
means that certain Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of November 20, 2016 among ETP, Energy Transfer Partners GP, L.P. (
ETP GP
), the Partnership, the General Partner, and, solely for
purposes of Sections 1.1(a), 1.1(b) and Article VIII, ETE, as amended by those certain Joinder Agreements dated as of November 22, 2016 by each of ETP Acquisition Sub, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, and SXL Acquisition Sub LLC, a
Delaware limited liability company, as further amended by that certain Amendment No. 1 to the Agreement and Plan of Merger dated as of [ ] among ETP, ETP GP, the Partnership, Sunoco Partners LLC, SXL Acquisition Sub LLC, SXL
Acquisition Sub LP, and, solely for purposes of Sections 1.1(b), 5.4(a), 5.16(a) and Article VIII, ETE.
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Event Issue Value
means, with respect to any Common Unit as of any date
of determination, (i) in the case of a Revaluation Event that includes the issuance of Common Units pursuant to a public offering and solely for cash, the price paid for such Common Units (before deduction for any underwriters discounts and
commissions), or (ii) in the case of any other Revaluation Event, the Closing Price of the Common Units on the date of such Revaluation Event or, if the General Partner determines that a value for the Common Units other than such Closing Price more
accurately reflects the Event Issue Value, the value determined by the General Partner.
Event of Withdrawal
has
the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
11.1(a)
.
Exchange and Repurchase
Agreement
means that certain Exchange and Repurchase Agreement, dated as of December 23, 2014, by and among ETP, ETE Common Holdings, LLC and ETE.
First Liquidation Target Amount
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
6.1(c)(i)(C)
.
First Target Distribution
means $0.0833 per Unit per Quarter,
subject to adjustment in accordance with
Section
6.6
and
Section
6.8
.
General Partner
means Sunoco Partners LLC, a Pennsylvania limited liability company, and its successors and
permitted assigns as general partner of the Partnership. At the GP Merger Effective Time (as defined in the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement), ETP GP shall be admitted as the general partner of the Partnership, Sunoco Partners LLC shall cease to be the
general partner of the Partnership, and the Partnership shall be continued without dissolution.
General Partner
Interest
means the ownership interest of the General Partner in the Partnership (in its capacity as a general partner without reference to any Limited Partner Interest held by it) which may be evidenced by Partnership Securities or a
combination thereof or interest therein, and includes any and all benefits to which the General Partner is entitled as provided in this Agreement, together with all obligations of the General Partner to comply with the terms and provisions of this
Agreement.
General Partner Quotient
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
5.2(b)
.
Group
means a Person that with or through any of its Affiliates or
Associates has any agreement, arrangement or understanding for the purpose of acquiring, holding, voting (except voting pursuant to a revocable proxy or consent given to such Person in response to a proxy or consent solicitation made to 10 or more
Persons) or disposing of any Partnership Securities with any other Person that beneficially owns, or whose Affiliates or Associates beneficially own, directly or indirectly, Partnership Securities.
Group Member
means a member of the Partnership Group.
Group Member Agreement
means the partnership agreement of any Group Member, other than the Partnership, that is a
limited or general partnership, the limited liability company agreement of any Group Member that is a limited liability company, the certificate of incorporation and bylaws or similar organizational documents of any Group Member that is a
corporation, the joint venture agreement or similar governing document of any Group Member that is a joint venture and the governing or organizational or similar documents of any other Group Member that is a Person other than a limited or general
partnership, limited liability company, corporation or joint venture, as such may be amended, supplemented or restated from time to time.
Holder
as used in
Section
7.2
, has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
7.12(a)
.
Incentive Distribution Right
means, the class of non-voting Limited
Partner Interest issued to the General Partner, which Partnership Interest confers upon the holder thereof only the rights and obligations specifically provided in this Agreement with respect to Incentive Distribution Rights (and no other rights
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otherwise available to or other obligations of a holder of a Partnership Interest). Notwithstanding anything in this Agreement to the contrary, the holder of an Incentive Distribution Right shall
not be entitled to vote such Incentive Distribution Right on any Partnership matter except as may otherwise be required by law or except as may be permitted under
Section 6.4(b)
.
Incentive Distributions
means any amount of cash distributed to the holders of the Incentive Distribution Rights
pursuant to
Section
6.4(a)(iii)
,
Section
6.4(a)(iv)
and
Section
6.4(a)(v)
.
Indemnified Persons
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
7.12(c)
.
Indemnitee
means (a) the General Partner, (b) any Departing Partner, (c) any Person who is or was an
Affiliate of the General Partner or any Departing Partner, (d) any Person who is or was a member, partner, officer, director, fiduciary or trustee of any Group Member, the General Partner (including Sunoco Partners LLC prior to the closing of
the transactions contemplated by the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement) or any Departing Partner or any Affiliate of any Group Member, the General Partner or any Departing Partner, (e) any Person who is or was serving at the request of the General
Partner or any Departing Partner or any Affiliate of the General Partner or any Departing Partner as an officer, director, member, partner, fiduciary or trustee of another Person;
provided
, that a Person shall not be an Indemnitee by reason
of providing, on a fee-for-services basis, trustee, fiduciary or custodial services, and (f) any Person that the General Partner designates as an Indemnitee for purposes of this Agreement.
Indenture
means that certain Indenture, dated as of February 7, 2002, among the Partnership, the Operating
Partnership, Sun Partners Marketing & Terminals L.P., Sunoco Pipeline L.P. and First Union National Bank, as trustee.
Initial Common Units
means the Common Units sold in the Initial Offering.
Initial Limited Partners
means the General Partner (with respect to the Incentive Distribution Rights and Common
Units received by it pursuant to
Section
5.2
) and the Underwriters, in each case when they were admitted to the Partnership in accordance with
Section
10.1
.
Initial Offering
means the initial offering and sale of Common Units to the public, as described in the Registration
Statement.
Initial Unit Price
means (a) with respect to the Common Units, the initial public offering
price per Common Unit at which the Underwriters offered the Common Units to the public for sale as set forth on the cover page of the prospectus included as part of the Registration Statement and first issued at or after the time the Registration
Statement first became effective or (b) with respect to any other class or series of Units, the price per Unit at which such class or series of Units is initially sold by the Partnership, as determined by the General Partner, in each case
adjusted as the General Partner determines to be appropriate to give effect to any distribution, subdivision or combination of Units;
provided
, (i) with respect to Common Units, upon the Split Date such price was reduced by two-thirds to
give effect to the 2011 Unit Split and (ii) with respect to Common Units, upon the 2014 Unit Split Date such price was further reduced by half to give effect to the 2014 Unit Split.
Interim Capital Transactions
means the following transactions if they occur prior to the Liquidation Date:
(a) borrowings, refinancings or refundings of indebtedness (other than Working Capital Borrowings and other than for items purchased on open account in the ordinary course of business) by any Group Member and sales of debt securities of any
Group Member; (b) sales of equity interests of any Group Member (including the Common Units sold to the Underwriters pursuant to the exercise of the Over-Allotment Option); (c) sales or other voluntary or involuntary dispositions of any
assets of any Group Member other than (i) sales or other dispositions of inventory, accounts receivable and other assets in the ordinary course of business, and (ii) sales or other dispositions of assets as part of normal retirements or
replacements.
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Issue Price
means the price at which a Unit is purchased from the
Partnership, after taking into account any sales commission or underwriting discount charged to the Partnership.
Limited
Partner
means, unless the context otherwise requires, (a) the Organizational Limited Partner prior to its withdrawal from the Partnership, each Initial Limited Partner, each Substituted Limited Partner, each Additional Limited
Partner and any Departing Partner upon the change of its status from General Partner to Limited Partner pursuant to
Section
11.3
or (b) solely for purposes of
Articles
V
,
VI
,
VII
and
IX
, each Assignee;
provided
,
however
, that when the term Limited Partner is used herein in the context of any vote or other approval, including without limitation
Articles
XIII
and
XIV
, such term shall not, solely for such purpose, include any holder of an Incentive Distribution Right except as may otherwise be required by law.
Limited Partner Interest
means the ownership interest of a Limited Partner or Assignee in the Partnership, which may
be evidenced by Common Units, Class E Units, Class G Units, Class J Units, Class K Units and Incentive Distribution Rights or other Partnership Securities or a combination thereof or interest therein, and includes any and all benefits to which
such Limited Partner or Assignee is entitled as provided in this Agreement, together with all obligations of such Limited Partner or Assignee to comply with the terms and provisions of this Agreement;
provided
,
however
, that when the
term Limited Partner Interest is used herein in the context of any vote or other approval, including without limitation
Articles
XIII
and
XIV
, such term shall not, solely for such purpose, include any
holder of an Incentive Distribution Right except as may otherwise be required by law.
Liquidation Date
means
(a) in the case of an event giving rise to the dissolution of the Partnership of the type described in
clauses
(a)
and
(b)
of the first sentence of
Section
12.2
, the date on which the
applicable time period during which the holders of Outstanding Units have the right to elect to reconstitute the Partnership and continue its business has expired without such an election being made, and (b) in the case of any other event
giving rise to the dissolution of the Partnership, the date on which such event occurs.
Liquidator
means one or
more Persons selected by the General Partner to perform the functions described in
Section
12.3
as liquidating trustee of the Partnership within the meaning of the Delaware Act.
Merger Agreement
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
14.1
.
Minimum Quarterly Distribution
means $0.075 per Unit per Quarter, subject to adjustment in accordance with
Section
6.6
and
Section
6.8
.
Moodys
means
Moodys Investors Service, Inc., or any successor to the rating agency business thereof.
National Securities
Exchange
means an exchange registered with the Commission under Section 6(a) of the Securities Exchange Act or the Nasdaq Stock Market or any successor thereto.
Net Agreed Value
means, (a) in the case of any Contributed Property, the Agreed Value of such property reduced
by any liabilities either assumed by the Partnership upon such contribution or to which such property is subject when contributed, and (b) in the case of any property distributed to a Partner or Assignee by the Partnership, the
Partnerships Carrying Value of such property (as adjusted pursuant to
Section
5.5(d)(ii)
) at the time such property is distributed, reduced by any indebtedness either assumed by such Partner or Assignee upon such
distribution or to which such property is subject at the time of distribution, in either case, as determined under Section 752 of the Code.
Net Income
means, for any taxable year, the excess, if any, of the Partnerships items of income and gain
(other than those items taken into account in the computation of Net Termination Gain or Net Termination Loss)
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for such taxable year over the Partnerships items of loss and deduction (other than those items taken into account in the computation of Net Termination Gain or Net Termination Loss) for
such taxable year. The items included in the calculation of Net Income shall be determined in accordance with
Section
5.5(b)
and shall not include any items specially allocated under
Section
6.1(d)
;
provided
that the determination of the items that have been specially allocated under
Section
6.1(d)
shall be made without regard to any reversal of such items under
Section
6.1(d)(xii)
.
Net Loss
means, for any taxable year, the excess, if any, of the
Partnerships items of loss and deduction (other than those items taken into account in the computation of Net Termination Gain or Net Termination Loss) for such taxable year over the Partnerships items of income and gain (other than
those items taken into account in the computation of Net Termination Gain or Net Termination Loss) for such taxable year. The items included in the calculation of Net Loss shall be determined in accordance with
Section
5.5(b)
and shall not include any items specially allocated under
Section
6.1(d)
;
provided
that the determination of the items that have been specially allocated under
Section
6.1(d)
shall be made without regard to any reversal of such items under
Section
6.1(d)(xiii)
).
Net Positive Adjustments
means, with respect to any Partner, the excess, if any, of the total positive adjustments
over the total negative adjustments made to the Capital Account of such Partner pursuant to Book-Up Events and Book-Down Events.
Net Termination Gain
means, for any taxable year, the sum, if positive, of all items of income, gain, loss or
deduction recognized by the Partnership (a) after the Liquidation Date or (b) upon the sale, exchange or other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of the Partnership Group, taken as a whole, in a single transaction or a
series of related transactions (excluding any disposition to a member of the Partnership Group). The items included in the determination of Net Termination Gain shall be determined in accordance with
Section
5.5(b)
and
shall not include any items of income, gain or loss specially allocated under
Section
6.1(d)
.
Net
Termination Loss
means, for any taxable year, the sum, if negative, of all items of income, gain, loss or deduction recognized by the Partnership (a) after the Liquidation Date or (b) upon the sale, exchange or other
disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of the Partnership Group, taken as a whole, in a single transaction or a series of related transactions (excluding any disposition to a member of the Partnership Group). The items included in the
determination of Net Termination Loss shall be determined in accordance with
Section
5.5(b)
and shall not include any items of income, gain or loss specially allocated under
Section
6.1(d)
.
Non-citizen Assignee
means a Person whom the General Partner has determined does not constitute an Eligible Citizen
and as to whose Partnership Interest the General Partner has become the Substituted Limited Partner, pursuant to
Section
4.9
.
Noncompensatory Option
has the meaning set forth in Treasury Regulation Section 1.721-2(f).
Nonrecourse Built-in Gain
means with respect to any Contributed Properties or Adjusted Properties that are subject
to a mortgage or pledge securing a Nonrecourse Liability, the amount of any taxable gain that would be allocated to the Partners pursuant to
Section
6.2(b)(i)(A)
,
Section
6.2(b)(ii)(A)
and
Section
6.2(b)(iii)
if such properties were disposed of in a taxable transaction in full satisfaction of such liabilities and for no other consideration.
Nonrecourse Deductions
means any and all items of loss, deduction or expenditure (including, without limitation, any
expenditure described in Section 705(a)(2)(B) of the Code) that, in accordance with the principles of Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-2(b), are attributable to a Nonrecourse Liability.
Nonrecourse Liability
has the meaning set forth in Treasury Regulation Section 1.752-1(a)(2).
Notice of Election to Purchase
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
15.1(b)
.
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Omnibus Agreement
means that Omnibus Agreement, dated as of the Closing
Date, among Sunoco, Inc., Sunoco R&M, the General Partner, the Partnership, the Operating Partnership and certain other parties.
Operating Expenditures
means all Partnership Group expenditures, including, but not limited to, taxes,
reimbursements of the General Partner, repayment of Working Capital Borrowings, debt service payments and capital expenditures, subject to the following:
(a) Payments (including prepayments) of principal of and premium on indebtedness other than Working Capital Borrowings shall not constitute
Operating Expenditures; and
(b) Operating Expenditures shall not include (i) capital expenditures made for Acquisitions or for
Capital Improvements, (ii) payment of transaction expenses relating to Interim Capital Transactions or (iii) distributions to Partners. Where capital expenditures are made in part for Acquisitions or for Capital Improvements and in part
for other purposes, the General Partner shall determine the amounts to be allocated to each.
Operating
Partnership
means Sunoco Logistics Partners Operations L.P., a Delaware limited partnership, and any successors thereto.
Operating Partnership Agreement
means the Amended and Restated Partnership Agreement of the Operating Partnership,
as it may be amended, supplemented or restated from time to time.
Operating Surplus
means, with respect to any
period ending prior to the Liquidation Date, on a cumulative basis and without duplication,
(a) the sum of (i) $15.0 million,
(ii) all cash and cash equivalents of the Partnership Group on hand as of the close of business on the Closing Date, (iii) all cash receipts of the Partnership Group for the period beginning on the Closing Date and ending with the last day
of such period, other than cash receipts from Interim Capital Transactions (except to the extent specified in
Section
6.5
), (iv) all cash receipts of the Partnership Group after the end of such period but on or before
the date of determination of Operating Surplus with respect to such period resulting from Working Capital Borrowings, and (v) the ETP Operating Surplus Amount, less
(b) the sum of (i) Operating Expenditures for the period beginning on the Closing Date and ending with the last day of such period and
(ii) the amount of cash reserves established by the General Partner to provide funds for future Operating Expenditures;
provided
,
however
, that disbursements made (including contributions to a Group Member or disbursements on
behalf of a Group Member) or cash reserves established, increased or reduced after the end of such period but on or before the date of determination of Available Cash with respect to such period shall be deemed to have been made, established,
increased or reduced, for purposes of determining Operating Surplus, within such period if the General Partner so determines.
Notwithstanding the foregoing,
Operating Surplus
with respect to the Quarter in which the Liquidation Date occurs
and any subsequent Quarter shall equal zero.
Opinion of Counsel
means a written opinion of counsel (who may be
regular counsel to the Partnership or the General Partner or any of its Affiliates) acceptable to the General Partner.
Option
Closing Date
means the date or dates on which any Common Units were sold by the Partnership to the Underwriters upon exercise of the Over-Allotment Option.
Organizational Limited Partner
means Sun Pipe Line Company of Delaware in its capacity as the organizational limited
partner of the Partnership pursuant to this Agreement.
Outstanding
means, with respect to Partnership
Securities, all Partnership Securities that are issued by the Partnership and reflected as outstanding on the Partnerships books and records as of the date of
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determination;
provided
,
however
, that if at any time any Person or Group (other than the General Partner or its Affiliates) beneficially owns 20% or more of any Outstanding
Partnership Securities of any class then Outstanding, all Partnership Securities owned by such Person or Group shall not be voted on any matter and shall not be considered to be Outstanding when sending notices of a meeting of Limited Partners to
vote on any matter (unless otherwise required by law), calculating required votes, determining the presence of a quorum or for other similar purposes under this Agreement, except that Common Units so owned shall be considered to be Outstanding for
purposes of
Section
11.1(b)(iv)
(such Common Units shall not, however, be treated as a separate class of Partnership Securities for purposes of this Agreement);
provided
,
further
, that the foregoing limitation
shall not apply (i) to any Person or Group who acquired 20% or more of any Outstanding Partnership Securities of any class then Outstanding directly from the General Partner or its Affiliates, (ii) to any Person or Group who acquired 20%
or more of any Outstanding Partnership Securities of any class then Outstanding directly or indirectly from a Person or Group described in
clause
(i)
;
provided
that the General Partner shall have notified such Person
or Group in writing that such limitation shall not apply, or (iii) to any Person or Group who acquired 20% or more of any Partnership Securities issued by the Partnership with the prior approval of the Board of Directors of the General Partner.
Over-Allotment Option
means the over-allotment option granted to the Underwriters by the Partnership pursuant
to the Underwriting Agreement.
Partner Nonrecourse Debt
has the meaning set forth in Treasury Regulation
Section 1.704-2(b)(4).
Partner Nonrecourse Debt Minimum Gain
has the meaning set forth in Treasury
Regulation Section 1.704-2(i)(2).
Partner Nonrecourse Deductions
means any and all items of loss, deduction or
expenditure (including, without limitation, any expenditure described in Section 705(a)(2)(B) of the Code) that, in accordance with the principles of Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-2(i), are attributable to a Partner Nonrecourse Debt.
Partners
means the General Partner and the Limited Partners.
Partnership
means [Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.], a Delaware limited partnership, and any successors thereto.
Partnership Group
means the Partnership, the Operating Partnership and any Subsidiary of any such entity, treated as
a single consolidated entity.
Partnership Interest
means an interest in the Partnership, which shall include
the General Partner Interest and Limited Partner Interests.
Partnership Liabilities
means all liabilities or
obligations of any nature, whether accrued, contingent or otherwise, of the Partnership.
Partnership Minimum
Gain
means that amount determined in accordance with the principles of Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-2(d).
Partnership Security
means any class or series of equity interest in the Partnership (but excluding any options,
rights, warrants and appreciation rights relating to an equity interest in the Partnership).
Percentage
Interest
means as of any date of determination (a) as to the General Partner (in its capacity as General Partner without reference to any Limited Partner Interests held by it), the product obtained by dividing (i) the Capital
Account balance of the General Partner by (ii) the aggregate Capital Account balances of all Limited Partners and the General Partner, (b) as to any holder of a Common Unit or Assignee holding Common
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Units, the product obtained by multiplying (i) 100% less the percentage applicable to
paragraphs
(a)
and (c) by (ii) the quotient obtained by dividing
(A) the number of Common Units held by such Unitholder or Assignee by (B) the total number of all Outstanding Common Units, and (c) as to the holders of other Partnership Securities issued by the Partnership in accordance with
Section
5.6
, the percentage established as a part of such issuance. The Percentage Interest with respect to an Incentive Distribution Right, a Class I Unit, a Class J Unit and a Class K Unit shall at all times be zero.
The Percentage Interest for the Class E Units shall be the Class E Percentage and Percentage Interest for the Class G Units shall be the Class G Percentage.
Person
means an individual or a corporation, limited liability company, partnership, joint venture, trust,
unincorporated organization, association, government agency or political subdivision thereof or other entity.
Per Unit
Capital Amount
means, as of any date of determination, the Capital Account, stated on a per Unit basis, underlying any Unit held by a Person other than the General Partner or any Affiliate of the General Partner who holds Units.
Pipelines and Terminals Storage and Throughput Agreement
means that certain Pipelines and Terminals Storage and
Throughput Agreement, dated as of the Closing Date, among Sunoco R&M and Sunoco Pipeline L.P.
Previous
Agreement
has the meaning assigned to such term in the Recitals.
Pro Rata
means (a) when
modifying Units or any class thereof, apportioned equally among all such designated Units in accordance with their relative Percentage Interests, (b) when modifying Partners and Assignees, apportioned among all Partners and Assignees in
accordance with their relative Percentage Interests and (c) when modifying holders of Incentive Distribution Rights, apportioned equally among all holders of Incentive Distribution Rights in accordance with the relative number or percentage of
Incentive Distribution Rights held by each such holder.
Purchase Date
means the date determined by the General
Partner as the date for purchase of all Outstanding Units of a certain class (other than Units owned by the General Partner and its Affiliates) pursuant to
Article
XV
.
Qualified Owner
means ETE and its Affiliates that are organized by such Person (or any Person controlling such
Person) primarily for making, or otherwise having as their primary activity holding or exercising control over, equity or debt investments in [Sunoco Logistics Partners, LP] or other publicly traded master limited partnerships.
Quarter
means, unless the context requires otherwise, a fiscal quarter, or, with respect to the first fiscal quarter
after the Closing Date, the portion of such fiscal quarter after the Closing Date, of the Partnership.
Ratings
Categories
means (a) with respect to S&P, any of the following categories: AAA, AA, A, BBB, BB, B, CCC, CC, C and D (or equivalent successor categories); and (b) with respect to Moodys, any of the following categories: Aaa,
Aa, A, Baa, Ba, B, Caa, Ca, C and D (or equivalent successor categories).
Ratings Decline
means a decrease in
the rating as to the Partnership by either Moodys or S&P by one or more gradations (including gradations within Rating Categories as well as between Rating Categories). In determining whether the rating of the Partnership has decreased by
one or more gradations, gradations within Ratings Categories, namely + or for S&P, and 1, 2, and 3 for Moodys, will be taken into account; for example, in the case of S&P, a ratings decline either from BB+ to BB or BB
to BB- will constitute a decrease of one gradation.
Recapture Income
means any gain recognized by the
Partnership (computed without regard to any adjustment required by Section 734 or Section 743 of the Code) upon the disposition of any property or asset of the Partnership, which gain is characterized as ordinary income because it represents the
recapture of deductions previously taken with respect to such property or asset.
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Record Date
means the date established by the General Partner for
determining (a) the identity of the Record Holders entitled to notice of, or to vote at, any meeting of Limited Partners or entitled to vote by ballot or give approval of Partnership action in writing without a meeting or entitled to exercise
rights in respect of any lawful action of Limited Partners or (b) the identity of Record Holders entitled to receive any report or distribution or to participate in any offer.
Record Holder
means the Person in whose name a Common Unit is registered on the books of the Transfer Agent as of
the opening of business on a particular Business Day, or with respect to other Partnership Securities, the Person in whose name any such other Partnership Security is registered on the books that the General Partner has caused to be kept as of the
opening of business on such Business Day.
Redeemable Interests
means any Partnership Interests for which a
redemption notice has been given, and has not been withdrawn, pursuant to
Section
4.10
.
Registration Statement
means the Registration Statement on Form S-1 (Registration No. 333-71968) as it has been
or as it may be amended or supplemented from time to time, filed by the Partnership with the Commission under the Securities Act to register the offering and sale of the Common Units in the Initial Offering.
Remaining Net Positive Adjustments
means as of the end of any taxable period, (i) with respect to the
Unitholders holding Common Units, the excess of (ii) the Net Positive Adjustments of the Unitholders holding Common Units as of the end of such period over (iii) the sum of those Partners Share of Additional Book Basis Derivative
Items for each prior taxable period, (iv) with respect to the General Partner (as holder of the General Partner Interest), the excess of (A) the Net Positive Adjustments of the General Partner as of the end of such period over (B) the
sum of the General Partners Share of Additional Book Basis Derivative Items with respect to the General Partner Interest for each prior taxable period, and (v) with respect to the holders of Incentive Distribution Rights, the excess of
(A) the Net Positive Adjustments of the holders of Incentive Distribution Rights as of the end of such period over (B) the sum of the Share of Additional Book Basis Derivative Items of the holders of the Incentive Distribution Rights for
each prior taxable period.
Repurchase Agreement
has the meaning assigned to such term in the Recitals.
Required Allocations
means (a) any limitation imposed on any allocation of Net Losses or Net Termination Losses
under
Section
6.1(b)
or
Section
6.1(c)(ii)
and (b) any allocation of an item of income, gain, loss or deduction pursuant to
Section
6.1(d)(i)
,
Section
6.1(d)(ii)
,
Section
6.1(d)(iv)
,
Section
6.1(d)(vii)
or
Section
6.1(d)(ix)
.
Residual Gain
or
Residual Loss
means any item of gain or loss, as the case may be, of the
Partnership recognized for federal income tax purposes resulting from a sale, exchange or other disposition of a Contributed Property or Adjusted Property, to the extent such item of gain or loss is not allocated pursuant to
Section
6.2(b)(i)(A)
or
Section
6.2(b)(ii)(A)
, respectively, to eliminate Book-Tax Disparities.
Restricted Activities
has the meaning assigned to such term in the Omnibus Agreement.
Retained Assets
means the pipeline, terminal and other logistics assets and investments owned by Sunoco, Inc. and
its affiliates that were not conveyed, contributed or otherwise transferred to the Partnership Group pursuant to the Contribution Agreement, including, without limitation, Mid-Valley Pipeline Company, West Texas Gulf Pipeline Company, the Mesa
pipeline and Inland Corporation;
provided
,
however
, that the term Retained Assets shall not include any pipeline, terminal or other logistics assets or investments that are sold, transferred or otherwise disposed of after
the date of this Agreement to a Person that is not an Affiliate of Sunoco, Inc.
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Revaluation Event
means an event that results in adjustment of the
Carrying Value of each Partnership property pursuant to
Section
5.5(d)
.
S&P
means
Standards & Poors Ratings Services, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., or any successor to the rating agency business thereof.
Second Liquidation Target Amount
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
6.1(c)(i)(D)
.
Second Target Distribution
means $0.0958 per Unit per Quarter,
subject to adjustment in accordance with
Section
6.6
and
Section
6.8
.
Securities Act
means the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, supplemented or restated from time to time and any
successor to such statute.
Securities Exchange Act
means the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended,
supplemented or restated from time to time and any successor to such statute.
Share of Additional Book Basis Derivative
Items
means in connection with any allocation of Additional Book Basis Derivative Items for any taxable period, (i) with respect to the Unitholders holding Common Units, the amount that bears the same ratio to such Additional Book
Basis Derivative Items as the Unitholders Remaining Net Positive Adjustments as of the end of such period bears to the Aggregate Remaining Net Positive Adjustments as of that time, (ii) with respect to the General Partner (as holder of
the General Partner Interest), the amount that bears the same ratio to such additional Book Basis Derivative Items as the General Partners Remaining Net Positive Adjustments as of the end of such period bears to the Aggregate Remaining Net
Positive Adjustment as of that time, and (iii) with respect to the Partners holding Incentive Distribution Rights, the amount that bears the same ratio to such Additional Book Basis Derivative Items as the Remaining Net Positive Adjustments of
the Partners holding the Incentive Distribution Rights as of the end of such period bears to the Aggregate Remaining Net Positive Adjustments as of that time.
Special Approval
means approval by a majority of the members of the Conflicts Committee.
Split Date
means December 2, 2011.
Subsidiary
means, with respect to any Person, (a) a corporation of which more than 50% of the voting power of
shares entitled (without regard to the occurrence of any contingency) to vote in the election of directors or other governing body of such corporation is owned, directly or indirectly, at the date of determination, by such Person, by one or more
Subsidiaries of such Person or a combination thereof, (b) a partnership (whether general or limited) in which such Person or a Subsidiary of such Person is, at the date of determination, a general or limited partner of such partnership, but
only if more than 50% of the partnership interests of such partnership (considering all of the partnership interests of the partnership as a single class) is owned, directly or indirectly, at the date of determination, by such Person, by one or more
Subsidiaries of such Person, or a combination thereof, or (c) any other Person (other than a corporation or a partnership) in which such Person, one or more Subsidiaries of such Person, or a combination thereof, directly or indirectly, at the
date of determination, has (i) at least a majority ownership interest or (ii) the power to elect or direct the election of a majority of the directors or other governing body of such Person.
Substituted Limited Partner
means a Person who is admitted as a Limited Partner to the Partnership pursuant to
Section
10.2
in place of and with all the rights of a Limited Partner and who is shown as a Limited Partner on the books and records of the Partnership.
Sunoco R&M
means Sunoco (R&M), LLC, a Pennsylvania limited liability company (formerly Sunoco, Inc.
(R&M), a Pennsylvania corporation).
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Surviving Business Entity
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
14.2(b)
.
Tax Cost
means the quotient obtained by dividing sixty percent (60%)
of the excess of (I) the highest marginal effective rate of federal, state and local income tax applicable to ordinary income of an individual resident in New York City, New York for the taxable year in which the conversion occurs over (II) the
highest marginal effective rate of federal, state and local income tax applicable to long-term capital gain of an individual resident in New York City, New York for the taxable year in which the conversion occurs, by one (1.00) minus the highest
marginal effective rate of federal, state and local income tax applicable to ordinary income of an individual resident in New York City, New York for the taxable year in which the conversion occurs.
Third Liquidation Target Amount
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
6.1(c)(i)(E)
.
Third Target Distribution
means $0.2638 per Unit per Quarter,
subject to adjustment in accordance with
Section
6.6
and
Section
6.8
.
Trading Day
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
15.1(a)
.
Transfer
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
4.4(a)
.
Transfer Agent
means such bank, trust company or other Person (including the General Partner or one of its
Affiliates) as shall be appointed from time to time by the Partnership to act as registrar and transfer agent for the Common Units;
provided
that if no Transfer Agent is specifically designated for any other Partnership Securities, the
General Partner shall act in such capacity.
Transfer Application
means an application and agreement for
transfer of Units in the form set forth on the back of a Certificate or in a form substantially to the same effect in a separate instrument.
Treasury Services Agreement
means the Treasury Services Agreement, dated as of the Closing Date, among Sunoco, Inc.,
the General Partner and the Partnership.
Underwriter
means each Person named as an underwriter in
Schedule I to the Underwriting Agreement who purchased Common Units pursuant thereto.
Underwriting
Agreement
means the Underwriting Agreement, dated February 4, 2002, among the Underwriters, the Partnership, the General Partner, the Operating Partnership, the general partner of the Operating Partnership and Sunoco, Inc.
providing for the purchase of Common Units by such Underwriters.
Unit
means a Partnership Security that is
designated as a Unit and shall include Common Units, Class E Units, Class G Units and Class K Units, but shall not include (a) the General Partner Interest, (b) the Incentive Distribution Rights, (c) the Class I Units or (d) the Class J
Units.
Unitholders
means the holders of Units.
Unitholder Net Income
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
5.11(b)(ii)(C)
.
Unitholder Net Losses
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
5.11(b)(ii)(D)
.
Unit Majority
means at least a majority of the Outstanding
Units (excluding the Class E Units, Class G Units and Class K Units in respect of matters in which the holders of the Class E Units, Class G Units and Class K Units are not entitled to a vote), voting together as a single class.
Unpaid MQD
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
6.1(c)(i)(B)
.
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Unrealized Gain
attributable to any item of Partnership property means,
as of any date of determination, the excess, if any, of (a) the fair market value of such property as of such date (as determined under
Section
5.5(d)
) over (b) the Carrying Value of such property as of such date
(prior to any adjustment to be made pursuant to
Section
5.5(d)
as of such date).
Unrealized
Loss
attributable to any item of Partnership property means, as of any date of determination, the excess, if any, of (a) the Carrying Value of such property as of such date (prior to any adjustment to be made pursuant to
Section
5.5(d)
as of such date) over (b) the fair market value of such property as of such date (as determined under
Section
5.5(d)
).
Unrecovered Capital
means at any time, with respect to a Unit, the Initial Unit Price less the sum of all
distributions constituting Capital Surplus theretofore made in respect of an Initial Common Unit and any distributions of cash (or the Net Agreed Value of any distributions in kind) in connection with the dissolution and liquidation of the
Partnership theretofore made in respect of an Initial Common Unit, adjusted as the General Partner determines to be appropriate to give effect to any distribution, subdivision or combination of such Units
provided
, (i) with respect to
Common Units, upon the Split Date such value was reduced by two-thirds to give effect to the 2011 Unit Split and (ii) with respect to Common Units, upon the 2014 Unit Split Date such value was further reduced by half to give effect to the 2014
Unit Split.
U.S. GAAP
means United States generally accepted accounting principles consistently applied.
Voting Stock
of any Person as of any date means, with respect to any Person (other than a general or limited
partnership), the equity interests of such Person pursuant to which the holders thereof have the general voting power under ordinary circumstances to elect at least a majority of the Board of Directors of such Person (regardless of whether, at the
time, equity interests of any other class or classes shall have, or might have, voting power by reason of the occurrence of any contingency) or, with respect to a partnership (whether general or limited), any general partner interest in such
partnership.
VWAP Price
means, as of any date, the volume-weighted average trading price of the Common Units on
the National Securities Exchange on which the Common Units are listed or admitted to trading, calculated over the trailing 20-Trading Day period.
Withdrawal Opinion of Counsel
has the meaning assigned to such term in
Section
11.1(b)
.
Working Capital Borrowings
means borrowings used solely for working capital purposes or to pay distributions to
Partners made pursuant to a credit facility or other arrangement to the extent such borrowings are required to be reduced to a relatively small amount each year (or for the year in which the Initial Offering is consummated, the 12-month period
beginning on the Closing Date) for an economically meaningful period of time.
Section 1.2
Construction
.
Unless the context requires otherwise: (a) any pronoun used in this Agreement shall include the corresponding masculine, feminine or
neuter forms, and the singular form of nouns, pronouns and verbs shall include the plural and vice versa; (b) references to Articles and Sections refer to Articles and Sections of this Agreement; and (c) the term include or
includes means includes, without limitation, and including means including, without limitation.
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ARTICLE II
ORGANIZATION
Section 2.1
Formation
.
Sunoco Partners LLC and the Organizational Limited Partner have previously formed the Partnership as a limited partnership pursuant to the
provisions of the Delaware Act and the General Partner hereby amends and restates the Previous Agreement in its entirety. This amendment and restatement shall become effective at the Effective Time. Except as expressly provided to the contrary in
this Agreement, the rights, duties (including fiduciary duties), liabilities and obligations of the Partners and the administration, dissolution and termination of the Partnership shall be governed by the Delaware Act. All Partnership Interests
shall constitute personal property of the owner thereof for all purposes and a Partner has no interest in specific Partnership property.
Section 2.2
Name
.
The name of the Partnership shall be [Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.] The Partnerships business may be conducted under any
other name or names determined by the General Partner, including the name of the General Partner. The words Limited Partnership, L.P., Ltd. or similar words or letters shall be included in the Partnerships
name where necessary for the purpose of complying with the laws of any jurisdiction that so requires. The General Partner may change the name of the Partnership at any time and from time to time and shall notify the Limited Partners of such change
in the next regular communication to the Limited Partners.
Section 2.3
Registered Office; Registered Agent; Principal Office;
Other Offices
.
Unless and until changed by the General Partner, the registered office of the Partnership in the State of Delaware
shall be located at 2711 Centerville Road, Suite 400, Wilmington, Delaware 19808, and the registered agent for service of process on the Partnership in the State of Delaware at such registered office shall be Corporation Service Company. The
principal office of the Partnership shall be located at 3807 West Chester Pike, Newtown Square, Pennsylvania 19073 or such other place as the General Partner may from time to time designate by notice to the Limited Partners. The Partnership may
maintain offices at such other place or places within or outside the State of Delaware as the General Partner shall determine. The address of the General Partner shall be 3807 West Chester Pike, Newtown Square, Pennsylvania 19073 or such other place
as the General Partner may from time to time designate by notice to the Limited Partners.
Section 2.4
Purpose and
Business
.
The purpose and nature of the business to be conducted by the Partnership shall be to (a) serve as a partner of
the Operating Partnership and, in connection therewith, to exercise all the rights and powers conferred upon the Partnership as a partner of the Operating Partnership pursuant to the Operating Partnership Agreement or otherwise, (b) engage
directly in, or enter into or form any corporation, partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or other arrangement to engage indirectly in, any business activity that the Operating Partnership is permitted to engage in by the Operating
Partnership Agreement or that its subsidiaries are permitted to engage in by their limited liability company or partnership agreements and, in connection therewith, to exercise all of the rights and powers conferred upon the Partnership pursuant to
the agreements relating to such business activity, (c) engage directly in, or enter into or form any corporation, partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or other arrangement to engage indirectly in, any business activity that is
approved by the General Partner and which lawfully may be conducted by a limited partnership organized pursuant to the Delaware Act and, in connection therewith, to exercise all of the rights and powers conferred upon the Partnership pursuant to the
agreements relating to such business activity;
provided
,
however
, that the General Partner determines, as of the date of the acquisition or commencement of such activity, that such activity (i) generates qualifying
income (as
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such term is defined pursuant to Section 7704 of the Code) or a Subsidiary or a Partnership activity that generates qualifying income or (ii) enhances the operations of an activity of
the Operating Partnership, and (d) do anything necessary or appropriate to the foregoing, including the making of capital contributions or loans to a Group Member. The General Partner shall have no duty or obligation to propose or approve, and
may decline to propose or approve, the conduct by the Partnership of any business free of any fiduciary duty or obligation whatsoever to the Partnership, any Limited Partner or Assignee and, in declining to so propose or approve, shall not be
required to act in good faith or pursuant to any other standard imposed by this Agreement, any Group Member Agreement, any other agreement contemplated hereby or under the Delaware Act or any other law, rule or regulation.
Section 2.5
Powers
.
The Partnership shall be empowered to do any and all acts and things necessary and appropriate for the furtherance and accomplishment of the
purposes and business described in
Section
2.4
and for the protection and benefit of the Partnership.
Section 2.6
Power of Attorney
.
(a) Each Limited Partner and each Assignee hereby constitutes and appoints the General Partner and, if a Liquidator shall have been selected
pursuant to
Section
12.3
, the Liquidator (and any successor to the Liquidator by merger, transfer, assignment, election or otherwise) and each of their authorized officers and attorneys-in-fact, as the case may be, with
full power of substitution, as his true and lawful agent and attorney-in-fact, with full power and authority in his name, place and stead, to:
(i) execute, swear to, acknowledge, deliver, file and record in the appropriate public offices (A) all certificates,
documents and other instruments (including this Agreement and the Certificate of Limited Partnership and all amendments or restatements hereof or thereof) that the General Partner or the Liquidator determines to be necessary or appropriate to form,
qualify or continue the existence or qualification of the Partnership as a limited partnership (or a partnership in which the limited partners have limited liability) in the State of Delaware and in all other jurisdictions in which the Partnership
may conduct business or own property; (B) all certificates, documents and other instruments that the General Partner or the Liquidator determines to be necessary or appropriate to reflect, in accordance with its terms, any amendment, change,
modification or restatement of this Agreement; (C) all certificates, documents and other instruments (including conveyances and a certificate of cancellation) that the General Partner or the Liquidator determines to be necessary or appropriate
to reflect the dissolution and liquidation of the Partnership pursuant to the terms of this Agreement; (D) all certificates, documents and other instruments relating to the admission, withdrawal, removal or substitution of any Partner pursuant
to, or other events described in,
Article
IV
,
X
,
XI
or
XII
; (E) all certificates, documents and other instruments relating to the determination of the rights, preferences and privileges of any
class or series of Partnership Securities issued pursuant to
Section
5.6
; and (F) all certificates, documents and other instruments (including agreements and a certificate of merger) relating to a merger, consolidation
or conversion of the Partnership pursuant to
Article
XIV
; and
(ii) execute, swear to,
acknowledge, deliver, file and record all ballots, consents, approvals, waivers, certificates, documents and other instruments that the General Partner or the Liquidator determines to be necessary or appropriate to (A) make, evidence, give,
confirm or ratify any vote, consent, approval, agreement or other action that is made or given by the Partners hereunder or is consistent with the terms of this Agreement or (B) effectuate the terms or intent of this Agreement;
provided
,
that when required by
Section
13.3
or any other provision of this Agreement that establishes a percentage of the Limited Partners or of the Limited Partners of any class or series required to take any action, the General
Partner and the Liquidator may exercise the power of attorney made in this
Section
2.6(a)(ii)
only after the necessary vote, consent or approval of the Limited Partners or of the Limited Partners of such class or series, as
applicable.
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Nothing contained in this
Section
2.6(a)
shall be construed as authorizing the General
Partner to amend this Agreement except in accordance with
Article
VIII
or as may be otherwise expressly provided for in this Agreement.
(b) The foregoing power of attorney is hereby declared to be irrevocable and a power coupled with an interest, and it shall survive and, to
the maximum extent permitted by law, not be affected by the subsequent death, incompetency, disability, incapacity, dissolution, bankruptcy or termination of any Limited Partner or Assignee and the transfer of all or any portion of such Limited
Partners or Assignees Partnership Interest and shall extend to such Limited Partners or Assignees heirs, successors, assigns and personal representatives. Each such Limited Partner or Assignee hereby agrees to be bound by any
representation made by the General Partner or the Liquidator acting in good faith pursuant to such power of attorney; and each such Limited Partner or Assignee, to the maximum extent permitted by law, hereby waives any and all defenses that may be
available to contest, negate or disaffirm the action of the General Partner or the Liquidator taken in good faith under such power of attorney. Each Limited Partner or Assignee shall execute and deliver to the General Partner or the Liquidator,
within 15 days after receipt of the request therefor, such further designation, powers of attorney and other instruments as the General Partner or the Liquidator may request in order to effectuate this Agreement and the purposes of the Partnership.
Section 2.7
Term
.
The term of the Partnership commenced upon the filing of the Certificate of Limited Partnership in accordance with the Delaware Act and shall
continue in existence until the dissolution of the Partnership in accordance with the provisions of
Article
VII
. The existence of the Partnership as a separate legal entity shall continue until the cancellation of the
Certificate of Limited Partnership as provided in the Delaware Act.
Section 2.8
Title to Partnership Assets
.
Title to Partnership assets, whether real, personal or mixed and whether tangible or intangible, shall be deemed to be owned by the
Partnership as an entity, and no Partner or Assignee, individually or collectively, shall have any ownership interest in such Partnership assets or any portion thereof. Title to any or all of the Partnership assets may be held in the name of the
Partnership, the General Partner, one or more of its Affiliates or one or more nominees, as the General Partner may determine. The General Partner hereby declares and warrants that any Partnership assets for which record title is held in the name of
the General Partner or one or more of its Affiliates or one or more nominees shall be held by the General Partner or such Affiliate or nominee for the use and benefit of the Partnership in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement;
provided
,
however
, that the General Partner shall use reasonable efforts to cause record title to such assets (other than those assets in respect of which the General Partner determines that the expense and difficulty of conveyancing
makes transfer of record title to the Partnership impracticable) to be vested in the Partnership as soon as reasonably practicable;
provided
,
further
, that, prior to the withdrawal or removal of the General Partner or as soon
thereafter as practicable, the General Partner shall use reasonable efforts to effect the transfer of record title to the Partnership and, prior to any such transfer, will provide for the use of such assets in a manner satisfactory to the General
Partner. All Partnership assets shall be recorded as the property of the Partnership in its books and records, irrespective of the name in which record title to such Partnership assets is held.
ARTICLE III
RIGHTS OF LIMITED PARTNERS
Section 3.1
Limitation of Liability
.
The Limited Partners and the Assignees shall have no liability under this Agreement except as expressly provided in this Agreement or the
Delaware Act.
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Section 3.2
Management of Business
.
No Limited Partner or Assignee, in its capacity as such, shall participate in the operation, management or control (within the meaning of the
Delaware Act) of the Partnerships business, transact any business in the Partnerships name or have the power to sign documents for or otherwise bind the Partnership. Any action taken by any Affiliate of the General Partner or any
officer, director, employee, manager, member, general partner, agent or trustee of the General Partner or any of its Affiliates, or any officer, director, employee, manager, member, general partner, agent or trustee of a Group Member, in its
capacity as such, shall not be deemed to be participation in the control of the business of the Partnership by a limited partner of the Partnership (within the meaning of Section 17-303(a) of the Delaware Act) and shall not affect, impair or
eliminate the limitations on the liability of the Limited Partners or Assignees under this Agreement.
Section 3.3
Outside
Activities of the Limited Partners
.
Subject to the provisions of
Section
7.5
and the Omnibus Agreement,
which shall continue to be applicable to the Persons referred to therein, regardless of whether such Persons shall also be Limited Partners or Assignees, any Limited Partner or Assignee shall be entitled to and may have business interests and engage
in business activities in addition to those relating to the Partnership, including business interests and activities in direct competition with the Partnership Group. Neither the Partnership nor any of the other Partners or Assignees shall have any
rights by virtue of this Agreement in any business ventures of any Limited Partner or Assignee.
Section 3.4
Rights of Limited
Partners
.
(a) In addition to other rights provided by this Agreement or by applicable law, and except as limited by
Section
3.4(b)
, each Limited Partner shall have the right, for a purpose reasonably related to such Limited Partners interest as a Limited Partner in the Partnership, upon reasonable written demand and at such Limited
Partners own expense:
(i) to obtain true and full information regarding the status of the business and financial
condition of the Partnership;
(ii) promptly after becoming available, to obtain a copy of the Partnerships federal,
state and local income tax returns for each year;
(iii) to have furnished to him a current list of the name and last known
business, residence or mailing address of each Partner;
(iv) to have furnished to him a copy of this Agreement and the
Certificate of Limited Partnership and all amendments thereto, together with a copy of the executed copies of all powers of attorney pursuant to which this Agreement, the Certificate of Limited Partnership and all amendments thereto have been
executed;
(v) to obtain true and full information regarding the amount of cash and a description and statement of the Net
Agreed Value of any other Capital Contribution by each Partner and that each Partner has agreed to contribute in the future, and the date on which each became a Partner; and
(vi) to obtain such other information regarding the affairs of the Partnership as is just and reasonable.
(b) The General Partner may keep confidential from the Limited Partners and Assignees, for such period of time as the General Partner deems
reasonable, (i) any information that the General Partner reasonably believes to be in the nature of trade secrets or (ii) other information the disclosure of which the General Partner in good faith believes (A) is not in the best
interests of the Partnership Group, (B) could damage the Partnership Group (C) that any Group Member is required by law or by agreement with any third party to keep confidential (other than agreements with Affiliates of the Partnership the
primary purpose of which is to circumvent the obligations set forth in this
Section
3.4
).
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ARTICLE IV
CERTIFICATES; RECORD HOLDERS; ISSUANCE AND TRANSFER OF PARTNERSHIP INTERESTS; REDEMPTION OF PARTNERSHIP INTERESTS
Section 4.1
Certificates
.
Upon the Partnerships issuance of Common Units to any Person, the Partnership shall, upon such Partners request, issue one or more
Certificates in the name of such Person evidencing the number of such Units being so issued. In addition, (a) upon the General Partners request, the Partnership shall issue to it one or more Certificates in the name of the General Partner
evidencing its interests in the Partnership and (b) upon the request of any Person owning Incentive Distribution Rights or any other Partnership Securities other than Common Units, the Partnership shall issue to such Person one or more
certificates evidencing such Incentive Distribution Rights or other Partnership Securities other than Common Units. Certificates shall be executed on behalf of the Partnership by the Chairman of the Board, President or any Executive Vice President
or Vice President and the Secretary or any Assistant Secretary of the General Partner. No Common Unit Certificate shall be valid for any purpose until it has been countersigned by the Transfer Agent;
provided
,
however
, that if the
General Partner elects to issue Common Units in global form, the Common Unit Certificates shall be valid upon receipt of a certificate from the Transfer Agent certifying that the Common Units have been duly registered in accordance with the
directions of the Partnership.
Section 4.2
Mutilated, Destroyed, Lost or Stolen Certificates
.
(a) If any mutilated Certificate is surrendered to the Transfer Agent, the appropriate officers of the General Partner on behalf of the
Partnership shall execute, and the Transfer Agent shall countersign and deliver in exchange therefor, a new Certificate evidencing the same number and type of Partnership Securities as the Certificate so surrendered.
(b) The appropriate officers of the General Partner on behalf of the Partnership shall execute and deliver, and the Transfer Agent shall
countersign a new Certificate in place of any Certificate previously issued if the Record Holder of the Certificate:
(i)
makes proof by affidavit, in form and substance satisfactory to the Partnership, that a previously issued Certificate has been lost, destroyed or stolen;
(ii) requests the issuance of a new Certificate before the Partnership has notice that the Certificate has been acquired by a
purchaser for value in good faith and without notice of an adverse claim;
(iii) if requested by the Partnership, delivers
to the Partnership a bond, in form and substance satisfactory to the Partnership, with surety or sureties and with fixed or open penalty as the Partnership may direct, to indemnify the Partnership, the Partners, the General Partner and the Transfer
Agent against any claim that may be made on account of the alleged loss, destruction or theft of the Certificate; and
(iv)
satisfies any other reasonable requirements imposed by the Partnership.
If a Limited Partner or Assignee fails to notify the Partnership
within a reasonable time after he has notice of the loss, destruction or theft of a Certificate, and a transfer of the Limited Partner Interests represented by the Certificate is registered before the Partnership, the General Partner or the Transfer
Agent receives such notification, the Limited Partner or Assignee shall be precluded from making any claim against the Partnership, the General Partner or the Transfer Agent for such transfer or for a new Certificate.
(c) As a condition to the issuance of any new Certificate under this
Section
4.2
, the Partnership may require the
payment of a sum sufficient to cover any tax or other governmental charge that may be imposed in relation thereto and any other expenses (including the fees and expenses of the Transfer Agent) reasonably connected therewith.
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Section 4.3
Record Holders
.
The Partnership shall be entitled to recognize the Record Holder as the Partner or Assignee with respect to any Partnership Interest and,
accordingly, shall not be bound to recognize any equitable or other claim to or interest in such Partnership Interest on the part of any other Person, regardless of whether the Partnership shall have actual or other notice thereof, except as
otherwise provided by law or any applicable rule, regulation, guideline or requirement of any National Securities Exchange on which such Partnership Interests are listed for trading. Without limiting the foregoing, when a Person (such as a broker,
dealer, bank, trust company or clearing corporation or an agent of any of the foregoing) is acting as nominee, agent or in some other representative capacity for another Person in acquiring and/or holding Partnership Interests, as between the
Partnership on the one hand, and such other Persons on the other, such representative Person (a) shall be the Partner or Assignee (as the case may be) of record and beneficially, (b) must execute and deliver a Transfer Application and
(c) shall be bound by this Agreement and shall have the rights and obligations of a Partner or Assignee (as the case may be) hereunder and as, and to the extent, provided for herein.
Section 4.4
Transfer Generally
.
(a) The term transfer, when used in this Agreement with respect to a Partnership Interest, shall be deemed to refer to a
transaction (i) by which the General Partner assigns its General Partner Interest to another Person or by which a holder of Incentive Distribution Rights assigns its Incentive Distribution Rights to another Person, and includes a sale,
assignment, gift, pledge, encumbrance, hypothecation, mortgage, exchange or any other disposition by law or otherwise or (ii) by which the holder of a Limited Partner Interest, other than an Incentive Distribution Right, assigns such Limited
Partner Interest to another Person who is or becomes a Limited Partner or an Assignee, and includes a sale, assignment, gift, exchange or any other disposition by law or otherwise, including any transfer upon foreclosure of any pledge, encumbrance,
hypothecation or mortgage.
(b) No Partnership Interest shall be transferred, in whole or in part, except in accordance with the terms and
conditions set forth in this
Article
IV
. Any transfer or purported transfer of a Partnership Interest not made in accordance with this
Article
IV
shall be null and void.
(c) Nothing contained in this Agreement shall be construed to prevent a disposition by any member of the General Partner of any or all of the
membership interests of the General Partner.
Section 4.5
Registration and Transfer of Limited Partner Interests
.
(a) The General Partner shall keep or cause to be kept on behalf of the Partnership a register in which, subject to such reasonable
regulations as it may prescribe and subject to the provisions of
Section
4.5(b)
, the Partnership will provide for the registration and transfer of Limited Partner Interests. The Transfer Agent is hereby appointed registrar
and transfer agent for the purpose of registering Common Units and transfers of such Common Units as herein provided. The Partnership shall not recognize transfers of Certificates evidencing Limited Partner Interests unless such transfers are
effected in the manner described in this
Section
4.5
. Upon surrender of a Certificate for registration of transfer of any Limited Partner Interests evidenced by a Certificate, and subject to the provisions of
Section
4.5(b)
, the appropriate officers of the General Partner on behalf of the Partnership shall execute and deliver, and in the case of Common Units, the Transfer Agent shall countersign and deliver, in the name of the
holder or the designated transferee or transferees, as required pursuant to the holders instructions, one or more new Certificates evidencing the same aggregate number and type of Limited Partner Interests as was evidenced by the Certificate
so surrendered.
(b) Except as otherwise provided in
Section
4.9
, the Partnership shall not recognize any
transfer of Limited Partner Interests until the Certificates evidencing such Limited Partner Interests are surrendered for registration of transfer and such Certificates are accompanied by a Transfer Application duly executed by the transferee (or
the transferees attorney-in-fact duly authorized in writing). No charge shall be imposed by the Partnership for such transfer;
provided
,
that as a condition to the issuance of any new Certificate under this
Section
4.5
, the Partnership may require the payment of a sum sufficient to cover any tax or other governmental charge that may be imposed with respect thereto.
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(c) Limited Partner Interests may be transferred only in the manner described in this
Section
4.5
. The transfer of any Limited Partner Interests and the admission of any new Limited Partner shall not constitute an amendment to this Agreement.
(d) Until admitted as a Substituted Limited Partner pursuant to
Section
10.2
, the Record Holder of a Limited Partner
Interest shall be an Assignee in respect of such Limited Partner Interest. Limited Partners may include custodians, nominees or any other individual or entity in its own or any representative capacity.
(e) A transferee of a Limited Partner Interest who has completed and delivered a Transfer Application shall be deemed to have
(i) requested admission as a Substituted Limited Partner, (ii) agreed to comply with and be bound by and to have executed this Agreement, (iii) represented and warranted that such transferee has the right, power and authority and, if
an individual, the capacity to enter into this Agreement, (iv) granted the powers of attorney set forth in this Agreement and (v) given the consents and approvals and made the waivers contained in this Agreement.
(f) The General Partner and its Affiliates shall have the right at any time to transfer their Common Units to one or more Persons.
Section 4.6
Transfer of the General Partner
s General Partner Interest
.
(a) [Reserved]
(b) Subject to
Section
4.6(c)
below, the General Partner may transfer all or any of its General Partner Interest without Unitholder approval.
(c) Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary, no transfer by the General Partner of all or any part of its General Partner Interest to
another Person shall be permitted unless (i) the transferee agrees to assume the rights and duties of the General Partner under this Agreement and to be bound by the provisions of this Agreement, (ii) the Partnership receives an Opinion of
Counsel that such transfer would not result in the loss of limited liability of any Limited Partner or of any limited partner of the Operating Partnership or cause the Partnership or the Operating Partnership to be treated as an association taxable
as a corporation or otherwise to be taxed as an entity for federal income tax purposes (to the extent not already so treated or taxed) and (iii) such transferee also agrees to purchase all (or the appropriate portion thereof, if applicable) of
the partnership or membership interest of the General Partner as the general partner or managing member, if any, of each other Group Member. In the case of a transfer pursuant to and in compliance with this
Section
4.6
, the
transferee or successor (as the case may be) shall, subject to compliance with the terms of
Section
10.3
, be admitted to the Partnership as the General Partner immediately prior to the transfer of the General Partner
Interest, and the business of the Partnership shall continue without dissolution.
Section 4.7
Transfer of Incentive
Distribution Rights
.
The General Partner or any other holder of Incentive Distribution Rights may transfer any or all of its
Incentive Distribution Rights without Unitholder approval. Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary, no transfer of Incentive Distribution Rights to another Person shall be permitted unless the transferee agrees to be bound by the provisions
of this Agreement.
Section 4.8
Restrictions on Transfers
.
(a) Except as provided in
Section
4.8(c)
below, but notwithstanding the other provisions of this
Article
IV
, no transfer of any Partnership Interests shall be made if such transfer would (i) violate the then applicable federal or state securities laws or rules and regulations of the Commission, any state
securities commission or any other governmental authority with jurisdiction over such transfer, (ii) terminate the existence or qualification of the Partnership or the Operating Partnership under the laws of the jurisdiction of its formation,
or (iii) cause the Partnership or the Operating Partnership to be treated as an association taxable as a corporation or otherwise to be taxed as an entity for federal income tax purposes (to the extent not already so treated or taxed).
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(b) The General Partner may impose restrictions on the transfer of Partnership Interests if it
receives an Opinion of Counsel that such restrictions are necessary to avoid a significant risk of the Partnership or the Operating Partnership becoming taxable as a corporation or otherwise becoming taxable as an entity for federal income tax
purposes. The restrictions may be imposed by making such amendments to this Agreement as the General Partner may determine to be necessary or appropriate to impose such restrictions;
provided
,
however
, that any amendment that the
General Partner determines would result in the delisting or suspension of trading of any class of Limited Partner Interests on the principal National Securities Exchange on which such class of Limited Partner Interests is then traded must be
approved, prior to such amendment being effected, by the holders of at least a majority of the Outstanding Limited Partner Interests of such class.
(c) Nothing contained in this
Article
VI
, or elsewhere in this Agreement, shall preclude the settlement of any
transactions involving Partnership Interests entered into through the facilities of any National Securities Exchange on which such Partnership Interests are listed for trading.
Section 4.9
Citizenship Certificates; Non-citizen Assignees
.
(a) If any Group Member is or becomes subject to any federal, state or local law or regulation that the General Partner determines would
create a substantial risk of cancellation or forfeiture of any property in which the Group Member has an interest based on the nationality, citizenship or other related status of a Limited Partner or Assignee, the General Partner may request any
Limited Partner or Assignee to furnish to the General Partner, within 30 days after receipt of such request, an executed Citizenship Certification or such other information concerning his nationality, citizenship or other related status (or, if the
Limited Partner or Assignee is a nominee holding for the account of another Person, the nationality, citizenship or other related status of such Person) as the General Partner may request. If a Limited Partner or Assignee fails to furnish to the
General Partner within the aforementioned 30-day period such Citizenship Certification or other requested information or if upon receipt of such Citizenship Certification or other requested information the General Partner determines that a Limited
Partner or Assignee is not an Eligible Citizen, the Partnership Interests owned by such Limited Partner or Assignee shall be subject to redemption in accordance with the provisions of
Section
4.10
. In addition, the General
Partner may require that the status of any such Partner or Assignee be changed to that of a Non-citizen Assignee and, thereupon, the General Partner shall be substituted for such Non-citizen Assignee as the Limited Partner in respect of his Limited
Partner Interests.
(b) The General Partner shall, in exercising voting rights in respect of Limited Partner Interests held by it on
behalf of Non-citizen Assignees, distribute the votes in the same ratios as the votes of Partners (including without limitation the General Partner) in respect of Limited Partner Interests other than those of Non-citizen Assignees are cast, either
for, against or abstaining as to the matter.
(c) Upon dissolution of the Partnership, a Non-citizen Assignee shall have no right to
receive a distribution in kind pursuant to
Section
12.4
but shall be entitled to the cash equivalent thereof, and the Partnership shall provide cash in exchange for an assignment of the Non-citizen Assignees share of
the distribution in kind. Such payment and assignment shall be treated for Partnership purposes as a purchase by the Partnership from the Non-citizen Assignee of his Limited Partner Interest (representing his right to receive his share of such
distribution in kind).
(d) At any time after he can and does certify that he has become an Eligible Citizen, a Non-citizen Assignee may,
upon application to the General Partner, request admission as a Substituted Limited Partner with respect to any Limited Partner Interests of such Non-citizen Assignee not redeemed pursuant to
Section
4.10
, and upon his
admission pursuant to
Section
10.2
, the General Partner shall cease to be deemed to be the Limited Partner in respect of the Non-citizen Assignees Limited Partner Interests.
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Section 4.10
Redemption of Partnership Interests of Non-citizen Assignees
.
(a) If at any time a Limited Partner or Assignee fails to furnish a Citizenship Certification or other information requested within the
30-day period specified in
Section
4.9(a)
, or if upon receipt of such Citizenship Certification or other information the General Partner determines, with the advice of counsel, that a Limited Partner or Assignee is not an
Eligible Citizen, the Partnership may, unless the Limited Partner or Assignee establishes to the satisfaction of the General Partner that such Limited Partner or Assignee is an Eligible Citizen or has transferred his Partnership Interests to a
Person who is an Eligible Citizen and who furnishes a Citizenship Certification to the General Partner prior to the date fixed for redemption as provided below, redeem the Partnership Interest of such Limited Partner or Assignee as follows:
(i) The General Partner shall, not later than the 30th day before the date fixed for redemption, give notice of redemption to
the Limited Partner or Assignee, at his last address designated on the records of the Partnership or the Transfer Agent, by registered or certified mail, postage prepaid. The notice shall be deemed to have been given when so mailed. The notice shall
specify the Redeemable Interests, the date fixed for redemption, the place of payment, that payment of the redemption price will be made upon surrender of the Certificate evidencing the Redeemable Interests and that on and after the date fixed for
redemption no further allocations or distributions to which the Limited Partner or Assignee would otherwise be entitled in respect of the Redeemable Interests will accrue or be made.
(ii) The aggregate redemption price for Redeemable Interests shall be an amount equal to the Current Market Price (the date of
determination of which shall be the date fixed for redemption) of Limited Partner Interests of the class to be so redeemed multiplied by the number of Limited Partner Interests of each such class included among the Redeemable Interests. The
redemption price shall be paid as determined by the General Partner, in cash or by delivery of a promissory note of the Partnership in the principal amount of the redemption price, bearing interest at the rate of 10% annually and payable in three
equal annual installments of principal together with accrued interest, commencing one year after the redemption date.
(iii) Upon surrender by or on behalf of the Limited Partner or Assignee, at the place specified in the notice of redemption, of
the Certificate evidencing the Redeemable Interests, duly endorsed in blank or accompanied by an assignment duly executed in blank, the Limited Partner or Assignee or his duly authorized representative shall be entitled to receive the payment
therefor.
(iv) After the redemption date, Redeemable Interests shall no longer constitute issued and Outstanding Limited
Partner Interests.
(b) The provisions of this
Section
4.10
shall also be applicable to Limited Partner
Interests held by a Limited Partner or Assignee as nominee of a Person determined to be other than an Eligible Citizen.
(c) Nothing in
this
Section
4.10
shall prevent the recipient of a notice of redemption from transferring his Limited Partner Interest before the redemption date if such transfer is otherwise permitted under this Agreement. Upon receipt of
notice of such a transfer, the General Partner shall withdraw the notice of redemption,
provided
the transferee of such Limited Partner Interest certifies to the satisfaction of the General Partner in a Citizenship Certification delivered in
connection with the Transfer Application that he is an Eligible Citizen. If the transferee fails to make such certification, such redemption shall be effected from the transferee on the original redemption date.
ARTICLE V
CAPITAL CONTRIBUTIONS AND ISSUANCE OF PARTNERSHIP INTERESTS
Section 5.1
Organizational Contributions
.
In connection with the formation of the Partnership under the Delaware Act, the General Partner made an initial Capital Contribution to the
Partnership in the amount of $20.00, for a certain interest in the Partnership and
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has been admitted as a General Partner of the Partnership, and the Organizational Limited Partner made an initial Capital Contribution to the Partnership in the amount of $980.00. As of the
Closing Date, the interest of the Organizational Limited Partner was redeemed as provided in the Contribution Agreement; the initial Capital Contributions of each Partner was thereupon refunded; and the Organizational Limited Partner ceased to be a
Limited Partner of the Partnership. Ninety-eight percent of any interest or other profit that may have resulted from the investment or other use of such initial Capital Contributions was allocated and distributed to the Organizational Limited
Partner, and the balance thereof was allocated and distributed to the General Partner.
Section 5.2
Contributions by the
General Partner and its Affiliates
.
(a) [Reserved]
(b) Upon the issuance of any additional Limited Partner Interests by the Partnership (other than the issuance of the Common Units issued in
the Initial Offering and other than the issuance of the Common Units issued pursuant to the Over-Allotment Option and other than Common Units purchased by the General Partner to the extent the Over-Allotment Option is not exercised), the General
Partner may make, but is not obligated to make, additional Capital Contributions up to an amount equal to (a) the product obtained by multiplying (i) the quotient (such quotient being referred to as the
General Partner
Quotient
) determined by dividing (A) the General Partners Percentage Interest immediately prior to the issuance of any additional Limited Partner Interests by the Partnership by (B) the sum of 100% less the General
Partners Percentage Interest immediately prior to the issuance of any additional Limited Partner Interests by the Partnership, times (ii) the amount contributed to the Partnership by the Limited Partners in exchange for such additional
Limited Partner Interests less (b) the General Partner Quotient of any amount so contributed by such Limited Partners that is used by the Partnership concurrently with such contribution to redeem or repurchase from any Person outstanding Limited
Partner Interests of the same class as the Limited Partner Interests issued to such Limited Partners at a price per Limited Partner Interest equal to the net proceeds per Limited Partner Interest, before expenses, that the Partnership receives from
such issuance. Notwithstanding the preceding sentence and except as set forth in
Article
XII
, the General Partner shall not be obligated to make any additional Capital Contributions to the Partnership.
(c) Any payment made to the Partnership Group by the General Partner or its Affiliates pursuant to
Article
III
or
V
of the Omnibus Agreement or payments made pursuant to
Section
5.2
,
5.4
or
5.5
of the Omnibus Agreement shall be treated for purposes of this Agreement as a Capital Contribution by the General Partner
to the Partnership.
Section 5.3 [Reserved]
Section 5.4
Interest and Withdrawal
.
No interest shall be paid by the Partnership on Capital Contributions. No Partner or Assignee shall be entitled to the withdrawal or return of
its Capital Contribution, except to the extent, if any, that distributions made pursuant to this Agreement or upon termination of the Partnership may be considered as such by law and then only to the extent provided for in this Agreement. Except to
the extent expressly provided in this Agreement, no Partner or Assignee shall have priority over any other Partner or Assignee either as to the return of Capital Contributions or as to profits, losses or distributions. Any such return shall be a
compromise to which all Partners and Assignees agree within the meaning of Section 17-502(b) of the Delaware Act.
Section 5.5
Capital Accounts
.
(a) The Partnership shall maintain for each Partner (or a beneficial owner of Partnership Interests held
by a nominee in any case in which the nominee has furnished the identity of such owner to the Partnership in accordance with Section 6031(c) of the Code or any other method acceptable to the General Partner) owning a Partnership Interest a separate
Capital Account with respect to such Partnership Interest in accordance with the
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rules of Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv). Such Capital Account shall be increased by (i) the amount of all Capital Contributions made to the Partnership with respect to such
Partnership Interest and (ii) all items of Partnership income and gain (including, without limitation, income and gain exempt from tax) computed in accordance with
Section
5.5(b)
and allocated with respect to such
Partnership Interest pursuant to
Section
6.1
, and decreased by (x) the amount of cash or Net Agreed Value of all actual and deemed distributions of cash or property made with respect to such Partnership Interest and
(y) all items of Partnership deduction and loss computed in accordance with
Section
5.5(b)
and allocated with respect to such Partnership Interest pursuant to
Section
6.1
.
The Capital Account balance with respect to each Common Unit as of the Effective Time shall be the Closing Price of the Common Units on the
day the Effective Time occurs. The Capital Account balance with respect to the General Partner Interest, the Incentive Distribution Right (including the Partners Class J Units), each Class G Unit, each Class I Unit, each Class E Unit and each
Class K Unit as of the Effective Time shall be equal to the Capital Account balance maintained by ETP for the ETP General Partner Interest, the ETP Incentive Distribution Right (including the Partners ETP Class J Units), each ETP Class G Unit,
each ETP Class I Unit, each ETP Class E Unit and each ETP Class K Unit as determined pursuant to the ETP Partnership Agreement immediately prior to the Effective Time, taking into account the revaluation of the assets of ETP pursuant to Section
5.5(d) of the ETP Partnership Agreement and the allocation of any Unrealized Gain and Unrealized Loss (each as defined in the ETP Partnership Agreement) resulting from such revaluation pursuant to Section 6.1 of the ETP Partnership Agreement.
(b) For purposes of computing the amount of any item of income, gain, loss or deduction which is to be allocated pursuant to
Article
VI
and is to be reflected in the Partners Capital Accounts, the determination, recognition and classification of any such item shall be the same as its determination, recognition and classification for federal
income tax purposes (including, without limitation, any method of depreciation, cost recovery or amortization used for that purpose),
provided
, that:
(i) Solely for purposes of this
Section
5.5
, the Partnership shall be treated as owning directly its
proportionate share (as determined by the General Partner based upon the provisions of the applicable Group Member Agreement) of all property owned by any other Group Member that is classified as a partnership for federal income tax purposes.
(ii) All fees and other expenses incurred by the Partnership to promote the sale of (or to sell) a Partnership Interest that
can neither be deducted nor amortized under Section 709 of the Code, if any, shall, for purposes of Capital Account maintenance, be treated as an item of deduction at the time such fees and other expenses are incurred and shall be allocated among
the Partners pursuant to
Section
6.1
.
(iii) Except as otherwise provided in Treasury Regulation
Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(m), the computation of all items of income, gain, loss and deduction shall be made without regard to any election under Section 754 of the Code which may be made by the Partnership and, as to those items described in
Section 705(a)(1)(B) or 705(a)(2)(B) of the Code, without regard to the fact that such items are not includable in gross income or are neither currently deductible nor capitalized for federal income tax purposes. To the extent an adjustment to the
adjusted tax basis of any Partnership asset pursuant to Section 734(b) or 743(b) of the Code is required, pursuant to Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(m), to be taken into account in determining Capital Accounts, the amount of such
adjustment in the Capital Accounts shall be treated as an item of gain or loss.
(iv) Any income, gain or loss attributable
to the taxable disposition of any Partnership property shall be determined as if the adjusted basis of such property as of such date of disposition were equal in amount to the Partnerships Carrying Value with respect to such property as of
such date.
(v) In accordance with the requirements of Section 704(b) of the Code, any deductions for depreciation, cost
recovery or amortization attributable to any Contributed Property shall be determined as if the adjusted basis of such property on the date it was acquired by the Partnership were equal to the Agreed Value of such property. Upon an adjustment
pursuant to
Section
5.5(d)
to the Carrying Value of any Partnership property
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subject to depreciation, cost recovery or amortization, any further deductions for such depreciation, cost recovery or amortization attributable to such property shall be determined under the
rules prescribed by Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-3(d)(2). If the Partnerships adjusted basis in a depreciable or cost recovery property is reduced for federal income tax purposes pursuant to Section 48(q)(1) or 48(q)(3) of the Code, the
amount of such reduction shall, solely for purposes hereof, be deemed to be an additional depreciation or cost recovery deduction in the year such property is placed in service and shall be allocated among the Partners pursuant to
Section
6.1
. Any restoration of such basis pursuant to Section 48(q)(2) of the Code shall, to the extent possible, be allocated in the same manner to the Partners to whom such deemed deduction was allocated.
(c) A transferee of a Partnership Interest shall succeed to a pro rata portion of the Capital Account of the transferor relating to the
Partnership Interest so transferred.
(d) (i) Consistent with Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(f) and
1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(h)(2), on an issuance of additional Partnership Interests for cash or Contributed Property, the issuance of a Noncompensatory Option, the issuance of Partnership Interests as consideration for the provision of services or the
conversion of the Combined Interest to Common Units pursuant to
Section 11.3(b)
, the Carrying Value of each Partnership property immediately prior to such issuance or after such conversion shall be adjusted upward or downward to reflect any
Unrealized Gain or Unrealized Loss attributable to such Partnership property;
provided, however
, that in the event of the issuance of a Partnership Interest pursuant to the exercise of a Noncompensatory Option where the right to share in
Partnership capital represented by such Partnership Interest differs from the consideration paid to acquire and exercise such option, the Carrying Value of each Partnership property immediately after the issuance of such Partnership Interest shall
be adjusted upward or downward to reflect any Unrealized Gain or Unrealized Loss attributable to such Partnership property and the Capital Accounts of the Partners shall be adjusted in a manner consistent with Treasury Regulation Section
1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(s);
provided further, however
, that in the event of an issuance of Partnership Interests for a
de minimis
amount of cash or Contributed Property, in the event of an issuance of a Noncompensatory Option to acquire a
de minimis
Partnership Interest or in the event of an issuance of a
de minimis
amount of Partnership Interests as consideration for the provision of services, the General Partner may determine that such adjustments are unnecessary for
the proper administration of the Partnership. In determining such Unrealized Gain or Unrealized Loss, the aggregate fair market value of all Partnership property (including cash or cash equivalents) immediately prior to the issuance of additional
Partnership Interests (or, in the case of a Revaluation Event resulting from the exercise of a Noncompensatory Option, immediately after the issuance of the Partnership Interest acquired pursuant to the exercise of such Noncompensatory Option) shall
be determined by the General Partner using such method of valuation as it may adopt;
provided
,
however
, that the General Partner, in arriving at such valuation, must take fully into account the fair market value of the Partnership
Interests of all Partners at such time and must make such adjustments to such valuation as required by Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(h)(2). If, after making the allocations of Unrealized Gain and Unrealized Loss as set forth in
Section
6.1(d)(xiv)
, the Capital Account of each Partner with respect to each Conversion Unit received upon such conversion of the Limited Partner Interest is less than the Per Unit Capital Amount for a then Outstanding
Initial Common Unit, then, in accordance with Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(s)(3), Capital Account balances shall be reallocated between the Partners holding Common Units (other than Conversion Units) and Partners holding Conversion
Units so as to cause the Capital Account of each Partner holding a Conversion Unit to equal, on a per Unit basis with respect to each such Conversion Unit, the Per Unit Capital Amount for a then Outstanding Initial Common Unit. In making its
determination of the fair market values of individual properties, the General Partner may first determine an aggregate value for the assets of the Partnership that takes into account the current trading price of the Common Units, the fair market
value of all other Partnership Interests at such time and the amount of Partnership Liabilities. The General Partner may allocate such aggregate value among the individual properties of the Partnership (in such manner as it determines
appropriate). Absent a contrary determination by the General Partner, the aggregate fair market value of all Partnership assets (including cash or cash equivalents) immediately prior to a Revaluation Event shall be the value that would result
in the Capital Account for each Common Unit that is Outstanding prior to such Revaluation Event being equal to the Event Issue Value.
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(ii) In accordance with Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(f),
immediately prior to any actual or deemed distribution to a Partner of any Partnership property (other than a distribution of cash that is not in redemption or retirement of a Partnership Interest), the Capital Accounts of all Partners and the
Carrying Value of all Partnership property shall be adjusted upward or downward to reflect any Unrealized Gain or Unrealized Loss attributable to such Partnership property, as if such Unrealized Gain or Unrealized Loss had been recognized on an
actual sale of each such property immediately prior to such distribution for an amount equal to its fair market value, and had been allocated to the Partners, at such time, pursuant to
Section
6.1(c)
in the same manner as
any item of gain or loss actually recognized following an event giving rise to the dissolution of the Partnership would have been allocated. In determining such Unrealized Gain or Unrealized Loss the aggregate cash amount and fair market value of
all Partnership assets (including cash or cash equivalents) immediately prior to a distribution shall (A) in the case of an actual distribution that is not made pursuant to
Section
12.4
or in the case of a deemed
distribution, be determined and allocated in the same manner as that provided in
Section
5.5(d)(i)
or (B) in the case of a liquidating distribution pursuant to
Section
12.4
, be determined and
allocated by the Liquidator using such method of valuation as it may adopt.
Section 5.6
Issuances of Additional Partnership
Securities
.
(a) The Partnership may issue additional Partnership Securities and options, rights, warrants and appreciation rights
relating to the Partnership Securities for any Partnership purpose at any time and from time to time to such Persons for such consideration and on such terms and conditions as the General Partner shall determine, all without the approval of any
Limited Partners.
(b) Each additional Partnership Security authorized to be issued by the Partnership pursuant to
Section
5.6(a)
may be issued in one or more classes, or one or more series of any such classes, with such designations, preferences, rights, powers and duties (which may be senior to existing classes and series of
Partnership Securities), as shall be fixed by the General Partner, including (i) the right to share Partnership profits and losses or items thereof; (ii) the right to share in Partnership distributions; (iii) the rights upon
dissolution and liquidation of the Partnership; (iv) whether, and the terms and conditions upon which, the Partnership may redeem the Partnership Security; (v) whether such Partnership Security is issued with the privilege of conversion or
exchange and, if so, the terms and conditions of such conversion or exchange; (vi) the terms and conditions upon which each Partnership Security will be issued, evidenced by certificates and assigned or transferred; and (vii) the method
for determining the Percentage Interest as to such Partnership Security and (viii) the right, if any, of each such Partnership Security to vote on Partnership matters, including matters relating to the relative rights, preferences and
privileges of such Partnership Security.
(c) The General Partner shall take all actions that it determines to be necessary or appropriate
in connection with (i) each issuance of Partnership Securities and options, rights, warrants and appreciation rights relating to Partnership Securities pursuant to this
Section
5.6
, (ii) the conversion of the
General Partner Interest or any Incentive Distribution Rights into Units pursuant to the terms of this Agreement, (iii) the admission of Additional Limited Partners and (iv) all additional issuances of Partnership Securities. The General
Partner shall determine the relative rights, powers and duties of the holders of the Units or other Partnership Securities being so issued. The General Partner shall do all things necessary to comply with the Delaware Act and is authorized and
directed to do all things it determines to be necessary or appropriate in connection with any future issuance of Partnership Securities or in connection with the conversion of the General Partner Interest or any Incentive Distribution Rights into
Units pursuant to the terms of this Agreement, including compliance with any statute, rule, regulation or guideline of any federal, state or other governmental agency or any National Securities Exchange on which the Units or other Partnership
Securities are listed for trading.
(d) No fractional Units shall be issued by the Partnership.
Section 5.7 [Reserved]
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Section 5.8
Limited Preemptive Right
.
Except as provided in this
Section
5.8
and in
Section
5.2
, no Person shall have any
preemptive, preferential or other similar right with respect to the issuance of any Partnership Security, whether unissued, held in the treasury or hereafter created. The General Partner shall have the right, which it may from time to time assign in
whole or in part to any of its Affiliates, to purchase Partnership Securities from the Partnership whenever, and on the same terms that, the Partnership issues Partnership Securities to Persons other than the General Partner and its Affiliates, to
the extent necessary to maintain the Percentage Interests of the General Partner and its Affiliates equal to that which existed immediately prior to the issuance of such Partnership Securities.
Section 5.9
Splits and Combinations
.
(a) Subject to
Section
5.9(d)
and
Section
6.6
(dealing with adjustments of distribution
levels), the Partnership may make a Pro Rata distribution of Partnership Securities to all Record Holders of Partnership Securities or may effect a subdivision or combination of Partnership Securities so long as, after any such event, each Partner
shall have the same Percentage Interest in the Partnership as before such event, and any amounts calculated on a per Unit basis or stated as a number of Units are proportionately adjusted retroactive to the date of formation of the Partnership.
(b) Whenever such a distribution, subdivision or combination of Partnership Securities is declared, the General Partner shall select a Record
Date as of which the distribution, subdivision or combination shall be effective and shall send notice thereof at least 20 days prior to such Record Date to each Record Holder as of a date not less than 10 days prior to the date of such notice. The
General Partner also may cause a firm of independent public accountants selected by it to calculate the number of Partnership Securities to be held by each Record Holder after giving effect to such distribution, subdivision or combination. The
General Partner shall be entitled to rely on any certificate provided by such firm as conclusive evidence of the accuracy of such calculation.
(c) Promptly following any such distribution, subdivision or combination, the Partnership may issue Certificates to the Record Holders of
Partnership Securities as of the applicable Record Date representing the new number of Partnership Securities held by such Record Holders, or the General Partner may adopt such other procedures that it determines to be necessary or appropriate to
reflect such changes. If any such combination results in a smaller total number of Partnership Securities Outstanding, the Partnership shall require, as a condition to the delivery to a Record Holder of such new Certificate, the surrender of any
Certificate held by such Record Holder immediately prior to such Record Date.
(d) The Partnership shall not issue fractional Units upon
any distribution, subdivision or combination of Units. If a distribution, subdivision or combination of Units would result in the issuance of fractional Units but for this
Section
5.9(d)
, each fractional Unit shall be
rounded to the nearest whole Unit (and a 0.5 Unit shall be rounded to the next higher Unit).
Section 5.10
Fully Paid and
Non-Assessable Nature of Limited Partner Interests
.
All Limited Partner Interests issued pursuant to, and in accordance with the
requirements of, this
Article
V
shall be fully paid and non-assessable Limited Partner Interests in the Partnership, except as such non-assessability may be affected by Section 17-607 of the Delaware Act.
Section 5.11
Establishment of Class G Units
.
(a)
General
. There is hereby created a series of Units to be designated as Class G Units and initially consisting of
a total of 90,706,000 Class G Units. The ETP Class G Units were converted into the right to receive
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Class G Units pursuant to the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement, and each Person that receives Class G Units pursuant to the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement is hereby admitted as a limited partner of the
Partnership. The initial ETP Class G Units were issued to the holders of the 90,706,000 ETP Class F Units outstanding on April 15, 2013, Pro Rata, and such ETP Class F Units were cancelled upon the issuance of the ETP Class G Units. In
accordance with
Section 5.6
, the General Partner shall have the power and authority to issue additional Class G Units in the future.
(b)
Rights of Class G Units
. The Class G Units shall have the following rights, preferences and privileges and shall be subject
to the following duties and obligations:
(i)
Initial Capital Account
. The initial capital account with
respect to each Class G Unit will be determined in accordance with
Section 5.5(a)
.
(ii)
Allocations
.
(A) The Class G Units shall not be entitled to receive any allocation of any item of Partnership income, gain, loss,
deduction or credit attributable to the Partnerships ownership of ETP Holdco or the Partnerships ownership of any indebtedness of ETP Holdco or any of its subsidiaries (the
ETP Holdco Items
), and such ETP Holdco
Items (which shall not be included in the computation of Net Income, Net Loss, Net Termination Gain or Net Termination Loss for any taxable period while any Class G Units remain Outstanding) shall instead be specially allocated to the General
Partner in an amount equal to the General Partners Percentage Interest of such ETP Holdco Items and the remainder to the Unitholders (other than the holders of the Class E Units or the holders of the Class G Units) Pro Rata.
(B) Items of Partnership depreciation, amortization and cost recovery deductions for the taxable period shall be allocated to
the Class G Units to the extent that such items would be allocated to the Class G Units if
clauses
(B)
through
(E)
of this
Section
5.11(b)(ii)
were not part of this Agreement and, solely for
purposes of applying
Sections 6.1(a)
,
6.1(b)
and the term Pro Rata in
Section 6.1(d)(xii)(A)(2)
, the Class G Percentage were equal to the percentage obtained by dividing the aggregate Capital Accounts of the Class G
Units Outstanding by the aggregate Capital Accounts of all Units Outstanding (including the Class G Units), determined based on the Capital Accounts of the Units Outstanding (including the Class G Units) as most recently adjusted pursuant to
Section 5.5(d)
.
(C) If the Partnership would have had net income for the taxable period, computed in the same
manner as Net Income but prior to the application of
Section 6.1(d)(xii)(A)(2)
and
clauses
(B)
through
(D)
of this
Section
5.11(b)(ii)
(
Unitholder Net
Income
), the Class G Units shall be allocated an amount of the remaining items of Partnership gross income or gain for the taxable period in a manner such that the Class G Units are allocated items that achieve the same result (taking
into account federal income tax consequences) as if the Class G Units were allocated the Class G Percentage of the Unitholder Net Income for such taxable period;
provided
that the net amount allocated to each Class G Unit for each taxable
period shall not exceed the product of (A) the aggregate cash amount distributed to such Class G Unit pursuant to
Article
VI
for such taxable period, multiplied by (B) the quotient obtained by dividing (I) the
Partnerships Net Income that would be allocated to the Unitholders pursuant to
Section 6.1(a)
for such taxable period if
clause
(B)
above and this
clause
(C)
were not a part of this
Agreement by (II) the aggregate cash amount distributed (excluding ETP Holdco Distributions) to the Unitholders (including the holders of the Class G Units) pursuant to
Article
VI
for such taxable period.
(D) If the Partnership would have had net losses for the taxable period, computed in the same manner as Net Losses but prior to
the application of
Section
6.1(d)(xii)(A)(2)
and
clause
(B)
through
(D)
of this
Section
5.11(b)(ii)
(
Unitholder Net Losses
), the Class G
Units shall be allocated an amount of the remaining items of Partnership gross income, gain, loss or deduction for the taxable period in a manner such that the Class G Units are allocated items that achieve the same result (taking into account
federal income tax consequences) as if the Class G Units were allocated the Class G
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Percentage of the Unitholder Net Losses for such taxable period;
provided
that items of Partnership gross deduction or loss shall not be allocated to the Class G Units pursuant to this
clause
(D)
to the extent that such allocation would cause any holder of a Class G Unit to have a deficit balance in its Adjusted Capital Account at the end of such taxable period (or increase any existing deficit balance in
its Adjusted Capital Account).
(E) No allocations of Net Income or Net Losses shall be made to the Class G Units pursuant
to
Section 6.1(a)
or
Section 6.1(b)
following the allocations set forth above.
(F) For each taxable period,
each Class G Unit shall be allocated Net Termination Gain pursuant to
Section 6.1(c)(i)(B)
until the Capital Account of each Class G Unit is equal to the Class G Issue Price. Such allocations will be made prior to any allocations being made
to any other Unitholder pursuant to
Section 6.1(c)(i)(B)
and will be made prior to any allocations being made pursuant to
Section 6.1(c)(i)(E)
. The Class G Units shall be allocated 1% of the remaining aggregate Net Termination Gain, if
any, that is to be allocated pursuant to
Section 6.1(c)(i)
for such taxable period following the allocations made pursuant to
Section 6.1(c)(i)(B)
. No other allocations of Net Termination Gain shall be made to the Class G Units for
such taxable period. The Class G Units shall be allocated Net Termination Loss to the same extent as the Common Units. Notwithstanding the foregoing, if ETP Holdco is an asset of the Partnership in the year in which the Partnership is liquidated and
the aggregate balance of the Capital Accounts of the Unitholders (other than the holders of the Class E Units, Class G Units and Class K Units) after the allocations under
Section 6.1(c)
of this Agreement would be less than the Carrying Value
of ETP Holdco, then Net Termination Gain or Net Termination Loss, as the case may be, or if necessary items thereof, shall first be allocated to the Class E Units, Class G Units and Class K Units in proportion to their respective positive Capital
Accounts, to the extent necessary to cause the aggregate balance of the Capital Accounts of the Unitholders (other than the holders of the Class E Units, Class G Units and Class K Units) to equal the Carrying Value of ETP Holdco after all
allocations have been made.
(G)
Section 6.1(d)(iii)(A)
shall not apply to the Class G Units.
(H) Notwithstanding
Section 6.2(b)(iii)
, the General Partner shall apply the principles of Treasury Regulation Section
1.704-3(b) to eliminate Book-Tax Disparities in any Contributed Property received by ETP in exchange for the issuance of ETP Class F Units when applying
Section 6.2(b)(i)
with respect to such Contributed Property.
(I) All items of income, gain, loss, deduction or credit attributable to any public indebtedness of Sunoco, Inc. that was
assumed, or that was treated as assumed, by ETP in connection with the issuance of the ETP Class F Units shall be specially allocated to the holders of the Class G Units.
(J) For the purposes of effectuating the intent of the foregoing allocation provisions, the General Partner shall make special
allocations of items of Partnership gross income, gain, loss or deductions among the General Partner and the Unitholders as it deems reasonable.
(iii)
Distributions
.
(A) For each taxable period, no portion of any Partnership cash distribution attributable to (i) any distribution or dividend
received by the Partnership from ETP Holdco or the proceeds of any sale of the capital stock of ETP Holdco or (ii) any interest payments received by the Partnership with respect to indebtedness of ETP Holdco or its subsidiaries (such portion of any
Partnership cash distributions, the
ETP Holdco Distributions
) shall be distributed to the Class G Units.
(B) For each Quarter in which distributions are made to the Class G Units, (i) for purposes of
Sections 6.4
and
6.5
, the Percentage Interest of the General Partner shall be computed without taking into account the Class G Units and (ii) any quarterly distributions to the General Partner pursuant to
Section 6.4
or Section 6.5 or to the holders of
the Incentive Distribution Rights pursuant to
clauses
(iii)(B)
,
(iv)(B)
and
(v)(B)
of
Section
6.4(a)
shall equal the amount that would have been distributed to such interests if the
distributions to the Class G Units in such Quarter had been made prior to any distributions being made pursuant to
Section 6.4
or
Section 6.5
.
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(C) The Class G Units will be entitled to receive the Class G Percentage of the
portion of any Partnership cash distributions (other than ETP Holdco Distributions) to be made to the Unitholders pursuant to
Article
VI
and the remaining portion of the Available Cash to be distributed shall be made to the
Unitholders (other than the holders of Class G Units) in proportion to their relative Percentage Interests;
provided
, that the aggregate Partnership distributions made to each Class G Unit for each fiscal year shall not exceed $3.75 (which
may, at the General Partners discretion, be split equally among the four Quarters of each fiscal year).
(iv) Voting
Rights. The Class G Units shall not have any voting rights, except to the extent the Delaware Act gives the Class G Units a vote as a class on any matter. With respect to any matter on which the Class G Units are entitled to vote, each Class G Unit
will be entitled to one vote on such matter.
(v) Redemption and Conversion Rights. The Class G Units will be perpetual and
shall not have any rights of redemption or conversion.
(vi) Certificates; Book-Entry. Unless the General Partner shall
determine otherwise, the Class G Units shall not be evidenced by certificates. Any Certificates relating to the Class G Units that may be issued will be in such form as the General Partner may approve. The Class G Units, subject to the satisfaction
of any applicable legal, regulatory and contractual requirements, may be assigned or transferred in a manner identical to the assignment and transfer of other Units.
(vii) Registrar and Transfer Agent. Unless and until the General Partner determines to assign the responsibility to another
Person, the General Partner will act as the registrar and transfer agent for the Class G Units.
Section 5.12
[Intentionally
Omitted]
.
Section 5.13
Establishment of Class I Units
.
(a)
General
. The General Partner hereby designates and creates a class of Partnership Securities to be designated as Class
I Units. The ETP Class I Units were converted into the right to receive Class I Units pursuant to the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement and each Person that receives Class I Units pursuant to the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement is hereby admitted as a limited
partner of the Partnership. In accordance with
Section 5.6
, the General Partner shall have the power and authority to issue additional Class I Units in the future.
(b)
Rights of Class I Units
.
The Class I Units shall have the following rights, preferences and privileges and
shall be subject to the following duties and obligations:
(i)
[Reserved]
.
(ii)
Allocations
.
(A) The Class I Units shall not be entitled to receive any (i) Net Income allocations pursuant to
Section 6.1(a)
, (ii)
Net Loss allocations pursuant to
Section 6.1(b)
, (iii) Net Termination Gain or Net Termination Loss allocations pursuant to
Section 6.1(c)
or
(iv)
except as otherwise provided in this
Section 5.13(b)(ii)
, special
allocations pursuant to
Section 6.1(d)
. Allocations pursuant to
Sections 6.1(a)
,
6.1(b)
,
6.1(c)
and
6.1(d)
(except as otherwise provided in this
Section 5.13(b)(ii)
) shall be made consistent with the
fact that the Class I Units are not Units and the holders of the Class I Units are not Unitholders and have no Percentage Interests with respect to their Class I Units.
(B) For each taxable period, after the application of
Section
6.1(d)(iii)(A)
but before the
application of
Section 6.1(d)(iii)(B)
, the holders of the Class I Units shall be allocated, pro rata in proportion to the number of Class I Units of each such holder, depreciation, amortization, depletion or any other form of cost recovery
equal to the cash consideration contributed by ETE to ETP pursuant to the Exchange and Repurchase Agreement. The allocation of items pursuant to this
Section 5.13(b)(ii)
shall be made proportionately over a period of ten years beginning on
March 9, 2015.
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(iii)
Distributions
.
The Class I Units shall not be
entitled to receive any distributions and, consistent with the fact that the Class I Units are not Units, and that the holders of the Class I Units are not Unitholders, and therefore have no Percentage Interests with respect to their Class I Units,
shall not be entitled to receive distributions of Available Cash pursuant to
Sections 6.4
or
6.5
.
5
(iv)
Voting Rights
.
Except as set forth in this
Section 5.13(b)(iv)
and
Section
13.3(c)
and except to the extent the Delaware Act gives the Class I Units a vote as a class on any matter, the Class I Units shall not have any voting rights. With respect to any matter on which the Class I Units
are entitled to vote, each Class I Unit will be entitled to one vote on such matter. The General Partner shall not, without the affirmative vote or written consent of holders of a majority of the Class I Units then Outstanding, amend, alter, modify
or change this
Section 5.13
(or vote or consent or resolve to take such action).
(v)
Redemption and
Conversion Rights
. The Class I Units will be perpetual and shall not have any rights of redemption or conversion.
(vi)
Certificates; Book-Entry
. Unless the General Partner shall determine otherwise, the Class I Units shall not
be evidenced by certificates. Any certificates relating to the Class I Units that may be issued will be in such form as the General Partner may approve. The Class I Units, subject to the satisfaction of any applicable legal, regulatory and
contractual requirements, may be assigned or transferred in a manner identical to and as if the Class I Units were Units in the Partnership.
(vii)
Registrar and Transfer Agent
. Unless and until the General Partner determines to assign the responsibility
to another Person, the General Partner will act as the registrar and transfer agent for the Class I Units.
Section 5.14
Establishment of Class J Units
.
(a)
General
. The General Partner hereby designates and creates a class of
Partnership Securities to be designated as Class J Units. The Class J Units were issued to the former holders of the ETP Class J Units pursuant to the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement. The Partnership shall issue sixty (60) Class J Units to the
General Partner in 2017. Additionally, in accordance with
Section 5.6
, the General Partner shall have the power and authority to issue additional Class J Units in the future.
(b)
Rights of Class J Units
. The Class J Units shall have the following rights, preferences and privileges and shall be subject
to the following duties and obligations:
(i)
Capital Account
. The Partnership shall not maintain a separate
Capital Account for a Class J Unit. All allocations made pursuant to
Section 5.14(b)(ii)
shall adjust the existing Capital Account of the holder of the Class J Unit and, in the case of the General Partner, shall adjust solely the Capital
Account maintained in respect of the General Partners Incentive Distribution Right.
(ii)
Allocations
.
(A) The Class J Units shall not be entitled to receive any (i) Net Income allocations pursuant to
Section 6.1(a)
,
(ii) Net Loss Allocations pursuant to
Section 6.1(b)
, (iii) Net Termination Gain or Net Termination Loss allocations pursuant to
Section 6.1(c)
or (iv) except as otherwise provided in this
Section
5.14(b)(ii)
,
special allocations pursuant to
Section 6.1(d)
. Allocations pursuant to
Sections 6.1(a)
,
6.1(b)
,
6.1(c)
and
6.1(d)
(except as otherwise provided in this
Section 5.14(b)(ii)
) shall be made consistent
with the facts that the Class J Units are not Units, and that the holders of the Class J Units are not Unitholders and, therefore have no Percentage Interests with respect to their Class J Units.
(B) For each taxable period, after making (i) the allocations to the Class G Units pursuant to
Sections 5.11(b)(ii)(B)
through
(D)
, with such allocations to the Class G Units being computed and
5
|
NTD: To be revised as necessary if the Effective Time occurs prior to payment of the distribution on the ETP Class I Units for the Quarter ending December 31, 2016.
|
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made without regard to any allocations to the Class J Units pursuant to this
Section 5.14(b)(ii)(B)
and (ii) the allocations to the Class I Units pursuant to
Section
5.13(b)(ii),
each Class J Unit shall be allocated, to the extent available, depreciation, amortization, depletion, together with any other form of cost-recovery, equal to Ten Million ($10,000,000) per Class J Unit during the calendar year in
which such Class J Unit was deemed issued. The allocation of items pursuant to this
Section
5.14(b)(ii)(B)
with respect to each Class J Unit shall be made proportionately over the calendar year or such portion thereof
beginning on the effective date of the issuance of such Class J Unit and ending on December 31st of such calendar year.
(iii)
Distributions
. The Class J Units shall not be entitled to receive any distributions and, consistent with
the facts that the Class J Units are not Units, and that the holders of the Class J Units are not Unitholders, and therefore have no Percentage Interests with respect to their Class J Units, shall not be entitled to receive distributions of
Available Cash pursuant to
Sections 6.4
or
6.5
.
(iv)
Voting Rights
. Except as set forth in
this
Section 5.14(b)(iv)
and
Section
13.3(c)
, and except to the extent the Delaware Act gives the Class J Units a vote as a class on any matter, the Class J Units shall not have any voting rights. With respect to any
matter on which the Class J Units are entitled to vote, each Class J Unit will be entitled to one vote on such matter. The General Partner shall not, without the affirmative vote or written consent of holders of a majority of the Class J Units then
Outstanding, amend, alter, modify or change this
Section 5.14
(or vote or consent to take such action).
(v)
Expiration, Redemption and Conversion Rights
. Each Class J Unit shall expire for no consideration on December 31st of the calendar year in which the effective date of the issuance of the Class J Unit occurred. The Class J Units shall
not have any rights of redemption or conversion.
(vi)
Certificates; Book-Entry
. Unless the General Partner
shall determine otherwise, the Class J Units shall not be evidenced by certificates. Any certificates relating to the Class J Units that may be issued later will be in such form as the General Partner may approve. The Class J Units, subject to the
satisfaction of any applicable legal, regulatory and contractual requirements, may be assigned or transferred in a manner identical to, and as if the Class J Units were, Units in the Partnership.
(vii)
Registrar and Transfer Agent
. Unless and until the General Partner determines to assign the responsibility
to another Person, the General Partner will act as the registrar and transfer agent for the Class J Units.
Section 5.15
Establishment of Class K Units
.
(a)
General
. The General Partner hereby designates and creates a class of
Partnership Securities to be designated as Class K Units. The Class K Units were issued to the former holders of the ETP Class K Units pursuant to the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement. In accordance with
Section 5.6
, the General Partner
shall have the power and authority to issue additional Class K Units in the future.
(b)
Rights of Class K Units
. The Class
K Units shall have the following rights, preferences and privileges and shall be subject to the following duties and obligations:
(i)
Initial Capital Account
. The initial capital account with respect to each Class K Unit will be equal to the
Class K Unit Issue Price.
(ii)
Allocations
.
(A) The holders of Class K Units shall not be entitled to receive (i) any allocations of ETP Holdco Items, and (ii) except
as otherwise provided in this
Section 5.15(b)(ii)
, allocations of (1) Net Income pursuant to
Section 6.1(a)
, (2) Net Loss pursuant to
Section 6.1(b)
, or (3) Net Termination Gains and Net Termination Losses pursuant to
Section
6.1(c)
.
(B) For each taxable period, after the application of
Section
6.1(d)(iii)(A)
but
before the application of
Section 6.1(d)(iii)(B)
, the holders of the Class K Units shall be allocated, pro rata in
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proportion to the number of Class K Units of each such holder, items of Partnership income, gain, loss or deduction (other than from ETP Holdco Items and items of Partnership depreciation,
amortization and cost recovery deductions) until the aggregate amount of such items allocated to the holders of the Class K Units pursuant to this
Section 5.15(b)(ii)(B)
for the current taxable period and all previous taxable periods is equal
to the cumulative amount of all distributions made to the holders of the Class K Units pursuant to
Section 5.15(b)(iii)
.
(C) Items of Partnership depreciation, amortization and cost recovery deductions (other than from ETP Holdco Items) for the
taxable period shall be allocated to the holders of Class K Units to the extent such items would be allocated to the holders of Class K Units as if each Class K Unit were treated as a Common Unit.
(D) For each taxable period, after the application of
Section
6.1(c)(i)(A)
but before the application
of
Section 6.1(c)(i)(B)
, Net Termination Gain (other than from ETP Holdco Items) shall be allocated to the holders of the Class K Units, pro rata in proportion to the number of Class K Units of each such holder, until the Capital Account of
each Class K Unit is equal to the Class K Unit Issue Price.
(E) For each taxable period, after the application of
Section
6.1(c)(i)(A)
but before the application of
Section 6.1(c)(i)(B)
, and after making the allocations provided for in
Section 5.15(b)(ii)(D)
, the holders of the Class K Units shall be allocated, pro rata
in proportion to the number of Class K Units of each such holder, 1% of the remaining aggregate Net Termination Gain (other than from ETP Holdco Items), if any, that is to be allocated pursuant to
Sections 6.1(c)(i)(B)
-
(F)
;
provided, however
, that an allocation shall only be made to the holders of Class K Units pursuant to this
Section 5.15(b)(ii)(E)
if the Capital Account of each Common Unit is equal to or greater than the Class K Unit Issue Price
immediately prior to making such allocation.
(F) For each taxable period, after the application of
Section
6.1(c)(ii)(A)
, but before the application of
Section
6.1(c)(ii)(B)
, the holders of the Class K Units shall be allocated Net Termination Loss (other than from ETP Holdco Items) until the
Capital Account in respect of each Class K Unit has been reduced to zero.
(G) For the purposes of effectuating the intent
of the foregoing allocation provisions, the General Partner shall have the sole discretion to make special allocations of items of Partnership gross income, gain, loss or deductions among the General Partner and the Unitholders as it deems
reasonable.
(iii)
Distributions
.
(A) For each taxable period, no portion of any Partnership cash distribution attributable to ETP Holdco Distributions shall be
distributed to the Class K Units.
(B) Commencing with the Class K Issuance Date, the holders of the Class K Units as of an
applicable Record Date shall be entitled to receive distributions (each, a
Class K Unit Quarterly Distribution
) prior to making any distributions pursuant to
Section 5.11(b)(iii)(C)
,
Section 6.3(e)(ii)
,
Section
6.4
or
Section 6.5
, in cash in an amount equal to the Class K Unit Distribution Rate on all Outstanding Class K Units. Distributions shall be paid Quarterly, in arrears, within forty-five (45) days after the
end of each Quarter, commencing with the Quarter ending [ ], 2017. Each Record Date established for paying a Class K Unit Quarterly Distribution in respect of any Quarter shall be the same Record Date established for any
distribution to be made by the Partnership in respect of other Partnership Interests pursuant to
Section 6.4
or
Section 6.5
. If the Partnership is unable to pay the Class K Unit Quarterly Distribution with respect to any Quarter,
(A) the amount of such accrued and unpaid distributions will accumulate until paid in full in cash and (B) the balance of such accrued and unpaid distributions shall increase at a rate of 1.5% per annum, compounded quarterly, from the date such
distribution was due until the date it is paid. For the avoidance of doubt, except as set forth in this
Section 5.15(b)(iii)(B)
, the Class K Units will not be entitled to receive distributions, including distributions of Available Cash under
Section 6.4
and
Section 6.5
.
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(iv)
Voting Rights
. Except as set forth in this
Section
5.15(b)(iv)
and
Section
13.3(c)
and except to the extent the Delaware Act gives the Class K Units a vote as a class on any matter, the Class K Units shall not have any voting rights. With respect to any matter on which
the Class K Units are entitled to vote, each Class K Unit will be entitled to one vote on such matter. The General Partner shall not, without the affirmative vote or written consent of holders of a majority of the Class K Units then Outstanding,
amend, alter, modify or change this
Section 5.15
(or vote or consent or resolve to take such action).
(v)
Redemption and Conversion Rights
. The Class K Units will be perpetual and shall not have any rights of redemption or conversion.
(vi)
Certificates; Book-Entry
. Unless the General Partner shall determine otherwise, the Class K Units shall not
be evidenced by certificates. Any certificates relating to the Class K Units that may be issued will be in such form as the General Partner may approve. The Class K Units, subject to the satisfaction of any applicable legal, regulatory and
contractual requirements, may be assigned or transferred in a manner identical to the assignment and transfer of other Units.
(vii)
Registrar and Transfer Agent
. Unless and until the General Partner determines to assign the responsibility
to another Person, the General Partner will act as the registrar and transfer agent for the Class K Units.
ARTICLE VI
ALLOCATIONS AND DISTRIBUTIONS
Section 6.1
Allocations for Capital Account Purposes
.
For purposes of maintaining the Capital Accounts and in determining the rights of the Partners among themselves, the Partnerships items
of income, gain, loss and deduction (computed in accordance with
Section
5.5(b)
) shall be allocated among the Partners in each taxable year (or portion thereof) as provided herein below.
(a)
Net Income
. After giving effect to the special allocations set forth in
Section
6.1(d)
and as
otherwise provided in
Article
V
, Net Income for each taxable year and all items of income, gain, loss and deduction taken into account in computing Net Income for such taxable year shall be allocated as follows:
(i) First, 100% to the General Partner until the aggregate Net Income allocated to the General Partner pursuant to this
Section
6.1(a)(i)
for the current taxable year and all previous taxable years is equal to the aggregate Net Losses allocated to the General Partner pursuant to
Section
6.1(b)(iii)
for all previous
taxable years;
(ii) Second, 100% to the General Partner and the Unitholders, in accordance with their respective
Percentage Interests, until the aggregate Net Income allocated to such Partners pursuant to this
Section
6.1(a)(ii)
for the current taxable year and all previous taxable years is equal to the aggregate Net Losses allocated
to such Partners pursuant to
Section 6.1(b)(ii)
for all previous taxable years; and
(iii) Third, the balance, if
any, 100% to the General Partner and the Unitholders in accordance with their respective Percentage Interests. For purposes of allocating Net Income pursuant to this
Section 6.1(a)
, notwithstanding the foregoing, the Class E Units shall not
be allocated any Net Income pursuant to this
Section 6.1(a)
.
(b)
Net Losses
. After giving effect to the special
allocations set forth in
Section
6.1(d)
and as otherwise provided in
Article
V
, Net Losses for each taxable period and all items of income, gain, loss and deduction taken into account in computing
Net Losses for such taxable period shall be allocated as follows:
(i) First, 100% to the General Partner and the
Unitholders, in accordance with their respective Percentage Interests, until the aggregate Net Losses allocated pursuant to this
Section
6.1(b)(i)
for the
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current taxable year and all previous taxable years is equal to the aggregate Net Income allocated to such Partners pursuant to
Section
6.1(a)(iii)
for all previous
taxable years,
provided
that the Net Losses shall not be allocated pursuant to this
Section
6.1(b)(i)
to the extent that such allocation would cause any Unitholder to have a deficit balance in its Adjusted Capital
Account at the end of such taxable year (or increase any existing deficit balance in its Adjusted Capital Account);
(ii)
Second, 100% to the General Partner and the Unitholders in accordance with their respective Percentage Interests;
provided
, that Net Losses shall not be allocated pursuant to this
Section
6.1(b)(ii)
to the extent
that such allocation would cause any Unitholder to have a deficit balance in its Adjusted Capital Account at the end of such taxable year (or increase any existing deficit balance in its Adjusted Capital Account). For purposes of allocating Net
Losses pursuant to this
Section 6.1(b)
, notwithstanding the foregoing, the Class E Units shall not be allocated any Net Losses pursuant to this
Section 6.1(b)
; and
(iii) Third, the balance, if any, 100% to the General Partner.
(c)
Net Termination Gains and Losses
.
After giving effect to the special allocations set forth in
Section
6.1(d)
and as otherwise provided in
Article
V
, all items of income, gain, loss and deduction taken into account in computing Net Termination Gain or Net Termination Loss for such taxable
period shall be allocated in the same manner as such Net Termination Gain or Net Termination Loss is allocated hereunder. All allocations under this
Section
6.1(c)
shall be made after Capital Account balances have been
adjusted by all other allocations provided under this
Section
6.1
and after all distributions of Available Cash provided under
Sections
6.4
and
6.5
have been made;
provided
,
however
, that solely for purposes of this
Section
6.1(c)
, Capital Accounts shall not be adjusted for distributions made pursuant to
Section
12.4
.
(i) If a Net Termination Gain is recognized (or deemed recognized pursuant to
Section 5.5(d)
) such Net Termination Gain
shall be allocated among the Partners in the following manner (and the Capital Accounts of the Partners shall be increased by the amount so allocated in each of the following subclauses, in the order listed, before an allocation is made pursuant to
the next succeeding subclause):
(A) First, to each Partner having a deficit balance in its Capital Account, in the
proportion that such deficit balance bears to the total deficit balances in the Capital Accounts of all Partners, until each such Partner has been allocated Net Termination Gain equal to any such deficit balance in its Capital Account;
(B) Second, (x) to the General Partner in accordance with its Percentage Interest and (y) to all Unitholders, Pro
Rata, a percentage equal to 100% less the percentage applicable to
subclause
(x)
of this
clause
(B)
, until the Capital Account in respect of each Common Unit then Outstanding is equal to the sum of
(1) its Unrecovered Capital plus (2) the Minimum Quarterly Distribution for the Quarter during which the Liquidation Date occurs, reduced by any distribution pursuant to
Section
6.4(a)(i)
with respect to such
Common Unit for such Quarter (the amount determined pursuant to this
clause
(2)
is hereinafter defined as the
Unpaid MQD
);
(C) Third, (x) to the General Partner in accordance with its Percentage Interest and (y) to all Unitholders, Pro
Rata, a percentage equal to 100% less the percentage applicable to
subclause
(x)
of this
clause
(C)
, until the Capital Account in respect of each Common Unit then Outstanding is equal to the sum of
(1) its Unrecovered Capital, plus (2) the Unpaid MQD, plus (3) the excess of (aa) the First Target Distribution less the Minimum Quarterly Distribution for each Quarter of the Partnerships existence over (bb) the
cumulative per Unit amount of any distributions of Operating Surplus that was distributed pursuant to
Section
6.4(a)(iv)
of the Previous Agreement and
Section 6.4(a)(ii)
of this Agreement (the sum of
(1)
plus
(2)
plus
(3)
is hereinafter defined as the
First Liquidation Target Amount
);
(D)
Fourth, (x) to the General Partner in accordance with its Percentage Interest, (y) 13% to the holders of the Incentive Distribution Rights, Pro Rata, and (z) to all Unitholders, Pro Rata, a percentage equal to 100% less the
percentages applicable to
subclauses
(x)
and
(y)
of this
clause
(D)
, until the
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Capital Account in respect of each Common Unit then Outstanding is equal to the sum of (1) the First Liquidation Target Amount, plus (2) the excess of (aa) the Second Target
Distribution less the First Target Distribution for each Quarter of the Partnerships existence over (bb) the cumulative per Unit amount of any distributions of Operating Surplus that was distributed pursuant to
Section
6.4(a)(v)
of the Previous Agreement and
Section 6.4(a)(iii)
of this Agreement (the sum of
(1)
plus
(2)
is hereinafter defined as the
Second Liquidation Target Amount
);
(E) Fifth, (x) to the General Partner in accordance with its Percentage Interest, (y) 23% to the holders of the
Incentive Distribution Rights, Pro Rata, and (z) to all Unitholders, Pro Rata, a percentage equal to 100% less the percentages applicable to
subclauses
(x)
and
(y)
of this
clause
(E)
,until the Capital Account in respect of each Common Unit then Outstanding is equal to the sum of (1) the Second Liquidation Target Amount, plus (2) the excess of (aa) the Third Target Distribution
less the Second Target Distribution for each Quarter of the Partnerships existence over (bb) the cumulative per Unit amount of any distributions of Operating Surplus that was distributed pursuant to Section 6.4(a)(vi) of the Previous
Agreement and
Section 6.4(a)(iv)
of this Agreement (the sum of
(1)
plus
(2)
is hereinafter defined as the
Third Liquidation Target Amount
); and
(F) Finally, any remaining amount (x) to the General Partner in accordance with its Percentage Interest, (y) 48% to
the holders of the Incentive Distribution Rights, Pro Rata, and (z) to all Unitholders, Pro Rata, a percentage equal to 100% less the percentages applicable to
subclauses
(x)
and
(y)
of this
clause
(F)
.
For purposes of allocating Net Termination Gain pursuant to this
Section 6.1(c)(i)
, notwithstanding the
foregoing, the Class E Units shall not be allocated any Net Termination Gain pursuant to this
Section 6.1(c)(i)
.
Notwithstanding the foregoing
provisions in this
Section
6.1(c)(i)
, the General Partner may adjust the amount of any Net Termination Gain arising in connection with a Revaluation Event that is allocated to the holders of Incentive Distribution Rights in
a manner that will result (1) in the Capital Account for each Common Unit that is Outstanding prior to such Revaluation Event being equal to the Event Issue Value and (2) to the greatest extent possible, the Capital Account with respect to
the Incentive Distribution Rights that are Outstanding prior to such Revaluation Event being equal to the amount of Net Termination Gain that would be allocated to the holders of the Incentive Distribution Rights pursuant to this
Section
6.1(c)(i)
if (i) the Capital Accounts with respect to all Partnership Interests that were Outstanding immediately prior to such Revaluation Event were equal to zero and (ii) the aggregate Carrying Value of
all Partnership property equaled the aggregate amount of all Partnership Liabilities.
(ii) If a Net Termination Loss is
recognized (or deemed recognized pursuant to
Section 5.5(d)
), such Net Termination Loss shall be allocated among the Partners in the following manner:
(A) First, to the General Partner and all Unitholders in accordance with their Percentage Interests until the Capital Account
in respect of each Unit then Outstanding has been reduced to zero; and
(B) Second, the balance, if any, 100% to the
General Partner.
For purposes of allocating Net Termination Loss pursuant to this
Section
6.1(c)(ii)
, notwithstanding the
foregoing, the Class E Units shall not be allocated any Net Termination Loss pursuant to this
Section
6.1(c)(ii)
.
(d)
Special Allocations
. Notwithstanding any other provision of this
Section
6.1
, the following
special allocations shall be made for such taxable period:
(i)
Partnership Minimum Gain Chargeback
.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this
Section
6.1
, if there is a net decrease in Partnership Minimum Gain during any Partnership taxable period, each Partner shall be allocated items of Partnership income and gain for
such period (and, if necessary, subsequent periods) in the manner and amounts provided in Treasury Regulation Sections 1.704-2(f)(6), 1.704-2(g)(2) and 1.704-2(j)(2)(i), or any successor provision. For purposes of this
Section
6.1(d)
, each
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Partners Adjusted Capital Account balance shall be determined, and the allocation of income or gain required hereunder shall be effected, prior to the application of any other allocations
pursuant to this
Section
6.1(d)
with respect to such taxable period (other than an allocation pursuant to
Sections
6.1(d)(vi)
and
6.1(d)(vii)
). This
Section
6.1(d)(i)
is intended to comply with the Partnership Minimum Gain chargeback requirement in Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-2(f) and shall be interpreted consistently therewith.
(ii)
Chargeback of Partner Nonrecourse Debt Minimum Gain
.
Notwithstanding the other provisions of
this
Section
6.1
(other than
Section
6.1(d)(i)
), except as provided in Treasury Regulation Section l.704-2(i)(4), if there is a net decrease in Partner Nonrecourse Debt Minimum Gain during any
Partnership taxable period, any Partner with a share of Partner Nonrecourse Debt Minimum Gain at the beginning of such taxable period shall be allocated items of Partnership income and gain for such period (and, if necessary, subsequent periods) in
the manner and amounts provided in Treasury Regulation Sections 1.704-2(i)(4) and 1.704-2(j)(2)(ii), or any successor provisions. For purposes of this
Section
6.1(d)
, each Partners Adjusted Capital Account
balance shall be determined, and the allocation of income or gain required hereunder shall be effected, prior to the application of any other allocations pursuant to this
Section
6.1(d)
, other than
Section 6.1(d)(i)
and other than an allocation pursuant to
Sections
6.1(d)(vi)
and
6.1(d)(vii)
, with respect to such taxable period. This
Section
6.1(d)(ii)
is intended to comply with the chargeback of items
of income and gain requirement in Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-2(i)(4) and shall be interpreted consistently therewith.
(iii)
Priority Allocations
.
(A) If the amount of cash or the Net Agreed Value of any property distributed (except cash or property distributed pursuant to
Section
12.4
) to any Unitholder with respect to its Units for a taxable year is greater (on a per Unit basis) than the amount of cash or the Net Agreed Value of property distributed to the other Unitholders with respect to
their Units (on a per Unit basis), then (1) each Unitholder receiving such greater cash or property distribution shall be allocated gross income in an amount equal to the product of (aa) the amount by which the distribution (on a per Unit
basis) to such Unitholder exceeds the distribution (on a per Unit basis) to the Unitholders receiving the smallest distribution and (bb) the number of Units owned by the Unitholder receiving the greater distribution; and (2) the General
Partner shall be allocated gross income and gain in an aggregate amount equal to the product obtained by multiplying (aa) the quotient determined by dividing (x) the General Partners Percentage Interest at the time in which the
greater cash or property distribution occurs by (y) the sum of 100 less the General Partners Percentage Interest at the time in which the greater cash or property distribution occurs times (bb) the sum of the amounts allocated in
clause
(1)
above. This
Section 6.1(d)(iii)(A)
shall not apply to the Class E Units and the Class K Units.
(B) After the application of
Section
6.1(d)(iii)(A)
, all or any portion of the remaining items of
Partnership gross income or gain for the taxable period, if any, shall be allocated (1) to the holders of Incentive Distribution Rights, Pro Rata, until the aggregate amount of such items allocated to the holders of Incentive Distribution
Rights pursuant to this
Section
6.1(d)(iii)(B)
for the current taxable year and all previous taxable years is equal to the cumulative amount of all Incentive Distributions made to the holders of Incentive Distribution
Rights from the Closing Date to a date 45 days after the end of the current taxable year; and (2) to the General Partner an amount equal to the product of (aa) an amount equal to the quotient determined by dividing (x) the
General Partners Percentage Interest by (y) the sum of 100 less the General Partners Percentage Interest times (bb) the sum of the amounts allocated in
clause
(1)
above.
(C) After the application of
Section 6.1(d)(iii)(B)
, all or any portion of the remaining items of Partnership gross
income or gain for the taxable year, if any, shall be allocated to the holders of Class E Units, Pro Rata, until the aggregate amount of such items allocated to the holders of the Class E Units pursuant to this
Section 6.1(d)(iii)(C)
for the
current taxable year and all previous taxable years ending on or after January 1, 2013 is equal to the cumulative amount of all distributions made to the holders of
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Class E Units pursuant to
Section 6.3(e)
from January 1, 2013 to a date 45 days after the end of the current taxable year.
(iv)
Qualified Income Offset
. In the event any Partner unexpectedly receives any adjustments, allocations or
distributions described in Treasury Regulation Sections 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(d)(4), 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(d)(5), or 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(d)(6), items of Partnership gross income and gain shall be specially allocated to such Partner in an amount and
manner sufficient to eliminate, to the extent required by the Treasury Regulations promulgated under Section 704(b) of the Code, the deficit balance, if any, in its Adjusted Capital Account created by such adjustments, allocations or distributions
as quickly as possible unless such deficit balance is otherwise eliminated pursuant to
Section
6.1(d)(i)
or
(ii)
.
(v)
Gross Income Allocations
. In the event any Partner has a deficit balance in its Capital Account at the end of
any Partnership taxable period in excess of the sum of (A) the amount such Partner is required to restore pursuant to the provisions of this Agreement and (B) the amount such Partner is deemed obligated to restore pursuant to Treasury
Regulation Sections 1.704-2(g) and 1.704-2(i)(5), such Partner shall be specially allocated items of Partnership gross income and gain in the amount of such excess as quickly as possible;
provided
, that an allocation pursuant to
this
Section
6.1(d)(v)
shall be made only if and to the extent that such Partner would have a deficit balance in its Capital Account as adjusted after all other allocations provided for in this
Section
6.1
have been tentatively made as if this
Section
6.1(d)(v)
were not in this Agreement.
(vi)
Nonrecourse Deductions
. Nonrecourse Deductions for any taxable period shall be allocated to the Partners in
accordance with their respective Percentage Interests. If the General Partner determines that the Partnerships Nonrecourse Deductions must be allocated in a different ratio to satisfy the safe harbor requirements of the Treasury Regulations
promulgated under Section 704(b) of the Code, the General Partner is authorized, upon notice to the other Partners, to revise the prescribed ratio to the numerically closest ratio that does satisfy such requirements.
(vii)
Partner Nonrecourse Deductions
. Partner Nonrecourse Deductions, for any taxable period shall be allocated
100% to the Partner that bears the Economic Risk of Loss with respect to the Partner Nonrecourse Debt to which such Partner Nonrecourse Deductions are attributable in accordance with Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-2(i). If more than one
Partner bears the Economic Risk of Loss with respect to a Partner Nonrecourse Debt, such Partner Nonrecourse Deductions attributable thereto shall be allocated between or among such Partners in accordance with the ratios in which they share such
Economic Risk of Loss.
(viii)
Nonrecourse Liabilities
. For purposes of Treasury Regulation Section
1.752-3(a)(3), the Partners agree that Nonrecourse Liabilities of the Partnership in excess of the sum of (A) the amount of Partnership Minimum Gain and (B) the total amount of Nonrecourse Built-in Gain shall be allocated among the
Partners in accordance with their respective Percentage Interests.
(ix)
Code Section 754 Adjustments
. To the
extent an adjustment to the adjusted tax basis of any Partnership asset pursuant to Section 734(b) or 743(b) of the Code is required, pursuant to Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(m), to be taken into account in determining
Capital Accounts, the amount of such adjustment to the Capital Accounts shall be treated as an item of gain (if the adjustment increases the basis of the asset) or loss (if the adjustment decreases such basis), and such item of gain or loss shall be
specially allocated to the Partners in a manner consistent with the manner in which their Capital Accounts are required to be adjusted pursuant to such Section of the Treasury Regulations.
(x) [Reserved]
(xi)
Curative Allocation
.
(A) Notwithstanding any other provision of this
Section
6.1
, other than the Required Allocations, the
Required Allocations shall be taken into account in making the Agreed Allocations so that, to the extent possible, the net amount of items of gross income, gain, loss and deduction allocated to each
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Partner pursuant to the Required Allocations and the Agreed Allocations, together, shall be equal to the net amount of such items that would have been allocated to each such Partner under the
Agreed Allocations had the Required Allocations and the related Curative Allocation not otherwise been provided in this
Section
6.1
. Notwithstanding the preceding sentence, Required Allocations relating to
(1) Nonrecourse Deductions shall not be taken into account except to the extent that there has been a decrease in Partnership Minimum Gain and (2) Partner Nonrecourse Deductions shall not be taken into account except to the extent that
there has been a decrease in Partner Nonrecourse Debt Minimum Gain. Allocations pursuant to this
Section
6.1(d)(xi)(A)
shall only be made with respect to Required Allocations to the extent the General Partner reasonably
determines that such allocations will otherwise be inconsistent with the economic agreement among the Partners. Further, allocations pursuant to this
Section
6.1(d)(xi)(A)
shall be deferred with respect to allocations
pursuant to
clauses
(1)
and
(2)
hereof to the extent the General Partner determines that such allocations are likely to be offset by subsequent Required Allocations.
(B) The General Partner shall, with respect to each taxable period, (1) apply the provisions of
Section
6.1(d)(xi)(A)
in whatever order is most likely to minimize the economic distortions that might otherwise result from the Required Allocations, and (2) divide all allocations pursuant to
Section
6.1(d)(xi)(A)
among the Partners in a manner that is likely to minimize such economic distortions.
(xii)
Corrective and Other Allocations
. In the event of any allocation of Additional Book Basis Derivative Items
or any Book-Down Event or any recognition of a Net Termination Loss, the following rules shall apply:
(A) Except as
provided in
Section
6.1(d)(xii)(B)
, in the case of any allocation of Additional Book Basis Derivative Items (other than an allocation of Unrealized Gain or Unrealized Loss treated as recognized under
Section
5.5(d)
hereof) with respect to any Partnership property, the General Partner shall allocate such Additional Book Basis Derivative Items (1) to (aa) the holders of Incentive Distribution Rights and
(bb) the General Partner in the same manner that Unrealized Gain or Unrealized Loss attributable to such property would be allocated if treated as recognized pursuant to
Section
5.5(d)(i)
or
Section
5.5(d)(ii)
and (2) to all Unitholders, Pro Rata, to the extent that the Unrealized Gain or Unrealized Loss attributable to such property would be allocated to any Unitholders if treated as recognized pursuant
to
Section
5.5(d)(i)
or
Section
5.5(d)(ii)
.
(B) In the case of any
allocation of Additional Book Basis Derivative Items (other than an allocation of Unrealized Gain or Unrealized Loss treated as recognized under
Section
5.5(d)
hereof or an allocation of Net Termination Gain or Net
Termination Loss pursuant to
Section
6.1(c)
hereof) as a result of a sale or other taxable disposition of any Partnership asset that is an Adjusted Property including, for this purpose, any inventory (
Disposed
of Adjusted Property
), the General Partner shall allocate (1) additional items of income and gain (aa) away from the holders of Incentive Distribution Rights and the General Partner and (bb) to the Unitholders, or
(2) additional items of deduction and loss (aa) away from the Unitholders and (bb) to the holders of Incentive Distribution Rights and the General Partner, to the extent that the Additional Book Basis Derivative Items allocated to the
Unitholders exceed their Share of Additional Book Basis Derivative Items with respect to such Disposed of Adjusted Property. For this purpose, the Unitholders shall be treated as being allocated Additional Book Basis Derivative Items to the extent
that such Additional Book Basis Derivative Items have reduced the amount of income that would otherwise have been allocated to the Unitholders under this Agreement (e.g., Additional Book Basis Derivative Items taken into account in computing cost of
goods sold would reduce the amount of book income otherwise available for allocation among the Partners). Any allocation made pursuant to this
Section
6.1(d)(xii)(B)
shall be made after all of the other Agreed Allocations
have been made as if this
Section
6.1(d)(xii)
were not in this Agreement and, to the extent necessary, shall require the reallocation of items that have been allocated pursuant to such other Agreed Allocations.
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(C) In the case of any negative adjustments to the Capital Accounts of the
Partners resulting from a Book-Down Event or from the recognition of a Net Termination Loss, such negative adjustment (1) shall first be allocated, to the extent of the Aggregate Remaining Net Positive Adjustments, in such a manner, as
determined by the General Partner, that to the extent possible the aggregate Capital Accounts of the Partners will equal the amount that would have been the Capital Account balance of the Partners if no prior Book-Up Events had occurred, and
(2) any negative adjustment in excess of the Aggregate Remaining Net Positive Adjustments shall be allocated pursuant to
Section
6.1(c)
hereof.
(D) In making the allocations required under this
Section
6.1(d)(xii)
, the General Partner may apply
whatever conventions or other methodology it determines will satisfy the purpose of this
Section
6.1(d)(xii)
.
(xiii)
Class E and ETP Holdco Allocations
.
(A) The Class E Units shall not be entitled to receive any allocation of any ETP Holdco Items, and such ETP Holdco Items (which
shall not be included in the computation of Net Income, Net Loss, Net Termination Gain or Net Termination Loss for any taxable year while any Class E Units, Class G Units or Class K Units remain Outstanding) shall instead be specifically allocated
to the General Partner in an amount equal to the General Partners Percentage Interest of such ETP Holdco Items and the remainder to the Unitholders (other than the holders of Class E Units, Class G Units or Class K Units) Pro Rata.
(B) For the purposes of effectuating the intent of
Section 6.1(a)(iii)
,
Section 6.1(c)
, and
Section
6.1(d)(xiii)
, the General Partner may make special allocations of items of Partnership gross income, gain, loss or deductions among the General Partner and the Unitholders as it deems reasonable.
(xiv)
Exercise of Noncompensatory Options
.
In accordance with Treasury Regulation Section
1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(s) and as provided in
Section
5.5(d)(i)
, immediately after the conversion of a Limited Partner Interest into Common Units (each such Common Unit a
Conversion Unit
) upon the
exercise of a Noncompensatory Option, the Carrying Value of each Partnership property shall be adjusted to reflect its fair market value immediately after such conversion and any resulting Unrealized Gain (if the Capital Account of each such
Conversion Unit is less than the Per Unit Capital Account for a then Outstanding Initial Common Unit) or Unrealized Loss (if the Capital Account of each such Conversion Unit is greater than the Per Unit Capital Account for a then Outstanding Initial
Common Unit) will be allocated to each Partner holding Conversion Units in proportion to and to the extent of the amount necessary to cause the Capital Account of each such Conversion Unit to equal the Per Unit Capital Amount for a then Outstanding
Initial Common Unit. Any remaining Unrealized Gain or Unrealized Loss will be allocated to the Partners pursuant to
Section
6.1(c)
and
Section
6.1(d)
.
Section 6.2
Allocations for Tax Purposes
.
(a) Except as otherwise provided herein, for federal income tax purposes, each item of income, gain, loss and deduction shall be allocated
among the Partners in the same manner as its correlative item of book income, gain, loss or deduction is allocated pursuant to
Section
6.1
.
(b) In an attempt to eliminate Book-Tax Disparities attributable to a Contributed Property or Adjusted Property, items of income, gain, loss,
depreciation, amortization and cost recovery deductions shall be allocated for federal income tax purposes among the Partners as follows:
(i) (A) In the case of a Contributed Property, such items attributable thereto shall be allocated among the Partners in
the manner provided under Section 704(c) of the Code that takes into account the variation between the Agreed Value of such property and its adjusted basis at the time of contribution; and (B) any item of Residual Gain or Residual Loss
attributable to a Contributed Property shall be allocated among the Partners hi the same manner as its correlative item of book gain or loss is allocated pursuant to
Section 6.1
.
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(ii) (A) In the case of an Adjusted Property, such items shall
(1) first, be allocated among the Partners in a manner consistent with the principles of Section 704(c) of the Code to take into account the Unrealized Gain or Unrealized Loss attributable to such property and the allocations thereof pursuant
to
Section
5.5(d)(i)
or
(ii)
, and (2) second, in the event such property was originally a Contributed Property, be allocated among the Partners in a manner consistent with
Section
6.2(b)(i)(A)
; and (B) any item of Residual Gain or Residual Loss attributable to an Adjusted Property shall be allocated among the Partners in the same manner as its correlative item of book gain or
loss is allocated pursuant to
Section
6.1
.
(iii) The General Partner shall apply the principles
of Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-3(d) to eliminate Book-Tax Disparities.
(iv) If, as a result of an exercise of a
Noncompensatory Option, a Capital Account reallocation is required under Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(s)(3), the General Partner shall make corrective allocations pursuant to Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-1(b)(4)(x).
(c) For the proper administration of the Partnership and for the preservation of uniformity of the Units (or any class or classes thereof),
the General Partner shall (i) adopt such conventions as it deems appropriate in determining the amount of depreciation, amortization and cost recovery deductions; (ii) make special allocations for federal income tax purposes of income
(including, without limitation, gross income) or deductions; and (iii) amend the provisions of this Agreement as appropriate (x) to reflect the proposal or promulgation of Treasury Regulations under Section 704(b) or Section 704(c) of the
Code or (y) otherwise to preserve or achieve uniformity of the Units (or any class or classes thereof). The General Partner may adopt such conventions, make such allocations and make such amendments to this Agreement as provided in this
Section
6.2(c)
only if such conventions, allocations or amendments would not have a material adverse effect on the Partners, the holders of any class or classes of Units issued and Outstanding or the Partnership, and if
such allocations are consistent with the principles of Section 704 of the Code.
(d) The General Partner may determine to depreciate
or amortize the portion of an adjustment under Section 743(b) of the Code attributable to unrealized appreciation in any Adjusted Property (to the extent of the unamortized Book-Tax Disparity) using a predetermined rate derived from the depreciation
or amortization method and useful life applied to the unamortized Book-Tax Disparity of such property, despite any inconsistency of such approach with Treasury Regulation Section 1.167(c)-1(a)(6) or the legislative history of
Section 197 of the Code. If the General Partner determines that such reporting position cannot reasonably be taken, the General Partner may adopt depreciation and amortization conventions under which all purchasers acquiring Units in the same
month would receive depreciation and amortization deductions, based upon the same applicable rate as if they had purchased a direct interest in the Partnerships property. If the General Partner chooses not to utilize such aggregate method, the
General Partner may use any other depreciation and amortization conventions to preserve the uniformity of the intrinsic tax characteristics of any Units that would not have a material adverse effect on the Limited Partners or the Record Holders of
any class or classes of Units.
(e) In accordance with Treasury Regulation Sections 1.1245-1(e) and 1.1250-1(f), any gain
allocated to the Partners upon the sale or other taxable disposition of any Partnership asset shall, to the extent possible, after taking into account other required allocations of gain pursuant to this
Section
6.2
, be
characterized as Recapture Income in the same proportions and to the same extent as such Partners (or their predecessors in interest) have been allocated any deductions directly or indirectly giving rise to the treatment of such gains as Recapture
Income.
(f) All items of income, gain, loss, deduction and credit recognized by the Partnership for federal income tax purposes and
allocated to the Partners in accordance with the provisions hereof shall be determined without regard to any election under Section 754 of the Code which may be made by the Partnership;
provided
,
however
, that such allocations,
once made, shall be adjusted (in the manner determined by the General Partner) to take into account those adjustments permitted or required by Sections 734 and 743 of the Code.
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(g) Each item of Partnership income, gain, loss and deduction, shall for federal income tax
purposes, be determined on an annual basis and prorated on a monthly basis and shall be allocated to the Partners as of the opening of the New York Stock Exchange on the first Business Day of each month;
provided
,
however
, that such
items for the period beginning on the Closing Date and ending on the last day of the month in which the Option Closing Date or the expiration of the Over-Allotment Option occurs shall be allocated to Partners as of the opening of the New York Stock
Exchange on the first Business Day of the next succeeding month; and
provided
,
further
, that gain or loss on a sale or other disposition of any assets of the Partnership or any other extraordinary item of income or loss realized and
recognized other than in the ordinary course of business, as determined by the General Partner, shall be allocated to the Partners as of the opening of the New York Stock Exchange on the first Business Day of the month in which such gain or loss is
recognized for federal income tax purposes. The General Partner may revise, alter or otherwise modify such methods of allocation, to the extent permitted or required by Section 706 of the Code and the regulations or rulings promulgated
thereunder.
(h) Allocations that would otherwise be made to a Limited Partner under the provisions of this
Article
VI
shall instead be made to the beneficial owner of Units held by a nominee in any case in which the nominee has furnished the identity of such owner to the Partnership in accordance with Section 6031(c) of the Code
or any other method determined by the General Partner.
Section 6.3
Requirement and Characterization of Distributions;
Distributions to Record Holders
.
(a) Within 45 days following the end of each Quarter, an amount equal to 100% of Available
Cash with respect to such Quarter shall, subject to Section 17-607 of the Delaware Act, be distributed in accordance with this
Article
VI
by the Partnership to the Partners as of the Record Date selected by the General
Partner. All amounts of Available Cash distributed by the Partnership on any date from any source shall be deemed to be Operating Surplus until the sum of all amounts of Available Cash theretofore distributed by the Partnership to the Partners
pursuant to
Section
6.4
equals the Operating Surplus from the Closing Date through the close of the immediately preceding Quarter. Any remaining amounts of Available Cash distributed by the Partnership on such date shall,
except as otherwise provided in
Section 6.5
, be deemed to be
Capital Surplus
. All distributions required to be made under this Agreement shall be made subject to Section 17-607 of the Delaware Act.
(b) In the event of the dissolution and liquidation of the Partnership, all receipts received during or after the Quarter in which the
Liquidation Date occurs, other than from borrowings described in (a)(ii) of the definition of Available Cash, shall be applied and distributed solely in accordance with, and subject to the terms and conditions of,
Section
12.4
.
(c) The General Partner may treat taxes paid by the Partnership on behalf of, or amounts withheld
with respect to, all or less than all of the Partners, as a distribution of Available Cash to such Partners.
(d) Each distribution in
respect of a Partnership Interest shall be paid by the Partnership, directly or through the Transfer Agent or through any other Person or agent, only to the Record Holder of such Partnership Interest as of the Record Date set for such distribution.
Such payment shall constitute full payment and satisfaction of the Partnerships liability in respect of such payment, regardless of any claim of any Person who may have an interest in such payment by reason of an assignment or otherwise.
(e) Distributions to Class E Unitholders shall be made as follows:
(i) For each taxable year, no portion of any Partnership cash distributions that are ETP Holdco Distributions shall be
distributed to the Class E Units.
(ii) The Class E Units shall be entitled to receive the Class E Percentage of
the portion of any Partnership distributions (other than ETP Holdco Distributions) to be made to the Unitholders pursuant to this
Article
VI
and the remaining portion of the Available Cash to be distributed shall be made to
the Unitholders (other than the holders of Class E or Class G Units) in proportion to their relative Percentage
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Interests;
provided
, that the aggregate Partnership distributions made pursuant to this
Article
VI
to each Class E Unit in respect of each fiscal year shall
not exceed $1.41 (which may, at the General Partners discretion, be split equally among the four Quarters of each fiscal year).
Section 6.4
Distributions of Available Cash from Operating Surplus
.
(a) Available Cash with respect to any Quarter that is deemed to be Operating Surplus pursuant to the provisions of
Section
6.3
or
Section
6.5
, subject to Section 17-607 of the Delaware Act, shall be distributed as follows, except as otherwise required by
Section
5.6(b)
in respect
of additional Partnership Securities issued pursuant thereto:
(i) First, (A) to the General Partner in accordance
with its Percentage Interest and (B) to all Unitholders, Pro Rata, a percentage equal to 100% less the percentage applicable to
subclause
(A)
of this
clause
(i)
until there has been
distributed in respect of each Unit then Outstanding an amount equal to the Minimum Quarterly Distribution for such Quarter;
(ii) Second, (A) to the General Partner in accordance with its Percentage Interest and (B) to all Unitholders, Pro
Rata, a percentage equal to 100% less the percentage applicable to
subclause
(A)
of this
clause
(ii)
until there has been distributed in respect of each Unit then Outstanding an amount equal to the
excess of the First Target Distribution over the Minimum Quarterly Distribution for such Quarter;
(iii) Third, (A) to
the General Partner in accordance with its Percentage Interest, (B) 13% to the holders of the Incentive Distribution Rights, Pro Rata, and (C) to all Unitholders, Pro Rata, a percentage equal to 100% less the percentages applicable to
subclauses
(A)
and
(B)
of this
clause
(iii)
until there has been distributed in respect of each Unit then Outstanding an amount equal to the excess of the Second Target Distribution over the
First Target Distribution for such Quarter;
(iv) Fourth, (A) to the General Partner in accordance with its Percentage
Interest, (B) 35% to the holders of the Incentive Distribution Rights, Pro Rata, and (C) to all Unitholders, Pro Rata, a percentage equal to 100% less the percentages applicable to
subclauses
(A)
and
(B)
of
this
clause
(iv)
until there has been distributed in respect of each Unit then Outstanding an amount equal to the excess of the Third Target Distribution over the Second Target Distribution for such Quarter; and
(v) Thereafter, (A) to the General Partner in accordance with its Percentage Interest, (B) 48% to the holders of the
Incentive Distribution Rights, Pro Rata, and (C) to all Unitholders, Pro Rata, a percentage equal to 100% less the percentages applicable to
subclauses
(A)
and
(B)
of this
clause
(v)
.
(b) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this
Section
6.4
, commencing with the
[ ] Quarter of 2017,
6
aggregate quarterly distributions, if any, to holders of the Incentive Distribution Rights provided by
clauses
(iii)(B)
,
(iv)(B)
and
(v)(B)
of
Section
6.4(a)
shall be reduced as set forth on
Schedule
6.4(b)
. In addition, notwithstanding anything to the
contrary herein, the General Partner, may, if approved by Special Approval and the holders of the Incentive Distribution Rights, make any amendment to the amount and timing of the reduction in the quarterly distributions to the holders of the
Incentive Distribution Rights set forth in this
Section
6.4(b)
(other than any reductions under the column Former SXL IDR Reduction on
Schedule
6.4(b)
) the General Partner deems
necessary or advisable in connection with a proposed transaction approved by Special Approval.
Section 6.5
Distributions of
Available Cash from Capital Surplus
.
Available Cash that is deemed to be Capital Surplus pursuant to the provisions of
Section
6.3(a)
shall, subject to Section 17-607 of the Delaware Act, be distributed, unless the provisions of
Section
6.3
require otherwise, to the General Partner in accordance with its Percentage
Interest and to all Unitholders, Pro Rata, in accordance with a percentage equal to 100% less the Percentage Interest applicable to the General Partner, until a
6
|
NTD: To correspond to the first Quarter with respect to which quarterly distributions are paid following the ETP-SXL Merger.
|
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hypothetical holder of a Common Unit acquired on the Closing Date has received with respect to such Common Unit, during the period since the Closing Date through such date, distributions of
Available Cash that are deemed to be Capital Surplus in an aggregate amount equal to the Initial Unit Price. Thereafter, all Available Cash shall be distributed as if it were Operating Surplus and shall be distributed in accordance with
Section
6.4
.
Section 6.6
Adjustment of Minimum Quarterly
Distribution and Target Distribution Levels
.
(a) The Minimum Quarterly Distribution, First Target Distribution, Second Target
Distribution and Third Target Distribution shall be proportionately adjusted in the event of any distribution, combination or subdivision (whether effected by a distribution payable in Units or otherwise) of Units or other Partnership Securities in
accordance with
Section
5.9
. In the event of a distribution of Available Cash that is deemed to be from Capital Surplus, the then applicable Minimum Quarterly Distribution, First Target Distribution, Second Target
Distribution and Third Target Distribution, shall be adjusted proportionately downward to equal the product obtained by multiplying the otherwise applicable Minimum Quarterly Distribution, First Target Distribution, Second Target Distribution and
Third Target Distribution, as the case may be, by a fraction of which the numerator is the Unrecovered Capital of the Common Units immediately after giving effect to such distribution and of which the denominator is the Unrecovered Capital of the
Common Units immediately prior to giving effect to such distribution.
(b) The Minimum Quarterly Distribution, First Target Distribution,
Second Target Distribution and Third Target Distribution, shall also be subject to adjustment pursuant to
Section
6.8
.
Section 6.7
Special Provisions Relating to the Holders of Incentive Distribution Rights
.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary set forth in this Agreement, the holders of the Incentive Distribution Rights (a) shall
(i) possess the rights and obligations provided in this Agreement with respect to a Limited Partner pursuant to
Articles
III
and
VII
and (ii) have a Capital Account as a Partner pursuant to
Section
5.5
and all other provisions related thereto and (b) shall not (i) be entitled to vote on any matters requiring the approval or vote of the holders of Outstanding Units, (ii) be entitled to any
distributions other than as provided in
Section
6.4(a)(iii)
,
Section
6.4(a)(iv)
,
Section
6.4(a)(v)
and Section 12.4 or (iii) be allocated items of income, gain,
loss or deduction other than as specified in this
Article
VI
.
Section 6.8
Entity-Level
Taxation
.
If legislation is enacted or the interpretation of existing language is modified by the relevant governmental authority
which causes a Group Member to be treated as an association taxable as a corporation or otherwise subjects a Group Member to entity-level taxation for federal, state or local income tax purposes, the then applicable Minimum Quarterly Distribution,
First Target Distribution, Second Target Distribution and Third Target Distribution, shall be adjusted to equal the product obtained by multiplying (a) the amount thereof by (b) one minus the sum of (i) the highest marginal federal
corporate (or other entity, as applicable) income tax rate of the Group Member for the taxable year of the Group Member in which such Quarter occurs (expressed as a percentage) plus (ii) the effective overall state and local income tax rate
(expressed as a percentage) applicable to the Group Member for the calendar year next preceding the calendar year in which such Quarter occurs (after taking into account the benefit of any deduction allowable for federal income tax purposes with
respect to the payment of state and local income taxes), but only to the extent of the increase in such rates resulting from such legislation or interpretation. Such effective overall state and local income tax rate shall be determined for the
taxable year next preceding the first taxable year during which the Group Member is taxable for federal income tax purposes as an association taxable as a corporation or is otherwise subject to entity-level taxation by determining such rate as if
the Group Member had been subject to such state and local taxes during such preceding taxable year.
Section 6.9
[Intentionally
Omitted]
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ARTICLE VII
MANAGEMENT AND OPERATION OF BUSINESS
Section 7.1
Management
.
(a) The General Partner shall conduct, direct and manage all activities of the Partnership. Except as otherwise expressly provided in this
Agreement, all management powers over the business and affairs of the Partnership shall be exclusively vested in the General Partner, and no Limited Partner or Assignee shall have any management power over the business and affairs of the
Partnership. In addition to the powers now or hereafter granted a general partner of a limited partnership under applicable law or that are granted to the General Partner under any other provision of this Agreement, the General Partner, subject to
Section
7.3
, shall have full power and authority to do all things and on such terms as it determines to be necessary or appropriate to conduct the business of the Partnership, to exercise all powers set forth in
Section
2.5
and to effectuate the purposes set forth in
Section
2.4
, including the following:
(i) the making of any expenditures, the lending or borrowing of money, the assumption or guarantee of, or other contracting
for, indebtedness and other liabilities, the issuance of evidences of indebtedness, including indebtedness that is convertible into Partnership Securities, and the incurring of any other obligations;
(ii) the making of tax, regulatory and other filings, or rendering of periodic or other reports to governmental or other
agencies having jurisdiction over the business or assets of the Partnership;
(iii) the acquisition, disposition, mortgage,
pledge, encumbrance, hypothecation or exchange of any or all of the assets of the Partnership or the merger or other combination of the Partnership with or into another Person (the matters described in this
clause
(iii)
being subject, however, to any prior approval that may be required by
Section
7.3
);
(iv) the use
of the assets of the Partnership (including cash on hand) for any purpose consistent with the terms of this Agreement, including the financing of the conduct of the operations of the Partnership Group; subject to
Section
7.6(a)
, the lending of funds to other Persons (including other Group Members); the repayment or guarantee of obligations of the Partnership Group and the making of capital contributions to any member of the
Partnership Group;
(v) the negotiation, execution and performance of any contracts, conveyances or other instruments
(including instruments that limit the liability of the Partnership under contractual arrangements to all or particular assets of the Partnership, with the other party to the contract to have no recourse against the General Partner or its assets
other than its interest in the Partnership, even if same results in the terms of the transaction being less favorable to the Partnership than would otherwise be the case);
(vi) the distribution of Partnership cash;
(vii) the selection and dismissal of employees (including employees having titles such as president, vice
president, secretary and treasurer) and agents, outside attorneys, accountants, consultants and contractors and the determination of their compensation and other terms of employment or hiring;
(viii) the maintenance of insurance for the benefit of the Partnership Group and the Partners;
(ix) the formation of, or acquisition of an interest in, and the contribution of property and the making of loans to, any
further limited or general partnerships, joint ventures, corporations, limited liability companies or other relationships (including the acquisition of interests in, and the contributions of property to, any Group Member from time to time) subject
to the restrictions set forth in
Section
2.4
;
(x) the control of any matters affecting the
rights and obligations of the Partnership, including the bringing and defending of actions at law or in equity and otherwise engaging in the conduct of litigation and the incurring of legal expense and the settlement of claims and litigation;
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(xi) the indemnification of any Person against liabilities and contingencies to
the extent permitted by law;
(xii) the entering into of listing agreements with any National Securities Exchange and the
delisting of some or all of the Limited Partner Interests from, or requesting that trading be suspended on, any such exchange (subject to any prior approval that may be required under
Section
4.8
);
(xiii) the purchase, sale or other acquisition or disposition of Partnership Securities, or the issuance of additional options,
rights, warrants and appreciation rights relating to Partnership Securities; and
(xiv) the undertaking of any action in
connection with the Partnerships participation in any Group Member; and
(xv) the entering into of agreements with
any of its Affiliates to render services to a Group Member or to itself in the discharge of its duties as General Partner of the Partnership.
(b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, the Operating Partnership Agreement, the Delaware Act or any applicable law, rule
or regulation, each of the Partners and the Assignees and each other Person who may acquire an interest in Partnership Securities hereby (i) approves, ratifies and confirms the execution, delivery and performance by the parties thereto of the
Operating Partnership Agreement, the Underwriting Agreement, the Omnibus Agreement, the Contribution Agreement, the Pipelines and Terminals Storage and Throughput Agreement, the Indenture and the other agreements described in or filed as exhibits to
the Registration Statement that are related to the transactions contemplated by the Registration Statement; (ii) agrees that the General Partner (on its own or through any officer of the Partnership) is authorized to execute, deliver and
perform the agreements referred to in
clause
(i)
of this sentence and the other agreements, acts, transactions and matters described in or contemplated by the Registration Statement on behalf of the Partnership without any
further act, approval or vote of the Partners or the Assignees or the other Persons who may acquire an interest in Partnership Securities; and (iii) agrees that the execution, delivery or performance by the General Partner, any Group Member or
any Affiliate of any of them, of this Agreement or any agreement authorized or permitted under this Agreement (including the exercise by the General Partner or any Affiliate of the General Partner of the rights accorded pursuant to
Article
XV
), shall not constitute a breach by the General Partner of any duty that the General Partner may owe the Partnership or the Limited Partners or any other Persons under this Agreement (or any other agreements) or
of any duty stated or implied by law or equity.
Section 7.2
Certificate of Limited Partnership
.
The General Partner has caused the Certificate of Limited Partnership to be filed with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware as
required by the Delaware Act. The General Partner shall use all reasonable efforts to cause to be filed such other certificates or documents that the General Partner determines to be necessary or appropriate for the formation, continuation,
qualification and operation of a limited partnership (or a partnership in which the limited partners have limited liability) in the State of Delaware or any other state in which the Partnership may elect to do business or own property. To the extent
that the General Partner determines such action to be necessary or appropriate, the General Partner shall file amendments to and restatements of the Certificate of Limited Partnership and do all things to maintain the Partnership as a limited
partnership (or a partnership or other entity in which the limited partners have limited liability) under the laws of the State of Delaware or of any other state in which the Partnership may elect to do business or own property. Subject to the terms
of
Section
3.4(a)
, the General Partner shall not be required, before or after filing, to deliver or mail a copy of the Certificate of Limited Partnership, any qualification document or any amendment thereto to any Limited
Partner.
Section 7.3
Restrictions on the General Partner
s Authority
.
(a) The General Partner may not, without written approval of the specific act by holders of all of the Outstanding Limited Partner Interests
or by other written instrument executed and delivered by holders of all of
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the Outstanding Limited Partner Interests subsequent to the date of this Agreement, take any action in contravention of this Agreement, including, except as otherwise provided in this Agreement,
(i) committing any act that would make it impossible to carry on the ordinary business of the Partnership; (ii) possessing Partnership property, or assigning any rights in specific Partnership property, for other than a Partnership
purpose; (iii) admitting a Person as a Partner; (iv) amending this Agreement in any manner; or (v) transferring its interest as a general partner of the Partnership.
(b) Except as provided in
Articles
XII
and
XIV
, the General Partner may not sell, exchange or otherwise
dispose of all or substantially all of the Partnerships assets in a single transaction or a series of related transactions (including by way of merger, consolidation or other combination) or approve on behalf of the Partnership the sale,
exchange or other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of the Operating Partnership without the approval of holders of a Unit Majority;
provided
,
however
, that this provision shall not preclude or limit the General
Partners ability to mortgage, pledge, hypothecate or grant a security interest in all or substantially all of the assets of the Partnership or the Operating Partnership and shall not apply to any forced sale of any or all of the assets of the
Partnership or the Operating Partnership pursuant to the foreclosure of, or other realization upon, any such encumbrance. Without the approval of holders of a Unit Majority, the General Partner shall not, on behalf of the Partnership,
(i) consent to any amendment to the Operating Partnership Agreement or, except as expressly permitted by
Section
7.9(d)
, take any action permitted to be taken by a partner of the Operating Partnership, in either case,
that would adversely affect the Limited Partners (including any particular class of Partnership Interests as compared to any other class of Partnership Interests) in any material respect or (ii) except as permitted under
Sections
4.6
,
11.1
and
11.2
, elect or cause the Partnership to elect a successor general partner of the Partnership.
Section 7.4
Reimbursement of the General Partner
.
(a) Except as provided in this
Section
7.4
and elsewhere in this Agreement, the General Partner shall not be
compensated for its services as a general partner or managing member of any Group Member.
(b) The General Partner shall be reimbursed on
a monthly basis, or such other basis as the General Partner may determine, for (i) all direct and indirect expenses it incurs or payments it makes on behalf of the Partnership (including salary, bonus, incentive compensation and other amounts
paid to any Person including Affiliates of the General Partner to perform services for the Partnership or for the General Partner in the discharge of its duties to the Partnership), and (ii) all other expenses allocable to the Partnership or
otherwise incurred by the General Partner in connection with operating the Partnerships business (including expenses allocated to the General Partner by its Affiliates). The General Partner shall determine the expenses that are allocable to
the Partnership. Reimbursements pursuant to this
Section
7.4
shall be in addition to any reimbursement to the General Partner as a result of indemnification pursuant to
Section
7.7
.
(c) The General Partner, and without the approval of the Limited Partners (who shall have no right to vote in respect thereof), may propose
and adopt on behalf of the Partnership employee benefit plans, employee programs and employee practices (including plans, programs and practices involving the issuance of Partnership Securities or options to purchase Partnership Securities), or
cause the Partnership to issue Partnership Securities in connection with, or pursuant to, any employee benefit plan, employee program or employee practice maintained or sponsored by the General Partner or any of its Affiliates, in each case for the
benefit of employees of the General Partner, any Group Member or any Affiliate, or any of them, in respect of services performed, directly or indirectly, for the benefit of the Partnership Group. The Partnership agrees to issue and sell to the
General Partner or any of its Affiliates any Partnership Securities that the General Partner or such Affiliates are obligated to provide to any employees pursuant to any such employee benefit plans, employee programs or employee practices. Expenses
incurred by the General Partner in connection with any such plans, programs and practices (including the net cost to the General Partner or such Affiliates of Partnership Securities purchased by the General Partner or such Affiliates from the
Partnership to fulfill options or awards under such plans, programs and practices) shall be reimbursed in accordance with
Section
7.4(b)
. Any and all obligations of the General
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Partner under any employee benefit plans, employee programs or employee practices adopted by the General Partner as permitted by this
Section
7.4(c)
shall constitute
obligations of the General Partner hereunder and shall be assumed by any successor General Partner approved pursuant to
Section
11.1
or
11.2
or the transferee of or successor to all of the General Partners
General Partner Interest pursuant to
Section
4.6
.
Section 7.5
Outside Activities
.
(a) After the Closing Date, the General Partner, for so long as it is the General Partner of the Partnership (i) agrees that its sole
business will be to act as a general partner or managing member, as the case may be, of the Partnership and any other partnership or limited liability company of which the Partnership or the Operating Partnership is, directly or indirectly, a
partner or member and to undertake activities that are ancillary or related thereto (including being a limited partner in the Partnership), (ii) except to the extent permitted in the Omnibus Agreement, shall not engage in any business or
activity or incur any debts or liabilities except in connection with or incidental to (A) its performance as general partner of one or more Group Members or as described in or contemplated by the Registration Statement, (B) the acquiring,
owning or disposing of debt or equity securities in any Group Member or (C) the operation, maintenance and administration of the Retained Assets and the businesses conducted by or related to them and (iii) except to the extent permitted in
the Omnibus Agreement, shall not, and shall cause its Affiliates not to, engage in any Restricted Activities. Nothing contained in this
Section
7.5(a)
shall restrict the General Partners ability to sell, assign, gift,
pledge, encumber, hypothecate, mortgage, exchange or any otherwise dispose of its Units by law or otherwise pursuant to, and in accordance with the terms and conditions set forth in
Article
IV
of this Agreement.
(b) Sunoco, Inc. and certain of its Affiliates have entered into the Omnibus Agreement with the General Partner, the Partnership and the
Operating Partnership, which agreement sets forth certain restrictions on the ability of Sunoco, Inc. and its Affiliates to engage in Restricted Activities.
(c) Except as specifically restricted by
Section
7.5(a)
and the Omnibus Agreement, each Indemnitee (other than the
General Partner) shall have the right to engage in businesses of every type and description and other activities for profit and to engage in and possess an interest in other business ventures of any and every type or description, whether in
businesses engaged in or anticipated to be engaged in by any Group Member, independently or with others, including business interests and activities in direct competition with the business and activities of any Group Member, and none of the same
shall constitute a breach of this Agreement or any duty express or implied by law to any Group Member or any Partner or Assignee. Neither any Group Member, any Limited Partner nor any other Person shall have any rights by virtue of this Agreement,
the Operating Partnership Agreement or the partnership relationship established hereby or thereby in any business ventures of any Indemnitee.
(d) Subject to the terms of
Section
7.5(a)
,
Section
7.5(b)
,
Section
7.5(c)
and the Omnibus Agreement, but otherwise notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement, (i) the engaging in competitive activities by any Indemnitees (other than the General Partner) in
accordance with the provisions of this
Section
7.5
is hereby approved by the Partnership and all Partners, (ii) it shall be deemed not to be a breach of the General Partners fiduciary duty or any other obligation
of any type whatsoever of the General Partner or of any Indemnitee for the Indemnitees (other than the General Partner) to engage in such business interests and activities in preference to or to the exclusion of the Partnership and (iii) except
as set forth in the Omnibus Agreement, the General Partner and the Indemnitees shall have no obligation hereunder or as a result of any duty expressed or implied by law to present business opportunities to the Partnership.
(e) The General Partner and each of its Affiliates may acquire Units or other Partnership Securities in addition to those acquired on the
Closing Date and, except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, shall be entitled to exercise, at their option, all rights relating to all Units or other Partnership Securities acquired by them.
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(f) The term Affiliates when used in
Section
7.5(a)
and
Section
7.5(e)
with respect to the General Partner shall not include any Group Member or any Subsidiary of the Group Member.
(g) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement, to the extent that any provision of this Agreement purports or is interpreted
to have the effect of restricting the fiduciary duties that might otherwise, as a result of Delaware or other applicable law, be owed by the General Partner to the Partnership and its Limited Partners, or to constitute a waiver or consent by the
Limited Partners to any such restriction, such provisions shall be inapplicable and have no effect in determining whether the General Partner has complied with its fiduciary duties in connection with determinations made by it under this
Section
7.5
.
Section 7.6
Loans from the General Partner; Loans or Contributions from the Partnership
or Group Members
.
(a) The General Partner or any of its Affiliates may lend to any Group Member, and any Group Member may borrow
from the General Partner or any of its Affiliates, funds needed or desired by the Group Member for such periods of time and in such amounts as the General Partner may determine;
provided
,
however
, that in any such case the lending
party may not charge the borrowing party interest at a rate greater than the rate that would be charged the borrowing party or impose terms less favorable to the borrowing party than would be charged or imposed on the borrowing party by unrelated
lenders on comparable loans made on an arms-length basis (without reference to the lending partys financial abilities or guarantees), all as determined by the General Partner. The borrowing party shall reimburse the lending party for any
costs (other than any additional interest costs) incurred by the lending party in connection with the borrowing of such funds. For purposes of this
Section
7.6(a)
and
Section
7.6(b)
, the term
Group Member
shall include any Affiliate of a Group Member that is controlled by the Group Member.
(b) The
Partnership may lend or contribute to any Group Member, and any Group Member may borrow from the Partnership, funds on terms and conditions determined by the General Partner. No Group Member may lend funds to the General Partner or any of its
Affiliates (other than another Group Member), otherwise than as provided in the Treasury Services Agreement.
(c) No borrowing by any
Group Member or the approval thereof by the General Partner shall be deemed to constitute a breach of any duty, expressed or implied, of the General Partner or its Affiliates to the Partnership or the Limited Partners by reason of the fact that the
purpose or effect of such borrowing is directly or indirectly to enable distributions to the General Partner or its Affiliates (including in their capacities as Limited Partners) to exceed the General Partners Percentage Interest of the total
amount distributed to all partners.
Section 7.7
Indemnification
.
(a) To the fullest extent permitted by law but subject to the limitations expressly provided in this Agreement, all Indemnitees shall be
indemnified and held harmless by the Partnership from and against any and all losses, claims, damages, liabilities, joint or several, expenses (including legal fees and expenses), judgments, fines, penalties, interest, settlements or other amounts
arising from any and all claims, demands, actions, suits or proceedings, whether civil, criminal, administrative or investigative, in which any Indemnitee may be involved, or is threatened to be involved, as a party or otherwise, by reason of its
status as an Indemnitee;
provided
, that the Indemnitee shall not be indemnified and held harmless if there has been a final and non-appealable judgment entered by a court of competent jurisdiction determining that, in respect of the matter
for which the Indemnitee is seeking indemnification pursuant to this
Section
7.7
, the Indemnitee acted in bad faith or engaged in fraud, willful misconduct or gross negligence or, in the case of a criminal matter, acted
with knowledge that the Indemnitees conduct was unlawful;
provided
,
further
, no indemnification pursuant to this
Section
7.7
shall be available to the General Partner with respect to its obligations
incurred pursuant to the Underwriting Agreement, the Omnibus Agreement, the Contribution Agreement or the Repurchase Agreement (other than obligations incurred by the General Partner on behalf of the Partnership). Any indemnification pursuant to
this
Section
7.7
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shall be made only out of the assets of the Partnership, it being agreed that the General Partner shall not be personally liable for such indemnification and shall have no obligation to
contribute or loan any monies or property to the Partnership to enable it to effectuate such indemnification.
(b) To the fullest extent
permitted by law, expenses (including legal fees and expenses) incurred by an Indemnitee who is indemnified pursuant to
Section
7.7(a)
in defending any claim, demand, action, suit or proceeding shall, from time to time, be
advanced by the Partnership prior to a determination that the Indemnitee is not entitled to be indemnified upon receipt by the Partnership of any undertaking by or on behalf of the Indemnitee to repay such amount if it shall be determined that the
Indemnitee is not entitled to be indemnified as authorized in this
Section
7.7
.
(c) The indemnification
provided by this
Section
7.7
shall be in addition to any other rights to which an Indemnitee may be entitled under any agreement, pursuant to any vote of the holders of Outstanding Limited Partner Interests, as a matter of
law or otherwise, both as to actions in the Indemnitees capacity as an Indemnitee and as to actions in any other capacity (including any capacity under the Underwriting Agreement), and shall continue as to an Indemnitee who has ceased to serve
in such capacity and shall inure to the benefit of the heirs, successors, assigns and administrators of the Indemnitee.
(d) The
Partnership may purchase and maintain (or reimburse the General Partner or its Affiliates for the cost of) insurance, on behalf of the General Partner, its Affiliates and such other Persons as the General Partner shall determine, against any
liability that may be asserted against or expense that may be incurred by such Person in connection with the Partnerships activities or such Persons activities on behalf of the Partnership, regardless of whether the Partnership would
have the power to indemnify such Person against such liability under the provisions of this Agreement.
(e) For purposes of this
Section
7.7
, the Partnership shall be deemed to have requested an Indemnitee to serve as fiduciary of an employee benefit plan whenever the performance by it of its duties to the Partnership also imposes duties on, or
otherwise involves services by, it to the plan or participants or beneficiaries of the plan; excise taxes assessed on an Indemnitee with respect to an employee benefit plan pursuant to applicable law shall constitute fines within the
meaning of
Section
7.7(a)
; and action taken or omitted by it with respect to any employee benefit plan in the performance of its duties for a purpose reasonably believed by it to be in the best interests of the participants
and beneficiaries of the plan shall be deemed to be for a purpose that is in the best interests of the Partnership.
(f) In no event may
an Indemnitee subject the Limited Partners to personal liability by reason of the indemnification provisions set forth in this Agreement.
(g) An Indemnitee shall not be denied indemnification in whole or in part under this
Section
7.7
because the
Indemnitee had an interest in the transaction with respect to which the indemnification applies if the transaction was otherwise permitted by the terms of this Agreement.
(h) The provisions of this
Section
7.7
are for the benefit of the Indemnitees, their heirs, successors, assigns and
administrators and shall not be deemed to create any rights for the benefit of any other Persons.
(i) No amendment, modification or
repeal of this
Section
7.7
or any provision hereof shall in any manner terminate, reduce or impair the right of any past, present or future Indemnitee to be indemnified by the Partnership, nor the obligations of the
Partnership to indemnify any such Indemnitee under and in accordance with the provisions of this
Section
7.7
as in effect immediately prior to such amendment, modification or repeal with respect to claims arising from or
relating to matters occurring, in whole or in part, prior to such amendment, modification or repeal, regardless of when such claims may arise or be asserted.
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Section 7.8
Liability of Indemnitees
.
(a) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary set forth in this Agreement, no Indemnitee shall be liable for monetary damages to the
Partnership, the Limited Partners, the Assignees or any other Persons who have acquired interests in the Partnership Securities, for losses sustained or liabilities incurred as a result of any act or omission of an Indemnitee unless there has been a
final and non-appealable judgment entered by a court of competent jurisdiction determining that, in respect of the matter in question, the Indemnitee acted in bad faith or engaged in fraud, willful misconduct or gross negligence or, in the case of a
criminal matter, acted with knowledge that the Indemnitees conduct was criminal.
(b) Subject to its obligations and duties as
General Partner set forth in
Section
7.1(a)
, the General Partner may exercise any of the powers granted to it by this Agreement and perform any of the duties imposed upon it hereunder either directly or by or through its
agents, and the General Partner shall not be responsible for any misconduct or negligence on the part of any such agent appointed by the General Partner in good faith.
(c) To the extent that, at law or in equity, an Indemnitee has duties (including fiduciary duties) and liabilities relating thereto to the
Partnership or to the Partners, the General Partner and any other Indemnitee acting in connection with the Partnerships business or affairs shall not be liable to the Partnership or to any Partner for its good faith reliance on the provisions
of this Agreement.
(d) Any amendment, modification or repeal of this
Section
7.8
or any provision hereof shall
be prospective only and shall not in any way affect the limitations on the liability to the Partnership, the Limited Partners, the General Partner, and the Partnerships and General Partners directors, officers and employees under this
Section
7.8
as in effect immediately prior to such amendment, modification or repeal with respect to claims arising from or relating to matters occurring, in whole or in part, prior to such amendment, modification or
repeal, regardless of when such claims may arise or be asserted.
Section 7.9
Resolution of Conflicts of Interest; Standards of
Conduct and Modification of Duties
.
(a) Unless otherwise expressly provided in this Agreement or any Group Member Agreement,
whenever a potential conflict of interest exists or arises between the General Partner or any of its Affiliates, on the one hand, and the Partnership, any Group Member, any Partner or any Assignee, on the other, any resolution or course of action by
the General Partner or its Affiliates in respect of such conflict of interest shall be permitted and deemed approved by all Partners, and shall not constitute a breach of this Agreement, of any Group Member Agreement, of any agreement contemplated
herein or therein, or of any duty stated or implied by law or equity, if the resolution or course of action in respect of such conflict of interest is (i) approved by Special Approval, (ii) approved by the vote of a majority of the Common
Units (excluding Common Units owned by the General Partner and its Affiliates), (iii) on terms no less favorable to the Partnership than those generally being provided to or available from unrelated third parties or (iv) fair and
reasonable to the Partnership, taking into account the totality of the relationships between the parties involved (including other transactions that may be particularly favorable or advantageous to the Partnership). The General Partner shall be
authorized but not required in connection with its resolution of such conflict of interest to seek Special Approval of such resolution, and the General Partner may also adopt a resolution or course of action that has not received Special Approval.
If Special Approval is not sought and the Board of Directors of the General Partner determines that the resolution or course of action taken with respect to a conflict of interest satisfies either of the standards set forth in
clauses
(iii)
or
(iv)
above, then it shall be presumed that, in making its decision, the Board of Directors of the General Partner acted in good faith, and in any proceeding brought by any Limited Partner or Assignee
or by or on behalf of such Limited Partner or Assignee or any other Limited Partner or Assignee or the Partnership challenging such approval, the Person bringing or prosecuting such proceeding shall have the burden of overcoming such presumption.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement, the existence of the conflicts of interest described in the Registration Statement are hereby approved by all Partners.
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(b) Whenever the General Partner makes a determination or takes or declines to take any other
action, or any of its Affiliates causes it to do so, in its capacity as the general partner of the Partnership as opposed to in its individual capacity, whether under this Agreement, any Group Member Agreement or any other agreement contemplated
hereby or otherwise, then, unless another express standard is provided for in this Agreement, the General Partner, or such Affiliate causing it to do so, shall make such determination or take or decline to take such other action in good faith and
shall not be subject to any other or different standards imposed by this Agreement, any Group Member Agreement, any other agreement contemplated hereby or under the Delaware Act or any other law, rule or regulation. In order for a determination or
other action to be in good faith for purposes of this Agreement, the Person or Persons making such determination or taking or declining to take such other action must reasonably believe that the determination or other action is in the
best interests of the Partnership, unless the context otherwise requires.
(c) Whenever the General Partner makes a determination or takes
or declines to take any other action, or any of its Affiliates causes it to do so, in its individual capacity as opposed to in its capacity as the general partner of the Partnership, whether under this Agreement, any Group Member Agreement or any
other agreement contemplated hereby or otherwise, then the General Partner, or such Affiliates causing it to do so, are entitled to make such determination or to take or decline to take such other action free of any fiduciary duty or obligation
whatsoever to the Partnership, any Limited Partner or Assignee, and the General Partner, or such Affiliates causing it to do so, and shall not be required to act in good faith or pursuant to any other standard imposed by this Agreement, any Group
Member Agreement, any other agreement contemplated hereby or under the Delaware Act or any other law, rule or regulation. By way of illustration and not of limitation, whenever the phrase, at the option of the General Partner, or some
variation of that phrase, is used in this Agreement, it indicates that the General Partner is acting in its individual capacity.
(d)
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement, the General Partner and its Affiliates shall have no duty or obligation, express or implied, to (i) sell or otherwise dispose of any asset of the Partnership Group other than in the
ordinary course of business or (ii) permit any Group Member to use any facilities or assets of the General Partner and its Affiliates, except as may be provided in contracts entered into from time to time specifically dealing with such use. Any
determination by the General Partner or any of its Affiliates to enter into such contracts shall be at its option.
(e) Except as
expressly set forth in this Agreement, neither the General Partner nor any other Indemnitee shall have any duties or liabilities, including fiduciary duties, to the Partnership or any Limited Partner or Assignee and the provisions of this Agreement,
to the extent that they restrict or otherwise modify the duties and liabilities, including fiduciary duties, of the General Partner or any other Indemnitee otherwise existing at law or in equity, are agreed by the Partners to replace such other
duties and liabilities of the General Partner or such other Indemnitee.
(f) The Unitholders hereby authorize the General Partner, on
behalf of the Partnership as a partner or member of a Group Member, to approve of actions by the general partner or managing member of such Group Member similar to those actions permitted to be taken by the General Partner pursuant to this
Section
7.9
.
Section 7.10
Other Matters Concerning the General Partner
.
(a) The General Partner may rely and shall be protected in acting or refraining from acting upon any resolution, certificate, statement,
instrument, opinion, report, notice, request, consent, order, bond, debenture or other paper or document believed by it to be genuine and to have been signed or presented by the proper party or parties.
(b) The General Partner may consult with legal counsel, accountants, appraisers, management consultants, investment bankers and other
consultants and advisers selected by it, and any act taken or omitted to be taken in reliance upon the opinion (including an Opinion of Counsel) of such Persons as to matters that the General Partner reasonably believes to be within such
Persons professional or expert competence shall be conclusively presumed to have been done or omitted in good faith and in accordance with such opinion.
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(c) The General Partner shall have the right, in respect of any of its powers or obligations
hereunder, to act through any of its duly authorized officers, a duly appointed attorney or attorneys-in-fact or the duly authorized officers of the Partnership.
Section 7.11
Purchase or Sale of Partnership Securities
.
The General Partner may cause the Partnership to purchase or otherwise acquire Partnership Securities. As long as Partnership Securities are
held by any Group Member, such Partnership Securities shall not be considered Outstanding for any purpose, except (a) Partnership Securities held by Group Members that are not disregarded entities for U.S. federal income tax purposes shall be
considered Outstanding for all purposes except that they shall not be considered to be Outstanding when sending notices of a meeting of Limited Partners to vote on any matter (unless otherwise required by law), calculating required votes,
determining the presence of a quorum or for other similar purposes under this Agreement and (b) as otherwise provided herein. The General Partner or any Affiliate of the General Partner may also purchase or otherwise acquire and sell or otherwise
dispose of Partnership Securities for its own account, subject to the provisions of
Articles
IV
and
X
.
Section 7.12
Registration Rights of the General Partner and its Affiliates
.
(a) If (i) the General Partner or any Affiliate of the General Partner (including for purposes of this
Section
7.12
, any Person that is an Affiliate of the General Partner at the date hereof notwithstanding that it may later cease to be an Affiliate of the General Partner) holds Partnership Securities that it desires to sell
and (ii) Rule 144 of the Securities Act (or any successor rule or regulation to Rule 144) or another exemption from registration is not available to enable such holder of Partnership Securities (the
Holder
) to dispose
of the number of Partnership Securities it desires to sell at the time it desires to do so without registration under the Securities Act, then at the option and upon the request of the Holder, the Partnership shall file with the Commission as
promptly as practicable after receiving such request, and use all reasonable efforts to cause to become effective and remain effective for a period of not less than six months following its effective date or such shorter period as shall terminate
when all Partnership Securities covered by such registration statement have been sold, a registration statement under the Securities Act registering the offering and sale of the number of Partnership Securities specified by the Holder;
provided
,
however
, that the Partnership shall not be required to effect more than three registrations pursuant to this
Section
7.12(a)
; and
provided further
, however, that if the Conflicts Committee
determines that a postponement of the requested registration for up to six months would be in the best interests of the Partnership and its Partners due to a pending transaction, investigation or other event, the filing of such registration
statement or the effectiveness thereof may be deferred for up to six months, but not thereafter. In connection with any registration pursuant to the immediately preceding sentence, the Partnership shall (i) promptly prepare and file
(A) such documents as may be necessary to register or qualify the securities subject to such registration under the securities laws of such states as the Holder shall reasonably request;
provided
,
however
, that no such
qualification shall be required in any jurisdiction where, as a result thereof, the Partnership would become subject to general service of process or to taxation or qualification to do business as a foreign corporation or partnership doing business
in such jurisdiction solely as a result of such registration, and (B) such documents as may be necessary to apply for listing or to list the Partnership Securities subject to such registration on such National Securities Exchange as the Holder
shall reasonably request, and (ii) do any and all other acts and things that may be necessary or appropriate to enable the Holder to consummate a public sale of such Partnership Securities in such states. Except as set forth in
Section
7.12(c)
, all costs and expenses of any such registration and offering (other than the underwriting discounts and commissions) shall be paid by the Partnership, without reimbursement by the Holder.
(b) If the Partnership shall at any time propose to file a registration statement under the Securities Act for an offering of equity
securities of the Partnership for cash (other than an offering relating solely to an employee benefit plan), the Partnership shall use all reasonable efforts to include such number or amount of securities held by the Holder in such registration
statement as the Holder shall request;
provided
that the Partnership is not required to make any effort or take any action to so include the securities of the Holder once the registration
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statement is declared effective by the Commission, including any registration statement providing for the offering from time to time of securities pursuant to Rule 415 of the Securities Act. If
the proposed offering pursuant to this
Section
7.12(b)
shall be an underwritten offering, then, in the event that the managing underwriter or managing underwriters of such offering advise the Partnership and the Holder in
writing that in their opinion the inclusion of all or some of the Holders Partnership Securities would adversely and materially affect the success of the offering, the Partnership shall include in such offering only that number or amount, if
any, of securities held by the Holder that, in the opinion of the managing underwriter or managing underwriters, will not so adversely and materially affect the offering. Except as set forth in
Section
7.12(c)
, all costs
and expenses of any such registration and offering (other than the underwriting discounts and commissions) shall be paid by the Partnership, without reimbursement by the Holder.
(c) If underwriters are engaged in connection with any registration referred to in this
Section
7.12
, the
Partnership shall provide indemnification, representations, covenants, opinions and other assurance to the underwriters in form and substance reasonably satisfactory to such underwriters. Further, in addition to and not in limitation of the
Partnerships obligation under
Section
7.7
, the Partnership shall, to the fullest extent permitted by law, indemnify and hold harmless the Holder, its officers, directors and each Person who controls the Holder (within
the meaning of the Securities Act) and any agent thereof (collectively,
Indemnified Persons
) against any losses, claims, demands, actions, causes of action, assessments, damages, liabilities (joint or several), costs and
expenses (including interest, penalties and reasonable attorneys fees and disbursements), resulting to, imposed upon, or incurred by the Indemnified Persons, directly or indirectly, under the Securities Act or otherwise (hereinafter referred
to in this
Section
7.12(c)
as a
claim
and in the plural as
claims
) based upon, arising out of or resulting from any untrue statement or alleged untrue statement of any
material fact contained in any registration statement under which any Partnership Securities were registered under the Securities Act or any state securities or Blue Sky laws, in any preliminary prospectus (if used prior to the effective date of
such registration statement), or in any summary or final prospectus or in any amendment or supplement thereto (if used during the period the Partnership is required to keep the registration statement current), or arising out of, based upon or
resulting from the omission or alleged omission to state therein a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements made therein not misleading;
provided
,
however
, that the Partnership shall not be liable
to any Indemnified Person to the extent that any such claim arises out of, is based upon or results from an untrue statement or alleged untrue statement or omission or alleged omission made in such registration statement, such preliminary, summary
or final prospectus or such amendment or supplement, in reliance upon and in conformity with written information furnished to the Partnership by or on behalf of such Indemnified Person specifically for use in the preparation thereof.
(d) The provisions of
Section
7.12(a)
and
7.12(b)
shall continue to be applicable with respect to the General
Partner (and any of the General Partners Affiliates) after it ceases to be a Partner of the Partnership, during a period of two years subsequent to the effective date of such cessation and for so long thereafter as is required for the Holder
to sell all of the Partnership Securities with respect to which it has requested during such two-year period inclusion in a registration statement otherwise filed or that a registration statement be filed;
provided
,
however
, that the
Partnership shall not be required to file successive registration statements covering the same Partnership Securities for which registration was demanded during such two-year period. The provisions of
Section
7.12(c)
shall
continue in effect thereafter.
(e) Any request to register Partnership Securities pursuant to this
Section
7.12
shall (i) specify the Partnership Securities intended to be offered and sold by the Person making the request, (ii) express such Persons present intent to offer such Partnership Securities for distribution, (iii) describe the
nature or method of the proposed offer and sale of Partnership Securities, and (iv) contain the undertaking of such Person to provide all such information and materials and take all action as may be required in order to permit the Partnership
to comply with all applicable requirements in connection with the registration of such Partnership Securities.
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Section 7.13
Reliance by Third Parties
.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement, any Person dealing with the Partnership shall be entitled to assume that the
General Partner and any officer of the General Partner authorized by the General Partner to act on behalf of and in the name of the Partnership has full power and authority to encumber, sell or otherwise use in any manner any and all assets of the
Partnership and to enter into any authorized contracts on behalf of the Partnership, and such Person shall be entitled to deal with the General Partner or any such officer as if it were the Partnerships sole party in interest, both legally and
beneficially. Each Limited Partner hereby waives any and all defenses or other remedies that may be available against such Person to contest, negate or disaffirm any action of the General Partner or any such officer in connection with any such
dealing. In no event shall any Person dealing with the General Partner or any such officer or its representatives be obligated to ascertain that the terms of this Agreement have been complied with or to inquire into the necessity or expedience of
any act or action of the General Partner or any such officer or its representatives. Each and every certificate, document or other instrument executed on behalf of the Partnership by the General Partner or its representatives shall be conclusive
evidence in favor of any and every Person relying thereon or claiming thereunder that (a) at the time of the execution and delivery of such certificate, document or instrument, this Agreement was in full force and effect, (b) the Person
executing and delivering such certificate, document or instrument was duly authorized and empowered to do so for and on behalf of the Partnership and (c) such certificate, document or instrument was duly executed and delivered in accordance
with the terms and provisions of this Agreement and is binding upon the Partnership.
ARTICLE VIII
BOOKS, RECORDS, ACCOUNTING AND REPORTS
Section 8.1
Records and Accounting
.
The General Partner shall keep or cause to be kept at the principal office of the Partnership appropriate books and records with respect to
the Partnerships business, including all books and records necessary to provide to the Limited Partners any information required to be provided pursuant to
Section
3.4(a)
. Any books and records maintained by or on
behalf of the Partnership in the regular course of its business, including the record of the Record Holders and Assignees of Units or other Partnership Securities, books of account and records of Partnership proceedings, may be kept on, or be in the
form of, computer disks, hard drives, punch cards, magnetic tape, photographs, micrographics or any other information storage device;
provided
, that the books and records so maintained are convertible into clearly legible written form within
a reasonable period of time. The books of the Partnership shall be maintained, for financial reporting purposes, on an accrual basis in accordance with U.S. GAAP.
Section 8.2
Fiscal Year
.
The fiscal year of the Partnership shall be a fiscal year ending December 31.
Section 8.3
Reports
.
(a) As soon as practicable, but in no event later than 120 days after the close of each fiscal year of the Partnership, the General Partner
shall cause to be mailed or made available to each Record Holder of a Unit as of a date selected by the General Partner, an annual report containing financial statements of the Partnership for such fiscal year of the Partnership, presented in
accordance with U.S. GAAP, including a balance sheet and statements of operations, Partnership equity and cash flows, such statements to be audited by a firm of independent public accountants selected by the General Partner.
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(b) As soon as practicable, but in no event later than 90 days after the close of each Quarter
except the last Quarter of each fiscal year, the General Partner shall cause to be mailed or made available to each Record Holder of a Unit, as of a date selected by the General Partner, a report containing unaudited financial statements of the
Partnership and such other information as may be required by applicable law, regulation or rule of any National Securities Exchange on which the Units are listed for trading, or as the General Partner determines to be necessary or appropriate.
ARTICLE IX
TAX MATTERS
Section 9.1
Tax Returns and Information
.
The Partnership shall timely file all returns of the Partnership that are required for federal, state and local income tax purposes on the
basis of the accrual method and a taxable year ending on December 31. The tax information reasonably required by Record Holders for federal and state income tax reporting purposes with respect to a taxable year shall be furnished to them within 90
days of the close of the calendar year in which the Partnerships taxable year ends. The classification, realization and recognition of income, gain, losses and deductions and other items shall be on the accrual method of accounting for federal
income tax purposes.
Section 9.2
Tax Elections
.
(a) The Partnership shall make the election under Section 754 of the Code in accordance with applicable regulations thereunder, subject to the
reservation of the right to seek to revoke any such election upon the General Partners determination that such revocation is in the best interests of the Limited Partners. Notwithstanding any other provision herein contained, for the purposes
of computing the adjustments under Section 743(b) of the Code, the General Partner shall be authorized (but not required) to adopt a convention whereby the price paid by a transferee of a Limited Partner Interest will be deemed to be the lowest
quoted closing price of the Limited Partner Interests on any National Securities Exchange on which such Limited Partner Interests are traded during the calendar month in which such transfer is deemed to occur pursuant to
Section
6.2(g)
without regard to the actual price paid by such transferee.
(b) The Partnership shall elect to
deduct expenses incurred in organizing the Partnership ratably over a sixty-month period as provided in Section 709 of the Code.
(c)
Except as otherwise provided herein, the General Partner shall determine whether the Partnership should make any other elections permitted by the Code.
Section 9.3
Tax Controversies
.
Subject to the provisions hereof, the General Partner is designated as the Tax Matters Partner (as defined in the Code) and is authorized and
required to represent the Partnership (at the Partnerships expense) in connection with all examinations of the Partnerships affairs by tax authorities, including resulting administrative and judicial proceedings, and to expend
Partnership funds for professional services and costs associated therewith. Each Partner agrees to cooperate with the General Partner and to do or refrain from doing any or all things reasonably required by the General Partner to conduct such
proceedings.
Section 9.4
Withholding
.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, the General Partner is authorized to take any action that may be required to cause the
Partnership and the other Group Members to comply with any withholding requirements established under the Code or any other federal, state or local law including, without limitation, pursuant to Sections 1441, 1442, 1445 and 1446 of the Code. To the
extent that the Partnership is required or elects to withhold and pay over to any taxing authority any amount resulting from the allocation or distribution of income to any Partner or Assignee (including, without limitation, by reason of Section
1446 of the Code), the General Partner may treat the amount withheld as a distribution of cash pursuant to
Section
6.3
in the amount of such withholding from such Partner.
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ARTICLE X
ADMISSION OF PARTNERS
Section 10.1
Admission of Initial Limited Partners
.
Upon the issuance by the Partnership of Common Units and Incentive Distribution Rights to the General Partner and the Underwriters as
described in
Section
5.3
in connection with the Initial Offering, the General Partner admitted such parties to the Partnership as Initial Limited Partners in respect of the Common Units or Incentive Distribution Rights
issued to them.
Section 10.2
Admission of Substituted Limited Partners
.
By transfer of a Limited Partner Interest in accordance with
Article
IV
, the transferor shall be deemed to have
given the transferee the right to seek admission as a Substituted Limited Partner subject to the conditions of, and in the manner permitted under, this Agreement. A transferor of a Certificate representing a Limited Partner Interest shall, however,
only have the authority to convey to a purchaser or other transferee who does not execute and deliver a Transfer Application (a) the right to negotiate such Certificate to a purchaser or other transferee and (b) the right to transfer the
right to request admission as a Substituted Limited Partner to such purchaser or other transferee in respect of the transferred Limited Partner Interests. Each transferee of a Limited Partner Interest (including any nominee holder or an agent
acquiring such Limited Partner Interest for the account of another Person) who executes and delivers a Transfer Application shall, by virtue of such execution and delivery, be an Assignee. Such Assignee shall automatically be admitted to the
Partnership as a Substituted Limited Partner with respect to the Limited Partner Interests so transferred to such Person at such time as such transfer is recorded in the books and records of the Partnership, and until so recorded, such transferee
shall be an Assignee. The General Partner shall periodically, but no less frequently than on the first Business Day of each calendar quarter, cause any unrecorded transfers of Limited Partner Interests with respect to which a completed and duly
executed Transfer Application has been received to be recorded in the books and records of the Partnership. An Assignee shall have an interest in the Partnership equivalent to that of a Limited Partner with respect to allocations and distributions,
including liquidating distributions, of the Partnership. With respect to voting rights attributable to Limited Partner Interests that are held by Assignees, the General Partner shall be deemed to be the Limited Partner with respect thereto and
shall, in exercising the voting rights in respect of such Limited Partner Interests on any matter, vote such Limited Partner Interests at the written direction of the Assignee who is the Record Holder of such Limited Partner Interests. If no such
written direction is received, such Limited Partner Interests will not be voted. An Assignee shall have no other rights of a Limited Partner.
Section 10.3
Admission of Successor General Partner
.
A successor General Partner approved pursuant to
Section
11.1
or
11.2
or the transferee of or successor to
all of the General Partner Interest pursuant to
Section
4.6
who is proposed to be admitted as a successor General Partner shall be admitted to the Partnership as the General Partner, effective immediately prior to the
withdrawal or removal of the predecessor or transferring General Partner, pursuant to
Section
11.1
or
11.2
or the transfer of the General Partner Interest pursuant to
Section
4.6
,
provided
,
however
, that no such successor shall be admitted to the Partnership until compliance with the terms of
Section
4.6
has occurred and such successor has executed and delivered such other documents or
instruments as may be required to effect such admission. Any such successor shall, subject to the terms hereof, carry on the business of the members of the Partnership Group without dissolution.
Section 10.4
Admission of Additional Limited Partners
.
(a) A Person (other than the General Partner, an Initial Limited Partner or a Substituted Limited Partner) who makes a Capital Contribution to
the Partnership in accordance with this Agreement shall be admitted to the Partnership as an Additional Limited Partner only upon furnishing to the General Partner:
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(i) evidence of acceptance in form satisfactory to the General Partner of all of
the terms and conditions of this Agreement, including the power of attorney granted in
Section
2.6
, and
(ii) such other documents or instruments as may be required by the General Partner to effect such Persons admission as an
Additional Limited Partner.
(b) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this
Section
10.4
, no Person shall
be admitted as an Additional Limited Partner without the consent of the General Partner. The admission of any Person as an Additional Limited Partner shall become effective on the date upon which the name of such Person is recorded as such in the
books and records of the Partnership, following the consent of the General Partner to such admission.
(c) Each Person receiving Common
Units pursuant to the ETP-SXL Merger Agreement is hereby admitted as a limited partner of the Partnership.
Section 10.5
Amendment of Agreement and Certificate of Limited Partnership
.
To effect the admission to the Partnership of any Partner,
the General Partner shall take all steps necessary or appropriate under the Delaware Act to amend the records of the Partnership to reflect such admission and, if necessary, to prepare as soon as practicable an amendment to this Agreement and, if
required by law, the General Partner shall prepare and file an amendment to the Certificate of Limited Partnership, and the General Partner may for this purpose, among others, exercise the power of attorney granted pursuant to
Section
2.6
.
ARTICLE XI
WITHDRAWAL OR REMOVAL OF PARTNERS
Section 11.1
Withdrawal of the General Partner
.
(a) The General Partner shall be deemed to have withdrawn from the Partnership upon the occurrence of any one of the following events (each
such event herein referred to as an
Event of Withdrawal
);
(i) The General Partner voluntarily
withdraws from the Partnership by giving written notice to the other Partners;
(ii) The General Partner transfers all of
its rights as General Partner pursuant to
Section
4.6
;
(iii) The General Partner is removed
pursuant to
Section
11.2
;
(iv) The General Partner (A) makes a general assignment for the
benefit of creditors; (B) files a voluntary bankruptcy petition for relief under Chapter 7 of the United States Bankruptcy Code; (C) files a petition or answer seeking for itself a liquidation, dissolution or similar relief (but not a
reorganization) under any law; (D) files an answer or other pleading admitting or failing to contest the material allegations of a petition filed against the General Partner in a proceeding of the type described in
clauses
(A)
-
(C)
of this
Section
11.1(a)(iv)
; or (E) seeks, consents to or acquiesces in the appointment of a trustee (but not a debtor-in-possession), receiver or liquidator of the
General Partner or of all or any substantial part of its properties;
(v) A final and non-appealable order of relief under
Chapter 7 of the United States Bankruptcy Code is entered by a court with appropriate jurisdiction pursuant to a voluntary or involuntary petition by or against the General Partner; or
(vi) (A) in the event the General Partner is a corporation, a certificate of dissolution or its equivalent is filed for
the General Partner, or 90 days expire after the date of notice to the General Partner of revocation
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of its charter without a reinstatement of its charter, under the laws of its state of incorporation; (B) in the event the General Partner is a partnership or a limited liability company, the
dissolution and commencement of winding up of the General Partner; (C) in the event the General Partner is acting in such capacity by virtue of being a trustee of a trust, the termination of the trust; (D) in the event the General Partner
is a natural person, his death or adjudication of incompetency; and (E) otherwise in the event of the termination of the General Partner.
If an
Event of Withdrawal specified in
Section
11.1(a)(iv)
,
(v)
or
(vi)(A)
,
(B)
,
(C)
or
(E)
occurs, the withdrawing General Partner shall give notice to the Limited Partners within 30 days after
such occurrence. The Partners hereby agree that only the Events of Withdrawal described in this
Section
11.1
shall result in the withdrawal of the General Partner from the Partnership.
(b) Withdrawal of the General Partner from the Partnership upon the occurrence of an Event of Withdrawal shall not constitute a breach of this
Agreement under the following circumstances: (i) at any time during the period beginning on the Closing Date and ending at 12:00 midnight, Eastern Standard Time, on December 31, 2011, the General Partner voluntarily withdraws by giving at
least 90 days advance notice of its intention to withdraw to the Limited Partners;
provided
that prior to the effective date of such withdrawal, the withdrawal is approved by Unitholders holding at least a majority of the Outstanding
Common Units (excluding Common Units held by the General Partner and its Affiliates) and the General Partner delivers to the Partnership an Opinion of Counsel (
Withdrawal Opinion of Counsel
) that such withdrawal (following
the selection of the successor General Partner) would not result in the loss of the limited liability of any Limited Partner or any Group Member or cause any Group Member to be treated as an association taxable as a corporation or otherwise to be
taxed as an entity for federal income tax purposes (to the extent not previously treated as such); (ii) at any time after 12:00 midnight, Eastern Standard Time, on December 31, 2011, the General Partner voluntarily withdraws by giving at
least 90 days advance notice to the Unitholders, such withdrawal to take effect on the date specified in such notice; (iii) at any time that the General Partner ceases to be the General Partner pursuant to
Section
11.1(a)(ii)
or is removed pursuant to
Section
11.2
; or (iv) notwithstanding
clause
(i)
of this sentence, at any time that the General Partner voluntarily
withdraws by giving at least 90 days advance notice of its intention to withdraw to the Limited Partners, such withdrawal to take effect on the date specified in the notice, if at the time such notice is given one Person and its Affiliates
(other than the General Partner and its Affiliates) own beneficially or of record or control at least 50% of the Outstanding Units. The withdrawal of the General Partner from the Partnership upon the occurrence of an Event of Withdrawal shall also
constitute the withdrawal of the General Partner as general partner or managing member, to the extent applicable, of the other Group Members. If the General Partner gives a notice of withdrawal pursuant to
Section
11.1(a)(i)
, the holders of a Unit Majority, may, prior to the effective date of such withdrawal, elect a successor General Partner. The Person so elected as successor General Partner shall automatically become the
successor general partner or managing member, to the extent applicable, of the other Group Members of which the General Partner is a general partner or a managing member. If, prior to the effective date of the General Partners withdrawal, a
successor is not selected by the Unitholders as provided herein or the Partnership does not receive a Withdrawal Opinion of Counsel, the Partnership shall be dissolved in accordance with
Section
12.1
. Any successor General
Partner elected in accordance with the terms of this
Section
11.1
shall be subject to the provisions of
Section
10.3
.
Section 11.2
Removal of the General Partner
.
The General Partner may be removed if such removal is approved by the Unitholders holding at least 66
2
⁄
3
% of the Outstanding Units (including Units held by the General Partner and its Affiliates). Any such action by such holders for removal of the General
Partner must also provide for the election of a successor General Partner by the Unitholders holding a majority of the outstanding Common Units voting as a class (including Units held by the General Partner and its Affiliates). Such removal shall be
effective immediately following the admission of a successor General Partner pursuant to
Section
10.3
. The removal of the General Partner shall also automatically constitute the removal of the General Partner as general
partner or managing member, to the extent applicable, of the other Group Members of which the General Partner is a general partner or a managing member.
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If a Person is elected as a successor General Partner in accordance with the terms of this
Section
11.2
, such Person shall, upon admission pursuant to
Section
10.3
, automatically become a successor general partner or managing member, to the extent applicable, of the other Group Members of which the General Partner is a general partner or a managing member. The right of
the holders of Outstanding Units to remove the General Partner shall not exist or be exercised unless the Partnership has received an opinion opining as to the matters covered by a Withdrawal Opinion of Counsel. Any successor General Partner elected
in accordance with the terms of this
Section
11.2
shall be subject to the provisions of
Section
10.3
.
Section 11.3
Interest of Departing Partner and Successor General Partner
.
(a) In the event of (i) withdrawal of the General Partner under circumstances where such withdrawal does not violate this Agreement or
(ii) removal of the General Partner by the holders of Outstanding Units under circumstances where Cause does not exist, if the successor General Partner is elected in accordance with the terms of
Section
11.1
or
11.2
, the Departing Partner shall have the option, exercisable prior to the effective date of the departure of such Departing Partner, to require its successor to purchase its General Partner Interest and its general partner interest (or
equivalent interest) in the other Group Members and all of its Incentive Distribution Rights (collectively, the
Combined Interest
) in exchange for an amount in cash equal to the fair market value of such Combined Interest,
such amount to be determined and payable as of the effective date of its departure. If the General Partner is removed by the Unitholders under circumstances where Cause exists or if the General Partner withdraws under circumstances where such
withdrawal violates this Agreement, and if a successor General Partner is elected in accordance with the terms of
Section
11.1
or
11.2
(or if the Partnership is reconstituted pursuant to
Section
12.2
and the successor General Partner is not the former General Partner), such successor shall have the option, exercisable prior to the effective date of the departure of such Departing Partner (or, in the event
of a reconstituted Partnership, prior to the effective date of the reconstitution of the Partnership), to purchase the Combined Interest for such fair market value of such Combined Interest of the Departing Partner. In either event, the Departing
Partner shall be entitled to receive all reimbursements due such Departing Partner pursuant to
Section
7.4
, including any employee-related liabilities (including severance liabilities), incurred in connection with the
termination of any employees employed by the Departing Partner for the benefit of the Partnership or the other Group Members.
For
purposes of this
Section
11.3(a)
, the fair market value of the Departing Partners Combined Interest shall be determined by agreement between the Departing Partner and its successor or, failing agreement within 30 days
after the effective date of such Departing Partners departure, by an independent investment banking firm or other independent expert selected by the Departing Partner and its successor, which, in turn, may rely on other experts, and the
determination of which shall be conclusive as to such matter. If such parties cannot agree upon one independent investment banking firm or other independent expert within 45 days after the effective date of such departure, then the Departing Partner
shall designate an independent investment banking firm or other independent expert, the Departing Partners successor shall designate an independent investment banking firm or other independent expert, and such firms or experts shall mutually
select a third independent investment banking firm or independent expert, which third independent investment banking firm or other independent expert shall determine the fair market value of the Combined Interest of the Departing Partner. In making
its determination, such third independent investment banking firm or other independent expert may consider the then current trading price of Units on any National Securities Exchange on which Units are then listed, the value of the
Partnerships assets, the rights and obligations of the Departing Partner and other factors it may deem relevant.
(b) If the
Combined Interest is not purchased in the manner set forth in
Section
11.3(a)
, the Departing Partner (or its transferee) shall become a Limited Partner and its Combined Interest shall be converted into Common Units pursuant
to a valuation made by an investment banking firm or other independent expert selected pursuant to
Section
11.3(a)
, without reduction in such Partnership Interest (but subject to proportionate dilution by reason of the
admission of its successor). Any successor General Partner shall indemnify the Departing Partner (or its transferee) as to all debts and liabilities of the Partnership arising on or after the date on which the
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Departing Partner (or its transferee) becomes a Limited Partner. For purposes of this Agreement, conversion of the Combined Interest of the Departing Partner to Common Units will be characterized
as if the Departing Partner (or its transferee) contributed its Combined Interest to the Partnership in exchange for the newly issued Common Units.
(c) If a successor General Partner is elected in accordance with the terms of
Section
11.1
or
11.2
(or if the
Partnership is reconstituted pursuant to
Section
12.2
and the successor General Partner is not the former General Partner) and the option described in
Section
11.3(a)
is not exercised by the party
entitled to do so, the successor General Partner shall, at the effective date of its admission to the Partnership, contribute to the Partnership cash in the amount equal to the product of the Percentage Interest of the Departing Partner as a general
partner in the Partnership and the Net Agreed Value of the Partnerships assets on such date. In such event, such successor General Partner shall, subject to the following sentence, be entitled to such Percentage Interest of all Partnership
allocations and distributions to which the Departing Partner was entitled. In addition, the successor General Partner shall cause this Agreement to be amended to reflect that, from and after the date of such successor General Partners
admission, the successor General Partners interest in all Partnership distributions and allocations shall be its Percentage Interest.
Section 11.4
Withdrawal of Limited Partners
.
No Limited Partner shall have any right to withdraw from the Partnership;
provided
,
however
, that when a transferee of a Limited
Partners Limited Partner Interest becomes a Record Holder of the Limited Partner Interest so transferred, such transferring Limited Partner shall cease to be a Limited Partner with respect to the Limited Partner Interest so transferred.
ARTICLE XII
DISSOLUTION AND LIQUIDATION
Section 12.1
Dissolution
.
The Partnership shall not be dissolved by the admission of Substituted Limited Partners or Additional Limited Partners or by the admission of
a successor General Partner in accordance with the terms of this Agreement. Upon the removal or withdrawal of the General Partner, if a successor General Partner is elected pursuant to
Section
11.1
or
11.2
, the
Partnership shall not be dissolved and such successor General Partner shall continue the business of the Partnership. The Partnership shall dissolve, and (subject to
Section
12.2
) its affairs shall be wound up, upon:
(a) an Event of Withdrawal of the General Partner as provided in
Section
11.1(a)
(other than
Section
11.1(a)(ii)
), unless a successor is elected and an Opinion of Counsel is received as provided in
Section
11.1(b)
or
11.2
and such successor is admitted to the Partnership pursuant to
Section
10.3
;
(b) an election to dissolve the Partnership by the General Partner that is approved by the
holders of a Unit Majority;
(c) the entry of a decree of judicial dissolution of the Partnership pursuant to the provisions of the
Delaware Act; or
(d) the sale, exchange or other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets and properties of the Partnership
Group.
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Section 12.2
Continuation of the Business of the Partnership After
Dissolution
.
Upon (a) dissolution of the Partnership following an Event of Withdrawal caused by the withdrawal or removal of
the General Partner as provided in
Section
11.1(a)(i)
or
(iii)
and the failure of the Partners to select a successor to such Departing Partner pursuant to
Section
11.1
or
11.2
, then
within 90 days thereafter, or (b) dissolution of the Partnership upon an event constituting an Event of Withdrawal as defined in
Section
11.1(a)(iv)
,
(v)
or
(vi)
, then, to the maximum extent permitted by
law, within 180 days thereafter, the holders of a Unit Majority may elect to reconstitute the Partnership and continue its business on the same terms and conditions set forth in this Agreement by forming a new limited partnership on terms identical
to those set forth in this Agreement and having as the successor General Partner a Person approved by the holders of a Unit Majority. Unless such an election is made within the applicable time period as set forth above, the Partnership shall conduct
only activities necessary to wind up its affairs. If such an election is so made, then:
(i) the reconstituted Partnership
shall continue unless earlier dissolved in accordance with this
Article
XII
;
(ii) if the
successor General Partner is not the former General Partner, then the interest of the former General Partner shall be treated in the manner provided in
Section
11.3
; and
(iii) all necessary steps shall be taken to cancel this Agreement and the Certificate of Limited Partnership and to enter into
and, as necessary, to file a new partnership agreement and certificate of limited partnership, and the successor General Partner may for this purpose exercise the powers of attorney granted the General Partner pursuant to
Section
2.6
;
provided
, that the right of the holders of a Unit Majority to approve a successor General Partner and to reconstitute and to continue the business of the Partnership shall not exist and may not be
exercised unless the Partnership has received an Opinion of Counsel that (A) the exercise of the right would not result in the loss of limited liability of any Limited Partner and (B) neither the Partnership, the reconstituted limited
partnership nor any other Group Member would be treated as an association taxable as a corporation or otherwise be taxable as an entity for federal income tax purposes upon the exercise of such right to continue (to the extent not already so treated
or taxed).
Section 12.3
Liquidator
.
Upon dissolution of the Partnership, unless the Partnership is continued under an election to reconstitute and continue the Partnership
pursuant to
Section
12.2
, the General Partner shall select one or more Persons to act as Liquidator. The Liquidator (if other than the General Partner) shall be entitled to receive such compensation for its services as may
be approved by holders of at least a majority of the Outstanding Common Units. The Liquidator (if other than the General Partner) shall agree not to resign at any time without 15 days prior notice and may be removed at any time, with or
without cause, by notice of removal approved by holders of at least a majority of the Outstanding Common Units. Upon dissolution, removal or resignation of the Liquidator, a successor and substitute Liquidator (who shall have and succeed to all
rights, powers and duties of the original Liquidator) shall within 30 days thereafter be approved by holders of at least a majority of the Outstanding Common Units. The right to approve a successor or substitute Liquidator in the manner provided
herein shall be deemed to refer also to any such successor or substitute Liquidator approved in the manner herein provided. Except as expressly provided in this
Article
XII
, the Liquidator approved in the manner provided
herein shall have and may exercise, without further authorization or consent of any of the parties hereto, all of the powers conferred upon the General Partner under the terms of this Agreement (but subject to all of the applicable limitations,
contractual and otherwise, upon the exercise of such powers, other than the limitation on sale set forth in
Section
7.3(b)
) necessary or appropriate to carry out the duties and functions of the Liquidator hereunder for and
during the period of time required to complete the winding up and liquidation of the Partnership as provided for herein.
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Section 12.4
Liquidation
.
The Liquidator shall proceed to dispose of the assets of the Partnership, discharge its liabilities, and otherwise wind up its affairs in such
manner and over such period as determined by the Liquidator, subject to Section 17-804 of the Delaware Act and the following:
(a) The
assets may be disposed of by public or private sale or by distribution in kind to one or more Partners on such terms as the Liquidator and such Partner or Partners may agree. If any property is distributed in kind, the Partner receiving the property
shall be deemed for purposes of
Section
12.4(c)
to have received cash equal to its fair market value; and contemporaneously therewith, appropriate cash distributions must be made to the other Partners. The Liquidator may
defer liquidation or distribution of the Partnerships assets for a reasonable time if it determines that an immediate sale or distribution of all or some of the Partnerships assets would be impractical or would cause undue loss to the
Partners. The Liquidator may distribute the Partnerships assets, in whole or in part, in kind if it determines that a sale would be impractical or would cause undue loss to the Partners.
(b) Liabilities of the Partnership include amounts owed to the Liquidator as compensation for serving in such capacity (subject to the terms
of
Section
12.3
) and amounts to Partners otherwise than in respect of their distribution rights under
Article
VI
. With respect to any liability that is contingent, conditional or unmatured or is
otherwise not yet due and payable, the Liquidator shall either settle such claim for such amount as it thinks appropriate or establish a reserve of cash or other assets to provide for its payment. When paid, any unused portion of the reserve shall
be distributed as additional liquidation proceeds.
(c) All property and all cash in excess of that required to discharge liabilities as
provided in
Section
12.4(b)
shall be distributed to the Partners in accordance with, and to the extent of, the positive balances in their respective Capital Accounts, as determined after taking into account all Capital
Account adjustments (other than those made by reason of distributions pursuant to this
Section
12.4(c)
) for the taxable year of the Partnership during which the liquidation of the Partnership occurs (with such date of
occurrence being determined pursuant to Treasury Regulation Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(g)), and such distribution shall be made by the end of such taxable year (or, if later, within 90 days after said date of such occurrence).
Section 12.5
Cancellation of Certificate of Limited Partnership
.
Upon the completion of the distribution of Partnership cash and property as provided in
Section
12.4
in connection
with the liquidation of the Partnership, the Partnership shall be terminated and the Certificate of Limited Partnership and all qualifications of the Partnership as a foreign limited partnership in jurisdictions other than the State of Delaware
shall be canceled and such other actions as may be necessary to terminate the Partnership shall be taken.
Section 12.6
Return
of Contributions
.
The General Partner shall not be personally liable for, and shall have no obligation to contribute or loan any
monies or property to the Partnership to enable it to effectuate, the return of the Capital Contributions of the Limited Partners or Unitholders, or any portion thereof, it being expressly understood that any such return shall be made solely from
Partnership assets.
Section 12.7
Waiver of Partition
.
To the maximum extent permitted by law, each Partner hereby waives any right to partition of the Partnership property.
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Section 12.8
Capital Account Restoration
.
No Limited Partner shall have any obligation to restore any negative balance in its Capital Account upon liquidation of the Partnership. The
General Partner shall be obligated to restore any negative balance in its Capital Account upon liquidation of its interest in the Partnership by the end of the taxable year of the Partnership during which such liquidation occurs, or, if later,
within 90 days after the date of such liquidation.
Section 12.9
[Intentionally Omitted]
ARTICLE XIII
AMENDMENT OF PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT; MEETINGS; RECORD DATE
Section 13.1
Amendments to be Adopted Solely by the General Partner
.
Each Partner agrees that the General Partner, without the approval of any Partner or Assignee, may amend any provision of this Agreement and
execute, swear to, acknowledge, deliver, file and record whatever documents may be required in connection therewith, to reflect:
(a) a
change in the name of the Partnership, the location of the principal place of business of the Partnership, the registered agent of the Partnership or the registered office of the Partnership;
(b) admission, substitution, withdrawal or removal of Partners in accordance with this Agreement;
(c) a change that the General Partner determines to be necessary or appropriate to qualify or continue the qualification of the Partnership as
a limited partnership or a partnership in which the Limited Partners have limited liability under the laws of any state or to ensure that the Group Members will not be treated as associations taxable as corporations or otherwise taxed as entities
for federal income tax purposes;
(d) a change that the General Partner determines (i) does not adversely affect the Limited Partners
(including any particular class of Partnership Interests as compared to other classes of Partnership Interests) in any material respect, (ii) to be necessary or appropriate to (A) satisfy any requirements, conditions or guidelines
contained in any opinion, directive, order, ruling or regulation of any federal or state agency or judicial authority or contained in any federal or state statute (including the Delaware Act) or (B) facilitate the trading of the Units
(including the division of any class or classes of Outstanding Units into different classes to facilitate uniformity of tax consequences within such classes of Units) or comply with any rule, regulation, guideline or requirement of any National
Securities Exchange on which the Units are or will be listed for trading, (iii) to be necessary or appropriate in connection with action taken by the General Partner pursuant to
Section
5.9
or (iv) is required to
effect the intent expressed in the Registration Statement or the intent of the provisions of this Agreement or is otherwise contemplated by this Agreement;
(e) a change in the fiscal year or taxable year of the Partnership and any other changes that the General Partner determines to be necessary
or appropriate as a result of a change in the fiscal year or taxable year of the Partnership including, if the General Partner shall so determine, a change in the definition of
Quarter
and the dates on which distributions
are to be made by the Partnership;
(f) an amendment that is necessary, in the Opinion of Counsel, to prevent the Partnership, or the
General Partner or its directors, officers, trustees or agents from in any manner being subjected to the provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended, or plan asset
regulations adopted under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended, regardless of whether such are substantially similar to plan asset regulations currently applied or proposed by the United States Department of Labor;
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(g) an amendment that the General Partner determines to be necessary or appropriate in connection
with the authorization of issuance of any class or series of Partnership Securities pursuant to
Section
5.6
;
(h) any amendment expressly permitted in this Agreement to be made by the General Partner acting alone;
(i) an amendment effected, necessitated or contemplated by a Merger Agreement approved in accordance with
Section
14.3
;
(j) an amendment that the General Partner determines to be necessary or appropriate to reflect
and account for the formation by the Partnership of, or investment by the Partnership in, any corporation, partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or other entity, in connection with the conduct by the Partnership of activities
permitted by the terms of
Section
2.4
;
(k) a merger or conveyance pursuant to
Section
14.3(d)
; or
(l) any other amendments substantially similar to the foregoing.
Section 13.2
Amendment Procedures
.
Except as provided in
Sections
13.1
and
13.3
, all amendments to this Agreement shall be made in accordance
with the following requirements. Amendments to this Agreement may be proposed only by the General Partner
provided, however
, that the General Partner shall have no duty or obligation to propose any amendment to this Agreement and may decline
to do so free of any fiduciary duty or obligation whatsoever to the Partnership, any Limited Partner or Assignee and, in declining to propose an amendment, shall not be required to act in good faith or pursuant to any other standard imposed by this
Agreement, any Group Member Agreement, any other agreement contemplated hereby or under the Delaware Act or any other law, rule or regulation A proposed amendment shall be effective upon its approval by the holders of a Unit Majority, unless a
greater or different percentage is required under this Agreement or by Delaware law. Each proposed amendment that requires the approval of the holders of a specified percentage of Outstanding Units shall be set forth in a writing that contains the
text of the proposed amendment. If such an amendment is proposed, the General Partner shall seek the written approval of the requisite percentage of Outstanding Units or call a meeting of the Unitholders to consider and vote on such proposed
amendment. The General Partner shall notify all Record Holders upon final adoption of any such proposed amendments.
Section 13.3
Amendment Requirements
.
(a) Notwithstanding the provisions of
Sections
13.1
and
13.2
, no
provision of this Agreement that establishes a percentage of Outstanding Units (including Units deemed owned by the General Partner) required to take any action shall be amended, altered, changed, repealed or rescinded in any respect that would have
the effect of reducing such voting percentage unless such amendment is approved by the written consent or the affirmative vote of holders of Outstanding Units whose aggregate Outstanding Units constitute not less than the voting requirement sought
to be reduced.
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of
Sections
13.1
and
13.2
, no amendment to this
Agreement may (i) enlarge the obligations of any Limited Partner without its consent, unless such shall be deemed to have occurred as a result of an amendment approved pursuant to
Section
13.3(c)
, (ii) enlarge the
obligations of, restrict in any way any action by or rights of, or reduce in any way the amounts distributable, reimbursable or otherwise payable to, the General Partner or any of its Affiliates without its consent, which consent may be given or
withheld at its option, (iii) change
Section
12.1(b)
, or (iv) change the term of the Partnership or, except as set forth in
Section
12.1(b)
, give any Person the right to dissolve the
Partnership.
(c) Except as provided in
Section
14.3
, and without limitation of the General Partners
authority to adopt amendments to this Agreement without the approval of any Partners or Assignees as contemplated in
Section
13.1
, any amendment that would have a material adverse effect on the rights or preferences of any
class of Partnership Interests in relation to other classes of Partnership Interests must be approved by the holders of not less than a majority of the Outstanding Partnership Interests of the class affected.
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(d) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, except for amendments pursuant to
Section
13.1
and except as otherwise provided by
Section
14.3(b)
, no amendments shall become effective without the approval of the holders of at least 90% of the Outstanding Units voting as a
single class unless the Partnership obtains an Opinion of Counsel to the effect that such amendment will not affect the limited liability of any Limited Partner under applicable law.
(e) Except as provided in
Section
13.1
, this
Section
13.3
shall only be amended with the
approval of the holders of at least 90% of the Outstanding Units.
Section 13.4
Special Meetings
.
All acts of Limited Partners to be taken pursuant to this Agreement shall be taken in the manner provided in this
Article
XIII
. Special meetings of the Limited Partners may be called by the General Partner or by Limited Partners owning 20% or more of the Outstanding Units of the class or classes for which a meeting is proposed. Limited
Partners shall call a special meeting by delivering to the General Partner one or more requests in writing stating that the signing Limited Partners wish to call a special meeting and indicating the general or specific purposes for which the special
meeting is to be called. Within 60 days after receipt of such a call from Limited Partners or within such greater time as may be reasonably necessary for the Partnership to comply with any statutes, rules, regulations, listing agreements or similar
requirements governing the holding of a meeting or the solicitation of proxies for use at such a meeting, the General Partner shall send a notice of the meeting to the Limited Partners either directly or indirectly through the Transfer Agent. A
meeting shall be held at a time and place determined by the General Partner on a date not less than 10 days nor more than 60 days after the mailing of notice of the meeting. Limited Partners shall not vote on matters that would cause the Limited
Partners to be deemed to be taking part in the management and control of the business and affairs of the Partnership so as to jeopardize the Limited Partners limited liability under the Delaware Act or the law of any other state in which the
Partnership is qualified to do business.
Section 13.5
Notice of a Meeting
.
Notice of a meeting called pursuant to
Section
13.4
shall be given to the Record Holders of the class or classes of
Units for which a meeting is proposed in writing by mail or other means of written communication in accordance with
Section
16.1
. The notice shall be deemed to have been given at the time when deposited in the mail or sent
by other means of written communication.
Section 13.6
Record Date
.
For purposes of determining the Limited Partners entitled to notice of or to vote at a meeting of the Limited Partners or to give approvals
without a meeting as provided in
Section
13.11
the General Partner may set a Record Date, which shall not be less than 10 nor more than 60 days before (a) the date of the meeting (unless such requirement conflicts with
any rule, regulation, guideline or requirement of any National Securities Exchange on which the Units are listed for trading, in which case the rule, regulation, guideline or requirement of such exchange shall govern) or (b) in the event that
approvals are sought without a meeting, the date by which Limited Partners are requested in writing by the General Partner to give such approvals.
Section 13.7
Adjournment
.
When a meeting is adjourned to another time or place, notice need not be given of the adjourned meeting and a new Record Date need not be
fixed, if the time and place thereof are announced at the meeting at which the adjournment is taken, unless such adjournment shall be for more than 45 days. At the adjourned meeting, the Partnership may transact any business which might have been
transacted at the original meeting. If the adjournment is for more than 45 days or if a new Record Date is fixed for the adjourned meeting, a notice of the adjourned meeting shall be given in accordance with this
Article
XIII
.
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Section 13.8
Waiver of Notice; Approval of Meeting; Approval of Minutes
.
The transactions of any meeting of Limited Partners, however called and noticed, and whenever held, shall be as valid as if it had occurred at
a meeting duly held after regular call and notice, if a quorum is present either in person or by proxy, and if, either before or after the meeting, Limited Partners representing such quorum who were present in person or by proxy and entitled to
vote, sign a written waiver of notice or an approval of the holding of the meeting or an approval of the minutes thereof. All waivers and approvals shall be filed with the Partnership records or made a part of the minutes of the meeting. Attendance
of a Limited Partner at a meeting shall constitute a waiver of notice of the meeting, except when the Limited Partner attends the meeting for the express purpose of objecting, at the beginning of the meeting, to the transaction of any business
because the meeting is not lawfully called or convened; and except that attendance at a meeting is not a waiver of any right to disapprove the consideration of matters required to be included in the notice of the meeting, but not so included, if the
disapproval is expressly made at the meeting.
Section 13.9
Quorum and Voting
.
The holders of a majority of the Outstanding Units of the class or classes for which a meeting has been called (including Outstanding Units
deemed owned by the General Partner) represented in person or by proxy shall constitute a quorum at a meeting of Limited Partners of such class or classes unless any such action by the Limited Partners requires approval by holders of a greater
percentage of such Units, in which case the quorum shall be such greater percentage. At any meeting of the Limited Partners duly called and held in accordance with this Agreement at which a quorum is present, the act of Limited Partners holding
Outstanding Units that in the aggregate represent a majority of the Outstanding Units entitled to vote and be present in person or by proxy at such meeting shall be deemed to constitute the act of all Limited Partners, unless a greater or different
percentage is required with respect to such action under the provisions of this Agreement, in which case the act of the Limited Partners holding Outstanding Units that in the aggregate represent at least such greater or different percentage shall be
required. The Limited Partners present at a duly called or held meeting at which a quorum is present may continue to transact business until adjournment, notwithstanding the withdrawal of enough Limited Partners to leave less than a quorum, if any
action taken (other than adjournment) is approved by the required percentage of Outstanding Units specified in this Agreement (including Outstanding Units deemed owned by the General Partner). In the absence of a quorum any meeting of Limited
Partners may be adjourned from time to time by the affirmative vote of holders of at least a majority of the Outstanding Units entitled to vote at such meeting (including Outstanding Units deemed owned by the General Partner) represented either in
person or by proxy, but no other business may be transacted, except as provided in
Section
13.7
.
Section 13.10
Conduct of a Meeting
.
The General Partner shall have full power and authority concerning the manner of conducting any meeting of the Limited Partners or
solicitation of approvals in writing, including the determination of Persons entitled to vote, the existence of a quorum, the satisfaction of the requirements of
Section
13.4
, the conduct of voting, the validity and effect
of any proxies and the determination of any controversies, votes or challenges arising in connection with or during the meeting or voting. The General Partner shall designate a Person to serve as chairman of any meeting and shall further designate a
Person to take the minutes of any meeting. All minutes shall be kept with the records of the Partnership maintained by the General Partner. The General Partner may make such other regulations consistent with applicable law and this Agreement as it
may deem advisable concerning the conduct of any meeting of the Limited Partners or solicitation of approvals in writing, including regulations in regard to the appointment of proxies, the appointment and duties of inspectors of votes and approvals,
the submission and examination of proxies and other evidence of the right to vote, and the revocation of approvals in writing.
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Section 13.11
Action Without a Meeting
.
If authorized by the General Partner, any action that may be taken at a meeting of the Limited Partners may be taken without a meeting if an
approval in writing setting forth the action so taken is signed by Limited Partners owning not less than the minimum percentage of the Outstanding Units (including Units deemed owned by the General Partner) that would be necessary to authorize or
take such action at a meeting at which all the Limited Partners were present and voted (unless such provision conflicts with any rule, regulation, guideline or requirement of any National Securities Exchange on which the Units are listed for
trading, in which case the rule, regulation, guideline or requirement of such exchange shall govern). Prompt notice of the taking of action without a meeting shall be given to the Limited Partners who have not approved in writing. The General
Partner may specify that any written ballot submitted to Limited Partners for the purpose of taking any action without a meeting shall be returned to the Partnership within the time period, which shall be not less than 20 days, specified by the
General Partner. If a ballot returned to the Partnership does not vote all of the Units held by the Limited Partners, the Partnership shall be deemed to have failed to receive a ballot for the Units that were not voted. If approval of the taking of
any action by the Limited Partners is solicited by any Person other than by or on behalf of the General Partner, the written approvals shall have no force and effect unless and until (a) they are deposited with the Partnership in care of the
General Partner, (b) approvals sufficient to take the action proposed are dated as of a date not more than 90 days prior to the date sufficient approvals are deposited with the Partnership and (c) an Opinion of Counsel is delivered to the
General Partner to the effect that the exercise of such right and the action proposed to be taken with respect to any particular matter (i) will not cause the Limited Partners to be deemed to be taking part in the management and control of the
business and affairs of the Partnership so as to jeopardize the Limited Partners limited liability, and (ii) is otherwise permissible under the state statutes then governing the rights, duties and liabilities of the Partnership and the
Partners.
Section 13.12
Right to Vote and Related Matters
.
(a) Only those Record Holders of the Units on the Record Date set pursuant to
Section
13.6
(and also subject to the
limitations contained in the definition of
Outstanding
) shall be entitled to notice of, and to vote at, a meeting of Limited Partners or to act with respect to matters as to which the holders of the Outstanding Units have
the right to vote or to act. All references in this Agreement to votes of, or other acts that may be taken by, the Outstanding Units shall be deemed to be references to the votes or acts of the Record Holders of such Outstanding Units.
(b) With respect to Units that are held for a Persons account by another Person (such as a broker, dealer, bank, trust company or
clearing corporation, or an agent of any of the foregoing), in whose name such Units are registered, such other Person shall, in exercising the voting rights in respect of such Units on any matter, and unless the arrangement between such Persons
provides otherwise, vote such Units in favor of, and at the direction of, the Person who is the beneficial owner, and the Partnership shall be entitled to assume it is so acting without further inquiry. The provisions of this
Section
13.12(b)
(as well as all other provisions of this Agreement) are subject to the provisions of
Section
4.3
.
(c) Notwithstanding any provision contained herein to the contrary, the Class E Units shall not have any voting rights except to the
extent that the Delaware Act gives the Class E Units a vote as a class on any matter. With respect to any matter on which the Class E Units are entitled a vote, each Class E Unit will be entitled to one vote on such matter.
ARTICLE XIV
MERGER
Section 14.1
Authority
.
The Partnership may merge or consolidate with one or more corporations, limited liability companies, business trusts or associations, real
estate investment trusts, common law trusts or unincorporated businesses,
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including a general partnership or limited partnership, formed under the laws of the State of Delaware or any other state of the United States of America, pursuant to a written agreement of
merger or consolidation (
Merger Agreement
) in accordance with this
Article
XIV
.
Section 14.2
Procedure for Merger or Consolidation
.
Merger or consolidation of the Partnership pursuant to this
Article
XIV
requires the prior consent of the General
Partner;
provided
,
however
, that the General Partner shall have no duty or obligation to consent to any merger or consolidation of the Partnership and may decline to do so free of any fiduciary duty or obligation whatsoever to the
Partnership, any Limited Partner or Assignee and, in declining to consent to a merger or consolidation, shall not be required to act in good faith or pursuant to any other standard imposed by this Agreement, any Group Member Agreement, any other
agreement contemplated hereby or under the Delaware Act or any other law, rule or regulation.
If the General Partner shall determine to
consent to the merger or consolidation, the General Partner shall approve the Merger Agreement, which shall set forth:
(a) the names and
jurisdictions of formation or organization of each of the business entities proposing to merge or consolidate;
(b) the name and
jurisdiction of formation or organization of the business entity that is to survive the proposed merger or consolidation (the
Surviving Business Entity
);
(c) the terms and conditions of the proposed merger or consolidation;
(d) the manner and basis of exchanging or converting the equity securities of each constituent business entity for, or into, cash, property or
general or limited partner interests, rights, securities or obligations of the Surviving Business Entity; and (i) if any general or limited partner interests, securities or rights of any constituent business entity are not to be exchanged or
converted solely for, or into, cash, property or general or limited partner interests, rights, securities or obligations of the Surviving Business Entity, the cash, property or general or limited partner interests, rights, securities or obligations
of any limited partnership, corporation, trust or other entity (other than the Surviving Business Entity) which the holders of such general or limited partner interests, securities or rights are to receive in exchange for, or upon conversion of
their general or limited partner interests, securities or rights, and (ii) in the case of securities represented by certificates, upon the surrender of such certificates, which cash, property or general or limited partner interests, rights,
securities or obligations of the Surviving Business Entity or any general or limited partnership, corporation, trust or other entity (other than the Surviving Business Entity), or evidences thereof, are to be delivered;
(e) a statement of any changes in the constituent documents or the adoption of new constituent documents (the articles or certificate of
incorporation, articles of trust, declaration of trust, certificate or agreement of limited partnership or other similar charter or governing document) of the Surviving Business Entity to be effected by such merger or consolidation;
(f) the effective time of the merger, which may be the date of the filing of the certificate of merger pursuant to
Section
14.4
or a later date specified in or determinable in accordance with the Merger Agreement (
provided
, that if the effective time of the merger is to be later than the date of the filing of the certificate of
merger, the effective time shall be fixed no later than the time of the filing of the certificate of merger and stated therein); and
(g)
such other provisions with respect to the proposed merger or consolidation that the General Partner determines to be necessary or appropriate.
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Section 14.3
Approval by Limited Partners of Merger or Consolidation
.
(a) Except as provided in
Section
14.3(d)
, the General Partner, upon its approval of the Merger Agreement, shall
direct that the Merger Agreement be submitted to a vote of Limited Partners, whether at a special meeting or by written consent, in either case in accordance with the requirements of
Article
XIII
. A copy or a summary of the
Merger Agreement shall be included in or enclosed with the notice of a special meeting or the written consent.
(b) Except as provided in
Section
14.3(d)
, the Merger Agreement shall be approved upon receiving the affirmative vote or consent of the holders of a Unit Majority unless the Merger Agreement contains any provision that, if contained in an amendment
to this Agreement, the provisions of this Agreement or the Delaware Act would require for its approval the vote or consent of a greater percentage of the Outstanding Units or of any class of Limited Partners, in which case such greater percentage
vote or consent shall be required for approval of the Merger Agreement.
(c) Except as provided in
Section
14.3(d)
, after such approval by vote or consent of the Limited Partners, and at any time prior to the filing of the certificate of merger pursuant to
Section
14.4
, the merger or
consolidation may be abandoned pursuant to provisions therefor, if any, set forth in the Merger Agreement.
(d) Notwithstanding anything
else contained in this
Article
XIV
or in this Agreement, the General Partner is permitted, without Limited Partner approval, to convert the Partnership or any Group Member into a new limited liability entity, merge the
Partnership or any Group Member into, or convey all of the Partnerships assets to, another limited liability entity which shall be newly formed and shall have no assets, liabilities or operations at the time of such Merger other than those it
receives from the Partnership or other Group Member if (i) the General Partner has received an Opinion of Counsel that the conversion, merger or conveyance, as the case may be, would not result in the loss of the limited liability of any
Limited Partner or any Group Member or cause the Partnership or any Group Member to be treated as an association taxable as a corporation or otherwise to be taxed as an entity for federal income tax purposes (to the extent not previously treated as
such), (ii) the sole purpose of such conversion, merger or conveyance is to effect a mere change in the legal form of the Partnership into another limited liability entity and (iii) the governing instruments of the new entity provide the
Limited Partners and the General Partner with the same rights and obligations as are herein contained.
Section 14.4
Certificate of Merger
.
Upon the required approval by the General Partner and the Unitholders of a Merger Agreement, a
certificate of merger shall be executed and filed with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware in conformity with the requirements of the Delaware Act.
Section 14.5
Effect of Merger
.
(a) At the effective time of the certificate of merger:
(i) all of the rights, privileges and powers of each of the business entities that has merged or consolidated, and all
property, real, personal and mixed, and all debts due to any of those business entities and all other things and causes of action belonging to each of those business entities, shall be vested in the Surviving Business Entity and after the merger or
consolidation shall be the property of the Surviving Business Entity to the extent they were of each constituent business entity;
(ii) the title to any real property vested by deed or otherwise in any of those constituent business entities shall not revert
and is not in any way impaired because of the merger or consolidation;
(iii) all rights of creditors and all liens on or
security interests in property of any of those constituent business entities shall be preserved unimpaired; and
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(iv) all debts, liabilities and duties of those constituent business entities
shall attach to the Surviving Business Entity and may be enforced against it to the same extent as if the debts, liabilities and duties had been incurred or contracted by it.
(b) A merger or consolidation effected pursuant to this Article shall not be deemed to result in a transfer or assignment of assets or
liabilities from one entity to another.
ARTICLE XV
RIGHT TO ACQUIRE LIMITED PARTNER INTERESTS
Section 15.1
Right to Acquire Limited Partner Interests
.
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, if at any time the General Partner and its Affiliates hold more than 80% of the
total Limited Partner Interests of any class then Outstanding, the General Partner shall then have the right, which right it may assign and transfer in whole or in part to the Partnership or any Affiliate of the General Partner, exercisable at its
option, to purchase all, but not less than all, of such Limited Partner Interests of such class then Outstanding held by Persons other than the General Partner and its Affiliates, at the greater of (i) the Current Market Price as of the date
three days prior to the date that the notice described in
Section
15.1(b)
is mailed and (ii) the highest price paid by the General Partner or any of its Affiliates for any such Limited Partner Interest of such class
purchased during the 90-day period preceding the date that the notice described in
Section
15.1(b)
is mailed. As used in this Agreement, (A)
Current Market Price
as of any date of any class of
Limited Partner Interests means the average of the daily Closing Prices (as hereinafter defined) per Limited Partner Interest of such class for the 20 consecutive Trading Days (as hereinafter defined) immediately prior to such date;
(B)
Closing Price
for any day means the last sale price on such day, regular way, or in case no such sale takes place on such day, the average of the closing bid and asked prices on such day, regular way, in either
case as reported in the principal consolidated transaction reporting system with respect to securities listed or admitted for trading on the principal National Securities Exchange (other than the Nasdaq Stock Market) on which such Limited Partner
Interests of such class are listed or admitted to trading or, if such Limited Partner Interests of such class are not listed or admitted to trading on any National Securities Exchange (other than the Nasdaq Stock Market), the last quoted price on
such day or, if not so quoted, the average of the high bid and low asked prices on such day in the over-the-counter market, as reported by the Nasdaq Stock Market or such other system then in use, or, if on any such day such Limited Partner
Interests of such class are not quoted by any such organization, the average of the closing bid and asked prices on such day as furnished by a professional market maker making a market in such Limited Partner Interests of such class selected by the
General Partner, or if on any such day no market maker is making a market in such Limited Partner Interests of such class, the fair value of such Limited Partner Interests on such day as determined by the General Partner; and
(C)
Trading Day
means a day on which the principal National Securities Exchange on which such Limited Partner Interests of any class are listed or admitted to trading is open for the transaction of business or, if
Limited Partner Interests of a class are not listed or admitted to trading on any National Securities Exchange, a day on which banking institutions in New York City generally are open.
(b) If the General Partner, any Affiliate of the General Partner or the Partnership elects to exercise the right to purchase Limited Partner
Interests granted pursuant to
Section
15.1(a)
, the General Partner shall deliver to the Transfer Agent notice of such election to purchase (the
Notice of Election to Purchase
) and shall cause the
Transfer Agent to mail a copy of such Notice of Election to Purchase to the Record Holders of Limited Partner Interests of such class (as of a Record Date selected by the General Partner) at least 10, but not more than 60, days prior to the Purchase
Date. Such Notice of Election to Purchase shall also be published for a period of at least three consecutive days in at least two daily newspapers of general circulation printed in the English language and published in the Borough of Manhattan, New
York. The Notice of Election to Purchase shall
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specify the Purchase Date and the price (determined in accordance with
Section
15.1(a)
) at which Limited Partner Interests will be purchased and state that the General
Partner, its Affiliate or the Partnership, as the case may be, elects to purchase such Limited Partner Interests, upon surrender of Certificates representing such Limited Partner Interests in exchange for payment, at such office or offices of the
Transfer Agent as the Transfer Agent may specify, or as may be required by any National Securities Exchange on which such Limited Partner Interests are listed or admitted to trading. Any such Notice of Election to Purchase mailed to a Record Holder
of Limited Partner Interests at his address as reflected in the records of the Transfer Agent shall be conclusively presumed to have been given regardless of whether the owner receives such notice. On or prior to the Purchase Date, the General
Partner, its Affiliate or the Partnership, as the case may be, shall deposit with the Transfer Agent cash in an amount sufficient to pay the aggregate purchase price of all of such Limited Partner Interests to be purchased in accordance with this
Section
15.1
. If the Notice of Election to Purchase shall have been duly given as aforesaid at least 10 days prior to the Purchase Date, and if on or prior to the Purchase Date the deposit described in the preceding
sentence has been made for the benefit of the holders of Limited Partner Interests subject to purchase as provided herein, then from and after the Purchase Date, notwithstanding that any Certificate shall not have been surrendered for purchase, all
rights of the holders of such Limited Partner Interests (including any rights pursuant to
Articles
IV
,
V
,
VI
, and
XII
) shall thereupon cease, except the right to receive the purchase price (determined
in accordance with
Section
15.1(a)
) for Limited Partner Interests therefor, without interest, upon surrender to the Transfer Agent of the Certificates representing such Limited Partner Interests, and such Limited Partner
Interests shall thereupon be deemed to be transferred to the General Partner, its Affiliate or the Partnership, as the case may be, on the record books of the Transfer Agent and the Partnership, and the General Partner or any Affiliate of the
General Partner, or the Partnership, as the case may be, shall be deemed to be the owner of all such Limited Partner Interests from and after the Purchase Date and shall have all rights as the owner of such Limited Partner Interests (including all
rights as owner of such Limited Partner Interests pursuant to
Articles
IV
,
V
,
VI
, and
XII
).
(c) At any time from and after the Purchase Date, a holder of an Outstanding Limited Partner Interest subject to purchase as provided in this
Section
15.1
may surrender his Certificate evidencing such Limited Partner Interest to the Transfer Agent in exchange for payment of the amount described in
Section
15.1(a)
, therefor, without
interest thereon.
ARTICLE XVI
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Section 16.1
Addresses and Notices
.
Any notice, demand, request, report or proxy materials required or permitted to be given or made to a Partner or Assignee under this Agreement
shall be in writing and shall be deemed given or made when delivered in person or when sent by first class United States mail or by other means of written communication to the Partner or Assignee at the address described below. Any notice, payment
or report to be given or made to a Partner or Assignee hereunder shall be deemed conclusively to have been given or made, and the obligation to give such notice or report or to make such payment shall be deemed conclusively to have been fully
satisfied, upon sending of such notice, payment or report to the Record Holder of such Partnership Securities at his address as shown on the records of the Transfer Agent or as otherwise shown on the records of the Partnership, regardless of any
claim of any Person who may have an interest in such Partnership Securities by reason of any assignment or otherwise. An affidavit or certificate of making of any notice, payment or report in accordance with the provisions of this
Section
16.1
executed by the General Partner, the Transfer Agent or the mailing organization shall be prima facie evidence of the giving or making of such notice, payment or report. If any notice, payment or report
addressed to a Record Holder at the address of such Record Holder appearing on the books and records of the Transfer Agent or the Partnership is returned by the United States Postal Service marked to indicate that the
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United States Postal Service is unable to deliver it, such notice, payment or report and any subsequent notices, payments and reports shall be deemed to have been duly given or made without
further mailing (until such time as such Record Holder or another Person notifies the Transfer Agent or the Partnership of a change in his address) if they are available for the Partner or Assignee at the principal office of the Partnership for a
period of one year from the date of the giving or making of such notice, payment or report to the other Partners and Assignees. Any notice to the Partnership shall be deemed given if received by the General Partner at the principal office of the
Partnership designated pursuant to
Section
2.3
. The General Partner may rely and shall be protected in relying on any notice or other document from a Partner, Assignee or other Person if believed by it to be genuine.
Section 16.2
Further Action
.
The parties shall execute and deliver all documents, provide all information and take or refrain from taking action as may be necessary or
appropriate to achieve the purposes of this Agreement.
Section 16.3
Binding Effect
.
This Agreement shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the parties hereto and their heirs, executors, administrators, successors,
legal representatives and permitted assigns.
Section 16.4
Integration
.
This Agreement constitutes the entire agreement among the parties hereto pertaining to the subject matter hereof and supersedes all prior
agreements and understandings pertaining thereto.
Section 16.5
Creditors
.
None of the provisions of this Agreement shall be for the benefit of, or shall be enforceable by, any creditor of the Partnership.
Section 16.6
Waiver
.
No failure by any party to insist upon the strict performance of any covenant, duty, agreement or condition of this Agreement or to exercise
any right or remedy consequent upon a breach thereof shall constitute waiver of any such breach of any other covenant, duty, agreement or condition.
Section 16.7
Counterparts
.
This Agreement may be executed in counterparts, all of which together shall constitute an agreement binding on all the parties hereto,
notwithstanding that all such parties are not signatories to the original or the same counterpart. Each party shall become bound by this Agreement immediately upon affixing its signature hereto or, in the case of a Person acquiring a Unit, upon
accepting the certificate evidencing such Unit or executing and delivering a Transfer Application as herein described, independently of the signature of any other party.
Section 16.8
Applicable Law
.
This Agreement shall be construed in accordance with and governed by the laws of the State of Delaware, without regard to the principles of
conflicts of law.
Section 16.9
Invalidity of Provisions
.
If any provision of this Agreement is or becomes invalid, illegal or unenforceable in any respect, the validity, legality and enforceability
of the remaining provisions contained herein shall not be affected thereby.
Section 16.10
Consent of Partners
.
Each Partner hereby expressly consents and agrees that, whenever in this Agreement it is specified that an action may be taken upon the
affirmative vote or consent of less than all of the Partners, such action may be so taken upon the concurrence of less than all of the Partners and each Partner shall be bound by the results of such action.
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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have executed this Agreement as of the date first written
above.
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GENERAL PARTNER
:
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SUNOCO PARTNERS LLC
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Name:
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Title:
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LIMITED PARTNERS
:
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All Limited Partners now and hereafter admitted as Limited Partners of the Partnership, pursuant to powers of attorney now and hereafter executed in favor of:
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SUNOCO PARTNERS LLC
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S
IGNATURE
P
AGE
TO
F
OURTH
A
MENDED
AND
R
ESTATED
A
GREEMENT
OF
L
IMITED
P
ARTNERSHIP
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EXHIBIT A
to the Fourth Amended and
Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of
[Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.]
Certificate Evidencing Common Units
Representing Limited Partner Interests in
[Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.]
In accordance with Section 4.1 of the Fourth Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of
[Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.], as amended, supplemented or restated from time to time (the
Partnership Agreement
), [Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.], a Delaware limited partnership (the
Partnership
), hereby certifies that (the
Holder
) is the registered owner of Common Units representing limited partner
interests in the Partnership (the
Common Units
) transferable on the books of the Partnership, in person or by duly authorized attorney, upon surrender of this Certificate properly endorsed and accompanied by a properly
executed application for transfer of the Common Units represented by this Certificate. The rights, preferences and limitations of the Common Units are set forth in, and this Certificate and the Common Units represented hereby are issued and shall in
all respects be subject to the terms and provisions of, the Partnership Agreement. Copies of the Partnership Agreement are on file at, and will be furnished without charge on delivery of written request to the Partnership at, the principal office of
the Partnership located at [ ]. Capitalized terms used herein but not defined shall have the meanings given them in the Partnership Agreement.
The Holder, by accepting this Certificate, is deemed to have (i) requested admission as, and agreed to become, a Limited Partner and to have
agreed to comply with and be bound by and to have executed the Partnership Agreement, (ii) represented and warranted that the Holder has all right, power and authority and, if an individual, the capacity necessary to enter into the Partnership
Agreement, (iii) granted the powers of attorney provided for in the Partnership Agreement and (iv) made the waivers and given the consents and approvals contained in the Partnership Agreement.
This Certificate shall not be valid for any purpose unless it has been countersigned and registered by the Transfer Agent and Registrar.
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Dated:
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Countersigned and Registered by:
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as Transfer Agent and Registrar
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[Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.]
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By: SUNOCO PARTNERS LLC, its general partner
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[Reverse of Certificate]
ABBREVIATIONS
The
following abbreviations, when used in the inscription on the face of this Certificate, shall be construed as follows according to applicable laws or regulations:
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TEN COM as tenants in common
TEN ENT as tenants by the entireties
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UNIF GIFT/TRANSFERS MIN ACT
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Custodian
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(Cust)
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(Minor)
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JT TEN as joint tenants with right of survivorship and not as tenants in common
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under Uniform Gifts/Transfers to CD Minors Act (State)
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Additional abbreviations, though not in the above list, may also be used.
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FOR VALUE RECEIVED,
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hereby assigns, conveys, sells and transfers unto
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(Please print or typewrite name and address
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(Please insert Social Security or other
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of Assignee)
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identifying number of Assignee)
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Common Units representing limited partner interests evidenced by this Certificate, subject to the
Partnership Agreement, and does hereby irrevocably constitute and appoint as its attorney-in-fact with full power of
substitution to transfer the same on the books of [Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.]
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Date:
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NOTE:
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The signature to any endorsement hereon must correspond with the name as written upon the face of this Certificate in every particular, without alteration, enlargement or
change.
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SIGNATURE(S) MUST BE GUARANTEED BY A MEMBER FIRM OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF SECURITIES DEALERS, INC. OR BY A COMMERCIAL BANK OR TRUST COMPANY SIGNATURE(S) GUARANTEED
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(Signature)
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(Signature)
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No transfer of the Common Units evidenced hereby will be registered on the books of the Partnership, unless
the Certificate evidencing the Common Units to be transferred is surrendered for registration or transfer and an Application for Transfer of Common Units has been executed by a transferee either (a) on the form set forth below or (b) on a separate
application that the Partnership will furnish on request without charge. A transferor of the Common Units shall have no duty to the transferee with respect to execution of the transfer application in order for such transferee to obtain registration
of the transfer of the Common Units.
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APPLICATION FOR TRANSFER OF COMMON UNITS
The undersigned (
Assignee
) hereby applies for transfer to the name of the Assignee of the Common Units evidenced
hereby.
The Assignee (a) requests admission as a Substituted Limited Partner and agrees to comply with and be bound by, and hereby
executes, the Fourth Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of [Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.] (the
Partnership
), as amended, supplemented or restated to the date hereof (the
Partnership
Agreement
), (b) represents and warrants that the Assignee has all right, power and authority and, if an individual, the capacity necessary to enter into the Partnership Agreement, (c) appoints the General Partner of the Partnership
and, if a Liquidator shall be appointed, the Liquidator of the Partnership as the Assignees attorney-in-fact to execute, swear to, acknowledge and file any document, including, without limitation, the Partnership Agreement and any amendment
thereto and the Certificate of Limited Partnership of the Partnership and any amendment thereto, necessary or appropriate for the Assignees admission as a Substituted Limited Partner and as a party to the Partnership Agreement, (d) gives the
powers of attorney provided for in the Partnership Agreement, and (e) makes the waivers and gives the consents and approvals contained in the Partnership Agreement. Capitalized terms not defined herein have the meanings assigned to such terms
in the Partnership Agreement.
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Social Security or other identifying number
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Signature of Assignee
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Purchase Price including commissions, if any
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Name and Address of Assignee
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Type of Entity (check one):
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☐ Individual
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☐ Partnership ☐
Corporation
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☐ Trust
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☐ Other (specify)
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Nationality (check one):
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☐ U.S. Citizen, Resident or Domestic Entity
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☐ Foreign Corporation
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☐ Non-resident Alien
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If the U.S. Citizen, Resident or Domestic Entity box is checked, the following certification must be
completed.
Under Section 1445(e) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code
), the Partnership
must withhold tax with respect to certain transfers of property if a holder of an interest in the Partnership is a foreign person. To inform the Partnership that no withholding is required with respect to the undersigned interestholders
interest in it, the undersigned hereby certifies the following (or, if applicable, certifies the following on behalf of the interestholder).
A.
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Individual Interestholder
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1.
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I am not a non-resident alien for purposes of U.S. income taxation.
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2.
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My U.S. taxpayer identification number (Social Security Number) is .
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C-88
B.
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Partnership, Corporation or Other Interestholder
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1.
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is not a foreign corporation, foreign partnership, foreign trust (Name of Interestholder) or
foreign estate (as those terms are defined in the Code and Treasury Regulations).
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2.
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The interestholders U.S. employer identification number is .
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3.
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The interestholders office address and place of incorporation (if applicable) is .
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The interestholder agrees to notify the Partnership within sixty (60) days of the date the interestholder becomes a foreign person.
The interestholder understands that this certificate may be disclosed to the Internal Revenue Service by the Partnership and that any false
statement contained herein could be punishable by fine, imprisonment or both.
Under penalties of perjury, I declare that I have examined
this certification and to the best of my knowledge and belief it is true, correct and complete and, if applicable, I further declare that I have authority to sign this document on behalf of:
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Name of Interestholder
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Signature and
Date
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Title (if
applicable)
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Note: If the Assignee is a broker, dealer, bank, trust company, clearing corporation, other nominee holder or
an agent of any of the foregoing, and is holding for the account of any other person, this application should be completed by an officer thereof or, in the case of a broker or dealer, by a registered representative who is a member of a registered
national securities exchange or a member of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc., or, in the case of any other nominee holder, a person performing a similar function. If the Assignee is a broker, dealer, bank, trust company, clearing
corporation, other nominee owner or an agent of any of the foregoing, the above certification as to any person for whom the Assignee will hold the Common Units shall be made to the best of the Assignees knowledge.
C-89
Schedule 6.4(b)
IDR Reduction Schedule
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Quarter Ending
|
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Former ETP IDR
Reduction
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|
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Former SXL IDR
Reduction
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Total IDR
Reduction
|
|
December 31, 2016
|
|
$
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137,500,000
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|
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$
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7,500,000
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|
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$
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145,000,000
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|
March 31, 2017
|
|
$
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149,500,000
|
|
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$
|
7,500,000
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|
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$
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157,000,000
|
|
June 30, 2017
|
|
$
|
154,500,000
|
|
|
$
|
7,500,000
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|
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$
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162,000,000
|
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September 30, 2017
|
|
$
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155,750,000
|
|
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$
|
7,500,000
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|
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$
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163,250,000
|
|
December 31, 2017
|
|
$
|
165,750,000
|
|
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$
|
7,500,000
|
|
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$
|
173,250,000
|
|
March 31, 2018
|
|
$
|
34,500,000
|
|
|
$
|
7,500,000
|
|
|
$
|
42,000,000
|
|
June 30, 2018
|
|
$
|
34,500,000
|
|
|
$
|
7,500,000
|
|
|
$
|
42,000,000
|
|
September 30, 2018
|
|
$
|
34,500,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
34,500,000
|
|
December 31, 2018
|
|
$
|
34,500,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
34,500,000
|
|
March 31, 2019
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
June 30, 2019
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
September 30, 2019
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
December 31, 2019
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
32,000,000
|
|
March 31, 2020 and Each Quarter Thereafter
|
|
$
|
8,250,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
8,250,000
|
|
Schedule 6.4(b)
C-90
SPECIAL
MEETING OF UNITHOLDERS OF
ENERGY TRANSFER PARTNERS, L.P.
April 26, 2017
PROXY VOTING INSTRUCTIONS
INTERNET - Access
www.voteproxy.com and follow the on-screen instructions or scan the QR code with your smartphone. Have your proxy card available when you access the web page.
TELEPHONE - Call toll-free 1-800-PROXIES (1-800-776-9437) in the United States or 1-718-921-8500 from foreign countries from any touch-tone telephone and follow the instructions. Have your
proxy card available when you call.
Vote online/phone until 11:59 PM EST the day before the meeting.
MAIL - Sign, date and mail your proxy card in the envelope provided as soon as possible.
IN PERSON - You may vote your shares in person by attending the Special Meeting.
GO GREEN - e-Consent makes it easy to go paperless. With e-Consent, you can quickly access your proxy material, statements
and other eligible documents online, while reducing costs, clutter and paper waste. Enroll today via www.amstock.com to enjoy online access.
NOTICE OF INTERNET AVAILABILITY OF PROXY MATERIAL:
The Notice of Special Meeting of Common Unitholders and the Proxy Statement for the Special Meeting are available at
http://www.astproxyportal.com/ast/08278/
Please detach along perforated line and mail in the envelope provided
IF you are not voting via telephone or the Internet.
00030000030000000000 5
COMPANY NUMBER
ACCOUNT NUMBER
THE BOARD OF ENERGY TRANSFER
PARTNERS, L.L.C., THE GENERAL PARTNER OF OUR GENERAL PARTNER, UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR THE FOLLOWING PROPOSALS:
PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND RETURN PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. PLEASE MARK YOUR VOTE IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS SHOWN HERE x
FOR AGAINST ABSTAIN
1. To consider and vote on a proposal to adopt the Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of November 20, 2016, as amended by Amendment No. 1 thereto, dated as of December 16, 2016, by and
among Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P. (SXL), Sunoco Partners LLC, the general partner of SXL, SXL Acquisition Sub LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of SXL, SXL Acquisition Sub LP, a wholly owned subsidiary of SXL (SXL Merger Sub
LP), Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. (ETP), Energy Transfer Partners GP, L.P., the general partner of ETP, and, solely for purposes of certain provisions therein, Energy Transfer Equity, L.P., and the transactions contemplated
thereby, including the merger of SXL Merger Sub LP with and into ETP.
2. To consider and vote on a proposal to
approve the adjournment of the special meeting, if necessary, to solicit additional proxies if there are not sufficient votes to adopt the Agreement and Plan of Merger, as amended, and the transactions contemplated thereby at the time of the special
meeting.
TO INCLUDE ANY COMMENTS, USE THE COMMENTS BOX ON THE REVERSE SIDE HEREOF.
To change the address on your account, please check the box at right and indicate your new address in the address space
above. Please note that changes to the registered name(s) on the account may not be submitted via this method.
Signature of Unitholder Date: Signature of Unitholder Date:
Note: Please sign exactly as your name or names appear on this Proxy. When shares are held jointly, each holder should
sign. When signing as executor, administrator, attorney, trustee or guardian, please give full title as such. If the signer is a corporation, please sign full corporate name by duly authorized officer, giving full title as such. If signer is a
partnership, please sign in partnership name by authorized person.
1
ENERGY TRANSFER PARTNERS, L.P.
For the Special Meeting of Unitholders To Be Held On April 26, 2017