|8-KFeb 3, 4:29 PM ET

ANTERO RESOURCES Corp 8-K

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Antero Resources Files 8‑K: $1.5B Term Loan to Fund Acquisition

What Happened

  • Antero Resources Corp. (AR) filed an 8‑K reporting completion of an acquisition-related transaction and the creation of a $1.5 billion unsecured Term Loan A Facility on February 3, 2026.
  • The credit agreement was entered into with Royal Bank of Canada as administrative agent and other lenders; the Company borrowed $1.5 billion in a single draw to partially fund the Antero Resources HG acquisition.
  • The filing also discloses a First Amendment to the Purchase Agreement dated December 22, 2025 that amends and restates certain annexes to that Purchase Agreement.

Key Details

  • Loan amount: $1.5 billion borrowed on February 3, 2026 (single borrowing).
  • Maturity: February 3, 2029; the Term Loan A does not amortize.
  • Security/guarantees: Unsecured and not guaranteed by the Company’s subsidiaries.
  • Covenants: Requires consolidated total indebtedness to capitalization of 65% or less at each fiscal quarter end (same covenant as the company’s unsecured revolving credit facility); contains customary affirmative/negative covenants (limits on liens, certain indebtedness, restricted payments, fundamental changes, related-party transactions).
  • Interest: Variable rate based on Term SOFR (with a 0.10% credit adjustment and 0.00% floor) or an Alternate Base Rate, plus an Applicable Rate tied to the Company’s long‑term unsecured debt rating (Term SOFR margins range from 1.125% to 2.00%).
  • Documents: The Term Loan Agreement and the Purchase Agreement amendment are filed as exhibits to the 8‑K.

Why It Matters

  • The loan provides immediate financing (liquidity) to help complete the stated acquisition, but it increases consolidated indebtedness by $1.5 billion and imposes borrowing covenants that could limit dividend payments, share repurchases or other capital actions.
  • Because the loan is unsecured and subsidiaries did not guarantee it, creditor recourse is to the borrower (parent company) rather than its subsidiaries.
  • Investors should note the maturity (2029) and variable interest exposure (SOFR‑linked with a margin tied to the company’s credit rating), which affect future interest costs and refinancing risk.