By Jeremy van Loon - 2012-07-23T23:12:03Z
Cnooc Ltd. (883)âs $15.1 billion takeover bid for Nexen Inc. (NXY) signals a Canadian shift toward China and away from the U.S. as the nationâs traditional oil and natural- gas partner and main export market.
Canadaâs oil sands reserves, the third-largest recoverable crude deposits in the world, were developed in part by U.S. money as companies such as Californiaâs Richfield Oil Corp. brought technology to extract bitumen from boreal peat bogs half a century ago. Now, for the first time, a Chinese company will own and operate oil-sands crude production as well as Nexenâs shale-gas assets in British Columbia, along with leases in other parts of the world.
âThis is really a decoupling of the north-south axis with the U.S.,â Michael Black, a partner with Fasken Martineau DuMoulin LLP who has advised on C$8.5 billion ($8.4 billion) worth of Canadian deals by Abu Dhabi Nation Energy Co. (TAQA), said in an interview. âThe U.S. guys just arenât coming up here the way they used to. It further illustrates Chinese interest in big assets, big reserves and Canadian expertise.â
Chinese oil producers have turned more frequently to Canada after political opposition in the U.S. derailed Cnoocâs $18.5 billion bid for Unocal Corp. in 2005, and after TransCanada Corp. (TRP)âs Keystone XL pipeline route south to Texas was blocked by President Barack Obamaâs administration last year.
Friendly Supplier
China, seeking to add oil and gas reserves to meet demand in the worldâs largest energy-consuming country, sees Canada as a ready supplier as it prepares to expand its pipeline network to the Pacific coast for exports to Asia.
Over the past decade, Chinese companies have spent $53.4 billion on Canadian oil and gas fields and companies, compared to $30.8 billion invested in the sector by U.S. companies, according to Bloomberg data.
âCanada is politically stable, has fantastic assets and technological know-how in the oil and gas sector,â said Dan Cheng, vice president at Calgary-based Matco Financial Inc., which oversees C$375 million in assets including Canadian oil and gas companies. âCanadian politicians and companies have been going over to China a lot recently. Itâs easy to speculate that there are more deals to come.â
The Canadian government, which turned down a 2010 hostile $40 billion bid by BHP Billiton Ltd (BHP) for Potash Corp. (POT) of Saskatchewan Inc., has to approve the transaction. Potash Corp. is the worldâs largest supplier of the fertilizer, which is produced in only a handful of countries around the world.
Geographic Diversity
By comparison, less than a third of Nexenâs second-quarter oil and gas production of 207,000 barrels a day was in Canada. Cnooc nevertheless will gain access to Canadian engineers and geologists familiar with developing and operating oil sands and shale-gas projects, said Faskenâs Black. The companyâs other assets include production platforms in the North Sea, the Gulf of Mexico and in Nigeria.
Canadaâs oil and gas and other natural resource industries have traditionally been open to foreign investment to speed development, Lysle Brinker, director of energy equity research at IHS Herold, said by telephone from Cape Elizabeth, Maine.
âItâs in the interest of the long term viability and the health of the Canadian oil and gas industriesâ to approve the Nexen takeover, he said. And the Canadian government has taken a âlong-term viewâ to recognize the energy industry needs a lot of investment to succeed, he said.
Deal Price
Chinaâs largest offshore oil and gas explorer is paying $27.50 for each common share, a premium of 61 percent to Calgary-based Nexenâs closing price on July 20, according to its statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange yesterday. Nexenâs board recommended the deal to its shareholders.
Cnooc last year acquired Nexenâs partner Opti Canada Inc., which held a minority stake in the Long Lake project, a production operation that uses steam to melt underground seams of tar-like bitumen and refines it in giant vats called upgraders. The joint venture allowed them to better understand the business as well as the political context, said Wenran Jiang, an adviser to the Alberta government and director of the Canada-China Energy and Environment Forum.
âThe political context in Canada is very good at the moment,â Jiang said in an interview. âThe Chinese have been careful to step up their involvement in Canada slowly. This isnât coming out of nowhere.â
Strained Ties
Canadaâs traditionally close energy ties to the U.S. were strained in the past year by political controversy that threatened to stall TransCanadaâs plans to ship crude from Alberta to the Texas Gulf Coast via its Keystone pipeline. As TransCanada redesigns the project to overcome U.S. environmental objections, the Canadian government stepped up its courtship of China.
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Alberta Premier Alison Redford have visited China this year to promote Canadaâs energy industry and build trans-Pacific ties. Harper told Chinese business leaders in February during a dinner in Guangzhou, China, that he wants to take Canadaâs economic partnership to âthe next level.â
âWe want to sell our energy to people who want to buy our energy,â Harper said at the time. âItâs that simple.â
The Nexen deal is one of two major Chinese energy acquisitions announced yesterday. China Petrochemical Corp. (1314) agreed to spend $1.5 billion for a 49 percent stake in Calgary- based Talisman Energy Inc. (TLM)âs U.K. unit after spending $2.2 billion last year to buy Canadaâs Daylight Energy Ltd.
Plunging Value
Nexen has been searching for a new CEO since Marvin Romanow stepped down in January amid a slumping share price and missed production targets. Nexenâs market value had plunged 60 percent before today from a high of C$43.45 in June 2008 as prices fell for natural gas, which accounts for about 20 percent of output. Production growth also slowed more than the company expected because of setbacks at projects in Canadaâs oil sands and in the North Sea.
âThe Chinese have shown that theyâre good at buying assets that have long-term value,â said Jennifer Stevenson, who helps oversee about C$5 billion in assets at Dynamic Funds in Calgary and doesnât own Nexen shares.
Cnooc will add 900 million barrels of oil equivalent reserves at $19.94 per barrel through the deal, according to a document posted on the companyâs website. Cnooc plans to boost output by as much as 2.7 percent this year to the equivalent of as much as 930,000 barrels of oil a day.
Calgary will become one of Cnoocâs international headquarters and the operations hub for overseeing an additional $8 billion in assets in North and Central America. The Chinese company will list its shares on the Toronto exchange, it said in the statement yesterday.
âThis agreement diversifies our reserve base by adding to our presence in Canada while providing high quality assets,â Cnooc Chief Executive Officer Li Fanrong said today in a conference call with reporters. âWe are in Canada to invest.â
To contact the reporter on this story: Jeremy van Loon in Calgary at jvanloon@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Susan Warren at susanwarren@bloomberg.net
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