Friday, December 7, 2012

Reuters: Hot Stocks: UPDATE 5-Canada approves Nexen and Progress Energy bids

Reuters: Hot Stocks
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UPDATE 5-Canada approves Nexen and Progress Energy bids
Dec 8th 2012, 00:06

Fri Dec 7, 2012 7:06pm EST

  * Canadian dollar firms on the news      * Gov't to impose stricter conditions on foreign investment     (Adds quotes, background)      By Michael Erman and David Ljunggren      NEW YORK/OTTAWA, Dec 7 (Reuters) - Canadian authorities  approved the acquisition of Nexen Inc by China's CNOOC  Ltd on Friday, but said they would block virtually all  new attempts by foreign state-owned enterprises to buy  controlling assets in the country's vast oil sands.      The ruling, closely watched by investors and politicians  alike, followed months of heated debate over how much of  Canada's energy sector, and especially its oil sands, should be  absorbed by companies run by other governments.      The Nexen deal is the largest successful foreign takeover  ever by a Chinese company. Separately, Ottawa also gave the  green light for the purchase of Progress Energy Resources Corp   by Petronas of Malaysia.       However, with the rulings, Prime Minister Stephen Harper  served notice that future investments by state-owned enterprises  would face much tighter scrutiny.      Harper said the two approvals marked the end of a trend for  the pro-business Conservatives.      "Foreign state control of oil sands development has reached  the point at which further such foreign state control would not  be of net benefit to Canada," he told reporters.      CNOOC bid $15.1 billion for Nexen, which is involved in oil  sands in Canada and offshore production operations around the  world. Petronas offered C$5.2 billion ($5.3 billion) for  Progress, a mid-size gas producer. Its offer had been rejected  once and the Malaysian company was invited to reapply. Both  suitors offered hefty premiums.      The Canadian dollar firmed against the U.S. currency after  Reuters reported the CNOOC deal had been approved. The shares of  both takeover targets went on a wild ride after the government  announced it would announce its decisions and both finished  lower as the market closed before the positive rulings were  known.      The Harper government also said it would impose stricter  conditions in the future on investments by state-owned  enterprises in all sectors of Canada's economy and that it would  welcome non-controlling minority investments by such enterprises  in Canadian companies.      In approving the deal, the Canadian government said CNOOC  made significant commitments on transparency, employment and  capital investments.                     The takeover was overwhelmingly approved by Nexen  shareholders in September, but the Canadian government delayed  approvals while it drafted a long-promised update to the rules  governing investments by state-owned foreign companies.       It also had to deal with the qualms of some of its own  members over whether companies from the communist country should  be allowed to buy up Canadian energy assets.      Harper has wooed investors in China and elsewhere in Asia to  deploy capital in the Alberta oil sands, the world's  third-largest crude deposit, and in other resources. The  requirements are far too large for Canadian companies to fund  alone.      "I realize there were a lot of politics that went into this  thing. But I think the overriding factor is that in order for  Canada to be able to develop all those tremendous resources that  they have is that they were going to need a lot of foreign  capital," said Keith Moore, managing director at MKM Partners  LLC in Stamford, Connecticut.      "I think they probably played it very well. By pushing back  quite a bit they were probably able to get concessions in both  these deals, in Nexen and in Progress."       The acquisition will give CNOOC control of Nexen's 43  percent stake in the Buzzard field in the North Sea, the most  important contributor to the crude blend used to set the Brent  crude price that serves as the international oil price  benchmark.      It also includes oil production from Yemen, offshore West  Africa and the Gulf of Mexico.      CNOOC also gains full control of Nexen's Long Lake oil sands  project in northern Alberta, properties containing as much as  six billion barrels of recoverable crude and a 7.2 percent stake  in the Syncrude Canada Ltd joint-venture.      Industry Minister Christian Paradis turned down in October  the C$5.2 billion ($5.3 billion) bid for Progress by Petronas  , but gave the Malaysian state-owned energy company a  chance to make new representations.      The companies, which already have a joint venture in the  Montney shale gas region of British Columbia, said this week  they are advancing an C$11 billion liquefied natural gas plant  on Canada's West Coast. They held out the prospect of bigger  project if the takeover is approved because Petronas would have  access to all of Progress's gas reserves.      Nexen shares ended down C$1.58, or 6.3 percent, at C$23.29  on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Friday. Progress fell 88  Canadian cents, or 4.4 percent. to C$19.37. Nexen's New  York-listed shares surged to $26.94 in after-hours trading.      ($1=$0.99 Canadian)     (Additional reporting by Solarina Ho, Euan Rocha and Alastair  Sharp in Toronto; Writing by Jeffrey Jones; Editing by Frank  McGurty, Bernard Orr, Tim Dobbyn,  Leslie Gevirtz and Andre  Grenon)  
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