Cenovus to buy Husky Energy in deal pegged at $23.6B

The Calgary-based companies say in a joint announcement that the combined company will be the third-largest Canadian oil and natural gas producer, based on total company production.

Cenovus CEO Alex Pourbaix, shown in Calgary in January. Boards of directors at both Cenovus Energy and Husky Energy have approved the deal between the two companies, expected to close in the first quarter of next year. Pourbaix will head the combined company. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

Cenovus Energy Inc. has agreed to buy rival Husky Energy Inc. in an all-stock deal valued at $3.8 billion as weak oil prices and a collapse in demand driven by the pandemic force the industry to consolidate.

The merged Cenovus Energy Inc. will remain headquartered in Alberta. The deal would combine the companies into a new integrated oil and gas business with increased and more stable cash flows, the statement said.

Cenovus’s deal for Husky is valued at $23.6 billion, including debt, the companies said in a joint statement.

Cenovus CEO Alex Pourbaix will head the combined company, with Husky chief financial officer Jeff Hart taking on that role at the new entity.

“We will be a leaner, stronger and more integrated company, exceptionally well suited to weather the current environment and be a strong Canadian energy leader in the years ahead,” Pourbaix said in the statement.

“The diverse portfolio will enable us to deliver stable cash flow through price cycles, while focusing capital on the highest-return assets and opportunities. The combined company will also have an efficient cost structure and ample liquidity.”

Oil rig floorhands work on an oil rig at the Cenovus Energy Christina Lake Steam-Assisted Gravity Drainage project south of Fort McMurray, Alta. The combined Cenovus-Husky company will be the third-largest Canadian oil and natural gas producer, based on total company production, Cenovus says. (Reuters)

The deal is the latest sign of consolidation in an energy sector that has been battered by the twin crises of the COVID-19-related economic slowdown and low crude oil prices.

Last Monday, ConocoPhillips announced it would buy shale producer Concho Resources in a deal valued at $9.7 billion U.S. that would create one of the largest U.S. oil producers.

Earlier in the month, one analyst pointed to the acquisition of a 17.6 per cent stake in Calgary oil and gas producer NuVista Energy Ltd. by rival Paramount Resources Ltd. as part of a trend toward “forced” consolidation in the troubled Canadian energy sector.

Rory Johnston, managing director and market economist at Price Street in Toronto, called the deal a “massive announcement” that solidifies Cenovus’s place in the top three of Canadian oil producers.

He said the deal is touting significant cost savings.

“That’s really good news for reducing the average cost per barrel in the sector and making the sector more competitive in an increasingly competitive global oil landscape,” Johnston said.

“The downside to that is a lot of the time synergies and efficiencies and cost containment usually means fewer jobs.” 

Johnston said he expects to see more takeovers and acquisitions over the next year but that they’re more likely to be much smaller in scale, with larger producers looking to acquire smaller ones.   

“I think that over the next couple of years, you’ll see fewer and fewer names producing oil in the patch,” he said. 

“But I think those fewer and fewer names will be producing those same barrels for a lower price in a more competitive market.” 

Ending oil curtailment quotas

News of the Cenovus-Husky deal follows a Friday announcement from Alberta’s government that the province would end its oil curtailment quotas, a temporary measure intended to support oil prices.

Spokespeople for both companies said Friday they welcomed the move. Indeed, Cenovus had already been producing above its curtailment levels with credits purchased from other companies.

Combining Husky and Cenovus will create annual savings of $1.2 billion, largely achieved within the first year and independent of commodity prices, the companies said. The merger ‘will enable us to deliver the full potential of this resilient new company,’ Husky CEO Rob Peabody said in the statement. (David Bell/CBC)

Combining the companies will create annual savings of $1.2 billion, largely achieved within the first year and independent of commodity prices, the companies said.

“Bringing our talented people and complementary assets together will enable us to deliver the full potential of this resilient new company,” Husky CEO Rob Peabody said in the statement.

“The integration of Cenovus’s best-in-class in situ oil sands assets with Husky’s extensive North American upgrading, refining and transportation network … will create a low-cost competitor and support long-term value creation.”

The combined company will be the third-largest Canadian oil and natural gas producer, based on total company production, Cenovus said. It will have low exposure to oilsands benchmark crude, which typically trades at a discount to North American benchmark West Texas intermediate.

The transaction has been approved by both boards and is expected to close in the first quarter of 2021, pending shareholder and regulatory approvals.

Husky shareholders will receive 0.7845 of a Cenovus share plus 0.0651 of a Cenovus share purchase warrant in exchange for each Husky common share.

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