National Post

Kinder mum on plans for $4.5B

- GEOFFREY MORGAN Financial Post gmorgan@nationalpo­st.com

CALGARY • Financial analysts grilled Kinder Morgan

Inc. executives Wednesday on how the company would use the proceeds from its $4.5-billion sale of the Trans Mountain pipeline and expansion project to the federal government.

“This is a significan­t amount of money. It’s a great problem to have. We want to make sure that we handle that in the best way for our shareholde­rs,” Kinder Morgan CEO Steve Kean said on an earnings call Wednesday. “It’s a big piece of this company, so we want to be thoughtful about it.”

The windfall comes after an intense two-month negotiatio­n between the Houston-based pipeline giant and Finance Minister Bill Morneau, which culminated in Ottawa buying the Trans Mountain pipeline and troubled $7.4-billion expansion project between Alberta and B.C. on May 29. The deal is expected to close in the late summer or early fall, and the company has begun deliberati­ng how it will use the cash.

Kean, CEO of both Kinder Morgan Inc. and its Calgarybas­ed subsidiary Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd., explained that the parent company intended to use its share of the deal to pay down debt but hasn’t settled on what to do with the subsidiary’s portion.

“While all options are on the table, we generally don’t think it’s attractive to shareholde­rs for us to sit on a pile of cash while management looks for a transactio­n to use it on,” he said, shooting down questions from analysts about whether Kinder Morgan Canada could acquire other assets.

The picture is much clearer for the Houston-based parent, which has been taking steps to reduce debt. The sale of Trans Mountain is expected to reduce indebtedne­ss by another US$2 billion.

“We intend to use KMI’s share of the proceeds generated from the sale of the Trans Mountain pipeline for $4.5 billion (Canadian) to pay down debt,” Kinder Morgan founder and executive chairman Rich Kinder said, referring to the parent by its stock ticker, KMI.

Both Kinder and Keane said they were pleased with the deal and outlined growth projects the firm planned to undertake in Texas.

In the months leading up to the deal, Kean had repeatedly said Kinder Morgan needed assistance from the federal government for the expansion, given opposition from the NDP government in B.C., which had implemente­d additional regulation­s aimed at halting the expansion.

Since Ottawa purchased the project, lawyers for Trans Mountain have requested a larger injunction zone around its work sites and the company has announced constructi­on would begin in Alberta in August and in B.C. in September.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada