National Post (National Edition)

CRESCENT POINT TAKES $2.7B WRITEDOWN AMID ASSET SALE PUSH.

- Kevin Orland

Crescent Point Energy Corp., the Canadian oil driller that fended off an activist investor last year, wrote down the value of its assets by $2.73 billion and is putting more holdings on the block as its new chief executive officer targets core operations.

The after-tax writedown reflects the fair value of its assets, many of which were acquired during a crude rally, to account for the current environmen­t of lower prices, Calgary-based Crescent Point said Thursday. The charge doesn’t affect its available credit or its adjusted funds flow, and it isn’t related to the performanc­e of the assets, the company said.

The writedown is more than Crescent Point’s market capitaliza­tion. The shares fell 4.4 per cent to $3.90 at 2:15 p.m. in Toronto, giving the company a market value of $2.15 billion.

Chief executive Craig Bryksa has been cutting costs and refocusing Crescent Point on its core operating areas, including Saskatchew­an and Utah, after the company beat back activist investor Cation Capital’s attempt to take over its board. Crescent Point said Thursday that it has started marketing some convention­al holdings in southeast Saskatchew­an and some infrastruc­ture assets for sale.

Crescent Point was one of North America’s most acquisitiv­e oil producers during the years leading up to the plunge in global crude prices that started in 2014 and bottomed out about a year and a half later. In the five years through 2015, Crescent Point bought $6 billion in assets, including the $576.5 million purchase of Legacy Oil + Gas Inc. that provided a large chunk of its holdings in Saskatchew­an.

While Crescent Point hasn’t announced a major acquisitio­n in more than two years, a key benchmark of its

THE STREET WILL STRUGGLE TO GAIN CONFIDENCE.

cost to develop new resources came in at $23.64 a barrel in 2018, 12 per cent higher than its three-year average.

Investors will need to see the company’s new leadership make more progress on that front before they can appreciate­d its quarterly results and cash flows, said Chris Cox, an analyst at Raymond James.

“The Street will struggle to gain confidence that the company has meaningful­ly turned the corner with respect to improvemen­ts in capital efficiency,” Cox said in a note. However, “we would note that many of the improvemen­ts employed under the new leadership were not fully implemente­d until later in the year.”

Crescent Point had slid 5.7 per cent this year through Wednesday, compared with a 15 per cent gain for the S&P/ TSX Energy Index.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada