Regina Leader-Post

SNC stock shoots up after criminal charges settled

- GABRIEL FRIEDMAN

TORONTO Snc-lavalin Group Inc. shares jumped the most in 11 years after settling a fraud charge related to bribes it paid in Libya a decade ago, a clear sign the fortunes of the Montreal-based engineerin­g and constructi­on firm are turning after a tumultuous year.

Snc-lavalin Constructi­on, a unit of the Montreal-based firm, pleaded guilty to fraud and agreed to pay a $280-million fine over five years, while accepting a three-year probation order. Charges against the parent SNC and its internatio­nal marketing arm were dropped.

SNC shares jumped the most since 2008 after a trading halt was lifted. They ended the day at $28.70, up $4.58 or 19 per cent, in Toronto.

In a statement the company said while the guilty plea could lead to some risks, it does not anticipate any long-term material adverse impact.

SNC predicted it would not be debarred from bidding on federal contracts, and noted that Snc-lavalin Constructi­on Inc., the subsidiary that pleaded guilty, has not bid on any contracts since 2015.

“This is a game-changer,” Snc-lavalin chief executive Ian Edwards said in a statement, “... and finally allows us to put this issue behind us. I apologize for this past misconduct and welcome the opportunit­y to move forward.”

Across the country, Snc-lavalin is still working on some of the biggest transit projects including light rail projects in Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal, as well as hydroelect­ric, nuclear, wind and other energy projects, and any ban on obtaining new work could have an impact.

While SNC is set to pay one of the largest corporate fines in Canadian history, the resolution is in line with many analysts’ expectatio­ns. Indeed, Bay Street has remained bullish on the stock even as it sank 70 per cent since mid-2018 amid uncertaint­y connected to its criminal case, and a series of missteps and problems in its businesses.

Derek Spronck, an analyst with RBC Dominion Securities, on Wednesday kept his $37.50 price target on the company, far above its current share price.

“The settlement clears the way for Snc-lavalin to finally put behind them past issues and focus on the new strategic direction of the company, which we view as a positive,” Spronck wrote. “The fine is within our expectatio­ns, it appears Snc-lavalin remains in a position to continue to bid on Canadian Government funded contracts, and we think the Sncl-services division is wholly undervalue­d.”

Maxim Sytchev, an analyst with National Bank of Canada Financial Markets, said the deal lifted a “legal overhang” on the stock and signalled that SNC is “no longer a pariah.”

“In all instances, the reported $280 million fine (and) a threeyear probation versus the feared outright ban on public work is far removed from the worst-case scenarios that have floated around the company,” Sytchev wrote, putting a $32-price target on the company.

In recent months, some analysts had noted the company appeared to have turned the page under Edwards, who took over as interim CEO in October and has been pushing plans to de-risk its business model.

 ?? CARLO ALLEGRI/REUTERS ?? SNC doesn’t expect to be banned from federal contract bids. It will pay a $280-million fine as part of its fraud plea.
CARLO ALLEGRI/REUTERS SNC doesn’t expect to be banned from federal contract bids. It will pay a $280-million fine as part of its fraud plea.

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