Saskatoon StarPhoenix

THE TRANS MOUNTAIN RULING DELAYING THE PIPELINE IS RAISING INVESTORS’ FRUSTRATIO­NS OVER CANADA’S SEEMINGLY UNPREDICTA­BLE REGULATORY REGIME, OBSERVERS SAY. ‘THE TIDE OF INVESTMENT HAS RECEDED.’

RULING CASTS CLOUD OVER CANADIAN PROJECTS

- Jesse snyder in Ottawa jnsyder@postmedia.com

Observers say fresh obstacles to building the Trans Mountain expansion project raise new alarms over Canada’s seemingly unpredicta­ble regulatory regime, threatenin­g to scare off would-be investors in the U.S. and elsewhere.

The Federal Court of Appeal decision effectivel­y overruled cabinet’s approval of the pipeline in 2016. The decision compels the national energy regulator to repeat a portion of its consultati­on process, halting constructi­on and setting back the timeline for the project.

It follows earlier regulatory delays that have hobbled Transmount­ain and other proposed pipelines in Canada, including Enbridge Inc.’s Northern Gateway pipeline project, straining the patience of foreign investors.

“Investors are beginning to say enough is enough,” said Jeremy Mccrae, analyst at Raymond James in Calgary. “The ruling is clearly negative. There was always an overtone of U.S. investors in particular saying Canada’s regulatory regime is hard to work with.”

Christophe­r Ragan, an economics professor at Mcgill University and chair of Canada’s Ecofiscal Commission, said investors are “one notch less likely to commit capital toward large-scale investment in Canada” following the decision. “My general view is that this will be interprete­d, rightly or wrongly, as yet another regulatory hurdle that can cause trouble for major projects,” he said.

Most oil-weighted Canadian energy stocks fell on the news. MEG Energy Corp. dropped nearly four per cent to just over $8 per share by market close, while Cenovus Energy Inc. fell nearly two per cent. Integrated oilsands giant Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. saw a 1.2 per cent drop, while rival Suncor Energy Inc. rose 0.6 per cent.

Energy economist Peter Tertzakian said there has been a general falloff in both debt and equity raised by Canadian firms, due partly to the collapse of oil prices in 2014, as well as the layering effect of pipeline constraint­s and regulatory uncertaint­y.

“The general trend is that the tide of investment has receded in Canada,” he said. “On equity raises this year the run rate has been almost zero.”

Total debt and equity financing by Canadian oil and gas companies typically average around $3 billion per quarter, according to ARC Energy Research Institute data, but have fallen to nearly zero in recent quarters.

Scotiabank chief economist Jean-françois Perrault said the decision will “complicate the investment climate” for any potential investors mulling a position in Canadian energy firms.

“Obviously it’s a pretty disappoint­ing result — there’s a fair amount of uncertaint­y as to how the government proceeds from here,” he said.

However, Perrault also pushed back against claims that foreign direct investment into Canada more generally has suffered as a result of a lack of competitiv­eness compared to the U.S., or due to an unreliable regulatory regime in Canada.

Direct investment in Canada totalled $11.7 billion in the second quarter, primarily in the form of equity instrument­s, according to Statistics Canada.

“More than half of the direct investment activity was in the manufactur­ing sector. As a result, foreign direct investment generated a net outflow of funds from the economy of $10 billion in the second quarter,” the agency said in a report Wednesday.

Foreign investors also added $917 million of Canadian equities to their holdings, the lowest investment since the third quarter of 2015. Foreign investment in Canadian shares have totalled $6.7 billion since the beginning of 2018, compared with $47.1 billion over the two first quarters of 2017, according to Statscan.

Politician­s and various business associatio­ns sounded off on the Federal Court’s ruling Thursday, saying it threatened to leave Canadian taxpayers footing the bill for the long-delayed pipeline. Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd. shareholde­rs voted on Thursday to sell existing Trans Mountain assets to the Canadian government for $4.5 billion. Constructi­on of the pipeline could cost another $6 billion to $8 billion, according to analysts.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Coldwater Indian band Chief Lee Spahan raises an eagle feather in Vancouver after responding to a Federal Court of Appeal ruling Thursday that stalled the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion.
DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS Coldwater Indian band Chief Lee Spahan raises an eagle feather in Vancouver after responding to a Federal Court of Appeal ruling Thursday that stalled the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion.
 ?? CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Finance Minister Bill Morneau affirmed that the government remains “committed” to the Trans Mountain pipeline purchase.
CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS Finance Minister Bill Morneau affirmed that the government remains “committed” to the Trans Mountain pipeline purchase.

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