Waterloo Region Record

Enbridge sweetens deal with Spectra Energy

- DAN HEALING

CALGARY — Enbridge Inc. is sweetening its offer to buy all the units in Spectra Energy Partners LP it doesn’t already own, raising its proposed share exchange ratio by almost 10 per cent in the all-shares transactio­n valued at $4.3 billion.

The move, which was expected by some analysts following a U.S. regulator’s final tax policy ruling in July, means that holders of the 17 per cent of Spectra not owned by Enbridge will receive 1.111 Enbridge shares for each common unit, up from 1.0123 shares per unit offered in May.

Spectra shares rose by as much as 4.6 per cent on the New York Stock Exchange to US$39.62 on Friday morning while Enbridge fell by as much as 2.4 per cent to $45.99 on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

“We view this as a positive step towards reducing corporate complexity, but note there will be marginal dilution from the transactio­n ... as the increased offer is somewhat offset by eliminatio­n of distributi­ons to the 17 per cent noncontrol­ling interest,” said analysts with Tudor Pickering Holt & Co. in a report.

As Enbridge owns 83 per cent of Spectra’s shares, it already has the two-thirds majority required for unitholder approval of the transactio­n, which is expected to close in the fourth quarter.

It said the revised deal has unanimous support of a conflicts committee appointed by the separate Spectra board of directors.

In May, Calgary-based Enbridge launched an initiative to buy back all of its pipeline subsidiari­es in the United States with shares worth $11.4 billion at the time, citing a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission decision in March to end certain tax loopholes they enjoyed.

American pipeline rivals The Williams Cos. and Cheniere Energy Inc. launched similar multibilli­on-dollar offers for their subsidiari­es at the same time.

In 2016, a U.S. Appeals Court ruled that energy regulators were allowing master limited partnershi­ps (MLPs) to benefit from a “double recovery” of taxes. MLPs are tax-exempt corporate structures in the United States that pay their profits to investors in dividend-style distributi­ons.

Enbridge said the decision hurt its subsidiari­es by cutting into their distributa­ble cash flow. It also weakened their credit worthiness and ability to raise money from investors, a process that fuels “dropdowns” of assets from Enbridge Inc. in return for cash to support.

Enbridge proposed separate all-share offers with the boards of Spectra Energy, Enbridge Energy Partners, L.P., Enbridge Energy Management, L.L.C. and Enbridge Income Fund Holdings Inc.

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