The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Total to buy Maersk O&G unit

French company will also assume US$2.5bil of debt

-

PARIS: Total SA has agreed to buy the oil and gas unit of A.P. Moller-Maersk A/S for US$4.95bil, another sign that the pace of deals in the energy sector is accelerati­ng after a long downturn.

Maersk will receive a considerat­ion of US$4.95bil in Total shares and the French company will also assume US$2.5bil of Maersk’s debt, the companies said in statements yesterday. The transactio­n is expected to close in first quarter 2018.

“The combinatio­n with Maersk Oil offers Total an exceptiona­l overlap of upstream businesses globally which will enhance Total’s competitiv­eness and value in many core areas, in particular through some high-quality growing assets,” Total said in its statement.

Total’s chief executive officer Patrick Pouyanne said last month he was ready and able to make acquisitio­ns and grow production, taking advantage of a plunge in the cost of drilling rigs and other equipment during the three-year industry downturn.

Earlier this year, he agreed to purchase stakes in a project in Uganda from Tullow Oil Plc for US$900mil and said yes to a US$2.2bil deal to buy into Brazilian oil fields and infrastruc­ture.

Energy deals have picked up pace more broadly in recent months, as the industry puts the worst of the slump behind it. In offshore drilling, Transocean Ltd’s US$3.4bil acquisitio­n of Songa Offshore this month was interprete­d as a signal that market is bottoming out. Major oil companies have tended to be sellers, with BP Plc offloading assets including a US$1.7bil stake in a Chinese petrochemi­cal venture and Royal Dutch Shell Plc exiting its Irish venture for US$1.2bil.

Total will issue to A.P. Moller Maersk 97.5 million shares, based on the average Total share price on the 20 business days prior to Aug 21. That will represent 3.75% of the enlarged share capital of Total.

There is still cause for caution. Crude oil prices remain stuck at about US$50 a barrel – half the level three years ago – and some notable traders see the the outlook for 2018 weakening.

Total and its European peers can cover spending from cash flow at current prices, but a fresh slump could put dividends at risk, and investors know it.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia