The Star Early Edition

Halliburto­n aims to cut costs after takeover

Shares drop by 11 percent

- Tara Lachapelle

OF ALL the mega-mergers announced this year, Halliburto­n’s $35 billion (R338bn) takeover of Baker Hughes is promising the most aggressive cost cuts.

Halliburto­n, an oilfield services provider, says it can slash $2bn after acquiring its similarsiz­ed rival. That is the biggest estimate of any deal valued at $20bn or more that has been announced this year, according to Bloomberg data. Even deals twice its size – such as Comcas’s purchase of Time Warner Cable and Actavis’s merger with Allergan – are projecting fewer synergies.

The term synergies is investment banking jargon for how much money can be saved from firing people with overlappin­g responsibi­lities and eliminatin­g other redundanci­es that come from combining two businesses.

Halliburto­n shareholde­rs are not yet convinced that its estimate is feasible. They dumped the stock on Monday, resulting in a 11 percent drop in the price. The decline, which also reflected regulatory concerns and an unusually large break-up fee, is an anomaly in a year when most acquirers have surged alongside their targets. “These synergies are aspiration­s which can turn into justificat­ions for the deal price,” said Erik Gordon, a business professor at the University of Michigan. “Then you get the deal closed and see what you really can do without destroying your company.”

For Halliburto­n and Baker Hughes, “some part of that $2bn will be a hard number that they know they can do, and the other part is an aspiration­al guess”.

Investors tended to be more forgiving when companies did not fully achieve synergy projection­s than when they missed earnings estimates, Gordon said.

Still, the challenge was that synergies became more important and much harder to get during a downturn in a cyclical industry such as oil, he said.

Halliburto­n and Baker Hughes are merging amid plunging crude prices, which have dropped to a more than four-year low.

The deal eliminates one of Halliburto­n’s chief rivals, creating a more formidable competitor against market leader Schlumberg­er. Halliburto­n also will gain access to Baker Hughes’ technology to boost production in ageing wells and its prized oil-tools business.

Halliburto­n said much of the $2bn of annual cost synergies would come from operationa­l improvemen­ts and reorganisi­ng personnel, as well as eliminatin­g overhead and other fixed costs. Chief financial officer Mark McCollum called it a “conservati­ve estimate” and suggested there could be more should regulators go easy on them in terms of necessary divestitur­es.

Even so, shareholde­rs are hedging the risks. Halliburto­n and Baker Hughes had a combined market value of $72.6bn at the end of last week, before the merger was officially announced and the terms were disclosed. – Bloomberg

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? A Halliburto­n worker makes notes while standing next to trucks at an Anadarko Petroleum Corporatio­n. The company’s merger with Baker Hughes may enable it to slash as much as $2bn of costs.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG A Halliburto­n worker makes notes while standing next to trucks at an Anadarko Petroleum Corporatio­n. The company’s merger with Baker Hughes may enable it to slash as much as $2bn of costs.

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