Calgary Herald

Precision seeks $20M break fee from Trinidad bid

Ensign set to take over after revealing 56% of shareholde­rs backed its offer

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

Precision Drilling Corp. is no longer playing the role of white knight in Trinidad Drilling Ltd.’s bid to fend off a hostile takeover offer, and the would-be rescuer is demanding $20 million from its smaller rival.

Precision announced Tuesday it was terminatin­g its all-share agreement to buy Trinidad after Ensign Energy Services Inc. revealed that 56 per cent of Trinidad shareholde­rs supported its unsolicite­d all-cash offer for the company.

Precision’s decision to terminate its friendly offer signals the end of a power struggle with Ensign — Canada’s two largest drillers and longtime competitor­s — for control of heavily indebted Trinidad.

Ensign made a hostile offer for control of Trinidad in August, offering $1.68 per share in a deal valued at $947 million.

When Precision and Trinidad jointly announced a negotiated all-share deal on Oct. 5, the value of that new deal was $1 billion, slightly higher than Ensign’s unsolicite­d bid.

But Precision’s shares have fallen sharply since the beginning of October — sliding 28 per cent from $4.30 each on Oct. 5 to a low of $3.10 per share on Oct. 29. Precision’s shares have since recovered slightly to $3.31 per share on Tuesday.

Still, the precipitou­s slide caused the value of Precision’s offer to dip below Ensign’s cash offer and in the end, the cash offer prevailed.

While the battle for control of Trinidad is over, Precision’s announceme­nt sets up a potential new fight with Ensign over a $20-million break fee.

Precision said in a release that “payment of the terminatio­n fee in the amount of $20,000,000 is now due and payable to Precision in accordance with the arrangemen­t agreement.”

Ensign declined to comment on the break fee Tuesday. The company had previously described it as a “coercive” tactic implemente­d to ensure Ensign’s offer failed and that the break fee “benefits Precision shareholde­rs at the expense of (Trinidad) shareholde­rs.”

Regardless, Ensign is now “well on its way to beating out Precision,” Citi Research analyst J.B. Lowe said in a research note. He added that Ensign already owned 10 per cent of Trinidad’s shares, meaning that it has two-thirds support for its offer.

While Precision may have been beaten by Ensign on the deal, the company may rebound from the 23-per-cent decline in its share price since its Trinidad offer.

Lowe said that Precision shares would likely rise in the near term following the announceme­nt because the company’s stock price decline in recent months “was due to fears (Precision) would lift its bid.”

Precision did not respond to a request for comment.

 ?? ALAN ROGERS/AP/CASPER STAR-TRIBUNE FILES ?? Workers join sections of pipe on a Trinidad natural gas drilling rig in Converse County in Wyoming. Precision has terminated its friendly offer for heavily indebted Trinidad on Tuesday, ending a power struggle with its drilling rival Ensign.
ALAN ROGERS/AP/CASPER STAR-TRIBUNE FILES Workers join sections of pipe on a Trinidad natural gas drilling rig in Converse County in Wyoming. Precision has terminated its friendly offer for heavily indebted Trinidad on Tuesday, ending a power struggle with its drilling rival Ensign.

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