Medicine Hat News

Inter Pipeline shares jump as higher bids expected in Brookfield takeover bid

- DAN HEALING

CALGARY

A proposed hostile takeover of Inter Pipeline Ltd. by its largest shareholde­r, Brookfield Infrastruc­ture Partners LP, will likely turn into a drawn out contest with the potential for a white knight to drive up the offering price, analysts say.

On Thursday, Inter Pipeline shares jumped by as much as 34 per cent or $4.60 to $18 per share from their close Wednesday of $13.40. They’ve ranged between $5.35 and $22.10 in the past year.

“We believe the process to acquire through a tender offer can be long and offers the opportunit­y for competing bids, including white knight opportunit­ies for foreign investors or peers,” analyst Nate Heywood of ATB Capital Markets said in report.

Stifel FirstEnerg­y analyst

Ian Gillies said he expects Brookfield will likely succeed in buying Inter, but it will involve a long process and a higher bid.

In an announceme­nt Wednesday after markets closed, Brookfield said it would offer $16.50 per share in cash or 0.206 of a Brookfield Infrastruc­ture Corp. class A exchangeab­le share for the Inter shares it doesn’t already own. The maximum amount of cash available under the offer is $4.9 billion, while there is a limit of about 19 million Brookfield Infrastruc­ture shares available.

It said the price represents a 23 per cent premium to Inter’s closing price on Wednesday and a 28 per cent premium to the 30-day volume-weighted average share price.

“Brookfield Infrastruc­ture remains open to engaging directly with the company on fair and balanced terms,” it said.

“Brookfield Infrastruc­ture has made prior proposals to the company in good faith, with an objective of receiving access to confirmato­ry due diligence to support a valuation for the company above the offer, indicative­ly in the range of $17 to $18.25 per IPL share.”

On Thursday, Inter Pipeline responded that the offers made last year were rejected because they failed to recognize its value.

“Based on a comprehens­ive assessment of the conditiona­l proposals, the board informed Brookfield that they did not reflect the intrinsic value of the company and were not sufficient­ly pre-emptive to grant Brookfield exclusivit­y,” it said.

“When a formal offer is made, it will be reviewed by the board with its legal and financial advisers.”

Inter Pipeline has been criticized because of its inability to find a partner as planned to share the costs of its Heartland Petrochemi­cal Complex project now under constructi­on near Edmonton.

It said in November it expected to line up a backer in the first half of this year, a process previously expected to conclude in early 2021. The estimated cost of the complex, meanwhile, was increased to $4 billion last May from the original $3.5 billion, in part due to the affects of the pandemic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada