Enbridge gets boost from $1.5B share sale
Enbridge Inc., North America’s largest pipeline operator, posted its biggest stock surge in almost two years after a share sale and lowered dividend-growth forecast eased concerns about its ability to finance new projects.
The stock advanced as much as 8.3 per cent on Thursday in Toronto, the largest intraday gain since January, 2016, before slipping back. It ended the day at $ 48.65, up 6.3 per cent. Calgary-based Enbridge had slid 19 per cent this year, compared with a 13- per- cent decline for the S&P/TSX energy index.
The gain comes a day after Enbridge announced plans to raise about $ 1.5 billion in a private share sale to pay down short- term debt and divest about $10 billion in non-core assets. The company also tempered its forecast for dividend growth to a rate of 10 per cent a year through 2020, down from earlier projections for 10 per cent to 12 per cent.
The moves helped alleviate concerns about Enbridge’s ability to maintain a strong balance sheet amid $ 22 billion in spending on capital projects through 2020.
While analysts said the dividend change was a slight negative, investors had been bracing for a steeper cut after the company declined to comment on its payout policy during its third-quarter earnings call.
“We view this as a prudent, yet difficult decision,” Ian Gillies at GMP FirstEnergy said in a note Thursday. “Investor focus can now return to Enbridge’s significant capital program and execution of its business plan.”
Gillies upgraded the stock to buy from hold, and raised his target to $58 from $54.
With its US$ 28- billion acquisition of U. S. natural gas distributor Spectra Energy Corp. completed earlier this year, Enbridge now says it will concentrate on oil pipelines, gas pipelines and gas utilities. The sharper focus will result in Enbridge selling off at least $ 3 billion in onshore renewables and unregulated gas midstream assets in 2018.
For its stock sale, three large institutional investors will buy about 33.5 million Enbridge shares for $44.84 apiece, according to a statement Wednesday, representing a 3.5-per-cent discount to Tuesday’s closing price.
Among the company’s future projects is its US$6.5-billion Line 3 replacement, its biggest yet, which seeks to upgrade an aging oil pipeline from Hardisty, Alta., to Superior, Wisc., Reuters said in a report.