Snc-lavalin to sell oil and gas unit, end global energy ambitions
• Snc-lavalin Group Inc. agreed to sell its unprofitable oil and gas business to Kentech Corporate Holdings of the united Arab emirates as the Montreal-based builder sharpens its focus on project management and nuclear energy.
The deal will probably close by mid-year, SNC said Tuesday. It didn’t disclose financial terms, other than to say the transaction’s “net cash impact” is expected to be minimal.
SNC said it would book $480-million worth of provisions and writedowns of receivables in the fourth quarter after a review of outstanding litigation and commercial claims and a reassessment of expenses. SNC — which plans to unveil fourth-quarter results in the next few weeks — will push “very hard” to recover extra costs associated with the completion of Canadian fixed-cost projects such as the réseau express métropolitain in Montreal, chief executive Ian edwards said.
The asset sale closes the book on SNC’S global foray in energy services — an expansion accelerated by the 2014 acquisition of Kentz Corp. and its 14,500 employees. SNC paid about $2 billion for Kentz, which operated in 36 countries at the time, to expand in oil and gas just as crude prices were crumbling.
The deal allows SNC to “cleanly and quickly reduce our business risk” by exiting oil and gas fixed-price projects, edwards said Tuesday on a conference call with analysts. The company is also “significantly reducing delivery and warranty obligations on all outstanding contracts.”
under the terms of the transaction, Kentech will take over SNC’S $745-million oil and gas backlog and the unit’s 7,100 employees, the CEO said. edwards had disclosed in late 2019 that the company was mulling options for the resources business.
SNC shares rose about 10 per cent to $24.99 in late morning trading on the Toronto Stock exchange. The stock has dropped about 24 per cent in the past year.
Fourth-quarter results will include $90 million in charges because productivity continues to be affected by COVID-19, edwards said. SNC will also book a $95-million charge on its remaining resources business.
Lockdowns in Quebec and Ontario “are restricting the amount of people we can get to the projects,” the CEO said. Productivity is also being affected by contact tracing, which is forcing some workers to isolate and miss work, he said.
“This lockdown is definitely going to go into the spring,” edwards said. “but really beyond the summer, we’re assuming that things largely get back to normal.”
SNC on Tuesday reaffirmed a forecast calling for fourth-quarter revenue at its engineering services unit to decrease by “low- to mid-single digits” year-overyear. Adjusted profit in the business should represent somewhere between 8.5 per cent and nine per cent of revenue.
Since taking over on an interim basis in June 2019, edwards — whose appointment was made permanent four months later — has worked to reduce risk and generate more consistent earnings and cash flow by reorganizing SNC into two main lines of business and ending the practice of bidding on fixedprice construction work.
So-called lump-sum turnkey projects in resources are “the biggest source of risk for SNC,” desjardins Capital Markets analyst benoit Poirier said Tuesday.
SNC shareholders cheered Tuesday’s news. Its shares, which traded as low as $17.50 in the past 52 weeks, jumped 11.1 per cent to close at $25.31 in Toronto.
beyond the summer, we’re assuming that things largely get back to normal.