Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Foreign investment rules hurt junior oil sands companies

- BY LAUREN KRUGEL

CALGARY • Rules imposed on foreign state-owned investment in the oil sands are having some unintended consequenc­es, says a new study by the University of Calgary’s School of Public Policy.

The report analyzes share prices of oil sands companies since the regulation­s were announced in December 2012. That’s when the Harper government approved Chineseown­ed CNOOC Ltd.’s $15-billion takeover of Calgary- based Nexen Inc., but imposed limitation­s on further ownership of oil sands resources by state-owned firms.

“The findings of this paper indicate the federal government’s policy change has resulted in the material destructio­n of shareholde­r wealth,” the study’s authors write.

The biggest impact has been on junior oil sands companies, whose stocks dropped by as much as 50% in the first half of 2013, diverging greatly from where oil prices and the wider stock market were heading at the time.

“There’s a significan­t cost and that cost is borne disproport­ionately by juniors,” Eugene Beaulieu, director of the school’s internatio­nal economics program, said in an interview.

The study was co-authored by Matthew Saunders, a senior analyst with early-stage oil sands firm Laricina Energy Ltd.

Small oil sands companies rely on outside investment to grow their operations much more than their larger counterpar­ts. Much of that financing comes from joint ventures in which a partner buys an ownership stake in a project and reaps a proportion­ate share of its returns.

In theory, those types of deals are still allowed under Ottawa’s new rules, provided the foreign stateowned entity doesn’t have control. Put in practice, that investment seems to be slowing down.

“Joint ventures and other kinds of investment­s that weren’t targeted by the policy have been affected,”

Uncertaint­y

creates consequenc­es for investment

said Mr. Beaulieu. “It wasn’t intended by the policy, but it seems to be having that effect.”

Mr. Beaulieu said he understand­s the need for the Investment Canada Act to address concerns about foreign ownership of Canadian resources. But a lack of clarity over how those restrictio­ns are applied is scaring away investment.

“That uncertaint­y creates consequenc­es for the investment climate,” he said.

“We have to have transparen­t and clear rules on how it operates and I think targeting ownership instead of targeting behaviour is not the right approach.”

Citing figures from the Canadian Energy Research Institute, the study’s authors say about $100-billion in investment will be needed in the oil sands over the next five years.

 ?? COURTESY OF NEXEN ?? Nexen’s purchase by CNOOC and subsequent government restrictio­ns on foreign investment in the oil sands have had unexpected results,
a new study finds.
COURTESY OF NEXEN Nexen’s purchase by CNOOC and subsequent government restrictio­ns on foreign investment in the oil sands have had unexpected results, a new study finds.

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