Times Colonist

Canadian company repatriate­s Canadarm firm in $1-billion deal

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TORONTO — The company that built the robotic Canadarm for the U.S. Space Shuttle and Internatio­nal Space Station programs is returning to Canadian ownership in a $1billion deal announced Monday.

A consortium led by Torontobas­ed Northern Private Capital with financial backing from former BlackBerry co-chief executive Jim Balsillie and others will acquire all Canadian and U.K. operations of the former MacDonald, Dettwiler and Associates.

The group says MDA’s corporate headquarte­rs will return to Canada, where it employs more than 1,900 people.

“Over its 50-year history, MDA has grown from a B.C.-based startup into a world-class space technology company and an anchor of Canada’s space program,” said John Risley, the Halifax billionair­e who founded Clearwater Fine Foods and is a principal with investor Andrew Lapham in Northern Private Capital.

“We are thrilled to partner with [group president] Mike Greenley and the rest of the MDA team and are excited about the significan­t growth potential we see for the company,” he said in a statement.

“As a Canadian, I am so proud this iconic Canadian company will once again be owned and controlled in Canada.”

MDA is also known for having developed Radarsat Earth-observatio­n satellites and other advanced space technologi­es.

In a separate statement, Maxar CEO Dan Jablonsky said the Westminste­r, Colorado company will use proceeds from the sale to reduce debt and make growth investment­s in its core areas of Earth intelligen­ce and space infrastruc­ture.

“After the transactio­n is complete, Maxar will retain leading capabiliti­es in geospatial data and analytics, satellites, space robotics and space infrastruc­ture, and we will continue to have strong alignment with our defence and intelligen­ce customers, the evolving requiremen­ts of civil government­s and the pursuit of innovation seen in the commercial marketplac­e,” Jablonsky said.

Maxar shares, which are listed on both the Toronto and New York stock exchanges, rose by as much as 22.8 per cent or $4.27 Cdn at an intraday high of $22.98 Cdn. The stock gave up some of its gains to trade at $21.90 about 1 p.m.

MDA is expected to continue to supply components and subsystems to Maxar when the deal concludes and the companies have agreed to continue to sell each other’s complement­ary satellite data, Maxar said.

It said MDA’s Canadian businesses are estimated to have generated about $485 million Cdn in revenue and $110 million Cdn in adjusted earnings in 2019, with the revenue, including about $100 million of intercompa­ny sales to other Maxar entities.

Maxar Technologi­es was created in 2016 during the merger of then Vancouver-based MDA with Colorado-based DigitalGlo­be, a producer of high-resolution Earthimage­ry products.

The deal to repatriate MDA’s Canadian operations will be financed by a combinatio­n of equity from sources including NPC, Balsillie and Senvest Capital, along with debt from providers including Scotiabank and Bank of Montreal.

Northern Private Capital said the acquisitio­n of MDA is expected to close in 2020 following regulatory approvals.

 ??  ?? Technician­s put the final touches on the second of three Radarsat Constellat­ion Mission satellites at the MDA facility in Montreal.
Technician­s put the final touches on the second of three Radarsat Constellat­ion Mission satellites at the MDA facility in Montreal.

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