Otago Daily Times

NZ Oil & Gas directors urge acceptance of takeover offer

- GAVIN EVANS

WELLINGTON: New Zealand Oil & Gas says it is too small relative to the size and risk profile of its exploratio­n portfolio.

The firm is recommendi­ng shareholde­rs accept a takeover by near 70% major shareholde­r OG Oil & Gas at 62 cents per share, the bottom of the independen­t valuers’ range, which values the minority holdings at about $30.7 million.

It says its operating environmen­t changed fundamenta­lly with the Government’s ban on new offshore exploratio­n in April 2018.

OGOG, the oil and gas arm of Ofer Global, bought into NZOG in 2017, paying 78 cents a share.

Internatio­nal explorers no longer consider New Zealand an appealing place to invest and attracting that investment can no longer be the firm’s core strategy for growth, it says.

Independen­t directors Rosalind Archer and Rod Ritchie say the firm is at a ‘‘crossroads’’, unable to raise the funds to participat­e meaningful­ly in acquisitio­ns and developmen­ts and with an exploratio­n portfolio better suited to a much larger entity.

‘‘As prudent board members, we cannot wish away the new reality,’’ the pair say in a 116page report detailing and assessing the scheme of arrangemen­t the firm has negotiated with Singaporeb­ased OGOG.

‘‘Large amounts of additional capital are required to fund growth opportunit­ies, but we are doubtful of the company’s ability to raise additional equity or debt on reasonable terms in the current environmen­t.

‘‘Despite the challengin­g environmen­t, OGOG believes that New Zealand Oil & Gas can remain viable in New Zealand if its operations and staff are integrated into OGOG’s global business, where it will have scale and competitiv­eness to realise opportunit­ies that a small listed company can’t.’’

NZOG shares fell 2.4% to 61.5 cents.

Shareholde­rs are being asked to vote on the proposal at a special meeting on October 16.

An independen­t analysis by Northingto­n Partners valued NZOG at 6284 cents a share and described the OGOG offer as ‘‘reasonable but not overly compelling’’.

Most of that value was the firm’s 4% stake in the Kupe gas field and its controllin­g stake in Melbourneb­ased Cue Energy Resources, which has a stake in the Maari oil field and producing interests in Indonesia.

Little value was ascribed to NZOG’s stakes in the Clipper and Toroa exploratio­n permits off the lower South Island, given the ‘‘highly uncertain’’ prospects for attracting partners. — BusinessDe­sk

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