Dec. 8 (Bloomberg) -- Canadas oilsands miners,
developing the largest reserves outside Saudi
Arabia, are being roiled by takeover speculation
after the 72 percent drop in crude prices delayed
projects and ruined the outlook for profits.
Nexen Inc. and Opti Canada Inc., owners of the Long
Lake oilsands mine in Alberta, soared as much as 53
percent last week on the Toronto Stock Exchange
after the Financial Times said Frances Total SA
planned a C$19.7 billion ($15.4 billion) offer for
Nexen. Both retreated more than 10 percent a day
later when the Times of London said Total wont bid.
Theres a risk youll see these companies go,
said John Stephenson, who helps to oversee about
$1.5 billion, including Nexen and Opti shares, at
First Asset Investment Management Inc. in Toronto.
Theyre pretty much on bended knees at this point.
The commodity is so much weaker now that it builds
the case for takeovers.
Companies from Royal Dutch Shell Plc to Suncor
Energy Inc. are putting projects on hold after oil
slid more than $106 a barrel as recessions in the
U.S., Europe and Japan cut energy demand. Crude
under $95 a barrel makes it unprofitable to develop
oilsands, in which bitumen dug from mines or coaxed
from the ground using steam is turned into oil,
according to Ryan Todd, an analyst for Deutsche
Bank AG in New York.
An equal-weighted index of four oilsands developers
--Opti, Nexen, UTS Energy Corp. and Petro-Canada --
dropped 77 percent this year, compared with a
decline of 38 percent in the Standard & Poors/TSX
Composite Index, and a 39 percent retreat in a
broader gauge of Canadian energy producers.
No Cash
Opti lost 88 percent in 2008 to C$1.95 after
delaying expansion of the C$6.1 billion Long Lake
mine, saying it doesnt have enough cash. UTS, an
investor in the C$25.3 billion Fort Hills, Alberta,
project, became a penny stock, slipping from C$6.09
in May, while partner Petro-Canada retreated as
much as 65 percent from its peak that month.
Nexen fell to its cheapest valuation on Oct. 10,
when the shares traded for 3.2 times earnings over
the previous 12 months. Thats 80 percent below the
average price-to-earnings ratio over the past five
years. Larger rival Suncor fell to 5.6 times
earnings on Nov. 20, versus a five-year average of 23.
Its an opportunistic way to get in if you want to
grow production and reserves, said Gareth Watson,
who helps manage about $46 billion as associate
director at ScotiaMcLeods portfolio advisory group
in Toronto. The stocks are cheap on a historical
basis. But its a timing issue. It depends on how
long the recession will be and what oil prices do.
Albertas tar-soaked sands may hold 173 billion
barrels of oil, enough to supply the U.S. for about
24 years, according to the Canadian Center for the
Study of Living Standards, an economic research
firm based in Ottawa.
Fast Start
UTS, Petro-Canada, Opti and Nexen benefited from
the surge in oil prices earlier this year, rising
an average 24 percent through June, compared with a
4.6 percent gain in the S&P/TSX and a 22 percent
advance in Canadian energy stocks, according to
data compiled by Bloomberg.
As crude retreated, producers such as Royal Dutch
Shell, based in The Hague, delayed decisions on
oilsands development, while Suncor cut its 2009
capital budget by a third.
Suncor decreased 57 percent this year, while
Canadian Oil Sands Trust, lead owner in Syncrude
Canada Ltd., the biggest oilsands producer, is down
43 percent after reducing its dividend in October.
Both companies are based in Calgary.
Costs Rise
Petro-Canada, also based in Calgary, raised the
cost estimate for its Fort Hills project by more
than half in September. Last month, it deferred
until 2009 a final decision on the development,
which it began when oil was trading above $80 a
barrel. The company has already spent $1 billion on
Fort Hills.
UTS trades at 82 cents, valuing it at C$389
million. The Calgary-based company must raise about
$3 billion for Fort Hills, according to Andrew
Potter, a UBS AG analyst in Calgary.
One of the problems is how do you raise capital,
said First Assets Stephenson. The smaller pieces
are logical candidates for being taken out.
Calgary-based Nexen surged as much as 33 percent to
C$29.10 Dec. 2 after the Financial Times reported
that Paris-based Total may bid C$38 a share. It
fell as much as 24 percent, its steepest intraday
drop in 21 years, a day later. Opti Canada rose
more than 40 percent two days in a row in November.
Longer-term, these assets are good, said Francois
Bourdon, who helps oversee about $14 billion as a
senior portfolio manager at Fiera Capital Inc. in
Montreal. In the short run, the price of oil and
the lack of available credit make these assets too
expensive.