Thursday, December 6, 2012

CNOOC's Nexen Bid: North Sea Oil Chinese Concentration? And Waiting for Canada's New 'Net Benefit' Test Parameters

By Keith Edmund White, Editor-in-Chief

If Nexen bid is approved, would China have a worrisome extent of control over Canada's largest North Sea oil field?

Owing to the surge of interest in CUSLINexus's last post on Canada's "net benefit test" and it's impact on CNOOC's takeover bid of the Canadian energy company Nexen, readers may be interested in (1) an update on revisions to Canada's "net benefit" rule and (2) a news exclusive regarding CNOOC's Nexen bid.

What to really watch for in a new Canadian "net benefit" test

WSJ reports on suspicions that changes to Canada's "net benefit" rule test will be very similar to Austrailia's approach.  But huge missing link in the article:  whether Canada adopts an Austrailian-like "net benefit" test or keeps its own, both are basically subjective tests.   The one seemingly change:  the national security review and "net benefit" review may be combined into one process, though if they are run by two different agencies that wouldn't be a huge reform.  

Charles St-Arnaud, foreign-exchange strategist and economist at Nomura, said in the report that Canada’s new guidelines are likely to mimic Australia’s template in how that resource-rich economy judges foreign investments. The Australian criteria include: national security, which is already incorporated as part of Canada’s foreign-investment review; antitrust issues; the impact on tax revenue; jobs and a possible “fair return” for the local community; and the “character” of the investment, which is a catch-all category that considers the investor’s transparency and corporate structure.

Mr. St-Arnaud noted that Australia has a special provision governing state-owned enterprises, such as Cnooc and Petronas, in which policymakers consider whether the planned investment is of a commercial nature or done for “political or strategic objectives.” Matters that could support a SOE-led takeover in Australia include the investor’s willingness to list shares on the local stock exchange. As it happens, Cnooc promised to do just that when it unveiled its initial bid for Nexen in July.

Nomura’s suggestion that Canada might follow the Australia example comes after a Calgary think tank, the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute, warned Ottawa not to follow the path of another resource-rich nation–Mongolia–that scared off international investors when it introduced new foreign investment guidelines last spring.
Instead of obsessing over name-changes to Canada's open ended "net benefit" test, the key is to look at whether (1) the test becomes more objective and (2) if the "net benefit" test and national security review are streamlined into one test, or if fewer federal agencies are responsible for foreign takeover bid reviews.

Would Approving CNOOC's Bid for Nexen Give China to Much North Sea Oil Control? 

And, while Canada is still reviewing the CNOOC bid under its current "net benefit" test, Bloomberg obtained a briefing memo prepared for Prime Minister Harper on the Nexen bid that emphasizes the considerable amount of control China would have over Canada's North Sea oil operations.

CNOOC Ltd.’s $15.1 billion takeover of Nexen Inc. would give the Chinese company the largest stake of an oil field in the North Sea that “has increasingly influenced” global oil prices, according to a memo sent to Prime Minister Stephen Harper by Canada’s top government worker.

...

It also cites the commitments CNOOC promised at the time, including establishing Calgary as its North and Central American head office, maintaining Nexen’s employment level and management, and enhancing Nexen’s capital spending.

The memo says the bid would mean the Chinese government would own a 16 per cent share of Syncrude, Canada’s biggest oil- sands project in production, with China Petroleum and Chemical Corp., known as Sinopec, owning 9 per cent and CNOOC acquiring Nexen’s 7 per cent.
From previous reports, it still appears the Nexen bid will be approved.  But, as reported in yesterday's Montreal Gazette, Canada has no problem extending (for a third time) the review process, and it's clear Alberta's provincial government wants its voice heard in the "net benefit" review process.

No comments:

Post a Comment