Sinopec to buy Canada's Daylight for $2b
Updated: 2011-10-10 10:44
(Agencies)
|
|||||||||||
Canadian oil and gas explorer Daylight Energy Ltd said on Oct 9 it has agreed to be acquired by China's Sinopec International Petroleum Exploration and Production Corp (SIPEPC)?for about C$2.2 billion ($2.1 billion).
The deal for Calgary, Alberta-based Daylight is for C$10.08 per share. That is more than double the closing price of Daylight's closing price of C$4.59 on Oct 7, but the company noted it is only a 43.6 percent premium over the 60-day weighted average trading price.
SIPEPC is a subsidiary of China Petrochemical Corp and undertakes overseas investments and operations in the upstream oil and gas sector, Daylight said in its release announcing the deal.
The purchase "recognizes the highly attractive asset portfolio and exceptional team that we have assembled at Daylight," Daylight Chief Executive Officer Anthony Lambert said in a statement.
A combination of falling oil prices and debt levels has hit Canadian oil and gas shares in recent months as investors fret that growth prospects are shriveling.
The transaction would mark the latest energy sector deal between China and Canada. In July, China's top offshore oil producer, CNOOC Ltd agreed to buy struggling Opti Canada Inc for $34 million and $2 billion in debt.
But this deal could be large enough to face review under the Investment Canada Act, which must determine if foreign purchases of domestic firms are of net benefit to Canada.
Related Stories
Sinopec finds deep natural gas field in Sichuan 2011-09-17 16:43
Credit tightening hits Sinopec debt 2011-09-14 09:54
Sinopec eyes unconventional oil & gas capacity 2011-09-08 13:56
Sinopec says H1 net profits up 12% 2011-08-29 10:49
- 'Crash' train line back to normal
- China IPOs shrink 40% in Jan-Sept amid bear market
- Xinjiang gets more support in policy
- Rules tightened over banks' products
- Agriculture faces a growing problem
- Environmental rule set to shift
- NAO audits China's top three steel firms
- Beijing residents think consumer prices too high