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Petro-Canada calls takeover bid 'fair'; Canada Southern rejected offer, claims Arctic assets undervalued
Times & Transcript (Moncton)
Wed 31 May 2006
Page: C3
Section: Money
Byline:
Source:
Petro-Canada (TSX:PCA) said yesterday that there was "no basis" for sweetening its offer for Canada Southern Petroleum, and is seeking to block the junior company's shareholder rights plan through Alberta's securities regulator.
Petro-Canada's unsolicited $124-million bid became hostile last week when Canada Southern's board (TSX:CSW) rejected the offer, saying it did not adequately value the company's large land position in the Arctic islands, including several gas discoveries.
ButPetro-Canada rejects the notion that Canada Southern's high Arctic gas reserves are close to being economically viable.
"There's a lot of uncertainty about timing, which of course impacts on economics and therefore value of the resource", Kathy Sendall,Petro-Canada's senior vice-president of North American natural gas, said in an interview.
Along with dealing with the harsh Arctic environment, Sendall said development plans have not been determined yet, and there's currently no regulatory or fiscal regime in place.
Petro-Canada said that with only a range of historical resource estimates available, it believed the junior firm's Arctic reserves were "significantly below" the approximately 20 trillion cubic feet of gas that Canada Southern had suggested it held.
Petro-Canada also said it has already had discussions with Alberta's securities regulator to set aside a shareholder rights or "poison pill" plan recently adopted by Canada Southern, whichPetro-Canada believes restricts the rights of Canada Southern Shareholders to accept the offer.
Sendall saidPetro-Canada took its takeover offer directly to shareholders after nearly two months of negotiations "and only when it became clear that we would be unable to reconcile the differing views of value betweenPetro-Canada and Canada Southern."
Petro-Canada said its initial offer for Canada Southern on May 11 represented a 58 per cent premium over the pre-bid closing price.
The stock initially jumped more than 60 per cent on the offer, and has continued to climb. In yesterday's trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange, Canada Southern Share rose a further 11 cents to $10.11.
"I'm a bit surprised at where their shares are trading today, given all the uncertainty," said Sendall. "And we do believe that our offer is a fair one."
Late yesterday, in the escalating war of words between the two companies, Canada Southern issued its own press release pointing out that thePetro-Canada offer is now 18 per cent below its current share price.
"Moreover, thePetro-Canada offer was opportunistically timed to coincide with a short-term drop in the Canadian junior oil and gas sector generally, and Canada Southern's share price, specifically," stated chairman Richard McGinity.
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Canada Southern also said it was "premature" forPetro-Canada to be pursuing legal action to strike down its shareholder rights plan while the company searches for potential white-knight bidders.
"This is entirely consistent with the coercive nature ofPetro-Canada's conduct throughout this process," said McGinity.
"We are in active discussions with a number of interested parties about potential value-maximizing transactions."
"We will continue to pursue these discussions in the interests of our shareholders."
©2006 Times & Transcript (Moncton)
Note:
Length: 488 words
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