Reaction mixed to CNOOC bid By Xie Ye and Wang Ying (China Daily) Updated: 2005-06-24 08:32
The US$18.5 billion bid by China National Offshore Oil Company Limited (CNOOC
Ltd), China's No 3 oil producer, for Unocal drew mixed reactions from investors
and credit-rating firms yesterday.
Shares of CNOOC inched up by 1.2 per cent to HK$4.20 (53 US cents) in the
Hong Kong stock market yesterday, as analysts said the long-awaited offer was
better than expected.
But in London, credit-rating firm Moody's placed the company's A2 issuer
rating on review yesterday for possible downgrade. Moody's officials said they
were concerned about the huge debt CNOOC would incur to finance the merger.
"In addition, the review for downgrade reflects the considerable integration
challenges that CNOOC Ltd is expected to face in bedding down such a large
acquisition, given its lack of track record in this area," Moody's said in a
report.
CNOOC's competitor for Unocal, the ninth-largest oil firm in the United
States, is Chevron, the second-largest petroleum company in the United States.
The price of CNOOC shares in Hong Kong tumbled earlier this month when the
company announced it would counter Chevron's bid, made in April. Investors had
believed that CNOOC's offer price was too high and that Unocal, the same size as
CNOOC, is too big to swallow.
Yesterday CNOOC offered US$67 in cash per Unocal share after a marathon board
meeting on Wednesday night.
Analysts said the long-awaited offer was better than expected as the proposed
cost is "surprisingly" cheap.
The company said it would finance the acquisition with its own cash resources
of US$3 billion and with loans from its parent company, China National Offshore
Oil Corporation, and investment banks, including Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, and
the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC).
The financing cost is cheap because the interest of US$7 billion in loans
provided by the parent company could be low, said Liu Gu, an analyst with Guotai
Jun'an Securities (Hong Kong) Corp.
The deal, if it goes ahead, would increase CNOOC's revenue by roughly 122 per
cent compared with last year, according to the company's telephone press
conference yesterday.
Predictions say the merger would more than double CNOOC's oil and gas
production and increase its reserves by nearly 80 per cent to 4 billion barrels
of oil equivalent.
"Both Unocal and CNOOC are already primary Asia business. Together we will be
one of the regional leaders," CNOOC Chief Financial Officer Yang Hua said
yesterday at the presentation.
The deal will also help CNOOC to overtake Sinopec as the second-largest oil
company of any kind in China after PetroChina.
CNOOC's executives said the merger would help it achieve a more balanced oil
and gas portfolio, enabling it to reduce the risk from the fluctuation of crude
oil prices.
In return, China's fast-growing liquefied natural gas (LNG) market will allow
Unocal to accelerate the exploration and development of gas resources and
position it as a long-term supplier to the Bontang LNG plant in Indonesia, the
executives said.
"This is a superior and friendly offer to Unocal's shareholders, and we
believe they will seriously consider it," CNOOC Chairman Fu Chengyu said.
CNOOC decided not to bid for Unocal at the last minute in March, reportedly
because board members were split on whether the proposed bid was in the
company's best interests.
But Fu said the company scrapped the proposed bid in March as it needed more
evaluation time.
"Now we all believe it is a good project, and we have won unanimous support
from the board members," he said.
Meanwhile, Chevron may also raise the terms of its bid to forestall CNOOC's
move.
"The US$18.5 billion may just be a start; there will be a second round of
wrangling when CNOOC will probably lift its bid to US$20 billion," said a senior
official with PetroOverseas who declined to be named.
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