Shell challenges Exxon dominance with $70bn bid for BG

Semiu Salami
Semiu Salami
Ben van Beurden (L), chief executive officer of Royal Dutch Shell, shakes hand with Andrew Gould, chairman of the BG Group, during a news conference at the London Stock Exchange, April 8, 2015. Courtesy of Reuters

Royal Dutch Shell has agreed to buy smaller rival BG Group (BG.L) for 47 billion pounds ($70.2 billion) in the first major energy industry merger in more than a decade, closing the gap on market leader U.S. ExxonMobil (XOM.N) after a plunge in prices.

Anglo-Dutch Shell will pay a mix of cash and shares that values each BG share at around 1,350 pence, the companies said.

This is a hefty premium of around 52 percent to the 90-day trading average for BG, setting the bar high for any potential counter-bid by a company like Exxon, which has said it would also use the oil markets downturn to expand.

The third-biggest oil and gas deal ever by enterprise value will bring Shell assets in Brazil, East Africa, Australia, Kazakhstan and Egypt, including some of the world’s most ambitious liquefied natural gas (LNG) projects.

Shell is already the world’s leading LNG company and it would get BG’s capacity in LNG logistics — complex infrastructure that includes terminals, pipelines, specialized tankers, rigs, super coolers, regasification facilities and storage points.

“We are seeing a gasification of energy demand. Shell clearly recognize this,” said Richard Gorry, director at JBC Energy Asia.

“That said, Shell is still taking a big gamble because if the price of oil and gas doesn’t go back up (in the next 24 months), I would imagine this might put them in a difficult position in terms of cash flow.”

Shell said on Wednesday the deal would boost its proven oil and gas reserves by 25 percent.

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