Shell gets deal OK

Picture: Sergei Karpukhin

Picture: Sergei Karpukhin

Published Jan 8, 2016

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Amsterdam - Royal Dutch Shell has won the backing for its takeover of BG Group from a body that advises many of its largest shareholders.

Shell’s biggest ever deal has “compelling strategic rationale” and “significant positive economics to be realised within a relatively short time frame,” Institutional Shareholder Services said in a report dated Thursday. “Support for this transaction is warranted.”

Shell is on the brink of pulling off its biggest acquisition, but oil’s collapse to less than $35 a barrel from about $55 on the day the deal was announced in April has prompted some investors to question whether the company is paying too much. The energy producer has justified the deal by saying it would boost its ability to maintain dividends, make it the world’s largest LNG producer and give it new assets from Australia to Brazil.

Thirty five of the top 50 shareholders in Shell subscribe to Institutional Shareholder Services, so a positive recommendation is akin “in our minds, to a top five shareholder publicly and vocally supporting the transaction,” Fred Ward, event-driven group managing director at Olivetree Financial, said in a report. Between 3 percent and 5 percent of Shell’s shareholder register “effectively blindly follows the recommendation of ISS,” he said.

The takeover of BG, worth $70 billion when it was announced in April, will increase Shell’s proven oil and gas reserves by 25 percent and production by 20 percent. The deal will result in $3.5 billion in operating cost savings from synergies in operations and will be strongly accretive to earnings per share by 2018, the ISS report said.

The transaction remains on track for completion early this year, Chief Executive Officer Ben van Beurden said in an interview published on Shell’s website. Shell’s shareholders are scheduled to vote on the deal on Jan. 27, with BG following the next day. Shell requires the backing of 50 percent of its holders. In BG’s case, votes in favour must represent at least 75 percent of the total value of the company’s shares.

BG’s shares rose as much as 3.3 percent and traded 3 percent higher at 965.20 pence as of 8:36 a.m. in London. The stock’s discount to Shell’s offer price narrowed to 5.9 percent on Friday compared with 9.5 percent Thursday.

BLOOMBERG

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