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Candax Energy Inc CXEYF



GREY:CXEYF - Post by User

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Post by pwade0821on Oct 23, 2009 1:04pm
304 Views
Post# 16417772

sure wish we were a part of this

sure wish we were a part of this

Canada's oil patch, mines tempt Asian giants

Thu Oct 22, 2009 6:15pm EDT

CALGARY/TORONTO (Reuters) - Canada's energy and mining sectors are riding a wave of acquisitions by Asian companies that are flush with cash and hungry for resources to fuel rapidly expanding economies, a trend not expected to let up soon.

Deals such as Korea National Oil Corp's C$1.8 billion ($1.7 billion) bid for Harvest Energy Trust (HTE_u.TO) on Thursday are aided by difficulties some Canadian companies have in funding their operations because of the financial crisis.

"We've been saying that the sectors which are the most susceptible to such M&A are the resource and energy sectors, and I still believe this to be the case," said Alain Auclair, head of investment banking for UBS Securities Canada.

"You still see the Asian countries with access to capital or strong balance sheets that can deploy cash quickly to seize opportunities.

"I think it's a trend that we're going to keep seeing, especially for companies who might be under pressure from a balance sheet perspective."

That is the case with debt-heavy Harvest, known for its Western Canadian oil and gas operations and a refinery on the East Coast, one it could not afford to expand by itself.

Last week, China's No. 2 nickel miner, Jilin Jien Nickel Industry (600432.SS), and Canada's Goldbrook Ventures (GBK.V) offered to buy mining developer Canadian Royalties Inc (CZZ.TO) for nearly C$200 million to help feed China's appetite for metals.

The number of such deals will only increase as China, Korea and other Asian nations seek to own the production of resources such as nickel or oil, instead of having to buy them on international markets.

South Korea, for example, aims to pump 300,000 barrels of oil a day by 2012 as it expands its manufacturing economy. It is currently the world's fifth-largest oil importer.

In August, state-owned PetroChina paid C$1.9 billion for a 60 percent stake in two planned oil sands projects owned by Athabasca Oil Corp. That was China's largest Canadian oil acquisition to date.

The deal helped fuel the shares of small developers such as Opti Canada Inc (OPC.TO) and UTS Energy Corp (UTS.TO), as investors wagered they might be the next to be absorbed by the Asian wave. Both are minority partners in large projects in Western Canada.

CASH IS KING

At a time when publicly traded businesses are struggling under the weight of a global economic crisis, state-owned oil companies can deploy cash for multibillion-dollar projects without having to seek shareholder approval.

"They couldn't care less about the balance of this year, or next year, even the year after," FirstEnergy Capital Corp analyst William Lacey said. "They're looking at the next 10-20 years, and the internal demands and they are going to meet those demands."

Bob Schulz, a professor of strategy and global management at the University of Calgary's Haskayne School of Business, said big, but not blockbuster deals will continue to be the order of the day in Canada's oil patch.

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