BP pays $10.5 billion for BHP shale assets to beef up
U.S. business
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[July 27, 2018]
By Sonali Paul and Ron Bousso
MELBOURNE/LONDON (Reuters) - BP Plc <BP.L>
has agreed to buy U.S. shale oil and gas assets from global miner BHP
Billiton <BLT.L> <BHP.AX> for $10.5 billion, expanding the British oil
major's footprint in oil-rich onshore basins in its biggest deal in
nearly 20 years.
The acquisition marks a big turning point for BP since the Deepwater
Horizon rig disaster in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, for which the
company is still paying off more than $65 billion in penalties and
clean-up costs.
"This is a transformational acquisition for our (onshore U.S.) business,
a major step in delivering our upstream strategy and a world-class
addition to BP's distinctive portfolio," BP Chief Executive Bob Dudley
said in a statement.
In a further sign of the upturn in its fortunes, BP said it would
increase its quarterly dividend for the first time in nearly four years
and announced a $6 billion share buyback, to be partly funded by selling
some upstream assets.
BP's London-listed shares were trading 0.4 percent higher at 1000 GMT,
compared with a 0.6 percent gain in the broader European energy index <.SXEP>.
The sale ends a disastrous seven-year foray by BHP into shale on which
the company effectively blew up $19 billion of shareholders' funds.
Investors led by U.S. hedge fund Elliott Management have been pressing
the company to jettison the onshore assets for the past 18 months. BHP
put the business up for sale last August.
The sale price was better than the $8 billion to $10 billion that
analysts had expected, and investors were pleased that BHP planned to
return the proceeds to shareholders.
"It was the wrong environment to have bought the assets when they did
but this is the right market to have sold them in," said Craig Evans,
co-portfolio manager of the Tribeca Global Natural Resources Fund.
BHP first acquired shale assets in 2011 for more than $20 billion with
the takeover of Petrohawk Energy and shale gas interests from Chesapeake
Energy Corp at the peak of the oil boom. It spent a further $20 billion
developing the assets, but suffered as gas and oil prices collapsed,
triggering massive writedowns.
The world's biggest miner said it would record a further one-off shale
charge of about $2.8 billion post-tax in its 2018 financial year
results.
U.S. BOOST FOR BP
The deal, BP's biggest since it bought oil company Atlantic Richfield Co
in 1999, will increase its U.S. onshore oil and gas resources by 57
percent.
BP will acquire BHP's unit which holds the Eagle Ford, Haynesville and
Permian assets for $10.5 billion, giving it "some of the best acreage in
some of the best basins in the onshore U.S.," the company said.
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BHP Billiton Chief
Executive Andrew Mackenzie is silhouetted against a screen
projecting the company's logo at a round table meeting with
journalists in Tokyo, Japan June 5, 2017. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File
Photo
It beat rivals including Royal Dutch Shell <RDSa.L> and Chevron Corp <CVX.N> for
the assets, which have combined production of 190,000 barrels of oil equivalent
per day (boe/d)and 4.6 billion barrels of oil equivalent resources.
The deal would turn the onshore United States into "a heartland business in the
company," Bernard Looney, BP's head of upstream, said in a call with analysts.
It will bring BP into the oil-rich Permian basin in eastern Texas, where
production has surged in recent years. With it, BP's onshore oil production will
jump from 10,000 barrels per day to 200,000 bpd by the mid-2020s, Looney said.
BP said the transaction would boost its earnings and cash flow per share and it
would still be able to maintain its gearing within a 20-30 percent range.
The company also said it would increase its quarterly dividend by 2.5 percent to
10.25 cents a share, the first rise in 15 quarters.
Meanwhile, a unit of Merit Energy Company will buy BHP Billiton Petroleum
(Arkansas) Inc and the Fayetteville assets, for $0.3 billion.
Tribeca's Evans welcomed the clean exit for cash, rather than asset swaps which
BHP had flagged as a possibility.
"It leaves the company good scope to focus on their far better offshore oil
business," he said.
BHP Chief Executive Andrew Mackenzie said the company had delivered on its
promise to get value for its shale assets, while the sale was consistent with a
long-term plan to simplify and strengthen its portfolio.
BHP <BHP.AX> shares rose 2.3 percent after the announcement, outperforming the
broader market <.AXJO> and rival Rio Tinto <RIO.AX><RIO.L>.
BP said it would pay the $10.5 billion in installments over six months from the
date of completion, with $5.25 billion of the consideration to be raised through
the sale of new shares.
An Elliott spokesman declined to comment.
(Reporting by Sonali Paul, additional reporting by Aditya Soni in Bengaluru and
Ron Bousso in London; editing by James Dalgleish, Richard Pullin and Adrian
Croft)
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