In Portugal, trust in China is the art of the deal
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[May 29, 2018]
By Sergio Goncalves and Axel Bugge
LISBON (Reuters) - Utility company EDP may
balk at the meager 5 percent premium offered for its shares by China
Three Gorges (CT) but the battle for Portugal's biggest business has
largely played out already.
To some it looks like a lowball bid, but Portugal has welcomed the offer
because it considers the Chinese firm's pledge to keep EDP-Energias de
Portugal intact more important than the price and it wants closer ties
with a country that has plowed billions into its economy.
That openness to investment from China, including in strategic sectors
like energy, stands out amid suspicions elsewhere in Europe about
Chinese acquisitions.
The Chinese state-owned hydropower giant became EDP's biggest
shareholder in 2011. So when reports of merger talks between EDP and
Spanish rival Gas Natural emerged in July 2017, it beat a path to the
Lisbon government's door.
A Gas Natural takeover would have threatened CTG's ambition to use EDP
to diversify beyond China, while Portugal's Socialist government feared
a European rival could break up the business, an industry source
familiar with the talks and a political source with knowledge of the
government's position said.
"Nearly a year ago, Gas Natural approached EDP and that was the time
when CT started to think about this move," said one industry source with
knowledge of CTG's takeover bid.
"If CT has been a partner for more than six years, has invested in the
company, in a strategic sector for Portugal, and has good relations with
the government, it is natural that they talk," the source said.
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EDP and Gas Natural denied being in talks last year. But just over a
month after the reports, Portugal added a clause to its takeover laws
allowing shareholders with the same ultimate owner to combine all their
voting rights.
Previously, the votes would have been capped at 25 percent, whatever the
size of their combined holdings.
That could be crucial as CTG's bid for EDP progresses. While it owns
23.3 percent, another Chinese state-owned company, CNIC, holds 5
percent, most recently buying 2 percent at the end of 2017.
CT [CYTGP.UL] in China and a spokesman for the Portuguese government did
not respond to requests for comment.
'PURELY POLITICAL'
CT first bought 21.4 percent of EDP in December 2011 for 2.7 billion
euros ($3.2 billion), stepping in when Portugal privatized the company
to raise funds after an international bailout to stabilize government
finances.
The Chinese company has since invested some 2 billion euros in power
ventures with EDP, which has a portfolio of renewable energy assets such
as wind, hydro and solar power in countries such as Brazil, the United
States, France, Italy and Poland.
In April this year, there were reports of interest in EDP from another
European utility, this time Engie. The French company declined to
comment while EDP said at the time that no contacts had been
established.
A few weeks later, CT launched its takeover bid. It offered 9.07 billion
euros ($10.7 billion) for the rest of EDP on May 11, a premium of just 5
percent above the utility company's share price before the offer became
public.
EDP described the offer as too low, but left the door open to
negotiations. Some analysts expect EDP to ask for a 20 to 30 percent
premium but no other bidder has yet emerged and EDP shares are trading
less than 5 percent above the offer price.
"It was predictable and there have already been conversations with the
government for a long time," said an industry source close to EDP who
has knowledge of the talks.
"This is purely political," the source said. "CT knew that there were
many European companies looking at EDP, which is medium-sized and has
interesting assets."
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In its bid announcement, CT made clear it saw EDP's long-term future as
a Portuguese company strengthened by CTG's assets, with a large free
float of shares that could potentially be used as a springboard for
European expansion.
That will please the government, which wants to protect EDP's 6,000 jobs
in Portugal and keep its headquarters in the country.
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Electric power cables are seen near an Energias de Portugal (EDP)
power plant at the outskirts of Carregado, Portugal May 16, 2018.
REUTERS/Rafael Marchante/File Photo
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"What matters to the government is the strategic importance of EDP to the
country," said Filipe Garcia, head of Informacao de Mercados Financeiros
consultancy, adding that the takeover price was a secondary consideration for
the government.
OPEN DOOR POLICY
Links between Portugal and China stretch back centuries to when the European
nation controlled the port of Macau. In recent years, Lisbon has embraced
Beijing's belt and road initiative to invest in infrastructure linking Asia to
Europe.
Chinese firms now own 25 percent of Portugal's national grid, 27 percent of its
largest listed bank, and all of its largest insurer and biggest private
hospitals operator.
Prime Minister Antonio Costa also told parliament last week that the change to
Portuguese takeover law last year was made with Chinese investors in mind.
"It was my initiative and aimed to ensure that Portugal would offer the same
conditions to foreigners, namely Chinese, as Europeans," Costa said.
The clause added on July 29, 2017, was designed to favor the "capture of foreign
direct investment from, namely, foreign state entities...", according to the
text.
The combined shareholding of CT and CNIC, a Chinese state-owned investment
company, now comes to 28.5 percent, close to the 33 percent needed to assure
effective control of EDP. Under Portuguese law, company statutes can only be
changed if two-thirds of shareholders vote in favor.
Costa denied in parliament the change was made with CT in mind: "This was
approved a year ago, when there was no takeover, nor any prediction of a
takeover bid."
'BONDS OF CONFIDENCE'
When CT launched its offer, it was conditional on getting 50 percent plus one
share, in line with Portuguese rules. However, market regulator CMVM said on May
23 it was waiving this requirement, effectively allowing CT to raise its stake
in EDP, even if it doesn't reach a simple majority.
"The Chinese have established bonds of confidence with Portugal," a senior
political source told Reuters. "There is mutual confidence and that changes
everything."
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Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi paid a well-timed visit to Lisbon on May 18. He
hailed Portugal's "open attitude" to foreign investment and promised Beijing
would continue to encourage investment by Chinese firms in Portugal.
Chinese citizens have also poured 2 billion euros into Portuguese housing in the
past few years, boosting a property market boom which has helped propel a strong
economic recovery.
As Lisbon's ties with CT have grown closer, its relationship with EDP has come
under strain. The government was annoyed last year by what it saw as EDP Chief
Executive Antonio Mexia's openness to potential European suitors, political
sources with knowledge of the government's position said.
In January this year, EDP upset the government again when it stopped paying an
extraordinary tax contribution energy companies have had to pay since Portugal's
2011-14 debt crisis.
"I won't comment," the prime minister told reporters at the time. "I only regret
the hostile attitude that EDP has maintained and which therefore represents a
change in the stance it had towards the previous government."
If CTG's bid does succeed, the timing could be auspicious, with Chinese
President Xi Jinping planning to visit to Portugal later this year.
"The visit may signal a new phase of strategic partnership between the two
countries, with the signing of agreements," Foreign Minister Augusto Santos
Silva said after meeting his Chinese counterpart this month.
(Additional reporting by Shanghai newsroom; editing by Mark Bendeich and David
Clarke)
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