Will 2021 Breathe Life Back Into The Asia Pacific Upstream M&A Market?
2020 has been dismal for
upstream dealmakers across Asia Pacific. During a recent conversation with a
senior banker in the region, I mentioned that deal activity was so poor this
year that as of October, only a sliver over US$400 million and 117 million boe of
2P resources had transacted (vs US$5.1 billion and 1,400 million boe in 2019).
I got a short response: “I’m surprised it wasn’t zero.” Perhaps nobody needs
reminding just how tough a year it’s been.
But hey, it’s almost 2021 and optimism is in the air. My
colleague Alay Patel, Principal Analyst in our APAC upstream research team,
tells me that we can expect a bounce-back as the M&A market is brought off
life support over the next 12 months. The recovery in oil and gas prices should
help bring buyers and sellers closer on price expectation, while ongoing
consolidation among upstream producers in North America has driven a sharp
uptick in global M&A in recent months, likely pushing more non-core APAC
assets into the market.
This is raising hopes that long-anticipated deals in
Australia, Malaysia, Vietnam and elsewhere could finally get done. Much will
need to go right, but by the end of next year, Asia Pacific could well see
signs of a refreshed corporate landscape and companies looking again to growth.
Sounds great, but of course challenges remain.How much could be on the block?
In a recent Insight, Alay and his colleagues
identify 11 high-profile prospective APAC deals on their M&A watchlist –
including assets both formally on the market and others rumoured to be for sale
or farm-down. Combined, these account for almost US$12 billion (NPV10, 2021) of
value.
And it doesn’t stop there. A further US$26 billion
of assets are now in their ‘speculative’ deal bucket as portfolio streamlining
and balance sheet deleveraging mean that fresh opportunities are coming onto
the market at a steady pace. For the Majors in particular, the longer-term
impact of the energy transition is driving further non-core divestments as
strategies quickly evolve.Who is selling?
Perhaps unsurprisingly, it is the Majors and larger
IOCs that are the primary sellers of assets, a trend that has accelerated since
the oil price crash in March. That said, several NOCs could also be looking to
divest, and we identify almost US$5 billion of NOC assets that could come to
market – check the speculative bucket. Geographically, Australia is the
region’s M&A hotspot.
When looking at the US$12 billion of potential
divestments by asset type, LNG opportunities account for more than half of the
5.8 billion boe of resources on offer. About a third of this is associated with
producing assets, with 2.7 billion boe located in Australia.And who is buying?
It’s a worn-out phrase, but it is of course a
buyer’s market out there. And the biggest challenge isn’t generating interest
in data rooms or sale processes – plenty of tyre kickers out there! – but
finding the right buyers with the required capital, experience and risk
appetite.
Despite the number of credible buyers being more
limited, and buyer and seller price expectations not quite fully aligned yet,
we do see serious buyers beginning to emerge. Regional independents and
traditional NOCs are looking to grow and will be watching closely. But as my
colleague Angus Rodger puts it, “It’s not just the usual suspects that have
been acquirers in recent years. Infrastructure funds and private equity-backed
entities such as Neptune, Trident and Chrysaor are stepping up their
opportunity screening.” Angus does point out however, that each of these
different buyer groups is focused on very specific asset classes in specific
areas.
Late-life asset specialists including Perenco,
Jadestone and Hibiscus will also be active, as will ambitious regional players
like Medco Energi. In Australia, infrastructure funds and utility companies are
looking for greater integration between upstream assets and their existing
portfolios, potentially redefining ‘infrastructure’ to include direct ownership
of gas plants and fields.
Reasons to be cheerful, but many challenges ahead
All of this sounds positive as we finally bid
farewell to the misery of 2020. But alas, optimism doesn’t wait on facts. Alay
is quick to add that the buyer and seller landscape has never been more
unpredictable. Many are still trying to find their footing: 2020’s meagre pickings
have meant that Asia Pacific deal data points are few and far between, making
it near impossible to calculate what barrels are worth to investors in region.
As ExxonMobil’s recent decision to take its
Australian Bass Strait asset off the market after a long sales process neatly
highlights, the pandemic, oil and gas price volatility and weakened corporate
balance sheets make executing successful upstream M&A extremely
challenging. Let’s hope that 2021 brings greater stability to all three.
Best wishes to you all. The APAC Energy Buzz will be
back in January.Source: Wood Mackenzie
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