Looking to deliver a deathblow in the bidding war for Calgary-based coal producer
The partnership’s revised bid now caps the cash portion at $965 million, up from $850 million. If all Fording shareholders choose to take cash, each will be limited to about $20 per share plus 0.429 of an exchange right for each share. Under the previous bid, shareholders would have received $17.63 in cash plus 0.496 of an exchange right.
While the cash portion of Sherritt’s $1.8-billion bid has been increased, the number of exchange rights available to shareholders has fallen to 38.6 million from 42.4 million. If all Fording shareholders choose to redeem their shares for exchange rights, they would each receive about $8.69 in cash plus 0.752 of an exchange right for each share tendered.
“We are offering approximately $225 million more cash to Fording shareholders and we are offering an income trust unit with greater cash flow, lower risk and more value than the Fording-Teck proposal,” says Sherritt Chairman Ian Delaney.
Under Fording’s own plan with
The Sherrit Coal Partnership II, an alliance of
The partnership has doubled to two years the period for which its share of quarterly cash distribution would be subordinated. The base subordination level has been increased to $1.30 per unit, subject to the quarterly change in the realized coal price relative to the average realized price of 2003. The maximum subordination level is $11.25 million per quarter.
Regulators in both Canada and the U.S. have approved the plan.
The Sherritt Coal Partnership II intends to combine certain of Luscar Energy’s metallurgical coal assets and port facilities with Fording’s metallurgical coal and industrial mineral assets. The new entity, Canadian Coal Trust, would be Canada’s largest producer of metallurgical coal.
Luscar is a joint venture among Sherritt, the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, and
Since the launch of the takeover bid in October, Fording has consistently rejected the partnership’s advances on the basis that the offer “vastly” undervalues its thermal coal assets. But Fording Chairman Richard Haskayne did not immediately reject the latest Sherritt offer. He said his company will review the proposed changes to the takeover bid.
“The fiduciary responsibility of the board is to examine all opportunities to maximize value for shareholders and that includes reviewing this latest proposal,” says Haskayne. “We are conscious of the impending Jan. 22 special meeting and the expiry of the Sherritt offer the following day, and intend to move as quickly as possible to advise shareholders in order to preserve all of their choices.”
The new bid comes two weeks before Fording’s special shareholders’ meeting, slated for Jan. 22, where shareholders will be asked to vote on their company’s 3-way plan to convert to an income trust.
The cash limit under the Fording-Teck-Westshore plan is $15.60 plus 0.541 of a unit in a new entity, the Fording Coal Partnership, per share.
Fording’s plan includes a $51-million break-up fee payable to Teck and Westshore. With about 51 million Fording shares outstanding, the dollar-per-share difference between the two offers all but vanishes.
Sherritt’s offer is conditional on Fording shareholders’ rejecting their company’s 3-way plan and submitting at least two-thirds of Fording’s outstanding shares to the partnership.
The Sherritt offer expires Jan. 23.
Meanwhile, at the Deltaport facility at Roberts Bank, near Vancouver, Westshore Terminals is surveying the damage caused by a windstorm on Jan. 2. Reuters reports that two 4-story-high mechanical ship loaders at one of the terminal’s two deep-sea berths were toppled by high winds. One of the loaders landed in the water; the other crashed into a ship that was being loaded. A third, larger tower was unaffected. Two people were injured.
Each tower is worth in the neighbourhood of $10-15 million and could take up to six months to replace. The affected berth will be shut down until repairs are made.
Westshore is discussing contingency plans with its customers.
The company does not expect the accident to impede its ability to cover its proposed $170-million investment in units of the proposed income trust to be formed under Fording’s plan.
Under Fording’s plan, Westshore would handle the Fording Coal Partnership’s coal under a long-term port services contract at normal commercial terms.
In mid-afternoon trading in Toronto on Jan. 6, Fording’s shares were 53 higher at $33.55; Sherritt’s issue was trading 7 higher at $4.55. Westshore’s units were off 32, or nearly 7% of value, at $4.40.
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