Energy & Materials Sector

Brief Energy: China Power New Energy To Be Delisted After SOE Injection Abandoned and more

In this briefing:

  1. China Power New Energy To Be Delisted After SOE Injection Abandoned
  2. New J Hutton – Exploration Report (Weeks Ending 22/03/19)
  3. Corporate Governance in Global Emerging Markets: 70 Energy Companies – Korean Co Gets Lowest Score
  4. Kazakhstan: Nazarbayev Surrendering Title, Not Power
  5. Weekly Oil Views: Another Crude Rally Fails to Stick as Technicals Signal a Pivot Point

1. China Power New Energy To Be Delisted After SOE Injection Abandoned

Price

SOE State Power Investment Corporation (SPIC) is seeking to privatise China Power New Energy Development Co (735 HK) by way of a Scheme at $5.45/share, a 41.9% premium to last close and a 78.1% premium to the 30-day average.

A scrip alternative (6 New shares for one Scheme shares) into an unlisted vehicle under SPIC is also available.

China Three Gorges, CPNED’s largest shareholder with 27.10%, have given an irrevocable undertaking to vote for the Scheme and to elect the share alternative.

However, China Three Gorges is presumably required to abstain from voting at the court meeting, as it is deemed to be acting in concert with the SPIC under class (1) of the definition of the acting in concert in the Takeovers Code. The announcement does not make this clear.

Assuming China Three Gorges does abstain, a 10% blocking stake at the court meeting is equivalent to 4.48% of shares out or 53mn shares.

This looks like a pretty clean deal. It is priced above the highest close since its listing by way of introduction on the 18 July 2017, while the excitement over the potential injection of all nuclear power assets and businesses from State Nuclear Power Technology Company has been removed after the restructuring was cancelled in July last year.

The stock is currently trading at an attractive gross/annualised spread of 8.3%/28.9% conservatively assuming a late July completion, and inclusive of the final dividend. 

2. New J Hutton – Exploration Report (Weeks Ending 22/03/19)

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3. Corporate Governance in Global Emerging Markets: 70 Energy Companies – Korean Co Gets Lowest Score

  • Our proprietary corporate governance scoring system now covers over 1,800 stocks including 70 Electricity, Alternative Energy, Distribution, Water and Utilities companies in Emerging Markets.
  • This report includes the Energy and Utilities names currently under coverage.
    The lowest score in this group is Korea Gas (44/100).
  • We have found that scores below 50/100 indicate poor corporate governance and higher risk of fraud.
  • Korean companies often have lower scores as a result of a lack of board independence and convoluted corporate structure.
  • Of the groupings presented here Alternative Energy has the highest average score at 64/100.
    We welcome requests from clients of names they want to see added to the universe.

4. Kazakhstan: Nazarbayev Surrendering Title, Not Power

By transferring his presidential powers to the Senate Speaker, President Nursultan Nazarbayev has not retired from politics. He has remained an official “Leader of the Nation” and retained a tight grip of Kazakhstan’s foreign and domestic policy. His recent announcements have signalled a tilt towards increased social spending. The reshuffle at the helm of the NBK signals that the regulator is far from achieving full independence. Furthermore, there are signs of increasing pressure on the central bank to provide long-term funding to the economy, which we find worrying.

5. Weekly Oil Views: Another Crude Rally Fails to Stick as Technicals Signal a Pivot Point

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Oil remains in a tug-of-war between fundamentals and a fickle sentiment in the global financial markets.

Brent and WTI futures settled at fresh four-month-highs of $68.50/barrel and $59.98/barrel mid-week, but had erased all the gains — and some more — by Friday’s close.  However, technicals point to a pivot point in crude futures, with the 50-day moving average crossing over the 100 DMA last week. That’s typically a buy signal, but a sustained rally from the current levels is hard to see in the near-term.

Meanwhile, there were some interesting and unexpected outcomes from a high-profile OPEC/non-OPEC monitoring committee meeting in Baku on March 18. Among them were signs of a divergence in the views of Saudi Arabia and Russia, de facto leaders of the 24-producer alliance curbing supply to rebalance the market.

 What explains Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih’s new hawkish stance and is the OPEC and non-OPEC partnership under some strain? Our short answer: No. We lay out our perspective of the evolving dynamics in the producers’ alliance, which is important to understanding the likely path of their collaboration.

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