Eni Strikes Saipem Deals, Selling Shares and Recovering Debt
October 28 2015 - 10:40AM
Dow Jones News
Eni SpA said Wednesday it will sell a stake in its oil-services
subsidiary Saipem SpA in a deal that it expects to bring in €5.4
billion ($5.9 billion) after the unit repays debt.
The Italian oil company will sell a 12.5% stake in Saipem to
Fondo Strategico Italiano, an Italian state-run investment fund,
for as much as €487 million, with the final price of the share sale
to be determined later. Saipem will also repay Eni €6.1 billion in
debt.
Eni has earmarked the proceeds for investment in its own
exploration activities.
As part of the agreements, Eni plans to take up its share of a
€3.5 billion capital increase at Saipem. The capital boost is
scheduled to be completed in the first quarter of next year.
The move falls under Eni Chief Executive Claudio Descalzi's plan
to recoup debt held by Saipem while sharpening the company's focus
on oil and gas exploration. Like those of other large oil
companies, Eni's results have been battered by the plunge in oil
prices since the middle of last year.
In April, Standard & Poor's cut its long- and short-term
credit rating on Eni, and at the start of this month it lowered its
outlook on the company to negative.
The money Eni raises by selling the stake in Saipem and
recouping the debt will be used to develop the company's oil and
gas reserves, Mr. Descalzi said.
Eni has outperformed most of its rivals in recent years in
finding new resources, including the discovery in August of a
massive natural gas field off the coast of Egypt, where several
competitors had given up looking.
"Ultimately this deal enables Eni to focus on upstream
[exploration and production activities]," wrote Bernstein in a note
to clients, adding that it provides for "one of the strongest
balance sheets in the industry."
Eni, which is 30%-owned by the Italian government, said the deal
will reduce its net debt by about €5.1 billion. At the end of June,
its net debt stood at €16.5 billion. On Thursday, Eni will release
its third-quarter results.
Saipem is trying to shore up its finances through the stock
sale, as oil-services companies have also been hit hard by the fall
in oil prices as oil and gas producers have slashed capital
spending and rushed to cut costs.
The company, which in July said it would lay off almost a fifth
of its workforce in the next two years, has lowered its profit
forecasts at least three times since 2013 and Tuesday reiterated a
forecast that it will lose €800 million this year.
"Today's announcement marks a turning point for Saipem: We have
a new shareholder structure, a strengthened balance sheet [and] a
new strategic plan" Saipem CEO Stefano Cao said. Mr. Cao is
Saipem's third CEO in three years.
Saipem will refinance €3.2 billion of debt, said the Milan-based
company. Up to now, Eni has funded Saipem's debt.
The deal will reduce Eni's stake in Sapiem to about 30.5%.
In early-afternoon trading in Milan, Saipem's shares were up
7.3%, while Eni's were 0.5% higher.
Write to Liam Moloney at liam.moloney@wsj.com and Eric Sylvers
at eric.sylvers@wsj.com
Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 28, 2015 10:25 ET (14:25 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2015 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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