Oil Search ditches takeover offer from Santos

Papua New Guinea-focused Oil Search has rejected a merger proposal by Australia’s Santos which would create an LNG player worth up to $16.1 billion.

Oil Search, which has a stake in the ExxonMobil-led PNG LNG project and the planned Papua LNG development, said in a statement the offer was not in the best interests of its shareholders.

However, Oil Search agrees with Santos that there is strategic logic in a combination of the two companies but the terms of “any such combination need to be fair for Oil Search shareholders,” the firm said.

The rejected offer valued Oil Search at A$8.8 billion ($6.5 billion).

Australian LNG firm Santos made the approach on June 25. The company proposed to offer 0.589 new Santos shares for each Oil Search share held.

The ownership ratio implied a transaction price of A$4.25 per Oil Search share, based on Santos’ closing price on June 24. Also, this represented a 12.3 percent premium to the Oil Search closing price on June 24 of A$3.78 and a 9.8 percent premium to the Mubadala block trade sale price of A$3.865, according to Santos.

“Oil Search notes that, based on Friday’s closing share prices for Oil Search and Santos, the proposed terms represent a premium of only 6.8 percent despite Santos shareholders owning 70 percent more of the equity than Oil Search shareholders,” the ASX-listed firm said.

“Oil Search has communicated to Santos that it is open to receiving a revised proposal which more appropriately reflects the value which Oil Search would bring to any combined entity,” it said.

“Extremely attractive opportunity”

In a separate statement, Santos said it continues to believe that the merger proposal represents an “extremely attractive opportunity” to deliver compelling value accretion to both Santos and Oil Search shareholders.

“The potential merger is a logical combination of two industry leaders to create an unrivalled regional champion of size and scale,” the firm said.

The company would have a pro forma market capitalisation of A$22 billion ($16.1 billion) which positions the merged entity in the top-20 ASX-listed companies and the 20 largest global oil and gas companies, according to Santos.

Moreover, the combination would create greater alignment in Papua New Guinea supporting the development of key projects including Papua LNG, deliver new jobs and help support the local economy, the firm said.

Most Popular

Excelerate buys GasLog LNG carrier

US FSRU player Excelerate Energy has purchased a 2007-built steam liquefied natural gas (LNG) carrier from GasLog Partners, a part of Greek LNG shipping firm GasLog, according to brokers.

Bangladesh receives boost from World Bank to buy LNG supplies

The World Bank has approved a project aimed at helping Bangladesh's state-owned company Petrobangla to secure liquefied natural gas (LNG) supplies.

Kimmeridge’s Commonwealth LNG gets FERC approval

Kimmeridge's Commonwealth LNG has received the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s final order upholding authorization for its planned 9.5 mtpa LNG export project near Cameron, Louisiana.

More News Like This

Santos: Barossa project in final stages of commissioning

The Barossa gas project, which will supply feed gas to the Santos-operated Darwin LNG plant, is now in the final stages of commissioning following the arrival of the BW Opal FPSO at the Barossa gas field.

Santos gets $18.7 billion takeover offer from Adnoc-led consortium

Australian LNG player Santos has received a takeover offer valued at $18.7 billion from a consortium led by Adnoc's investment unit XRG.

Santos: PNG LNG shipped 28 cargoes in Q1

The ExxonMobil-operated PNG LNG project in Papua New Guinea shipped 28 cargoes of liquefied natural gas in the first quarter of 2025, up by one cargo compared to the same quarter last year and one cargo less compared to the prior quarter, according to shareholder Australia’s Santos.

Santos: Barossa project 95.2 percent complete

The Barossa gas project, which will supply feed gas to the Santos-operated Darwin LNG plant, is 95.2 percent complete and remains on target for first production in the third quarter of 2025, Santos said on Thursday.