After months of twists, delays, and rival bids, MEG Energy shareholders have officially approved the long-awaited takeover by Cenovus Energy, clearing one of the final hurdles in an $8.6 billion deal that will reshape Canada’s oil sands sector.
At a special meeting this week, 86% of MEG shareholders voted in favor of the acquisition—well above the two-thirds threshold required. The vote marks a decisive end to a saga that began back in the spring, when Strathcona Resources launched a hostile bid for MEG but was rebuffed by its board. Cenovus stepped in with a competing offer in August, quickly winning MEG’s support—but the road since then has been rocky.
Initially valued at C$7.9 billion (US$5.7 billion), Cenovus’ bid was sweetened twice as the company sought to win over skeptical shareholders and fend off Strathcona. By late October, the offer had climbed to C$8.6 billion (US$6.2 billion), or about $29.80 per MEG share—half in cash, half in Cenovus stock. The deal also gave MEG shareholders the choice of taking cash or shares in the new, combined company.
Then came the regulatory hiccup. Canada’s securities regulators requested more details on a separate transaction between Cenovus and Strathcona—specifically, Cenovus’ sale of its Vawn thermal oil facility and other Saskatchewan and Alberta assets to Strathcona. That deal effectively turned Strathcona, which holds a 14.2% stake in MEG, from an opponent into a supporter of the Cenovus takeover. The inquiry forced MEG to delay its shareholder vote three separate times before finally holding it this week.
With the vote now behind them, the companies move into the final stretch. What’s left are the standard closing conditions—regulatory approvals from Canada’s Competition Bureau and Alberta’s Energy Regulator, along with final court approval of the arrangement. Those are expected to be formalities at this point.
The merger will create one of North America’s largest integrated oil producers, expanding Cenovus’ heavy oil footprint in the Christina Lake region and tightening its grip on the Canadian oil sands. After a year of corporate chess, the pieces have finally fallen into place.
By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com
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