Rising oil prices have resulted in higher exploration budgets and the need for rigs capable of operating in harsh and deepwater environments such as Brazil and the Arctic. The acquisition of Sevan Drilling, which has two rigs under contract with Petroleo Brasileiro SA, advances plans announced by Seadrill last month to evaluate the creation of a separate Brazil-listed company as it targets growth.
“We view this as a complementary acquisition that will add scale and will fit strategically well into Seadrill’s plans of creating a separate Brazilian drilling company,” Robert A. Jensen and Anders Bergland, analysts at RS Platou Markets AS, said in an e-mailed note.
Sevan Drilling shares jumped as much as 40 percent in Oslo trading, the biggest intraday gain since May 3, and were up 26 percent at 5.72 kroner as of 11:45 a.m. local time. Seadrill shares were up 1.9 percent at 203.4 kroner.
Drawn-Out Process
“Based on earlier acquisitions by Seadrill, we expect an acquisition of Sevan Drilling could be a drawn-out process,” the Platou analysts wrote. “It is unlikely that a bid for the company would be offered at a material premium to the initial investment.”
ABG Sundal Collier Norge ASA, Arctic Securities ASA, First Securities AS, ING Bank NV, Pareto and SEB Enskilda AS received and accepted an “all-or-nothing” bid from Seadrill. As part of the deal, SV Unsecured will be released from a “lock-up undertaking” in the shares, and Seadrill will be subject to a similar lock-up.
SV Unsecured on Nov. 30 bought the shares as part of the restructuring of Sevan Marine ASA.
“We got this information 30 minutes ago and so far we have no comments,” Jon Wilmann, chief financial officer of Sevan Drilling, said by phone today. Calls made to Sevan Drilling’s CEO Scott Kerr’s mobile phone weren’t immediately returned, nor was an e-mail to Seadrill’s Chief Financial Officer Esa Ikaeheimonen.