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Business / World Business

Shell wins shareholder approval to purchase BG Group

Published: 27 Jan 2016 - 03:53 pm | Last Updated: 29 Nov 2021 - 08:33 pm
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(LtoR) Non-executive Director Gerrit Zalm, Non-executive Director Guy Elliott, Chief Financial Officer Simon Henry, Chief Executive Officer Ben van Beurden, Non-executive Chairman Charles Holliday, Secretary and General Counsel Michiel Brandjes, Non-executive Director Hans Weijers, and Non-executive Directors Sir Nigel Sheinwald and Gerard Kleisterlee attend the shareholders meeting of Royal Dutch Shell plc in The Hague on January 27, 2016. AFP / ANP / Bart Maar


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Royal Dutch Shell Plc won shareholder approval to buy BG Group Plc, sealing its biggest acquisition amid the worst oil-industry slump since the global financial crisis.

More than 80 percent of Shell shareholders voted in favor of the transaction, the company said in a regulatory statement. Most votes were cast by proxy while other investors met in The Hague on Wednesday.

The approval vindicates Shell’s belief that it can better ride out the market rout by combining with U.K. oil and gas producer BG. Crude’s tumble since the deal was announced in April prompted some shareholders to question whether it’s paying too much, yet Chief Executive Officer Ben Van Beurden has said the acquisition will boost cash flow and enhance Shell’s ability to pay dividends, while BG’s growing production will help bolster its declining output.

The planned acquisition, which will also make Shell the world’s biggest liquefied natural gas trader, now faces a vote by BG investors on Thursday and final court approval before the deal can close in mid-February.

Benchmark Brent crude has lost almost half its value since the purchase was announced and now trades near $30 a barrel. That slump, which Shell has said may be prolonged, means the company may need longer to make a profit on the acquisition. It said last month it will break even when Brent reaches the low $60s, and add to operating cash flow per share at $50 this year. Brent for delivery in December 2020 is currently at about $50 a barrel.

Shell bid 0.4454 of its B shares and 383 pence for each BG share in April, valuing the transaction at $70 billion and offering a 50 percent premium. As Shell’s stock has dropped with the oil price, the deal’s value has declined to about $51 billion.

Bloomberg