By Sonali Paul
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Private equity firms are expected to drive a wave of merger activity in Australia's gas sector, hunting for bargains amid soaring demand in China, rising domestic prices and a broader oil market recovery.
The energy sector has dominated Australian M&A activity over the past 12 months, led by a spurned $10.8 billion bid for oil and gas producer Santos and a $9.8 billion bid for pipeline operator APA Group by Hong Kong's CK Infrastructure.
Still, the share prices of smaller companies in the sector have yet to fully reflect the sharp recovery in oil markets over the past year and gains from lower drilling costs, say bankers and consultants.
"Private equity firms clearly see strong turnaround opportunities in the oil and gas sector. Stocks are trading below their earnings potential with serious upside," said Perth-based Deloitte Consulting partner Bernadette Cullinane.
U.S. firm Harbour Energy pursued Santos for a year before its bid ended in acrimony, while private equity fund Lone Star bid A$530 million ($392 million) in March for Australia's Sino Gas & Energy Holdings, which has stakes in two shale gas projects in China.
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More deals are seen as small oil and gas companies look to fund new gas developments to feed the east coast market and bigger companies, like Santos, look to replenish their reserves, following years of cuts in exploration.
"Most of the sub-billion market cap companies with reasonable 2P resources and cash flow or near term cashflow would be attractive to private equity funds," said Eddie Rigg, head of corporate finance at Argonaut, who advised a private Chinese firm that lost out in a three-way bidding war for gas producer AWE Ltd in February.
Such companies include Senex Energy, Central Petroleum, Cooper Energy and Strike Energy.
Rigg predicted Sino Gas will attract a rival bid from a U.S., European or Asian group as most of the geological and well engineering risks on its project have been dealt with.
"It's a reasonably safe entry into a growing gas market," he said.
LOW RISK, ON ASIA'S DOORSTEP
Australian domestic gas prices have more than doubled in the past three years as east coast supply has been sucked into exports of liquefied natural gas (LNG) to feed Asia-Pacific demand.
China's LNG imports, driven by a clean air push, are expected to jump 50 percent over three years to 57 million tonnes by 2020, according to Australian government forecasts. For investors, Australia is handy way to play into that growth.
"Australia's attractiveness as an oil and gas M&A and investment proposition is driven primarily by its low geopolitical and sovereign risk ... and of course its proximity to Asia's energy demand centres," said Deloitte's Cullinane.
The next likely target is in Australia's west. Gas supplier Quadrant Energy, potentially worth A$3 billion, is attracting interest as one of its two owners, Canada's Brookfield Asset Management, is looking to sell its stake, bankers say.
Quadrant, co-owned by Macquarie Group, produces more than a fifth of the gas going into the domestic market in the state of Western Australia, has oil production and untapped gas reserves.
Potential suitors include Santos.
The appeal for Santos is that it knows the Quadrant business well as the companies share stakes in a number of gas fields, bankers and analysts say, although Santos may not want to risk alienating shareholders by splashing out on a deal so soon after having rejected a takeover.
"Quadrant's domestic business in Western Australia is a prized cash cow in Santos' portfolio. Doubling down there makes sense," said Wood Mackenzie analyst Saul Kavonic.
Santos, Brookfield and Macquarie declined to comment.
OWNERSHIP CULL
Within the next two years, there could be other deals on the west coast, where Woodside Petroleum and Chevron Corp are looking to develop new gas fields to feed their LNG plants.
The biggest hurdle to their plans is the myriad of co-owners in their gas fields and LNG plants - all with competing priorities - making it difficult to agree on development plans.
The best way to overcome that hurdle, analysts and bankers say, would be for Woodside or Chevron to buy out some of their partners, as Woodside did in February with the $744 million purchase of ExxonMobil's stake in the Scarborough gas field.
"Obviously if an interest owner in a particular part of the value chain no longer desires to participate, Chevron or other companies are always looking for opportunities to improve their portfolio," Chevron's Asia-Pacific exploration and production president Stephen Green said in a recent group interview.
($1 = 1.3526 Australian dollars)
(Reporting by Sonali Paul; editing by Richard Pullin)
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