Vancouver Sun

U.S. activist Elliott targets Suncor in bid to shake up leadership

- GEOFFREY MORGAN, ROBERT TUTTLE and SCOTT DEVEAU

Activist investor Elliott Investment Management LP is taking aim at Canadian oil producer Suncor Energy Inc., pushing the company to add five new directors and overhaul management to change a “slow-moving, overly bureaucrat­ic corporate culture.”

Elliott said the company should also look at selling its retail network of gasoline stations across Canada to unlock a higher share price. Suncor rose 12 per cent to $47.22 in Toronto, the highest level since October 2018. The Calgary-based company is the worst-performing large oil producer in Canada since the beginning of 2021. Analysts have said the stock is being weighed down by a series of operationa­l problems, including a fire that resulted in an injury at a refinery in March and fatal accidents in the last two years. Suncor also cut its production guidance at its Fort Hills oilsands mine in 2021 after finding slopes in the mine were not stable.

“Suncor now finds itself plagued by repeated operationa­l challenges and safety issues,” Elliott Partner John Pike and portfolio manager Mike Tomkins wrote in a letter to the company, which noted the company's missed production goals and high costs.

Elliott, which was founded by Paul Singer, hasn't nominated directors for this year's annual general meeting slated for May 10. The firm, which owns a 3.4-per-cent economic stake in Suncor, could increase that stake or partner with other shareholde­rs to call a special meeting if the company resists change, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The “full upside” of a restructur­ing plan would put Suncor's share price at $68, a rise of more than 50 per cent from Wednesday's close, the firm said in a presentati­on.

“Our investment in Suncor is underpinne­d by our conviction that, with the right leadership, the company can restore its prior success. Suncor's integrated oilsands operations are a critical part of the global energy supply, and we believe these assets are dramatical­ly undervalue­d,” the letter from Pike and Tomkins stated.

Suncor's board and management team “appreciate­s the views of its shareholde­rs and will take the time to carefully assess the recommenda­tions and materials provided, with a view to enhancing shareholde­r and other stakeholde­r value,” the company said in an emailed statement. Suncor “looks forward to engaging with Elliott in due course to better understand their perspectiv­e”, the statement said.

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