Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

Loonie's Plight, Low Interest Rates Could Make Canadian Firms Ripe For Pickings

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Feb, 2016 11:45 AM
    TORONTO — The plight of the loonie and low interest rates can make Canadian companies ripe for the pickings, observers said Wednesday as U.S. home improvement chain Lowe's announced its acquisition of Quebec retailer Rona.
     
    Companies paying in U.S. dollars receive a discount thanks to the Canadian dollar, said Perry Sadorsky, an associate professor of economics at York University's Schulich School of Business in Toronto.
     
    "For international companies, it's very attractive to buy Canadian companies," he said.
     
    Retail consultant Wendy Evans predicted the Lowe's-Rona announcement is likely to be the first of other takeover deals in the offing.
     
    "Particularly with our dollar, this market looks like very good value so there will be others," she said.
     
    The loonie has not closed above 80 cents US since late June last year. As of Wednesday it was hovering above the 72-cent US mark.
     
    The $3.2-billion deal by Lowe's to buy Rona is partly motivated to pursue a strategic opportunity to become the largest home renovation retailer in Canada, said Jean Rickli, a retail analyst with the JC Williams Group.
     
    But when the price tag translates to roughly US$2.3 billion, the deal is more affordable, he said.
     
    Historically, there is often a bump in mergers and acquisitions when the dollar slides, Sadorsky said.
     
    On the flip side, Canadian companies have purchased American targets when the loonie sells at a premium, said Laurence Booth, a finance professor at the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto.
     
    He points to acquisitions made by TD Bank (which bought The South Financial Group Inc. in 2010) and Royal Bank (which acquired City National Corporation in November 2015).
     
     
    The low loonie can also incentivize Canadian companies, which may not be able to afford to acquire entities abroad, to consider purchasing local ones, said Sadorsky.
     
    Already this year, Suncor Energy offered a multibillion-dollar deal to take over Canadian Oil Sands. The offer expires Friday.
     
    Sadorsky anticipates more domestic action this year in the oilpatch.
     
    Canada's current low interest-rate environment provides further enticement, he said, as companies can borrow money for any potential deals at cheaper rates.
     
    But some believe there is little correlation between low interest rates, a low dollar and an increase in mergers and acquisitions.
     
    In the third quarter of 2015, Canadian companies made 186 foreign-target acquisitions worth a total of $60 billion compared to 172 acquisitions over the same time the year before for $42 billion, according to the most recent quarterly report by Crosbie, a Toronto-based investment banking firm that tracks Canadian merger and acquisition activity.
     
    In the same time frame last year, Canadian companies acquired 1.6 times more companies outside the country's borders than foreigners acquired companies within Canada, the report found.
     
    It's important to recognize that while the exchange rate can offer a discount, it's the prospects for profit that often motivates acquisitions, said Booth.
     
    A sliding loonie can also mean that some Canadian firms are not as appealing to prospective buyers.
     
    "The change in the value of the currency is also strongly correlated with the attractiveness of Canadian firms as foreign targets."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Kamloops Senior Mauled To Death By Dog In Her Backyard, Coroner Investigating

    Kamloops Senior Mauled To Death By Dog In Her Backyard, Coroner Investigating
    Seventy-eight-year-old Kathleen Green was mauled to death at her home on the southern Interior reserve Saturday night by a dog that was tied up in the backyard.

    Kamloops Senior Mauled To Death By Dog In Her Backyard, Coroner Investigating

    'Bigger Than Thou': Awestruck Snowmobilers Won't Stop After 5 Avalanche Deaths

    'Bigger Than Thou': Awestruck Snowmobilers Won't Stop After 5 Avalanche Deaths
    The day after a colossal avalanche killed five snowmobilers in eastern British Columbia, Thea Pelletier climbed aboard her machine and returned to the backcountry wilderness.

    'Bigger Than Thou': Awestruck Snowmobilers Won't Stop After 5 Avalanche Deaths

    Two B.C. Byelections See Parties Field Testing Tactics Ahead Of 2017 Election

    Premier Christy Clark's Liberals, the New Democrats and the Greens are knocking on doors and waving signs to court votes and field testing tactics and attitudes in advance of the provincial election 16 months away.

    Two B.C. Byelections See Parties Field Testing Tactics Ahead Of 2017 Election

    Longtime Mobster Rocco Zito, 87, Shot Dead In His Toronto Home

    Longtime Mobster Rocco Zito, 87, Shot Dead In His Toronto Home
    Police have said Zito was pronounced dead after suffering a gunshot wound in a house on Toronto's west end. They said officers tried to save the man's life.

    Longtime Mobster Rocco Zito, 87, Shot Dead In His Toronto Home

    Ex-Radio Star Jian Ghomeshi: From Obscurity To Fame To Infamy To...?

    Ex-Radio Star Jian Ghomeshi: From Obscurity To Fame To Infamy To...?
    On Monday, the courts will begin sorting out whether he engaged in consensual "rough sex," as Ghomeshi claims, or whether, as three women claim, he sexually assaulted them.

    Ex-Radio Star Jian Ghomeshi: From Obscurity To Fame To Infamy To...?

    Kejriwal opposes minimum qualification for auto-rickshaw licence

    Kejriwal, who is in city since January 27 for naturopathy treatment at a private hospital, said he would soon write to union Road Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari to scrap the clause by amending the Act.

    Kejriwal opposes minimum qualification for auto-rickshaw licence