IFM to take pipeline owner Buckeye private for $6.5b

Houston. IFM Global Infrastructure Fund agreed to acquire Buckeye Partners LP, a US owner and operator of oil pipelines and terminals on the East Coast and Gulf Coast, for $6.5 billion.

The Australian fund said Friday it will pay $41.50 for each unit of Houston-based Buckeye, a master limited partnership that has 6,000 miles of pipeline and associated tanks and terminals. The offer represents a 28% premium to the closing unit price on Thursday.

The deal is the first full takeout of a pipeline MLP amid a rush of private-equity money into the industry, according to Hinds Howard, a portfolio manager at CBRE Clarion Securities LLC.

MLPs, the structure used by many oil and gas companies to hold their pipeline businesses, have taken a beating in the public equity markets in the past year, partly due to a change in US tax policy. That’s attracted private capital to the so-called midstream industry instead.

Buckeye, which earlier this year sold its stake in a marine terminals segment at a $175 million loss, credited the decision to sell itself to an “undervaluation” of its assets.

While other pipeline operators have moved to self-fund their growth projects in response to a challenging public equity market, Buckeye said that has actually caused listed companies to trade at a discount.

“We believe that the trend toward more stability and self-funding in the public equity markets has weakened public company multiples and resulted in an undervaluation of Buckeye’s assets,” CEO Clark Smith said on a conference call Friday.

While the buyout of Buckeye is a positive for the sector as a whole, it deals “another blow to the MLP structure, which loses its fifth-largest remaining MLP,” CBRE’s Howard said. That “will make it even more challenging for asset managers focused specifically on MLPs to put money to work.”

IFM had A$126.8 billion ($89 billion) under management as of March 31, according to its website. It’s a well-known infrastructure player with a “huge backlog of capital they need to deploy,” Howard added. “This deal allows them to do that.”

Buckeye said last year it was considering strategic options. That led to the company divesting storage and pipeline assets, including the sale of the company’s stake in VTTI BV back to a Vitol Group investment vehicle and IFM for $975 million after buying it in 2017 for $1.15 billion.

‘Struggling Buckeye Partners has received a life raft in the form of a proposed $10.3 billion acquisition by privately held IFM Global Infrastructure, helping set the M&A market for storage and related pipeline infrastructure assets. -Michael Kay, senior industry analyst, and Jonathan Mardini, associate analystClick here to view the research

The acquisition would be the third-largest of a US pipeline company announced in the past 12 months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It comes two days after Marathon Petroleum Corp. agreed to merge two pipeline partnerships it controls in a deal valued at about $9 billion.

The so-called US midstream industry — encompassing pipelines and other oil and gas infrastructure — has struggled to attract investors despite a need for new assets in places including the prolific Permian Basin of West Texas and New Mexico.

There were 80 deals targeting US pipeline companies announced last year, the highest according to data compiled by Bloomberg going back 12 years.

Separately on Friday, Prostar Capital, another private equity firm, agreed to acquire an oil terminal from NuStar Energy LP for about $250 million.

Buckeye traces its roots to 1886 as a subsidiary of the Standard Oil Co., according to its website. The name stems from its original purpose, supplying refineries in northwestern Ohio — the Buckeye state. Buckeye’s units have climbed 12% this year through yesterday, better than the 9% average increase of MLPs on the Alerian index.

Friday’s deal is expected to be completed in the fourth quarter, subject to closing conditions. Units of Buckeye surged 28 per cent to $41.81 at 11:42am in New York.