Enbridge Is Leading the Canadian Large Caps Lower?

Enbridge shares sink due to a fumbled equity deal.

| More on:
The Motley Fool

Now there’s a headline you don’t see everyday!  Enbridge (TSX:ENB,NYSE:ENB) was profiled here earlier in the week as a stock that was bumping up against its all-time high.  Clearly Enbridge management read our piece as last night after the close the company announced an equity offering for 10,850,000 shares at a price of $46.11, a tad below the closing price of $46.40.  The company cited growth plans that are going more quickly than expected as the reason for raising the cash.

Background

There are two primary ways that an equity issue like this happens.  One is known as a “marketed deal” and the other a “bought deal”.

In a marketed deal, the company spends a period of time “marketing”, primarily to institutional investors, in an attempt to drum up enough investor interest to sell the desired number of shares.  The key is that the onus is on the company to sell the deal.

With a bought deal, a broker (or more likely several brokers) will step in and buy the entire block of stock up front, at a set price.  It is then up to the broker to go out and sell the deal to the investing masses.  Brokers do this when they are highly confident that they will have no problem moving the stock at least at the price that they paid for it.  Because the onus of selling the deal under this scenario shifts to the broker (the company has its money) it’s not a service offered to all would-be issuers.

Ouch!

The Enbridge issuance was a bought deal.  Many of Canada’s brokers were involved but the leads were the Royal Bank (TSX:RY,NYSE:RY) and Bank of Nova Scotia (TSX:BNS,NYSE:BNS), scooping 31% each.  Last night the respective sales forces would have been in full flight, telling their clients to lineup to buy the Enbridge deal Friday morning at $46.11 per share.

What the brokers probably weren’t counting on was the market moving non-farm payrolls figure in the U.S. coming in so low, causing North American markets to swoon and investors that were in-line to buy the Enbridge deal to scatter.

The original deal was scrapped and a new pitch came out at $45.25, 1.9% lower than the first crack at it and 2.5% below where Enbridge closed yesterday.

The brokers have eaten a loss of about $9.3 million on this deal – chicken feed in the big picture of the banks that many of them are a part of, but a tough way to end the week nevertheless.

Foolish Takeaway

Enbridge shares are down on the day because of this equity offering.  Nothing has fundamentally gone wrong with the company.  In fact, it’s very likely that they require this equity injection because so much is going right.  The outlook for pipeline growth in North America is very positive and you can bet Enbridge is going to take this $500 million and put it to good use.

If you think Enbridge is a great dividend stock, you need to click here to receive our special report titled “13 High-Yielding Stocks to Buy Today”.  This report is absolutely FREE and will have you rolling in dividend cheques before you know it.  You are just one click away from dividend nirvana!

Follow us on Twitter and Facebook for the latest in Foolish investing.

Fool contributor Iain Butler does not own shares in any of the companies mentioned in this report at this time.  The Motley Fool has no positions in the stocks mentioned above.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

More on Investing

rail train
Stocks for Beginners

CP Stock: 1 Key Catalyst Investors Should Watch

After a positive surprise in the last quarter, CP stock (TSX:CP) recently made a change that should have investors excited…

Read more »

Payday ringed on a calendar
Dividend Stocks

Cash Kings: 3 TSX Stocks That Pay Monthly

These stocks are rewarding shareholders with regular monthly dividends and high yields, making them compelling investments for monthly cash.

Read more »

grow dividends
Tech Stocks

Celestica Stock Is up 62% in 2024 Alone, and an Earnings Pop Could Bring Even More

Celestica (TSX:CLS) stock is up an incredible 280% in the last year. But more could be coming when the stock…

Read more »

Airport and plane
Stocks for Beginners

Is Air Canada Stock a Good Buy in April 2024?

Despite rallying by over 20% in the last six months, Air Canada stock could be a great buy for the…

Read more »

Businessman holding AI cloud
Tech Stocks

Stealth AI: 1 Unexpected Stock to Win With Artificial Intelligence

Thomson Reuters (TSX:TRI) stock isn't widely-known for its generative AI prowess, but don't count it out quite yet.

Read more »

Shopping and e-commerce
Tech Stocks

Missed Out on Nvidia? My Best AI Stock to Buy and Hold

Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) stock isn't the only wonderful growth stock to hold for the next 10 years and beyond.

Read more »

Human Hand Placing A Coin On Increasing Coin Stacks In Front Of House
Dividend Stocks

Up 13%, Killam REIT Looks Like It Has More Room to Run

Killam REIT (TSX:KMP.UN) has seen shares climb 13% since market bottom, but come down recently after 2023 earnings.

Read more »

crypto, chart, stocks
Energy Stocks

If You Had Invested $10,000 in Enbridge Stock in 2018, This Is How Much You Would Have Today

Enbridge's big dividend yield isn't free money. Here's why.

Read more »