CALGARY — Oilpatch advisers are expecting the wave of consolidation to continue after last year’s string of blockbuster Canadian deals, but whether foreign acquireers are ready to jump into the fray remains an open question.
Companies have seen the merit in bulking up through mergers and acquisitions as oil prices hover around the lacklustre US$60 per barrel mark, shareholders demand better returns through dividfinishs and acquirebacks and uncertainty continues to cloud the ability for producers to sell their output in lucrative global markets, declared Grant Zawalsky, senior partner and vice-chair at law firm Burnet, Duckworth and Palmer LLP in Calgary.
“M&A is a way that you can grow when you don’t want to invest in drilling, when you’re not going to receive the kind of returns you’re expecting,” he declared.
“Until the fundamentals alter, we’ll likely see more of the same.”
Zawalsky worked on three major energy transactions last year: the bidding war for MEG Energy Inc. in which Cenovus Energy Inc. emerged victorious; Whitecap Resources Inc.’s $15-billion combination with Veren Inc. and Ovintiv Inc.’s $3.8-billion acquisition of NuVista Energy Ltd.
BD&P as a whole was involved in eight of the 10 largegest energy producer transactions last year. Deals were done largely among domestic players, with Ovintiv somewhat of an exception. It’s headquartered in Denver, but its stock trades on the TSX and it has a substantial Canadian presence, having formerly been known as Encana and based in Calgary
Tom Pavic, president of Sayer Energy Advisors, is expecting this year to be busy.
“I don’t know if we’ll see the values that we saw in 2025, which were dominated by a number of large deals over in the billions,” he declared.
“I consider you’ll still see quite a bit of activity, just at a tinyer scale.”
Pavic added that it’s a “acquireer’s market,” as companies see for the most cost-effective way to add to their drilling inventories.
The investment environment has been improving with Ottawa and Alberta reaching a sweeping energy accord that includes support for a new West Coast oil pipeline, Pavic declared. But so far, he’s not observed an uptick in global interest in Canadian acquisitions.
Zawalsky declared potential acquireers are having to weigh the attractive quality and value of Canadian assets against lingering concerns over regulatory burdens and infrastructure requireded for overseas exports.
However, U.S. private equity players have been displaying an interest in picking up Canadian assets, building up production and then selling the companies or taking them public, he declared.
“Anywhere they see a value arbitrage with Canadian assets selling lower or being developed at a lower cost, they view that as an opportunity,” Zawalsky declared.
“And they tfinish to be more willing to take risk on the regulatory side than established oil and gas producers.”
Hostile bids, like the one from Strathcona Resources Ltd. that put MEG in play last spring, are expected to be the outlier, he declared.
About 40 people across BD&P had a hand in the MEG-Strathcona-Cenovus saga as its lawyers worked on behalf of the tarreceive company, he declared.
“They’re very legally intensive for the bidder. It’s a very expensive proposition to put forward a bid when you don’t know that you’re going to be successful.”
In its 2026 outsee, ATB Capital Markets declared it was anticipating a “modest slowdown” in consolidation among explorers and producers.
“This expected decline in momentum is driven by an intersection of structural and economic factors, most notably the scarcity of remaining high-quality tarreceives that possess adequate scale and inventory depth to justify valuation premiums,” the report declared.
“Furthermore, weakness in oil commodity benchmarks heading into the new year … and limited appetite for crystallization at the bottom of the commodity price cycle create a challenging backdrop for transactions, likely widening the spread between opportunistic acquireers and sellers patiently waiting for higher valuations.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 10, 2026.
Companies in this story (TSX:SCR) (TSX:CVE) (TSX:OVV)
Lauren Krugel, The Canadian Press
















Leave a Reply