Key Highlights
- Shares of Harbour Energy (HBR) declined more than 5% following BASF’s disposal of 80 million shares priced at 273p per share — representing a 9% markdown from Thursday’s closing level
- The German chemicals conglomerate generated roughly £218 million ($290.6 million) through the transaction, with Morgan Stanley serving as the exclusive bookrunner
- Initial plans for a 60 million share placement were expanded following robust demand from institutional investors
- BASF’s ownership in Harbour Energy has been reduced to approximately 35%, compared to more than 41% recorded at the close of February
- No funds from the share sale went to Harbour Energy; BASF’s continuing position includes a 90-day restriction period
On Friday, BASF executed a placement of 80 million Harbour Energy shares at a price of 273 pence per unit, securing approximately £218 million ($290.6 million) in gross proceeds. This pricing marked a 9% reduction from the previous session’s closing level of 300p.
The share placement significantly impacted Harbour Energy’s market performance. HBR initially plummeted over 5% during early trading before stabilizing at 284.4p, with the intraday bottom reaching 273.25p — nearly identical to the placement price point.
Harbour Energy did not receive any capital from this transaction. The entire operation constituted a secondary market disposal exclusively by BASF.
The initial structure called for the placement of 60 million shares. However, substantial appetite from institutional buyers prompted an increase to 80 million shares prior to the book closing.
BASF accumulated its position in Harbour Energy as part of the $11 billion takeover of Wintershall Dea’s upstream petroleum and natural gas operations completed in 2024. Harbour Energy issued equity to BASF as a component of the transaction consideration.
By February’s conclusion, BASF controlled more than 41% of Harbour Energy’s outstanding shares. This recent disposal brings that figure down to approximately 35%.
Morgan Stanley served as the sole bookrunner for the placement operation.
Restriction Period and Potential Future Disposals
BASF’s continuing shareholding faces a 90-day restriction agreement. Nevertheless, one notable exemption exists — BASF retains the ability to transfer additional shares to LetterOne Holdings, the original counterparty in the Wintershall Dea transaction.
This exemption clause indicates the restriction isn’t completely comprehensive. Market participants will probably monitor whether BASF utilizes this mechanism to further reduce its holdings through this specific channel.
The execution timing of this placement — combined with the upsizing — indicates that institutional demand for Harbour Energy shares at discounted valuations remains robust despite the immediate downward price momentum.
BASF’s Strategic Rationale
From BASF’s perspective, this transaction appears to represent an ongoing strategy to reduce its Harbour Energy exposure acquired through the 2024 transaction. The German industrial corporation obtained this equity stake as transaction currency rather than as a core long-term investment position.
Executing gradual disposals in portions, as opposed to a complete exit, represents a typical strategy for major shareholders seeking to liquidate positions while minimizing severe price disruption.
With a 35% ownership stake, BASF maintains a significant shareholding in Harbour Energy and continues to exercise voting influence at this threshold.
Harbour Energy shares were trading at 284.4p during Friday’s morning session.
