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Trudeau government initially offered $3.85 billion for Trans Mountain pipeline assets

#137 of 298 articles from the Special Report: Trans Mountain
Justin Trudeau, Ottawa, news conference
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau leaves the National Press Theatre in Ottawa following a news conference on June 20, 2018. File photo by Alex Tétreault

Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd. says the actual price the federal government will pay for its Trans Mountain pipeline system and expansion project will be hundreds of millions of dollars less than the $4.5 billion it announced in May.

In a regulatory filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the company says it estimates it will have to pay at least $325 million in capital gains taxes to the Canadian government when the deal is concluded.

It says that reduces the "net price" to $4.175 billion.

The filing is designed to advise Kinder Morgan Canada shareholders in advance of their vote on the transaction in August. Houston-based parent company Kinder Morgan, Inc. owns about two-thirds of the shares.

The document also recounts the negotiations that led to the deal, including an initial offer by the company to give the government a five per cent equity stake in return for financial guarantees and Ottawa's counter suggestion it could buy 51 per cent of the pipeline assets.

The filing notes that once they decided on a 100 per cent sale, Kinder Morgan offered to sell for $6.5 billion and the government came back with a counter offer of $3.85 billion.

An attached report from adviser TD Securities concludes that the deal as negotiated is fair for shareholders.

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