Shell (SHEL) Strikes $16.4B Deal to Acquire Canadian Producer ARC Resources (ARX)

Table of Contents Shell (SHEL) has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire ARC Resources (ARX), a Canadian energy producer, in a transaction carrying a total enterprise value of $16.4 billion when factoring in $2.8 billion of net debt and lease obligations. Shell plc, SHEL The deal’s equity component is valued at approximately $13.6 billion. Under the terms of the agreement, ARC investors will be entitled to CAD 8.20 cash plus 0.40247 ordinary shares of Shell for every ARC share in their possession. Based on Shell’s share price at market close on April 24, this translates to approximately CAD 32.80 per ARC share. The offer represents a 20% premium above ARC’s volume-weighted average trading price over the previous 30 days. The transaction composition breaks down to roughly 25% cash consideration and 75% Shell stock. Shell plans to finance the equity segment with $3.4 billion in cash resources and $10.2 billion through the issuance of new Shell shares—totaling about 228 million ordinary shares. ARC Resources delivered production of 374,000 barrels of oil equivalent daily throughout the previous year. This acquisition introduces approximately 2 billion barrels of proved plus probable reserves to Shell’s existing resource base. ARC’s operations are concentrated within the Montney shale formation spanning British Columbia and Alberta. The company controls 1.5 million net acres across this region, which will be combined with Shell’s current 440,000 net acre position in the identical basin. This consolidation provides Shell with significantly enhanced scale in one of Canada’s premier natural gas and natural gas liquids-rich unconventional plays. Shell’s management indicated expectations for the acquisition to deliver double-digit returns while enhancing free cash flow per share beginning in 2027. The company has identified approximately $250 million in annual synergy opportunities achievable within twelve months post-closing. Notwithstanding the substantial size of this transaction, Shell has confirmed it will maintain its capital expenditure guidance at $20–22 billion for the 2027 to 2028 period. The company’s shareholder distribution framework—which commits to returning 40–50% of cash flow from operations—remains unchanged. Both companies’ boards of directors have granted unanimous approval to the transaction. Final completion requires affirmative votes from ARC shareholders, court sanction, and necessary regulatory authorizations. Shell and ARC are working toward a closing timeline in the second half of 2026. At the time of writing, SHEL was down 0.16% and ARX was down 1.34% on the day.