MONOPOLY CAPITALI$M
Red-Hot Canadian Oil Patch M&A Likely to Cool
- Canada’s upstream oil and gas sector saw a record $31.2 billion in M&A activity in 2025.
- 2025 saw major deals such as Whitecap Resources’ merger with Veren and Cenovus Energy’ takeover of MEG Energy.
- Sayer Energy Advisors expects deal activity to moderate in 2026 due to a shrinking pool of high-quality targets, strong producer balance sheets, and structural constraints despite improving policy signals.
Last year saw a record number of deals in the Canadian oil patch, with sectoral consolidation reaching an eight-year high.
But a new report from Calgary-based Sayer Energy Advisors anticipates mergers and acquisitions in Canada’s upstream oil and gas will moderate over the next 12 months.
The report’s findings go against the expectations of industry analysts and executives of more US buyers searching for acquisition targets, along with more favorable government policies towards the sector spurring more action in 2026.
According to the report, via the Calgary Herald, the upstream oil and gas sector saw an estimated $31.2 billion of M&A activity in 2025, a 53% jump from the previous year and the most dealmaking since 2017, when five large transactions led by foreign firms exiting the oilsands accounted for 80% of the total deal value.
The 2025 total included Whitecap Resources’ (TSX:WCP) $15 billion merger with Veren Inc. last March, and Cenovus Energy’s (TSX:CVE) $8.6B takeover of oilsands producer MEG Energy in November.
Other deals saw Sunoco LP’s (NYSE:SUN) purchase of fuel giant Parkland Corp. for $9.1 billion; Keyera Corp.’s (TSX:KEY) $5.1B acquisition of Plains All American Pipeline’s (NASDAQ:PAA) NGL (Natural Gas Liquids) Division; Ovintiv Inc.’s (TSX:OVV) purchase of NuVista Energy for $3.8 billion, and Canadian Natural Resources’ (NYSE:CNQ) acquisition of Chevron’s (NYSE:CVX) Oilsands/ Duvernay Assets ($1.0B).
Buyers bulked up to achieve better returns and operational synergies during a period of lower oil prices averaging roughly $60 a barrel, rather than investing in new drilling.
About 30% of last year’s M&A activity targeted assets in the Montney formation of northeastern British Columbia and northwestern Alberta — a region known for its natural gas, condensate and NGLs.
Most major deals were completed by domestic players, although interest from US buyers began to increase as US shale wells started to become depleted.
A separate report from ATB Capital Markets notes most producers still have strong balance sheets, which could slow M&A in 2026, as there will be fewer firms looking to sell.
“We anticipate a modest slowdown in Canadian (exploration and production) M&A activity through 2026 following three years of robust consolidation within the sector,” the report states, per the Herald.
“This expected decline in momentum is driven by an intersection of structural and economic factors, most notably the scarcity of remaining high-quality targets that possess adequate scale and inventory depth to justify valuation premiums.”
On the other hand, Grant Zawalsky, senior partner and vice-chair at law firm Burnet, Duckworth and Palmer LLP in Calgary, was quoted by The Canadian Press as saying that “M&A is a way that you can grow when you don’t want to invest in drilling, when you’re not going to get the kind of returns you’re expecting,” he said.
“Until the fundamentals change, we’ll likely see more of the same.”
He should know. Zawalsky worked on three major energy transactions last year: the Cenovus-MEG Energy acquisition, Whitecap’s combination with Veren, and Ovintiv’s purchase of NuVista Energy.
BD&P was involved in eight of the 10 biggest transactions.
Tom Pavic, president of Sayer Energy Advisors, said that while the investment environment has been improving due to the Canadian and Alberta governments reaching an energy accord that includes support for a new West Coast oil pipeline, he hasn’t observed increased global interest in Canadian acquisitions.
Pavic chalked the disinterest up to lingering concerns over regulatory burdens and infrastructure needed for overseas exports.
However, US private equity players have been showing an interest in picking up Canadian assets, building up production and then selling the companies or taking them public.
“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 was quoted by The Canadian Press.
“And they tend to be more willing to take risk on the regulatory side than established oil and gas producers.”
By Andrew Topf for Oilprice.com
Big Oil’s Merger Boom Is Being Driven by a Surprisingly Small Club
- Just 20 oil and gas companies accounted for more than half of the total M&A deal value over the past decade, according to Bain & Co.
- Frequent acquirers dramatically outperformed non-acquirers, delivering shareholder returns roughly 130% higher over ten years.
- Recent mega-deals, including Devon’s acquisition of Coterra, highlight how consolidation is reshaping U.S. shale even as future dealmaking may slow or shift focus.
The oil and gas sector is continuing to consolidate after years of ‘merger-mania’, with ramifications for the entire energy sector and wider economy. But a recent report reveals that the spate of mergers and acquisitions that has characterized the fossil fuels industry over the last decade is not as widespread as it may seem, but rather concentrated among a few key players.
A newly released report from the consulting firm Bain & Co found that, within the oil and gas sector, “fewer companies are doing more of the deals and creating more of the value.” In fact, over the last ten years, just 20 companies were responsible for 53% of total deal value when it comes to mergers and acquisitions within the sector.
“And it’s not only the large supermajors,” Bain & Co report, “but also independents such as Diamondback Energy and large midstream companies such as ONEOK and Energy Transfer.” Indeed, this consolidation frenzy is reshaping the landscape of Big Oil, with not-quite-supermajors gobbling up more and more of the market.
What is more, the companies that are driving merger-mania are winning big. The report concluded that the companies considered to be ‘frequent acquirers’ ultimately provided shareholder returns that dwarfed the firms that were not involved in acquisitions over the last ten years. Companies completing at least one acquisition per year yielded returns that were a jaw-dropping 130% higher than companies that did not conduct acquisitions. This is more than double the performance gap seen between acquirers and non-acquirers in the sector a decade ago.
What is the math behind this massive performance gap? In layman’s terms, as explained by news outlet Semafor, “mergers tend to allow companies to capture scale and reduce unit costs through operational efficiencies and consolidated infrastructure, savings that have become more important now that oil prices have retreated from their 2022 peak.”
The consolidation boom has been especially concentrated in the United States, where “year-over-year mergers and acquisitions (M&A) activity surged 331%, totaling $206.6 billion,” according to an August report from Ernst & Young. In fact, the domestic oil and gas sector has shrunk from a field of 50 major players to one of just 40 big names.
Just in the last two years, Chevron bought Hess for $53 billion, Exxon Mobil bought Pioneer Natural Resources for $60 billion, and Devon bought Grayson Mill Energy for $5 billion. And this merger-mania reached a new height just this month as Devon moved to acquire Coterra for nearly $26 billion in a marriage of two “crown jewels.” This deal “creates a domestic oil and gas juggernaut trailing only household names Exxon Mobil, Chevron, and ConocoPhillips in sheer production volumes” according to Fortune.
However, not everyone is thrilled about the new United States shale giant. The deal is a pure stock deal, with Devon shareholders set to hold 54 percent and Coterra shareholders 46 percent of the merged company. This makes it a bit contentious for investors. As explained by MarketWatch, “investors in the acquiring companies don’t usually like stock deals, because issuing new shares to fund the purchase dilutes their holdings, meaning they now own a smaller percentage of the company.”
The Devon-Coterra merger, popular or not, is major news after a relatively quiet year for mergers and acquisitions in 2025. In fact, it could be the harbinger of the next big consolidation wave. But probably not.
Some experts think that merger-mania is set to wind down or at least reorient its focus as prices become more volatile on the back of shifting demand patterns. “With ongoing uncertainty around supply and demand, pricing, tariffs, and geopolitics, operational efficiency and capital discipline will be critical,” says Ernst & Young’s Herb Listen. “The companies that adapt quickly, invest strategically and integrate effectively will define the next chapter of U.S. energy.”
By Haley Zaremba for Oilprice.com


