RWE spends $4.1 billion on power grid stake to become more resilient

Industry:    23 hours ago

RWE has raised its stake in power grid operator Amprion to a majority for €3.6 billion ($4.1 billion), Germany’s biggest power producer said on Monday, betting on regulated assets in a push ​to make its business more resilient.

The deal will give RWE a pro rata stake of ​55% in Germany’s second-largest high-voltage power grid operator, exposing the company to more ⁠regulated returns at a time when its capital allocation has drawn scrutiny from some investors.

The deal ​will make regulated infrastructure the company’s third business pillar, CEO Markus Krebber said, complementing renewables and gas-fired ​power generation, as the company seeks a more robust set-up.

Larger peers, including France’s Engie ENGIE.PA, Italy’s Enel and Spain’s Iberdrola, all have a sizeable regulated asset portfolio, something which Krebber said enabled more flexibility when it comes to investments.

‘MORE ROBUST ​PORTFOLIO’

“We’ve always looked a bit to our peers in … Southern Europe, the big players who have ​generation and grid operations, naturally,” Krebber told journalists.

“They have a significantly more robust portfolio and greater flexibility when it ‌comes to ⁠investment.”

He said the deal, which is expected to close in the third quarter of 2026, would add €930 million of adjusted core profit from 2031, adding it would provide long-term stability in terms of returns at a time of changing market dynamics.

“At the moment, generation is clearly the absolute favourite given ​the data centre and AI ​boom,” he said. “But ⁠let’s think back 24 months – things were very different then.”

RWE said the deal would be funded by issuing shares representing 10% of its capital, adding ​Qatar, already the German group’s single biggest investor, as well as Norges Bank (NOCB.UL), ​had already ⁠agreed to buy €1 billion worth of shares.

Shares were placed at €54, a 2.9% discount to Monday’s closing price, resulting in gross proceeds of around €4 billion, RWE said.

Sources had told Reuters in February that major owners of Amprion ⁠were considering ​selling stakes to new investors in the face of growing ​funding needs for energy networks across Europe.

RWE last year formed a joint venture with Apollo Global Management for its existing 25.1% stake ​in Amprion.

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