Hong Kong firm eyes UK’s debt-laden Thames Water with £7b takeover bid

LONDON, Feb 22 — A Hong Kong company has submitted an initial £7 billion (RM39.1 billion) bid for a majority stake in Th...

featured-image

LONDON, Feb 22 — A Hong Kong company has submitted an initial £7 billion (RM39.1 billion) bid for a majority stake in Thames Water, a heavily indebted UK water supplier, the Financial Times said yesterday. CK Infrastructure, part of the CK Hutchison group, put forward the non-binding offer earlier this month, but expects the utility’s bondholders to take significant writedowns, according to two people close to the issue.

The news came after a UK court on Tuesday approved a £3 billion emergency loan for Thames Water, offering it a lifeline as it buckles under a mountain of debt. The loan provides a short-term solution to keeping the company — faced with debts of £16 billion — afloat while it finds the necessary funding to stave off a costly public bailout. Thames Water did not comment on the FT report when asked by AFP.



If the company that serves 16 million customers, or a quarter of the UK’s population, fails to find the funding, it will have to call on the state to bail it out. Such a rescue would be a blow to the government in the face of tight public finances. Thames Water — owned by a consortium of shareholders including Canada’s Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System and the British Universities Superannuation Scheme — has recently attracted interest from private buyers.

Infrastructure investor Covalis Capital proposed an upfront buyout offer of £1 billion, with the potential to bring in French utility giant Suez. According to the Financial Times, Thames Water has also received other offers including a £4 billion bid from American investment fund KKR. — AFP.