Bay of Plenty Times

Infratil shares hit record on news of US asset revaluatio­n

- Jene´ e Tibshraeny

Infratil’s share price has hit a record high after announcing the value of its stake in a United States-based renewable energy company has increased more than three-fold in three months.

The catch is, the independen­t valuations it’s had done have used different methodolog­ies.

The Nzx-listed company yesterday announced it and the New Zealand Superannua­tion Fund are each investing a further US$100 million ($159m) in Longroad Energy to retain their roughly 37 per cent stakes.

Their moves come as the asset manager of the reinsuranc­e giant, Munich Re, has agreed to invest

US$300M in Longroad to acquire a 12 per cent stake.

Infratil said, in a statement, its stake in Longroad was valued at US$798M on June 30, based on the assumption the proposed capital raise and transactio­n go through.

It said this was significan­tly higher than a valuation dated March 31, which concluded its stake was worth only US$220M.

“Infratil is extremely happy with this outcome,” Infratil chief executive Jason Boyes said in the statement.

“We remain very optimistic about the . . . outlook for Longroad and are pleased to be increasing our investment as part of this transactio­n.”

Boyes said Munich Ergo Asset Management’s investment in

Longroad was also a “strong endorsemen­t of the business and the sector”. Infratil’s share price rose from $8.85 to a record high of $9.04, at the time of writing.

When the Herald asked Boyes what was behind the massive rise in valuation of Infratil’s stake in Longroad, he explained that in March, the independen­t valuer only considered the value looking one year ahead. Whereas in June, it considered the value across multiple years into the future.

“The value was always there, but now it’s recognised,” Boyes said.

He said a valuation hadn’t been done in June, using the same methodolog­y as in March. Therefore, apples couldn’t be compared with apples.

Coming back to the statement, it explained Longroad has developed and acquired 3.2 gigawatts of wind and solar projects since its establishm­ent in 2016. It still retains 1.5GW of this sum and has a 15GW developmen­t pipeline composed of wind, solar, solar and storage, and standalone storage assets across 13 states in the US.

NZ Super Fund head of external investment­s and partnershi­ps Del Hart said it’s been exciting to see Longroad grow since the Fund first invested.

“Longroad has been one of the NZ Super Fund’s most successful investment­s,” he said.

Longroad chief executive Paul Gaynor said, “The additional capital will allow Longroad to maximise its competitiv­e position in what remains one of the most attractive markets in the world for renewable energy investment.”

Longroad management has a 14 per cent stake in the company.

Munich Ergo Asset Management’s investment is subject to approvals from the US’S Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the Commission on Foreign Investment.

This transactio­n is expected to be completed in the last quarter of the calendar year.

 ?? ?? Jason Boyes
Jason Boyes

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