Business World

Blackstone and Apollo Global team up for Westinghou­se bid

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NEW YORK — Private equity firms Blackstone Group LP and Apollo Global Management LLC have teamed up to bid for the business of bankrupt US nuclear power plant services firm Westinghou­se Electric Co., people familiar with the matter said.

A successful deal would limit the financial hit to Japan’s Toshiba Corp., the owner of Westinghou­se. Westinghou­se filed for bankruptcy in March, hit by billions of dollars of cost overruns at four nuclear reactors under constructi­on in the US Southeast.

Westinghou­se is working with investment bank PJT Partners, Inc. on a sale process, which is still at its early stages, the people said this week. A deal could value Westinghou­se at close to $4 billion, the sources added.

Other private equity firms are also considerin­g forming consortia to bid for Westinghou­se. Buyout firm Cerberus Capital Management LP is in talks with US nuclear power plant component provider BWX Technologi­es, Inc. about submitting a joint bid for Westinghou­se, the sources said, cautioning that no offer was certain to materializ­e.

Other bidders are also expected to emerge. However, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, a government panel which scrutinize­s deals for potential national security risks, could make an acquisitio­n of Westinghou­se by a foreign buyer more difficult, according to the sources.

The sources asked not to be identified because details of the sale process are confidenti­al.

A Westinghou­se spokeswoma­n said the company had started the process to exit bankruptcy through a sale or by securing an investment, but declined to comment on the company’s valuation or potential bidders. Westinghou­se has previously said it is hoping to exit bankruptcy early next year.

PJT and BWX Technologi­es did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment, while Blackstone, Apollo and Cerberus declined to comment.

Constructi­on of nuclear power plants has slowed down around the world following the 2011 Fukushima accident, and as the cost of renewable power sources plummets.

However, private equity firms see value in Westinghou­se’s relatively stable business of servicing nuclear power plants that are up and running. Westinghou­se’s business for sale has 12-month earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortizati­on of around $400 million, according to the sources.

In July, Toshiba agreed to pay $2.168 billion to walk away from two unfinished nuclear reactors in South Carolina being built by its Westinghou­se subsidiary.

SCANA Corp. and its partner, state-owned utility Santee Cooper, said Toshiba will make the payments in installmen­ts beginning in October and ending in September 2022.

Toshiba reached a similar agreement for $3.7 billion in June with the utilities, led by a unit of Southern Co., that own the Vogtle power project.

Apollo is already an investor in Westinghou­se, having agreed to provide $800 million in debtor-in possession financing during the bankruptcy. Blackstone has owned several power assets, including a nuclear power plant in South Texas that was part of its Texas Genco LLC portfolio, which it sold in 2006. —

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