Fortis, the biggest gas and electricity distribution utility in Canada, is making a move into the desert.
On Wednesday, it agreed to buy UNS Energy Corporation, a utility based in Arizona, for $2.5 billion in cash. The price of $60.25 a share represents a 31 percent premium over UNS’s closing share price of $45.84 on Wednesday. Fortis will also assume $1.8 billion of UNS’s debt, bringing the total value of the deal to $4.3 billion.
Though Fortis is based in St. John’s, Newfoundland, and primarily operates utilities in Canada, the company has experience in the United States as well. It owns both Central Hudson, a utility in upstate New York, as well as Griffith Energy Services, a non-utility provider of propane and heating oil to mid-Atlantic states.
Further afield, Fortis operates utilities in the Caribbean islands, and power generating assets in Belize. Altogether, Fortis serves more than 2.4 million customers, and had revenue of $3.7 billion last year.
In UNS, Fortis will acquire a big provider of electricity to the city of Tucson, and UniSource Energy Services, which provides natural gas and electricity a broader swath of southern Arizona. Taken together, the utilities have more than 650,000 customers.
Fortis plans to invest $200 million into UNS to bolster its balance sheet and help fund the planned acquisition of a natural gas-fired Gila River Power Plant. Completing that deal will reduce UNS’s reliance on coal, part of the company’s continuing push into renewable energy.
“Fortis has built a successful track record of investing in fundamentally strong utilities that remain deeply engaged with the communities they serve,†UNS’s chief operating officer, David Hutchens, said in a statement. “They proposed this partnership because they like the way we do business, not because they’re looking to change it.â€
As with its other companies, Fortis plans to operate UNS independently. “UNS Energy will remain a standalone utility in the Fortis model,†Fortis’s chief executive, Stan Marshall, said in a statement. “Its headquarters and management team will remain in Tucson, Arizona and its customers will not pay for any costs related to the transaction.â€
UNS shareholders will have a chance to vote on the transaction next year, and various regulators must also bless the deal before it can be completed.
Scotiabank advised Fortis, and White & Case, Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg and Snell & Wilmer provided legal advice. Lazard advised UNS Energy, and Baker Botts provided legal advice.