The city's yearlong quest to find a buyer for the
Philadelphia Gas Works is passing into a new, frenetic phase, and a Connecticut
utility that entered the natural-gas business only three years ago is said to
be Mayor Nutter's choice to take over PGW.
UIL Holdings Corp. of New Haven, parent company of
Connecticut electric utility United Illuminating Co. and three New England gas
utilities, has been selected by Nutter, according to a published report.
Sources said a deal is incomplete, and no terms were disclosed. If UIL
succeeds, the PGW acquisition would nearly double its size.
The selection of a winner will launch a high-stakes game
with City Council, whose members have been excluded from the selection process
but must approve a sale. A skeptical Council is hiring consultants to help
analyze the bid and examine alternatives to a sale.
UIL's name emerged this week as the front-runner. The
Philadelphia Daily News, citing a letter to an unnamed recipient from lawyer
Stephen A. Cozen, identified UIL Holdings as the mayor's choice. Cozen, who
represents a rival bidder, declined to comment. So did spokesmen for the mayor
and UIL.
Cozen represents a one-year-old company called Liberty
Energy Trust L.L.C., founded by Russian-born Boris Brevnov, a former Enron
executive who lives in Virginia and has spent the last decade engineering
energy mergers.
Liberty Energy recently identified itself as a PGW finalist
to leaders of the union that represents 1,150 gas workers.
James F. Runckel, the union's lawyer, said Liberty Trust had
financial backing from a labor-owned investment company, Ullico Inc. But the
gas workers union, which has vociferously opposed a sale to any bidder,
declined to endorse Liberty Energy, he said.
Brevnov did not respond to requests for comment.
Though terms of a deal have not been announced, Nutter has
said any deal would respect existing labor contracts and low-income assistance
programs.
Last year, Nutter launched the bidding process to sell PGW,
the nation's largest municipally owned gas utility. JPMorgan Chase & Co.
and Loop Capital Partners are managing the sale. A financial adviser calculated
that PGW could command a price of $1.4 billion to $1.9 billion, with net
proceeds to the city of $422 million to $872 million. Nutter has proposed using
the money to shore up the city's underfunded pension program.
Though PGW's business of distributing gas to 503,000
customers is stagnant, the utility is being marketed as a growth opportunity
for investors looking to gain a foothold in a region repositioning itself as an
energy hub tied to Marcellus Shale natural-gas development.
UIL, with a market value of about $2.2 billion, is a
pure-play utility that got into the gas business only in 2010, when it paid
$1.3 billion to acquire three New England gas utilities: Southern Connecticut
Gas Co., Connecticut Natural Gas Corp., and BerkShire Gas Co. in western
Massachusetts. The acquisition doubled UIL's size.
The company's chief executive, James P. Torgerson, was
questioned by analysts at a Feb. 21 earnings call about merger-and-acquisition
opportunities.
"Well, I think what we've said in the past is that if
there are opportunities, we'd like to look at them for utilities in the area or
in the region, kind of a broad region," he said.
UIL shares closed at $38.72 Friday, down 73 cents or 1.85
percent.
Source: Philly.com
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