3i Group Consortium Halts Gatwick Bid On Price - Sources
February 17 2009 - 2:26AM
Dow Jones News
A consortium comprising 3i Group PLC's (III.LN) infrastructure
business, Teachers' Pension Plan and Canada Pension Plan has
stopped working on a bid for London's Gatwick airport, people
familiar with the situation told Dow Jones Newswires.
Airport operator BAA Ltd., a unit of Spain's Grupo Ferrovial SA
(FER.MC), launched the sale in September and hired Royal Bank of
Scotland Group PLC (RBS.LN) and HSBC Holdings PLC (HBC) as
advisers.
The 3i group hasn't disbanded and still views Gatwick as an
attractive asset but thinks the GBP2 billion price tag is too high
and has stopped actively working on a bid, people said. It will
monitor the situation and hasn't formally withdrawn, they
added.
Earlier this month, Ferrovial said it hoped to get binding bids
by the end of March or sometime in April.
BAA, which also runs Heathrow and Stansted airports, is being
forced to sell Gatwick by competition authorities, who have
suggested that the operator sells three of its seven airports.
Rather than lose Heathrow, the busiest of the seven, BAA has put
Gatwick on the block. The U.K. Competition Commission is expected
to issue a final decision at the end of this month.
Bidders still involved in the process include Gatwick Future
Partnership, which comprises Deutsche Bank AG (DB) unit Rreef
Alternative Investments, and Australia's Babcock & Brown
(BCM.AU);Global Infrastructure Partners, which includes London City
airport owners General Electric Co. (GE) and Credit Suisse Group
(CS); and a consortium comprising a Citigroup (C) infrastructure
fund, Vancouver Airport and John Hancock Life Insurance Co. bidding
jointly as Lysander Gatwick Investment Group, people said.
However, it is uncertain whether all three will submit final
bids - the process is difficult and the timetable is tight, the
people added.
Meanwhile, several banks are in the frame as potential lenders
for the staple finance being arranged by RBS and HSBC to be
available to the winning bidder.
The staple finance has been estimated at GBP1.6 billion by
people familiar with the matter, comprising GBP1.1 billion for the
acquisition and a further GBP500 million for future investment.
In addition to the staple finance, Ferrovial may also offer a
vendor loan to the potential buyer, one person has told Dow Jones
Newswires.
-By Marietta Cauchi, Dow Jones Newswires; +44 207 842 9241;
marietta.cauchi@dowjones.com
(Carol Dean contributed to this item.)
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