(Updates with details throughout)

 
   DOW JONES NEWSWIRES 
 

Two big Canadian pension funds beat out at least two other bidders to acquire the high-speed rail link connecting London with the Channel Tunnel in a deal valued at GBP2.1 billion, as Canadian pension funds look for steady sources of cash flow from infrastructure investments to help them meet the funding obligations of their pension plans.

Borealis Infrastructure, the infrastructure investment arm of Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System, or OMERS, and Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan, two of the country's biggest pension funds, said early Friday they won the right to own and operate the 68-mile High Speed 1 rail network under a 30-year concession.

The pension funds will each own 50% of the concession, a Teachers' spokeswoman confirmed.

OMERS and Teachers' beat out at least two other bidders in an auction the U.K. government launched in June. Dow Jones reported earlier this week that Groupe Eurotunnel SA (GET.FR) and two of its shareholders, Infracapital and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS), and another group comprised of Morgan Stanley's (MS) infrastructure fund, 3i Group PLC's (III.LN) infrastructure fund and the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, also participated in the auction.

Representatives for OMERS and Teachers' said they couldn't comment on the transaction beyond their news releases until the deal closes, which should be shortly.

In the releases, OMERS and Teachers' said the transaction is consistent with their strategies to diversify their investments globally and seek "stable inflation-protected returns."

More than 9 million international and over 5 million domestic passengers use HS1 annually. The rail network generates the majority of its revenues from track access charges under a structure allowing it to receive an inflation-adjusted income stream and recover its operating and maintenance costs from train operating companies. Approximately 60% of revenue is earned from domestic track access charges for high-speed services operating between London and southeast England and the remaining 40% is earned from international services currently operating from London, Paris and Brussels.

Teachers' oversees about C$96.4 million in assets and of that total about C$8 billion is allocated to infrastructure investments in the U.K., Canada, Chile and elsewhere. In the U.K., Teachers' investments also include Camelot Group, Acron Care and Bristol International Airport among others.

OMERS oversees a total of about C$48 billion of assets and its infrastructure arm Borealis has about C$7 billion invested in more than 20 businesses in the U.K., the U.S. and Canada.

Websites: www.omers.com, www.borealis.ca

-By Ben Dummett, Dow Jones Newswires; 416-306-2024; ben.dummett@dowjones.com;

(Judy McKinnon in Toronto contributed to this article.)