The Globe and Mail

 

Blogs

Monday, July 6, 2009 5:37 PM

Great Lakes buys BAM dams

The renewable power sector just got a lot larger, as Great Lakes Hydro Income Fund bought $945-million of hydro dams and wind farms from parent Brookfield Asset management

Great Lakes GLH.UN-T cut a deal that will see the company pick up 16 power projects, and fund the acquisition by selling $380-million of subscription receipts. Half of this equity will be purchased by Brookfield BAM-T, to maintain its 50.1 per cent stake in the trust. After this deal, Great Lakes is expected to sport a $1.6-billion market capitalization.

Scotia Capital and CIBC World Markets will lead a bought deal financing that will see $185-million of Great Lakes subscription receipts sold at $15.10 each. This paper flips into Great Lakes units once the power plant purchase closes. The trust will also issue $200-million of unsecured debt to pay for the acquistion.

As part of this purchase, Great Lakes also firmly stated that it will convert from a trust to a corporate structure before a new tax regime takes hold on Jan 1, 2011. Great Lakes said: ‘With the completion of the proposed transaction, the fund expects to be well-positioned to maintain its current cash distributions after its conversion to a corporation.”

The planned purchase will allow the trust to maintain its $1.25 per unit annual distribution by boosting cash flow to about $100 million, Great Lakes said

After this acquisition closes, Great Lakes will be renamed Brookfield Renewable Power Fund, a branding exercise meant to clearly establish the companies under the Brookfield umbrella.

Latest Comments

Streetwise Contributors

Andrew Willis

Andrew Willis joined The Globe and Mail in September of 1995. His career has included stints at a number of publications, including The Financial Post, The Financial Times of Canada, Dow Jones/Wall Street Journal, and MacLean's magazine. He also did freelance writing for Investment Executive magazine. He appears on television for BNN TV and CBC Newsworld.

Andrew has co-written a book, The Bre-X Fraud, with business journalist Douglas Goold.

Read Streetwise Tuesday through Friday in the pages of Report on Business.

 
Boyd Erman

Boyd Erman

Boyd Erman is a long-time business journalist who has worked at Dow Jones, Bloomberg, and the National Post before joining the Globe and Mail. Over the years, his areas of coverage have included economics, monetary policy, debt markets and corporate finance.

In addition, he is a regular commentator and guest host on Business News Network.

 

Steve Ladurantaye

Steve Ladurantaye wrote about technology companies in Ottawa before reporting for the Peterborough Examiner and Kingston Whig-Standard, where he won a National Newspaper Award for explanatory journalism. After joining the Globe and Mail in 2007, his work has regularly appeared in Report On Business and Globe Investor Magazine.

 
Globe and Mail reporter Tara Perkins

Tara Perkins

Tara Perkins has been a business reporter since 2004, following a brief stint as overnight editor of globeandmail.com. She has been writing for the Globe's business section since the spring of 2007, covering the banking sector during the course of the financial crisis. Prior to that, she worked for the Toronto Star. Tara has a Bachelor of Journalism from Ryerson University and a Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Guelph.

 
 

Jacquie McNish

Jacquie McNish has been a business writer with The Globe and Mail since 1988. Prior to that she was a reporter with The Wall Street Journal.

During her time at The Globe and Mail, she has served as the paper's New York correspondent and won three National Newspaper Awards. She is the author of The Big Score: Robert Friedland and The Voisey's Bay Hustle and Wrong Way: The Fall of Conrad Black, for which she and co-author Sinclair Stewart won the National Business Book Award. She is a co-host of Market Morning on the Business News Network.