RWE (RWE.F) agreed to raise its stake in German power grid operator Amprion to 55% through a 3.6 billion-euro deal, establishing regulated grid business as its third core investment pillar alongside renewables and flexible generation.
The German utility already held a 20% stake in Amprion, which operates an 11,000-kilometer long extra-high-voltage grid. RWE said on Monday that it will acquire an additional 35% indirect stake in Amprion from five shareholders of M31, the majority shareholder of the target company.
To finance the acquisition, RWE intends to raise 4 billion euros by placing 36,143,952 new bearer shares and 38,240,169 treasury shares with institutional investors at 54 euros per share.
"We are expanding RWE's portfolio into grid infrastructure," RWE Chief Executive Markus Krebber said. "By increasing our stake in Amprion and providing additional funding for the expansion of Germany's transmission grid, we gain further attractive growth opportunities. These complement our existing investment plans in renewables, battery storage and flexible generation."
The transaction is expected to be accretive to RWE's EPS from day one. As such, the company plans to increase its EPS target for 2031 to 4.55 euros from 4.40 euros.
Following the completion of the deal, which is expected in the third quarter subject to regulatory clearances, Amprion will retain its position as an independent transmission system operator.
RWE also committed to investing 6.5 billion euros in grid expansion in Germany through 2031, which will be fully funded via the equity capital raise and its available financial headroom.
RWE shares were up more than 1% in morning trading in Frankfurt on Tuesday.



