UK Considers Nationalization of Thames Water as Crisis Escalates

Britain’s biggest water supplier, Thames Water, is in talks with officials over contingency plans including a temporary nationalization as concerns grow over its more than £13 billion ($16.5 billion) debt pile, according to people familiar with the matter.

(Bloomberg) — Britain’s biggest water supplier, Thames Water, is in talks with officials over contingency plans including a temporary nationalization as concerns grow over its more than £13 billion ($16.5 billion) debt pile, according to people familiar with the matter.

Thames’ bonds tumbled on Wednesday morning, with one falling 35 pence on the pound. Chief Executive Officer Sarah Bentley suddenly stepped down with immediate effect the previous day amid concerns over the financial stability of the firm, forcing the issue on to the government’s agenda.

“There is a lot of work going on behind the scenes with Thames Water to ensure customers are not impacted,” water minister Rebecca Pow told the House of Commons on Wednesday in response to an urgent question by the opposition Labour Party.

Talks are underway between water regulator Ofwat, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and the Treasury about bringing the utility company into a so-called special administration regime, according to two of the people. One said they hoped nationalization would not be necessary.

Rocketing interest rates are putting pressure on leveraged companies. At the end of March, Thames Water had the highest debt to equity ratio in the sector at more than 80%, according to a note from Martin Young, an analyst at Investec.

Read More: Thames Water’s Debt Woes Raise Specter of UK’s Energy Crisis

Inflation

More than half of the company’s senior debt is linked to inflation, which has remained stubbornly high in the UK.

New government regulations have also added to Thames Water’s problems. While most of its bonds fell on Wednesday, those belonging to junk-rated Thames Water Kemble Finance dropped particularly sharply. These notes are dependent on receiving dividends from the operating company, and a regulatory decision in March — which came into affect in mid-May — to curb water companies’ dividend payments made it harder for the unit to receive payouts from its subsidiary.

Thames Water said it is working with shareholders to raise more equity, in a statement published in response to media coverage about its position. It said it had raised £500 million in March, as previously planned. Last summer it said that, on top of this fundraising, it was seeking a further £1 billion from shareholders.

A spokesperson for Ofwat said it’s in ongoing discussions with Thames Water about a plan to turn the business around.

Thames Water provides water services for 15 million people in London and the South East. 

England’s privatized water companies have historically relied on the public debt markets to fund their operations. Environmental campaigners have accused them of borrowing heavily to fund large dividends and executive bonuses instead of investing more heavily into the system’s often-antiquated infrastructure.

Read More: Water Firms Will Turn to Debt Markets to Fix UK Sewage Crisis

Labour’s environment spokesman, Jim McMahon, accused the Conservative government of “handing over the water industry” to private companies “at a knockdown price.”

Sewage Spills

The water sector has faced public outrage over sewage spilling into rivers and along coastlines and is struggling to cope with the UK’s increasingly hot summers. The country suffered a long drought last year and utilities have imposed restrictions on families’ water use, despite a large number of leaks in Britain’s antiquated pipes.

Bills are likely to rise as water companies present plans to Ofwat to fix more infrastructure from 2025, Investec’s Young added in the note. 

Other major water companies have higher rates of capital, said Ahmed Farman, equity analyst at Jefferies, reducing the risk of contagion. Still, he said the latest developments would “raise broader questions about past regulatory robustness, financing and ownership structures for the sector.”

Debt

Thames Water had £4.3 billion of secured bank loans and private placement notes at the end of September and £9.5 billion of bonds issued out of different units, out of which £2.8 billion are linked to UK inflation. Each of the units offer different security to investors.

Darren Jones, a Labour party Member of Parliament who chairs the House of Commons Business and Trade Committee, told the BBC that the government shouldn’t be nationalizing the whole water industry. However, he said “if we ended up in a situation where the private owners of these companies have completely messed it up, then there is no choice for the government other than to bring it into public ownership and to run it.”

AlixPartners has been undertaking operational improvement work on Thames Water for a couple of months, while Rothschild is also advising the company, according to people familiar with the matter.

A spokesperson for AlixPartners declined to comment.

–With assistance from Eamon Akil Farhat, Luca Casiraghi, Tasos Vossos, Alex Morales and Dana El Baltaji.

(Adds ministerial response in third paragraph and context throughout.)

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.