On February 25, 2026, ENGIE — a French multinational utility listed on the Paris and Brussels stock exchanges with approximately €71.9Bn in 2025 revenues — entered into a definitive agreement to acquire 100% of UK Power Networks from three Hong Kong-listed companies controlled by the Li Ka-shing family. The equity value of the transaction stands at £10.5Bn, implying a total enterprise value of £15.8Bn. The acquisition is subject to customary regulatory approvals and is expected to close in mid-2026.
ENGIE operates across the full energy value chain, from renewable energy production and battery storage to gas networks and retail energy supply in over 30 countries. Despite that scale, ENGIE had historically been absent from one segment: regulated electricity distribution, the infrastructure that physically moves power from the grid to homes and businesses. Prior to this transaction, ENGIE was the only major European utility without a distribution network — a gap that peers such as Iberdrola, E.ON and National Grid have long used to anchor more stable, predictable earnings. The UKPN acquisition closes that gap.

Strategic Reasoning
UKPN is the largest electricity distribution network operator in the UK by number of customers served, delivering power to 8.5 million homes and businesses across London, the South East and East of England. It is a regulated business, meaning its revenues and permitted returns are set by Ofgem, the UK energy regulator — not by market prices.
At £15.8Bn, the transaction values UKPN at approximately 1.5 times its Regulated Asset Value (RAV), the measure Ofgem uses to determine what a network operator is allowed to earn. That multiple is above the historical range for regulated UK infrastructure deals, reflecting the scarcity of assets of this quality and scale coming to market.
The strategic case for ENGIE rests on two related dynamics. First, regulated distribution assets offer revenue that is inflation-linked, underpinned by a regulator and largely insulated from commodity price movements. ENGIE has historically carried meaningful exposure to natural gas prices, which introduces volatility that regulated infrastructure does not. The French state, which holds approximately 23.6% of ENGIE through the Agence des Participations de l’État, tends to favor predictable earnings profiles. The UKPN acquisition materially shifts ENGIE’s mix toward that profile.
Second, electricity demand in the UK is expected to grow. The UK government’s target to decarbonize its power system by 2030 is placing increasing investment requirements on distribution infrastructure, and two demand drivers — electric vehicle adoption and data center expansion — are accelerating that pressure. Aurora Energy Research estimates that a single 100-megawatt data center may consume as much electricity as 260,000 homes. ENGIE’s management views UKPN’s regulated asset base as well positioned to benefit from that demand growth through growth in RAV over current and future price control periods. The acquisition is expected to be accretive to net recurring income from the first full year following completion.
A Large Financing Package and a 15-Year Exit
To fund the acquisition, ENGIE plans a combination of approximately €5Bn in debt and hybrid instruments, a €4Bn asset disposal program by 2028 and up to €3Bn in equity raised through an accelerated bookbuilding process. The transaction is expected to increase the group’s net financial debt by between €13Bn and €15Bn by end-2026 and lift total capital employed by €17Bn to €19Bn over the same period. Management indicated that its investment-grade credit rating and dividend policy will be maintained.
On the sell side, CK Infrastructure Holdings, Power Assets Holdings and CK Asset Holdings — entities affiliated with the Li Ka-shing family — acquired UKPN in 2010. After approximately 15 years of ownership, the sale reflects a broader portfolio review by the CK Group, which has signaled an intention to simplify its international holdings. The transaction is conditional on approval by the independent shareholders of the sellers’ Hong Kong-listed parent companies.
The Market Reaction
ENGIE shares rose as much as 7.6% on the day of the announcement — their largest single-day gain since March 2017 and their highest level since February 2009. Jefferies estimated the deal may be 3–6% accretive to earnings per share by 2028.
The transaction also illustrates how limited the supply of comparable assets has become. In August 2024, ENGIE and its partner CDPQ were outbid by Iberdrola for Electricity North West, a smaller UK distribution network valued at approximately €5Bn. UKPN is more than three times the size of that deal by enterprise value. Whether the ENGIE transaction encourages further consolidation in European electricity distribution will depend on the availability of comparable assets, of which there are few remaining and the appetite of other utilities to pursue similar portfolio adjustments.
The Bigger Picture
Upon completion, the UK will most likely become ENGIE’s second-largest country of activity by earnings contribution, and regulated networks will account for a materially higher share of group revenues. For a company that has spent several years pivoting away from commodity-linked earnings, the UKPN acquisition may represent the most consequential step in that transition. Whether the premium paid proves justified will likely depend on the pace of UK electricity demand growth and ENGIE’s ability to integrate a large, complex regulated business in a jurisdiction where it had no prior distribution presence.
About DelMorgan & Co. (www.delmorganco.com)
With over $300 billion of successful transactions in over 80 countries, DelMorgan‘s Investment Banking professionals have worked on some of the most challenging, most rewarding and highest profile transactions in the U.S. and around the globe. DelMorgan specializes in capital raising and M&A advisor services for companies across all industries and is recognized as one of the leading investment banking practices in California and globally.
Learn more about DelMorgan’s Capabilities, Transactions, and why DelMorgan is ranked as the #1 Investment Bank in Los Angeles and #2 in California by Axial.








