Hermes Investment Management has substantially grown its stake in British utility Southern Water, buying a 17% shareholding previously owned by Australia鈥檚 sovereign wealth fund.
Hermes bought the 17.1% stake in Southern, which supplies water to more than 2.4m people in Hampshire and other English regions, months after reports the AUD117bn (鈧79bn) Future Fund planned to dispose of its 23.4% shareholding, built up since 2008.
In a statement, Hermes said it completed the transaction following the sovereign investor鈥檚 sale, and that the manager now owned 21% of the utility.
Financial terms have not been disclosed.
The last full sale of the company, in 2007, saw Royal Bank of Scotland sell Southern for 拢4.2bn to a group led by JP Morgan.
Its current owners include a number of pension funds, as well as infrastructure funds.
Peter Hofbauer, head of infrastructure at Hermes Investment Management said: 鈥淲e are pleased to have acquired this additional ownership interest in Southern Water, obtaining incremental governance rights, including board representation, on behalf of our clients.鈥
Hermes, owned by the UK鈥檚 BT Pension Scheme, would not be drawn on the client for which it acquired the stake, but a spokeswoman clarified that the transaction was not conducted on behalf of the Hermes GPE Infrastructure Fund (HIF).
HIF is backed by six UK local government pension schemes (LGPS) 鈥 including those for Dorset, Cornwall and the London borough of Barking and Dagenham 鈥 and, as a result, Hermes has been considering the launch of a .
HIF has previously bought into Associated British Ports, in which .
Hermes was also part of a group to buy the UK government鈥檚 stake in .
Both previous deals were also supported by the Santander UK Group Pension Scheme, for which Hermes runs a segregated infrastructure account.
However, a spokesman for Sandander confirmed that the scheme had not participated in the Southern deal.