Li Ka-Shing Makes Year's Top British Takeover Offer
By wchung | 23 Apr, 2026
Hong Kong’s richest man is bidding $3.9 bil. for British utility Northumbrian Water Group. The offer is likely to be consummated as the company’s board and leading minority shareholders are supporting Li Ka-shing’s bid.
Li’s Cheung Kong Infrastructure Holdings is bidding 465 pence ($7.57) per share of Northumbrian, 9.1 percent above the closing price before the bid was announced in July and 26.4 percent above June’s pre-rumor price. The offer includes assumption of debt of $3.7 billion, putting the deal’s full value at $7.6 billion. If completed, it would be the year’s biggest takeover of a listed British company.
The Northumbrian buy will expand Li’s bet on Britain. Last year he led a group to buy EDF’s British energy arm for £5.8 billion ($9.44 bil.). The current bid required Cheung Kong to unload Cambridge Water to HSBC in order to satisfy Britain’s monopoly regulators.
Li has been acquiring utilities, energy and infrastructure assets in Commonwealth countries like Australia, Canada and New Zealand, as well as in mainland China.
For the year ended March 31, Northumbrian reported profit of £178.4 million ($290.4 mil.), up 45 percent from the previous year. A final dividend of 9.57 pence will be paid in addition to the share price to be paid by Cheung Kong.
Li has won the backing of Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan Board, the Canadian pension fund that owns 26.8 percent of Northumbrian as well as of minority shareholders J.P. Morgan Asset Management and Artemis Investment Management, which own 3.8 percent and 2.9 percent respectively.
Cheung Kong has promised to would retain Northumbrian’s management under CEO Heidi Mottram but will be placed under a newly-created entity Cheung Kong-owned entity called U.K. Water.
Recent Articles
- TSMC Squeezes Smaller, Faster Chips from Old ASML Gear
- Jawbone Shaving and the Feminization of Korean Male Beauty Standards
- Song: Thumb of Thunder
- SK Hynix to Invest $13 Billion in South Korea Plant to Meet AI Memory Demand
- China, India Bet Big on Green Energy in Sharp Contrast to Regressive US
- China Plans to Make Cities More Youth-, Child-Friendly
- India's L&T Energy GreenTech, Japan's ITOCHU Ink Long-Term Green Ammonia Deal
- Meta Sued by Consumer Group for Profiting from Scam Ads
- AI Fears Hurt Software Stocks Despite Strong Performance
- Trump Deportations Weaken GOP Midterm Prospects Finds Reuters/Ipsos Poll
