
The says its decision on whether can take over Manawa has been delayed until May 9.
, but the commission updated its case register this morning to reflect the new decision date.
If the deal proceeds, it will be one of the biggest energy deals since the partial privatisation of the a decade ago.
Manawa, formerly , operates 26 power schemes from in the North Island to Otago in the South.
If approved, the deal would make Contact the second-largest generator in New Zealand behind Meridian Energy (31%).
Contact鈥檚 market share, currently 21%, will rise to 25% should the deal proceed. Mercury has around 21% and Genesis around 14%.
Under a proposed s Contact is offering shares and cash, valuing the target company at $1.86 billion.
With Manawa鈥檚 debt included, the enterprise value of the deal is $2.3b.
Contact says the two companies鈥 assets are complementary, with different seasonal generation profiles, allowing Contact to better manage dry-year risk and to sell larger volumes of fixed-price electricity into the market than it could independently.
But going on the competition watchdog鈥檚 comments made in its 鈥渟tatement of issues鈥 released last month, the deal is far from a slam dunk.
鈥淲e consider that the aggregation of the parties鈥 businesses would result in a merged entity with a substantially greater ability to impact the average wholesale electricity spot price more than Contact or Manawa would be able to do independently of one another,鈥 the commission said.
Jamie Gray is an Auckland-based journalist, covering the financial markets, the primary sector and energy. He joined the Herald in 2011.
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