Both AECOM and the investment group planning to buy its government contracting and nuclear decommissioning business could call off the deal if it takes too long to complete, according to a recent financial filing.
AECOM plans to sell its Management Services business to Maverick Purchaser Sub LLC, a joint venture formed by investment firms American Securities and Lindsay Goldberg, under an Oct. 12 purchase deal valued at roughly $2.4 billion. The sale is due to close by late January.
But both parties retain the right to terminate the deal if it has not closed by Feb. 12, though the deadline could be extended to April 12 if they are still waiting on government regulatory approvals. The purchaser could pay AECOM a termination fee of $141 million if the deal falls through, according to the 8-K financial disclosure report the Los Angeles-based engineering and infrastructure specialist filed on Oct. 17 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
The termination fee option is a fairly common clause in contracts to encourage parties not to drag their feet on closing an agreement, a source said.
The deal is subject to the customary closing requirements for large corporate transactions, including the 1976 Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act, as amended — which typically requires paperwork be filed with the Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice, followed by a 30-day waiting period. The companies will also need antitrust approval in the European Union “and the absence of any judgment or law preventing or prohibiting the closing,” the SEC filing says.
The agreement says the buyer will stop using the AECOM name on anything from stationary to websites within six months of closing.
There is probably a lot of stationary to be changed for AECOM and its joint ventures that contract with the U.S. Department of Energy. AECOM leads a joint venture operating the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) near Carlsbad, N.M., and another AECOM-headed partnership is in charge of remediation at the Oak Ridge Site in Tennessee. The company leads contractors handling radioactive waste management at the Savannah River Site in South Carolina and Hanford Site in Washington state.
AECOM and nuclear services firm EnergySolutions formed a joint venture to manage the $4.4 billion decommissioning of the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station in California. Its expanding portfolio of commercial nuclear work also covers partnering with Toshiba for decommissioning projects in Japan and cleanup contracts with the United Kingdom’s Nuclear Decommissioning Authority.
AECOM says its Management Services group currently employs about 25,000 people and generates roughly $4 billion in annual revenue. The group brought in more than $1 billion during its second quarter for fiscal 2019, or roughly 20% of AECOM’s total revenue for the three-month stretch. One year earlier the group generated $897.8 million
The company announced the sale Oct. 14. It decided to sell Management Services directly rather than following through with its June plan to spin it off via an initial public offering.
The financial filing says the buyer would pay AECOM up to 90% of any financial recovery it receives from DOE over a dispute over cleanup of a nuclear site in New York state.