Categories: BusinessInvesting

BP to buy TravelCenters for $1.3 bln in U.S. fuel retail drive

 BP (BPL) will buy truck fueling provider Travel Centers of America Inc for about $1.3 billion, the companies said on Thursday, as the British energy giant seeks to expand its retail network in a bet on biofuels and electric vehicle charging.

Shares of the U.S. truck stop operator surged about 70% to $84.3 in morning trading, hovering near BP’s per share cash offer of $86. BP shares closed 1.4% higher in London trading.

TravelCenters owns a network of about 281 highway sites across 44 states and offers services beyond fueling, including truck maintenance, restaurants, travel stores, and parking, which account for 70% of the business’s profit margin, BP said.

It sells around 150,000 barrels of oil per day, 90% of which is diesel, BP said.

The services complement BP’s existing convenience and mobility business and will help in expanding its offers including electric vehicle charging, biofuels, renewable natural gas (RNG) and later hydrogen, the company said.

BP has been pushing to boost its investments in convenience, bioenergy and EV charging. In 2022, it acquired U.S. biogas producer Archaea for $4.1 billion in a bet on the expansion of low-carbon fuels and recently announced plans to invest $1 billion in EV charging across the U.S. by 2030.

“While we expect that traditional fuels demand will remain a material part of the energy mix through the decade, demand for lower carbon mobility solutions is growing rapidly,” BP Chief Executive Bernard Looney told analysts.

Electric vehicles are rapidly ramping up around the world, but battery technology to power trucks remains limited. BP plans to offer hydrogen as a truck fuel in the longer-term, Looney said.

Convenience is one of BP’s five strategic transition growth engines. By 2030, the London-listed company aims for around half its annual investment to go into these growth areas.

The acquisition of TravelCenters is expected to add to BP’s earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization immediately, growing to around $800 million in 2025, the company said.

BP expects the deal to offer a return on investment of over 15%, Looney said.

Source : Reuters

GLOBAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE MAGAZINE

Recent Posts

Goldman lifts MSCI EM target on AI boost, flags Iran deal relief for forex, bonds

The brokerage raised its benchmark ​index target to 2,000 from 1,850, implying a nearly 12%…

1 day ago

Bahrain raises $1bln in 10-year USD bond; demand exceeds $3bln

Strong demand enabled Bahrain to tighten pricing by 37.5 basis points from IPTs. Bahrain has…

1 day ago

Gold falls on stronger dollar, oil amid renewed Middle East hostilities

Dollar, oil gain on fading hopes of US-Iran peace deal. Gold fell ‌on Wednesday, weighed…

1 day ago

What Three Decades of Advancing Clean Air Taught Us—and Where We Go from Here

In 1990, facing a public health crisis, Mexico City initiated its first multiyear air quality…

1 day ago

Blue finance: Making waves for sustainable oceans and freshwater resources

Water is a key pillar of life and livelihoods — but it is massively underfinanced.…

1 day ago

The early takeoff of space innovation

The conventional account of US space sector transformation credits the post-2005 entry of SpaceX, Blue…

1 day ago