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EIG Global Energy to launch new fund for Aramco pipeline and attract new investors

EIG Global Energy Partners hired PJT Partners as an advisor on how to structure a 'new fund' for its stake in Saudi Aramco oil pipeline assets, as the vehicle that holds it is nearing expiry.

Sources said that the so-called continuation funds would allow U.S. infrastructure investors to keep the Aramco stake they bought in 2021 for a longer period of time and bring in new investors.

EIG, PJT Partner?and Aramco didn't immediately respond to a comment request.

A continuation fund allows a company to continue ownership of an asset after the fund's initial?lifecycle. Firms can sell assets when funds reach their term limits, which are usually five years. Or they can use continuation funds to keep high-performing investments while offering existing investors a?exit. In 2021, an EIG-led group invested in Aramco Oil Pipelines for $12.4 billion. They acquired a 49% share in a newly formed entity that held lease rights to Aramco’s stabilised crude oil pipelines. Private equity firms and infrastructure companies are increasingly using the continuation fund structure to help them hold onto their investments for longer, while also providing liquidity options to existing investors.

Aramco Oil Pipelines operates under a lease agreement of 25 years, and generates tariff payments based on the crude volumes transported across thousands of kilometers of pipelines in Saudi Arabia. This move will?add to a growing market for Gulf pipelines. ?In April of 2024, BlackRock & KKR sold a stake in ADNOC Oil Pipelines to Abu Dhabi’s?Lunate.

Kuwait Petroleum Corp. is preparing to sell a stake in an oil pipeline that could fetch up to $7 billion. Saudi Aramco, meanwhile, is planning to sell gas-fired plants for about $4 billion.

(source: Reuters)