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Talen Energy shares soar on $3.5 billion gas fired power plant deal

Talen Energy shares soar on $3.5 billion gas fired power plant deal

Talen Energy shares jumped by more than 15 percent in Friday's premarket trading. This was a day following the announcement of 3.5 billion dollars worth of deals to purchase two gas-fired power plants.

On Thursday, the utility company announced that it would buy the Moxie Energy Center and Guernsey Power Station from Caithness Energy in Pennsylvania and BlackRock in Ohio.

UBS, a brokerage firm, said that the Talen deals "extends the runway" for assets they can leverage when power demand from data centers using artificial intelligence technologies surges.

Gas-fired power plants are a crucial bridge for the U.S. in its energy transition. They provide reliable and dispatchable electricity at large scale.

J.P. Morgan stated that the deals will give Talen a "new flexibility" to capitalize on robust demand for data centers contracting and could help increase its value.

Talen announced last month a partnership agreement with Amazon.com for the supply of up to 1,920 Megawatts from its Susquehanna Nuclear Plant in Pennsylvania to Amazon Web Services' data centers.

Mac McFarland, CEO of the company, said that the deals announced on Thursday add "more than equivalent" to another Susquehanna facility.

Analysts at brokerage Evercore estimate that the average cost of purchasing new turbines is 53% higher than the cost of buying two plants. They said that "buy over build is continuing the momentum."

Talen said that the two plants which added nearly 3 gigawatts to the PJM interconnection are among the most energy efficient within the PJM, a regional transmission organisation that manages wholesale electricity flow in areas of the Eastern United States stretching from Illinois up to New Jersey.

The deals will boost Talen Energy’s core profit in 2026 by over 40%, and its free cash flow is expected to increase by 40% by 2026 and by over 50% by 2029. (Reporting and editing by Arunima Menon and Pooja Kumar in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)