Skip to main content

Official sale of M6 Toll to be launched in September

An information memorandum that will officially launch the sale of M6 Toll, the UK’s only toll road, will be sent out to interested buyers in September. No date is set for sending out the IM, according to sources, but the 43km six-lane asset around the English city of Birmingham could be going for slightly less after the UK’s European Union referendum vote in June. The result of the so-called Brexit – ‘British exit’ of the EU – referendum was won by the no-to-Europe side and the UK is now setting up t
August 23, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
An information memorandum that will officially launch the sale of M6 Toll, the UK’s only toll road, will be sent out to interested buyers in September.

No date is set for sending out the IM, according to sources, but the 43km six-lane asset around the English city of Birmingham could be going for slightly less after the UK’s European Union referendum vote in June.

The result of the so-called Brexit – ‘British exit’ of the EU – referendum was won by the no-to-Europe side and the UK is now setting up talks to leave the economic union. But when the UK will officially exit the EU – which it joined in 1973 - is dependent upon discussions with other member states of the 28-country organisation.

The morning after the vote was counted, the UK pound fell 10% in value to its lowest point since 1985.

“We held up the [sale] process until the referendum dust had settled,” Andy Pearson, chief executive of Midland Expressway Limited (MEL), part of Macquarie Atlas Roads, told World Highways. MEL operates the road on behalf of the owners, a consortium of banks that hope to recover some of the €2.45 billion of debt.

The information memorandum will detail financial aspects of the asset upon which prospective buyers can proceed with due diligence in order to make a bid.

The 27 owners of M6 Toll, including Crédit Agricole, Commerzbank and Banco Espirito Santo, took over the pay-as-you-go toll road from infrastructure group Macquarie in December 2013 after a debt restructuring.

MEL won a public-private partnership competition in 1991 to privately build the road and operate it under a 53-year concession, lasting to 2054. MEL was to finance construction and recoup its costs by setting and collecting tolls. At the end of the concession period the infrastructure will revert to the government. Toll rates are set at the discretion, with no cap on the rates charged.

Related Content

  • BREXIT reprieve for NRMM engines
    October 2, 2020
    The UK has revised its guidelines for placing manufactured goods on the UK market.
  • UK infrastructure at risk
    February 9, 2017
    The entire infrastructure investment programme in the United Kingdom - Europe’s second biggest economy - is at serious risk as the country begins the process of leaving the European Union “During the next five years, GDP Growth in the UK will be half of what it was in the previous five years,” warned Alexander Jan, a director at UK-based infrastructure designer Arup. The value of the currency will continue to crash and “there will be a doubling in the cost of government borrowing”. This is bad news f
  • Cemex wins over 90% acceptance for debt exchange offer
    August 22, 2012
    Cemex, the largest cement maker in the Americas, has won more than 90% acceptance of an offer to extend maturities on US$ 7.25 billion of loans by three years. Support for the proposal, whose acceptance deadline was extended to 7th September, is said to have bolstered Cemex’s efforts to prevent a financing crunch in 2014 by pushing maturities to 2017.
  • ACE/AECOM report: private sector and user-pay for English roads
    May 14, 2018
    It’s one minute to midnight for funding England’s roads, according to a timely new report, and the clock’s big hand is pointing to some form of user-pay solution, reports David Arminas Is there any way out of future user-pay funding for England’s highway infrastructure? The answer is a resounding ‘no’, according to the recently published report: Funding Roads for the Future. The brief 25-page document by the London-based Association for Consultancy and Engineering, ACE**, sums up the state of England’s ro