APA Group Raises $1.5B in Debt Offering Oversubscribed by Nearly 4X
APA Group raises $1.5 billion in oversubscribed debt offering
APA Group has successfully raised $1.5 billion through a dual-tranche debt offering comprising $1 billion in hybrid subordinated capital securities and $500 million in senior unsecured notes. The raise, which attracted demand nearly four times the amount on offer, has been structured as either fixed rates or swapped into fixed rates.
The capital raise strengthens APA’s balance sheet to support ongoing delivery of its growth strategy across Australia’s energy infrastructure portfolio.
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Breaking down the capital structure
The debt offering consists of three separate tranches with varying terms and interest rates:
| Tranche | Principal Amount | Format | Fixed AUD Interest Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30-year (call at year 7.5) | $400 million | Hybrid / Fixed | 6.77% |
| 30-year (call at year 7.5) | $600 million | Hybrid / Floating | 6.77% |
| 10-year | $500 million | Senior / Fixed | 6.42% |
The hybrid securities carry a 30-year final maturity with a call option at year 7.5, giving APA the flexibility to redeem early if market conditions favour refinancing. The senior notes carry a lower interest rate of 6.42% compared to the hybrids at 6.77%, reflecting the subordinated nature of hybrid capital in the company’s capital structure.
What are hybrid subordinated capital securities?
Hybrid securities sit between debt and equity in a company’s capital structure. They are subordinated to senior debt, meaning they rank lower in the repayment hierarchy if the company faces financial distress, but they rank above ordinary equity.
Companies use hybrid securities because they can receive partial equity credit from ratings agencies, which strengthens credit metrics without diluting existing shareholders. For APA, the hybrid structure provides the option to redeem at year 7.5, though the notes carry a 30-year final maturity if the call option is not exercised.
For APA securityholders, hybrid capital provides growth funding without issuing new equity, preserving ownership stakes whilst improving the balance sheet.
Strategic rationale and capital deployment
Garrick Rollason, Chief Financial Officer
“This funding strengthens our balance sheet and is consistent with our focus on efficient capital management, increasing the diversity of APA’s funding at attractive pricing. It will support ongoing delivery of our strategy, with our assets and growth platforms central to Australia’s energy security and transition.”
The raise is designed to support ongoing delivery of APA’s growth strategy across its asset base, which comprises more than $20 billion of energy infrastructure assets. This portfolio includes gas transmission, processing, compression, storage, renewables, battery storage, and electricity transmission assets.
APA delivers around half of Australia’s domestic gas through more than 15,000 kilometres of pipelines across the country.
Investor demand signals confidence
The nearly four times oversubscription demonstrates strong institutional appetite for APA’s debt instruments. Chief Financial Officer Garrick Rollason highlighted the positive investor response: “We are pleased with the strong support from Australian bond investors for both hybrid securities and long-term senior notes. In particular, the hybrid security issuance represents an efficient source of capital that benefits our credit profile.”
The level of demand at these rates suggests the market views APA as a stable, investment-grade counterparty within the energy infrastructure sector.
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What this means for APA securityholders
The raise delivers several key outcomes for investors:
- Balance sheet strengthened with $1.5 billion in new capital
- No equity dilution, as the raise was funded via debt instruments
- Hybrid securities provide credit profile benefits through partial equity treatment by ratings agencies
- Capital supports continued growth strategy execution across energy transition projects
- Strong investor demand demonstrates market confidence in APA’s credit standing
The issuing entity is APA Infrastructure Limited, which operates as the borrowing entity of APA Group.
The capital raise provides APA with funding runway to pursue growth opportunities across Australia’s energy infrastructure landscape whilst maintaining financial discipline.
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