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Antin Infrastructure Partners SA: 2025 Annual Shareholder Meeting All Resolutions Are Adopted
Antin Infrastructure Partners SA: 2025 Annual Shareholder Meeting All Resolutions Are Adopted

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Antin Infrastructure Partners SA: 2025 Annual Shareholder Meeting All Resolutions Are Adopted

Disclosure in accordance with the AMF recommendations PARIS & LONDON & NEW YORK, June 11, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Regulatory News: Antin Infrastructure Partners SA (Paris:ANTIN) held its Annual Shareholder Meeting today in Paris, under the chairmanship of Alain Rauscher, Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chief Executive Officer. The shareholders, who represented 97.50% of voting rights, approved all the resolutions presented, and in particular: approved the statutory and consolidated financial statements for 2024 decided on the distribution of an amount of €0.71 per share. Given the interim payment of €0.34 per share made on 14 November 2024, the balance of the distribution, i.e., €0.37 per share, will be paid on 18 June 2025 (ex-date: 16 June 2025) renewed, for a period of three years, the terms of office of Lynne Shamwana and Dagmar Valcarcel. The Board of Directors remains comprised of six members, three of whom are independent, and the composition of its Committees remains unchanged approved the 2025 compensation policies for the corporate officers, as well as the compensation paid or awarded for 2024 equipped the Board of Directors with a set of financial authorisations, giving it a degree of flexibility to initiate securities within a strictly defined framework The Board of Directors met after the Annual Shareholder Meeting and decided in particular to continue the liquidity agreement with BNP Paribas Arbitrage. Alain Rauscher invited shareholders to the next Annual Shareholder Meeting that will take place on 10 June 2026. The results of the votes are available on the website section "Shareholder Meetings". About Antin Infrastructure Partners Antin Infrastructure Partners is a leading private equity firm focused on infrastructure. With over €33 billion in assets under management across its Flagship, Mid Cap and NextGen investment strategies, Antin targets investments in the energy and environment, digital, transport and social infrastructure sectors. With offices in Paris, London, New York, Singapore, Seoul and Luxembourg, Antin employs over 240 professionals dedicated to growing, improving and transforming infrastructure businesses while delivering long-term value to portfolio companies and investors. Majority owned by its partners, Antin is listed on compartment A of the regulated market of Euronext Paris (Ticker: ANTIN – ISIN: FR0014005AL0). View source version on Contacts Media Thomas Kamm, Partner – Head of CommunicationNicolle Graugnard, Communication DirectorEmail: media@ Shareholder Relations Ludmilla Binet, Head of Shareholder RelationsEmail: shareholders@ Brunswick Email: antinip@ Tristan Roquet Montegon: +33 (0)6 37 00 52 57

Antin Infrastructure Partners SA: 2025 Annual Shareholder Meeting All Resolutions Are Adopted
Antin Infrastructure Partners SA: 2025 Annual Shareholder Meeting All Resolutions Are Adopted

Business Wire

timea day ago

  • Business
  • Business Wire

Antin Infrastructure Partners SA: 2025 Annual Shareholder Meeting All Resolutions Are Adopted

PARIS & LONDON & NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Regulatory News: Antin Infrastructure Partners SA (Paris:ANTIN) held its Annual Shareholder Meeting today in Paris, under the chairmanship of Alain Rauscher, Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chief Executive Officer. The shareholders, who represented 97.50% of voting rights, approved all the resolutions presented, and in particular: approved the statutory and consolidated financial statements for 2024 decided on the distribution of an amount of €0.71 per share. Given the interim payment of €0.34 per share made on 14 November 2024, the balance of the distribution, i.e., €0.37 per share, will be paid on 18 June 2025 (ex-date: 16 June 2025) renewed, for a period of three years, the terms of office of Lynne Shamwana and Dagmar Valcarcel. The Board of Directors remains comprised of six members, three of whom are independent, and the composition of its Committees remains unchanged approved the 2025 compensation policies for the corporate officers, as well as the compensation paid or awarded for 2024 equipped the Board of Directors with a set of financial authorisations, giving it a degree of flexibility to initiate securities within a strictly defined framework The Board of Directors met after the Annual Shareholder Meeting and decided in particular to continue the liquidity agreement with BNP Paribas Arbitrage. Alain Rauscher invited shareholders to the next Annual Shareholder Meeting that will take place on 10 June 2026. The results of the votes are available on the website section ' Shareholder Meetings '. About Antin Infrastructure Partners Antin Infrastructure Partners is a leading private equity firm focused on infrastructure. With over €33 billion in assets under management across its Flagship, Mid Cap and NextGen investment strategies, Antin targets investments in the energy and environment, digital, transport and social infrastructure sectors. With offices in Paris, London, New York, Singapore, Seoul and Luxembourg, Antin employs over 240 professionals dedicated to growing, improving and transforming infrastructure businesses while delivering long-term value to portfolio companies and investors. Majority owned by its partners, Antin is listed on compartment A of the regulated market of Euronext Paris (Ticker: ANTIN – ISIN: FR0014005AL0).

Antin Infrastructure Partners: Documents and Information Relating to the Combined Annual Shareholders' Meeting to Be Held on 11 June 2025 Now Available
Antin Infrastructure Partners: Documents and Information Relating to the Combined Annual Shareholders' Meeting to Be Held on 11 June 2025 Now Available

Business Wire

time07-05-2025

  • Business
  • Business Wire

Antin Infrastructure Partners: Documents and Information Relating to the Combined Annual Shareholders' Meeting to Be Held on 11 June 2025 Now Available

PARIS & LONDON & NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Regulatory News: The shareholders of Antin Infrastructure Partners SA are invited to attend the Combined Annual Shareholders' Meeting (the 'Meeting') that will be held at 14:30 on 11 June 2025 at 9, Place Vendôme, 75001 Paris. The preliminary notice of the Meeting was published in the French legal gazette (BALO) No.49 of 23 April 2025. It includes the Meeting's agenda, the draft resolutions that the Board of Directors will submit to the shareholders' vote, and the main modalities for attending, voting and exercising shareholders rights. The notice of the Meeting will be published in the French legal gazette (BALO) and a French legal announcement journal within the legal and regulatory deadlines. The preparatory documents and information relating to the Meeting are made available to shareholders and may be consulted or communicated in accordance with the applicable laws and regulations. They are available on the website About Antin Infrastructure Partners Antin Infrastructure Partners is a leading private equity firm focused on infrastructure. With over €33bn in Assets Under Management across its Flagship, Mid Cap and NextGen investment strategies, Antin targets investments in the energy and environment, digital, transport and social infrastructure sectors. With offices in Paris, London, New York, Singapore, Seoul and Luxembourg, Antin employs over 240 professionals dedicated to growing, improving and transforming infrastructure businesses while delivering long-term value to portfolio companies and investors. Majority owned by its partners, Antin is listed on compartment A of the regulated market of Euronext Paris (Ticker: ANTIN – ISIN: FR0014005AL0).

What's Next For Manhattan Real Estate? Stability.
What's Next For Manhattan Real Estate? Stability.

Forbes

time23-04-2025

  • Business
  • Forbes

What's Next For Manhattan Real Estate? Stability.

For investors and buyers with a long lens, Manhattan real estate offers something few other markets can match: the chance to preserve capital, hedge inflation and unlock generational value. Few headlines have reverberated across the nation like the New York Daily News splash on October 30, 1975. Five spare words—'FORD TO CITY: DROP DEAD'—declared that Wall Street's hometown was on the brink. The phrase distilled a decade of near bankruptcy and municipal belt‑tightening into a single punch and seemed to predict a lasting fade. New York, of course, refused to oblige. Decade after decade, the city remains steadfast in the face of adversity. Boom gives way to bust, slump gives way to revival, the market resets and thrives while the skyline remains unmoved. Resilience is Manhattan's defining trait. So, which headline will define 2025? According to Jared Antin, managing director of Midtown brokerage Elegran, it will be one to do with a seldom-applied word for a city addicted to superlatives: stabilizing. 'After years of feast and famine, Manhattan real estate is no longer lurching between extremes,' he says. '[It's] now operating at a measured, sustainable pace.' Ultra‑luxury inventory, like this $15 million Upper East Side townhouse, is quietly swelling—yet the uptick remains far from flood. To understand what Antin means by extremes, just look to this decade's opening act. From 2020 through 2022, buyers feasted on record‑low rates, pent‑up pandemic demand and a worldwide flight to quality. Then inflation surged. The Federal Reserve stepped in with its sharpest rate hikes in a generation, and deal volume slipped. Where past cycles would have whipped back into another extreme, the slowdown instead fostered long-term discipline. With developable land on Manhattan all but spoken for, demand has vaulted once‑overlooked pockets along the Hudson's eastern shore—Hudson Yards, West Chelsea and the far‑west Village—into some of the borough's hottest, highest‑priced territory. This Jean Nouvel-designed Hudson-view apartment is on the market for $4.5 million. In March 2025 alone, more than 2,000 new listings hit the Manhattan market—up 44% from February and 15% year‑on‑year. Instead of spooking buyers, the fresh inventory lured them in: contracts signed climbed 30% month‑over‑month and 11% annually. Antin says these aren't momentum trades but life‑cycle moves—estate planning, tax repositioning, global-wealth parking. He adds, 'Today's market is not driven by fear or frenzy. It is driven by fundamentals. And those fundamentals are beginning to quietly favor Manhattan once again.' Median price per square foot now sits at $1,397, a 6.2% annual gain and within arm's reach of the eight‑year ceiling set in 2016. Yes, inventory is inching up, but selectively. Trophy townhouses skimming Central Park's edge, Greenwich Village co‑ops crowned with secret sky decks and Hudson‑hugging high‑rises. As a global gateway city with a well-earned reputation for resilience, New York consistently attracts capital from every corner of the planet. This 3,078-square-foot apartment at 212 5th Avenue offers privacy, lock-up-and-leave luxury and views of Midtown's iconic Flatiron Building. But what of interest rates? Rising prices? Irrelevant for the luxury market, according to Antin. The currency flooding Manhattan today is conviction capital—family‑office money seeking generational diversification, overseas investors escaping weaker currencies and domestic buyers prioritizing lifestyle and legacy over leverage. For these UHNW buyers, three realities set Manhattan apart from pandemic boomtowns now nursing price compression. First, the island's tight footprint keeps supply scarce. Second, liquidity rarely dries up. Even in downturns, closings proceed from Midtown conference rooms to Tribeca lofts. Third, durability is baked into the borough's DNA. After 9/11, after Lehman, after the shutdowns of 2020, Manhattan stumbled, regrouped and often sprinted ahead of rival cities. 'Unlike stocks or crypto, your home doesn't ping you with a minute‑by‑minute ticker of perceived value. Real estate is tangible, usable and not immediately correlated with the daily whims of public markets.' The buyers signing contracts this spring are not chasing quick flips. They are buying a mansion's worth of square footage for heirs, for tax planning, for footholds in a city that forever attracts money, media and culture. They are less rate‑sensitive, more quality‑obsessed and newly appreciative of the subtle inventory uptick that offers just enough choice to negotiate without kneecapping values. Why does Manhattan real estate hold up while other assets twitch? Antin says that residential property stands out as one of the few asset classes that offers both emotional and financial stability. 'Unlike stocks or crypto, your home doesn't ping you with a minute‑by‑minute ticker of perceived value. Real estate is tangible, usable and not immediately correlated with the daily whims of public markets. It's a built‑in hedge against inflation and a ballast during turbulence.' In the face of global economic uncertainty, erratic equity markets and geopolitical tension, including the escalating tariff landscapes, that ballast matters. A condo on Fifth Avenue won't crater because a meme stock sneezes. It will still welcome you with views of the Flatiron Building and sleek chevron-patterned flooring. Like its iconic skyline, Manhattan keeps reinventing while preserving the bedrock traits that anchor its resilience: a Tier 1 city with all the lifestyle and ecoomic benefits that brings. Stability may lack the fireworks of a bull stampede, yet it may prove more profitable. Manhattan has entered what feels like a long-overdue equilibrium —a measured rhythm that suits both end-users and patient investors. The skyline, ever restless with cantilevers and cranes, reminds us that even times of serenity here are rarely dull. They are merely intervals when architects refine blueprints and capital finds its next long‑term berth. History suggests those who read such interludes correctly tend to be rewarded. Elegran is a member of Forbes Global Properties, an invitation-only network of top-tier brokerages worldwide and the exclusive real estate partner of Forbes.

EU Commission tells Spain not to pay up in long-running renewable subsidies case
EU Commission tells Spain not to pay up in long-running renewable subsidies case

Reuters

time24-03-2025

  • Business
  • Reuters

EU Commission tells Spain not to pay up in long-running renewable subsidies case

MADRID, March 24 (Reuters) - The European Commission on Monday handed Spain a victory when it instructed the country not to pay any compensation in a case related to claims amounting to billions of euros on renewable energy subsidies cut more than a decade ago. Foreign investors, mostly investment funds, took legal action against Spain after the previous conservative government cut renewables subsidies in 2013 to reduce a power tariff deficit built up through years of artificially low prices. here. In 2018, French infrastructure-focused private equity firm Antin ( opens new tab won an arbitration procedure against Spain for losses allegedly suffered as a consequence of the policy change, and Spain was ordered to pay 101 million euros ($109.39 million) in compensation. The case was brought under the Energy Charter Treaty, an international treaty that allows energy companies to sue governments over policies that damage their investments. Later Antin, like other companies and investment funds that had invested in Spain in expectation of subsidies and also lodged lawsuits, sold the compensation rights to another fund, the Spanish Energy Ministry said without mentioning the fund. The EU Commission, after a long-running investigation, said on Monday that paying the arbitration would breach EU state aid rules, which prevent governments from giving unfair advantages to one firm over competitors. The ruling instructs Spain not to pay any compensation based on the arbitration award and to ensure that the award cannot be claimed in any other way. The finding is a boon for Spain, which has one of Europe's most ambitious green agendas. Spain's energy ministry welcomed the ruling and said it hopes it will help it defeat similar claims. International investors filed a total of 51 arbitrations over the cancellation of Spanish renewables subsidies worth 10.6 billion euros, according to the ministry. Eight are still pending. So far, Spain has been ordered to pay around 1.5 billion euros in various cases, the ministry added. Some funds have tried to have arbitration awards enforced with lawsuits outside EU in countries such as United States, Australia or Britain. Two years ago, a London court ruled that investors could seize Spanish assets to enforce a 120 million-euro judgment in a related case. ($1 = 0.9233 euros)

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