Apollo's $2B Power Play: Private Credit Giants Just Flipped the Script on Wall Street

Brookfield, BlBrookfield, Blackstone, and JPMorgan quietly funded a near-billion-dollar loan

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May 20, 2025
Summary
  • Private lenders now dominate LBOs—$32B and counting in 2025.
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Apollo Global Management (APO, Financial) is doubling down on U.S. infrastructure with its $2 billion acquisition of PowerGrid Services—backed by a nearly $1 billion private credit package. The firm is tapping Brookfield, Blackstone, and JPMorgan's direct lending units to fund the deal, according to sources with knowledge of the matter. The financing includes a $650 million term loan, $200 million in delayed-draw debt, and a $125 million revolver—marking another big swing by private lenders as they continue to eat into Wall Street's turf.

PowerGrid will pay 4.75 percentage points above the U.S. benchmark on the term loan, which comes with a seven-year maturity and a 1% discount on issuance. There's room for a 25-basis-point cut if certain conditions are met, making the deal potentially attractive to lenders looking for yield with upside optionality. While no one involved is commenting publicly, JPMorgan reportedly advised Apollo on the transaction, which gives the firm control of a business that services electric utilities across the country.

Private credit is having a moment. Lenders have financed $32 billion worth of leveraged buyouts so far this year—already blowing past the $23 billion figure from this time in 2024. With public M&A volumes still tepid, deals like PowerGrid suggest direct lenders are stepping into the void and reshaping how large buyouts get done. For Apollo, this isn't just another infrastructure play—it's a bet that essential services, funded outside traditional banks, could offer stable returns in an uncertain macro backdrop.

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