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Company type | Public |
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NYSE: PWR S&P 500 Component | |
Founded | 1997 |
Headquarters | Williams Tower Houston, Texas |
Key people | Earl C. Austin Jr. (CEO) |
Revenue | $29.94 billion USD (Feb 2024) [1] [2] $9.466 billion USD (2017) [3] |
Number of employees | 40,000 |
Website | quantaservices.com |
Footnotes /references [4] |
Quanta Services is an American corporation that provides infrastructure services for electric power, pipeline, industrial and communications industries. Capabilities include the planning, design, installation, program management, maintenance and repair of most types of network infrastructure. In June 2009, Quanta Services was added to the S&P 500 index, replacing Ingersoll-Rand. [5]
Quanta Services employs about 40,000 people. Its operating companies achieved combined revenues of about $11 billion in 2018. It is headquartered in Houston, Texas. In 1998, Quanta went public on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol PWR.
In 1997, John R. Colson founded Quanta Services and is a former executive chairman. [6] After earning a degree in geology from the University of Missouri at Kansas City, Colson entered the military and served one year in Vietnam. He was discharged from the Army in 1971 and returned to Kansas City, taking temporary employment at PAR Electrical Contractors Inc., which built high-voltage transmission lines, distribution lines, substations, and provided other electric utility infrastructure services.
Colson's initial job was to carry stakes for a survey team. Within three years, he got promoted as manager of engineering services. After six years, he had worked his way up to vice-president of operations. After becoming executive vice-president and general manager in the early 1980s, he bought the company and became the president in 1991, and ultimately emerged as its owner.[ citation needed ]
In the 1990s, the electrical contracting business was highly fragmented: populated by more than 50,000 companies. The vast majority were small, owner-operated enterprises. Deregulation in the electric utility industries in a number of states prompted utilities to become more cost-competitive, leading to the outsourcing of infrastructure work to contractors who could do the job more efficiently. Much of the transmission and distribution infrastructure in the United States was aging and in need of repair or replacement. In 1997, Colson spearheaded the combination of four contractors to form Quanta Services Inc., which then established its headquarters in Houston with Colson as its head. [7] In addition to PAR, Quanta consisted of Union Power Construction Co., Trans Tech Electric Inc., and Potelco Inc.
With BT Alex Brown Incorporated, BancAmerica Robertson Stephens, and Sanders Morris Mundy Inc. serving as underwriters, Quanta completed its IPO in February 1998, raising $45 million. Of that amount, $21 million was used to pay the cash portion of the buyouts of the four founding companies. Much of the balance, along with a $175 million line of credit arranged with a consortium of nine banks, was used on over a dozen acquisitions completed in 1998. Acquired telecom companies included Manuel Brothers, Smith Contracting, Telecom Network Specialists, North Pacific Construction Company, NorAm Telecommunications, Spalj Construction Company and Golden State Utility Company. Acquired electric contractors included Harker & Harker, Sumter Builders and Environmental Professional Associates. Hybrid acquisitions included Wilson Roadbores and Underground Construction Company.
A secondary offering was completed in late January 1999. The company had planned to sell 3.5 million shares at $21 per share, but interest was so strong that in the end 4.6 million shares were sold at $23.25 per share. All told, Quanta realized $101.1 million. Money was used to fund the acquisition of 40 additional companies, which in total cost $323.6 million in cash and notes and 15 million shares of stock. Many of these additions were made to expand Quanta's business in gas transmission and cable television.
In 2001, UtiliCorp United Inc. (now Aquila, Inc.), an energy company with whom PAR had been doing business since the 1950s, attempted a takeover of Quanta. [8] UtiliCorp owned about 36% of Quanta, an investment that was originally part of a strategic alliance when UtiliCorp outsourced all of its maintenance needs to Quanta. Quanta resisted, and in October 2001, the two parties signed a standstill agreement. A month later Quanta adopted a "poison pill" plan to prevent a takeover, prompting UtiliCorp to sue. A proxy fight ensued in the spring of 2002. Quanta maintained that UtiliCorp, which was enduring difficult times, wanted to gain controlling interest in order to consolidate Quanta's earnings with its own balance sheet. The fight came to an end in May 2002, as Quanta fended off the takeover bid. [9]
On November 20, 2012, Quanta Services sold its telecommunications subsidiaries for $275 million in cash to Dycom. On August 4, 2015, Quanta Services sold its fiber optic licensing operations (Sunesys) to Crown Castle International Corp. (NYSE: CCI) for approximately $1 billion in cash.
On August 30, 2007, Quanta Services acquired InfraSource Services through an all-stock deal. Before the merger, Engineering News-Record ranked Quanta Services as the second-largest specialty contractor in the United States and InfraSource Services as No. 8. [10] This acquisition received popular attention after being given positive coverage on Jim Cramer's Mad Money show, [11] in Smart Money [12] and in TheStreet. [13]
In September 2009, Quanta Services announced that a deal had been struck to acquire Price Gregory, the largest U.S. gas pipeline construction company, for $350 million. [14] With this acquisition, Quanta Services was expected to have consolidated 2009 revenue of $4.4 billion.
On October 22, 2010, Quanta Services announced an agreement to acquire Canada's largest electric power line contractor, Valard Construction, for approximately $219 million. [15]
On September 2, 2021, Quanta Services announced that it entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Blattner Holding Company (Blattner), one of the largest and leading utility-scale renewable energy infrastructure solutions[ buzzword ] providers in North America, for $2.7 billion in stock and cash. Blattner generated full-year 2020 revenues and adjusted EBITDA (a non-GAAP measure) of approximately $2.4 billion and $291 million, respectively. [16] In August 2022, Quanta purchased William E. Groves Construction Inc. of Madison, KY. [17]
On March 14, 2016, Earl C. “Duke” Austin succeeded former chief executive officer Jim O’Neil. Austin is currently president, chief executive officer and chief operating officer. He is a graduate of Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas, and the former president of Quanta's Operating Unit: North Houston Pole Line. [18]
On April 2, 2012, Derrick A. Jensen succeeded former chief financial officer James H. Haddox. Jensen is a graduate of Oklahoma State University. [19]
On June 13, 2016, American Electric Power (AEP) received the 89th annual Edison Electric Institute's (EEI's) 2016 Edison Award, the electric power industry's most prestigious honor, for its Energized Reconductor Project in the Lower Rio Grande Valley (LRGV) of Texas. The 240 mile project was possible because of Quanta Energized Services (QES) live-line planning capabilities and North Houston Pole Line's construction expertise. [20]
GenOn Energy, Inc., based in Houston, Texas, United States, is an energy company that provides electricity to wholesale customers in the United States. The company is one of the largest independent power producers in the nation with more than 7,000 megawatts of power generation capacity across the United States using natural gas, fuel oil and coal. GenOn Energy was headquartered in the Reliant Energy Plaza in Downtown Houston. The company, formerly known as RRI Energy, acquired Mirant on December 3, 2010. The corporate names and logos of both RRI Energy and Mirant were retired.
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