Vistra Corp. (VST) stock climbed Tuesday after announcing it's buying Cogentrix Energy for around $4.7 billion, a deal that significantly beefs up its natural gas generation portfolio and extends its reach across some of the country's hottest power markets.
Cogentrix, currently owned indirectly by funds managed by Quantum Capital Group, brings 10 modern natural gas facilities to the table with roughly 5,500 MW of total capacity. That's a meaningful addition to Vistra's already substantial generation business.
The asset mix is pretty strategic: three combined-cycle and two combustion-turbine plants in PJM, four combined-cycle facilities in ISO New England, and one cogeneration plant in ERCOT. These are markets where power demand is growing and capacity commands a premium.
The portfolio's technical specs are solid too. The Cogentrix assets have an average heat rate of approximately 7,800 Btu/kWh, with the Patriot and Hamilton-Liberty plants (which came online in 2016) running at sub-7,000 Btu/kWh efficiency. In power generation terms, that's pretty efficient.
Breaking Down the Deal
The net purchase price comes to roughly $4.0 billion once you factor everything in. Vistra is structuring this as a mix of around $2.3 billion in cash, $900 million in Vistra stock (5 million shares valued at $185 each) going to Quantum, and the assumption of about $1.5 billion of Cogentrix debt. That's offset by roughly $0.7 billion in expected tax benefits from the transaction.
From a valuation perspective, this represents a multiple of roughly 7.25x projected 2027 Adjusted EBITDA and approximately $730 per kW for the portfolio. The transaction is expected to close in mid-to-late 2026, pending approval from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and other regulatory requirements.
Why This Makes Sense
The acquisition adds 5,500 MW of net capacity across high-growth regions in PJM, ISO New England, and ERCOT, pushing Vistra's total U.S. generation capacity to roughly 50,000 MW. That's a serious footprint in markets where electricity demand keeps climbing.
The financial projections look attractive. The transaction is expected to deliver mid-single-digit accretion per share in 2027 and high single-digit average accretion from 2027 to 2029. Vistra projects strong cash flow and tax benefits, and expects the deal to exceed its mid-teens levered return target.
What Management Is Saying
Vistra President and CEO Jim Burke sounded pretty enthusiastic about the acquisition: "The addition of this natural gas portfolio is a great way to start another year of growth for Vistra as we've completed, acquired, or developed projects in each of the competitive power regions where we operate. Vistra continues to look for opportunities that allow us to meet the growing demand of customers and meet our disciplined investment thresholds."
The company has plenty of firepower for deals like this. As of September 30, 2025, Vistra had total liquidity of approximately $3.71 billion, including $602 million in cash and cash equivalents.
VST Price Action: Vistra shares were up 4.34% at $170.00 during premarket trading on Tuesday.




