MADRID—Spanish renewable energy and engineering firm Abengoa SA said it had reached a restructuring deal with its creditors to avoid Spain's largest-ever bankruptcy, sending shares up nearly 4% in mid-morning trading in Madrid.

A group of investors including Centerbridge Partners LP, Elliott Management Corp. and Oaktree Capital Management LP have agreed to inject €1.17 billion ($1.31 billion) into the debt-laden company, Abengoa said in a regulatory filing on Thursday. Abengoa will also receive €307 million in financial guarantees, the filing said.

In exchange, investors and creditor banks, such as Spanish lenders Banco Santander SA and Banco Popular Españ ol SA, are set to own between 90% and 95% of Abengoa, depending on whether it meets certain targets.

The company didn't clarify whether 75% of creditors had agreed to the restructuring deal, as required by Spanish bankruptcy law. Abengoa said it plans to hold a telephone conference with investors and analysts on Aug. 16 at noon New York time to provide further details.

The Seville-based company has been negotiating with creditors since November to avoid becoming the country's largest bankruptcy, after years of debt-fueled expansion during Spain's boom years eventually caught up with the company.

The company has been among the top builders of power lines transporting energy across Latin America and a top engineering and construction business, manufacturing massive renewable-energy power plants in places from Kansas to the U.K.

But last year, investors grew wary about how much cash Abengoa had to manage its debt pile. While the company's debt load was nothing new for investors and analysts who had been monitoring the company for years, moves last summer led some investors to conclude that Abengoa had less cash on hand than they thought.

Investors and analysts trace Abengoa's current financial difficulties to a shift in strategy during Spain's property boom, which started to gain momentum around 2004. The country's banks eased borrowing requirements for companies, which helped trigger an infectious corporate optimism, spurring some Spanish companies to step up expansion abroad.

From its inception, Abengoa built power transmission lines, biofuel plants and desalination infrastructure for clients. During Spain's boom years, though, it began to construct such projects for itself, fueled by cheaper bank loans and a desire to expand.

The company took on piles of debt in anticipation of a growth rate that never materialized.

Write to Jeannette Neumann at jeannette.neumann@wsj.com

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

August 11, 2016 06:55 ET (10:55 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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