speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

results conference call and webcast. As a reminder, all participants are in listen-only mode and the conference is being recorded. After the presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, simply press star 1-1 on your touchtone phone. Now I'd like to turn the conference over to Alan Fleming, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, Mr. Fleming.

speaker
Alan Fleming
Head of Investor Relations

Thank you, Operator, and good morning. Before we begin, I'd like to remind you that in responding to questions and talking about our growth initiatives and our financial and operating performance, we may make forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to known and unknown risks, and future results may differ materially. For further information on known risk factors, I encourage you to review our filings with the securities regulators in Canada and the U.S., which are both available on our website. We'll begin the call today with Anuj Ranjan, our Chief Executive Officer, who will provide an update on our strategic initiatives. Anuj will then turn the call over to Adrian Letts, Head of our Business Operations Team, to share an update on the global operating environment. Jaspreet Dhal, our Chief Financial Officer, will then discuss our financial results for the quarter. After we finish our prepared remarks, the team will be on and available to take your questions. With that, I'd like to now pass the call over to Anuj.

speaker
Anuj Ranjan
Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Alan. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us on the call today. We had a great quarter. Our business continues to compound value, and six months into the year, our overall per unit value is higher. Over the past few months, we realized more than $800 million from asset sales and distributions, and invested $300 million to acquire two market-leading businesses. We continue to buy back under our repurchase program, which has returned nearly $160 million to our owners at the start of the year. We also generated strong financial results with adjusted EBITDA, increasing to $591 million, supported by resilient margins and improved performance of our existing operations. As our business continues to scale, finding new ways to surface value will provide us flexibility to execute our playbook, and the growth of the secondaries market has become one of the options at our disposal. In simple terms, secondaries are the sale or transfer of a private investment from one investor to another, often at a 10% or more discount in that asset value as a way for an existing investor to get liquidity. If you think about BBU, it's really just a large private equity secondary, which is publicly listed and should trade at a much narrower discount than it does. This should prove itself out as we continue to surface value in accretive ways, including the secondary sale of interest in our businesses at values that are accretive to our trading price. To that point last month, we sold a portion of our interest in three of our businesses to seed a new Evergreen fund managed by Brookfield. In exchange, we took back units of the new fund that have an initial redemption value of $690 million, which represents an aggregate .6% discount to the NAV of the interest that we sold. At these values, the transaction is highly accretive to the market value of BBU. As the units are redeemed, the cash will provide us added flexibility to accelerate buybacks, reinvest in growth, and reduce debt, all of which will increase the per unit and share value of our business. We've also been putting capital to work. Earlier this week, we agreed to privatize First National Financial Corporation, a leading Canadian residential and multifamily mortgage lender. First National is an essential service provider to the Canadian housing market, serving a critical role across the mortgage life cycle from underwriting and origination to funding, distribution, servicing, and loan renewal. Its highly resilient earnings and strong cash flows are supported by the fees and income it earns on large and growing base of mortgages at its services. Alongside our partners, we see opportunities to upgrade its systems, streamline operations, and strengthen its service model in a private setting which should enhance its already strong track record of returns and cash flows. BBU's share of the equity investment is expected to be about $145 million. Stepping back, we've made great progress since the start of the year, and the reasons to own BBU have arguably never been clearer. First, we trade at a material discount to the private market value of our assets. Second, those assets are mission critical providers of products and services which generate strong cash flow across economic cycles. And lastly, every dollar that is recycled and redeployed is done so by the same Brookfield team which has generated tremendous returns on capital for decades. With that, I'll now pass the call over to Adrian Letts, our global head of business operations, to provide an update on the operating environment.

speaker
Adrian Letts
Global Head of Business Operations

Thank you, Inuj, and good morning everyone. It's great to be joining you on the call today. With the first half of the year now behind us, I wanted to provide some observations on how the operating environment has evolved over the past few months and how our businesses have been responding. The global economy today is in a much different spot than the outlook most had expected at the start of this year. With inflation in check, unemployment levels low, and many central banks moving toward an easing cycle, growth expectations across most developed markets were high heading into the year. However, as we know, tariffs, rising global trade tensions, and geopolitical conflicts have introduced much more uncertainty in a relatively short time. While this continues, we do see signs that it is stabilizing. However, we remain cautious. The US has been very resilient. GDP expectations for the second half of the year have stabilized. Unemployment remains low, and consumer sentiment has inched higher in the past few months. In Europe, although it will take a while for things to play through, stimulus spending is increasing, including Germany greenlighting a $500 billion infrastructure fund, and other countries such as the UK have put forward plans to reduce barriers to competition and accelerate delivery of infrastructure projects. Outside of Europe, it remains very clear that the GCC markets where we operate in the Middle East are very strong, and India remains a growth economy. Growth is very important to our value creation plans, and while our businesses have not been immune to slowdowns, over the past few months, our principals are serving us very well. We deliberately buy high quality market leading businesses that have strong competitive advantages and provide mission critical products and services. This means they generally have pricing power, which has enabled us to pass through the direct flex of tariffs in the select cases where we're seeing some impact in our operations. It also means that notwithstanding some pockets of softness, our volumes and activity levels on balance have held up well in spite of the backdrop. Most importantly, we're not standing still. We have continued to make significant progress in our value creation plans across the business. As a result, we've been able to maintain, and in some cases increase, margins in more difficult near-term environments while continuing to strengthen the long-term positioning of our businesses. For example, at Dexco, while volumes have contracted, margins have increased approximately 200 basis points since our acquisition due to the phenomenal job the business has done to right size its cost structure, strengthen its market position, and optimize productivity. Similarly, at Modular, where utilization levels have been impacted by overall sluggish capital investment in Europe, the team is continuing to drive growth in value-added products and services and streamline the organizational structure, which has contributed to resilient margins which are higher than when we bought the business four years ago. Even at Clarios, where performance continues to exceed expectations, overall battery volumes have seen some impact from a slowdown in global automotive production levels. Yet margins, which exceeded 20% through the first half of the calendar year, continue to increase, supported by improved service levels, increased operational effectiveness, and a higher mix of technologically advanced batteries. These are just a few examples of the work underway across each of our businesses, including our more recent acquisitions like Network International and Chemilex, where our integration and value creation plans are off to very strong starts. As Anush said, we're really pleased with the progress we've made over the past six months. We've been through cycles like these before, and our playbook is tested. All the work we've done to optimize the operating platform should amplify performance when a broader base recovery does take hold. With that, I'll hand it over to Jaspreet for a view of our financial results, and we'll stay on the line to take any more questions after prepared remarks.

speaker
Jaspreet Dhal
Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Adrian. And good morning, everyone. Second quarter adjusted EBITDA of $591 million increased compared to $524 million in the prior period. Results reflected improved underlying operating performance, tax benefits, and contribution from recent acquisitions. Adjusted EFO of $234 million during the quarter benefited from lower interest expense due to reduction in corporate borrowings compared to the prior period. Turning to segment performance, our industrial segment generated second quarter adjusted EBITDA of $307 million and increased compared to $213 million in 2024. Results included $71 million of tax benefits at our advanced energy storage operation and Contributions from recent acquisitions, including our electric heat tracing systems manufacturer, which we acquired in January. Strong performance at our advanced energy storage operations benefited from growing demand and increased volumes of advanced batteries, as well as continued strong commercial and operational execution. Volumes at our engineered components manufacturer improved across many international and North American end markets, which contributed to increased contributions during the quarter. Moving to business services segment, which generated second quarter adjusted EBITDA of $205 million and increased compared to $182 million last year, which included the impact of $38 million related to one time costs at our dealer software and technology services operations. Our residential mortgage insurer is benefiting from increased volumes of new insurance premiums written and low losses on claims. Results during the quarter reflect the timing impact of slower revenue recognition under IFR 17 accounting standards due to revised model assumptions given the current macroeconomic uncertainty and consensus view of the Canadian housing market. At our dealer software and technology services operation, stable performance included costs associated with the ongoing investments in product modernization and technology upgrades. This is expected to continue over the next 12 to 18 months. Finally, our infrastructure services segment generated second quarter adjusted EBITDA of $109 million compared to $157 million during the same quarter last year. This reflects the sale of our offshore oil services shuttle tanker operation early this year. Industry fundamentals at our lottery service operation remain resilient despite the impact of fewer hardware deliveries and lower lottery jackpot sizes compared to prior years. Turning to our balance sheet and capital allocation priorities, our strong balance sheet provides us options to support our capital allocation. We ended the quarter with approximately $2.9 billion of corporate liquidity pro forma for announced acquisitions and realizations including the expected redemption value of the fund units we received in exchange for the sale of a partial interest in three businesses last month. During the quarter, we continue to maintain an increased base of repurchase activity under our buyback program. As Anuj mentioned, since February we've acquired 6.5 million units and shares, returning nearly $160 million to our owners, including $56 million return during the quarter. Buying our own units and shares well below their fair value is an easy and efficient way for us to generate returns for our investors and increase the per unit value of our business. We plan to renew our normal cost issuer bid later this month, which will provide us capacity to repurchase an additional 8 million units and shares over the subsequent 12 months. With that, I'll close my remarks and we'll open up the call for questions.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

If you'd like to ask a question at this time, please press star 1-1 on your touchtone phone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 1-1 again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

first question comes

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

from Devin Dodge with BMO Capital Markets.

speaker
Devin Dodge
BMO Capital Markets Analyst

Thank you, I'm already ready. So I wanted to start with scientific gains. When we look at the earnings from this investment, call it over the last 12 months or so, the trajectory has been flat to down. The business is having some nice commercial wins and I'm sure there's a lot of work being done in the background to improve the operating performance, but it just seems like this progress often gets offset by other factors. We've seen hardware deliveries, lower jackpots, inflation was a challenge at one point. It just made it harder to assess the earnings power of the business. So the question for you is just how is scientific gains performing relative to your underwriting assumptions and when do you expect all the work that's being done to show up in earnings?

speaker
Adrian Letts
Global Head of Business Operations

Thanks Devin, it's Adrian Ledge. So I think the first thing to say, if you look at the results this quarter, you're absolutely right. Hardware deliveries were lower this year and we saw some impact from a performance penalty at one of our JVs. But if you adjust for those impacts, even though our performance was flat. Stepping back, the industry remains very resilient, which was central to our original investment thesis. And at the same time, overall industry growth has been a bit slower than we expected. We're continuing to scale up and put our shoulder behind digital capabilities and we continue to see a high growth segment of the market. We've talked about the work that we've done in realigning the business with digital, having its own reporting line under new leadership. We hired a new business leader in that part of the organisation. It brings a strong depth of experience. But as you know, it takes time for the legislation to be put in place in the US which will allow lottery operators to introduce digital lottery. But we've been winning our fair share, including a significant digital lottery as part of the contract we were recently awarded for the UK. And today we're the largest digital lottery service provider globally. And while we've been winning these new opportunities, some of the contracts awards have been slower to ramp up. And we're working and continuing to strengthen our capability to accelerate these. And as the contracts ramp up over the next 12 months, we fully expect to flow through to earnings and cash flow. So, look, it's in line with our investment thesis. It's a little bit behind in terms of where we'd like, but we're still incredibly positive on the business and see a big opportunity.

speaker
Devin Dodge
BMO Capital Markets Analyst

Okay, that's a really good colour. I appreciate that. Second question, brand Safeway. I think the letter to the unit holders mentioned the repositioning of the business towards higher growth markets. Just wondering if you could provide a bit more colour behind that initiative and how easily you can pivot the business towards those markets.

speaker
Adrian Letts
Global Head of Business Operations

Yeah, so, Devin, I'll take that one again. Look, lower expected volumes than across all segments, particularly in the rental business, which is higher margin. And North American industrials are recovering, but the commercial markets remain soft. We do see pockets of opportunity. We've begun to reposition the business to strengthen the regional focus. And we're starting to see some upturn, although it's early. Management is really focused on executing the transformation plan. Pricing continues to be a bit challenging in the market, given some demand challenges and volume softness. We expect to continue through the second half of the year, but as we start to reposition into some of the growth markets we see, we do see some cautious optimism towards the end of next year.

speaker
Devin Dodge
BMO Capital Markets Analyst

Okay, great. Thanks for that. I'll turn it over.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Our next question comes from Gary Ho with Desjardins.

speaker
Gary Ho
Desjardins Analyst

Thanks. Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. A few high-level ones here for me. Maybe start with Anuj. I listened in on one of your recent interviews, and you mentioned leveraging AI to improve productivity in your businesses, improving margins of those businesses. I think some of the examples you gave were automation, customer service, robotics. I'm wondering if I can pick your brain on several of these larger projects you have ongoing in your portfolio, maybe highlighting ones that have more meaningful financial impact or provide a bit more competitive moat or strengthen your market positions in those assets.

speaker
Anuj Ranjan
Chief Executive Officer

Sure. Hi, Gary. So yes, we definitely see AI as a great tool. Stepping back, we've always bought leading industrial businesses and improved their margins with operations, and AI is another tool in that toolkit to do it in a much more dramatic way and much faster. In terms of use cases, to be honest, there's probably 700 use cases right now that we're running across the portfolio, so it's pretty vast and pretty large. I can talk about a couple that are more higher impact and a few of our bigger operations. In Clarios, we've been implementing a way to optimize order intake, so have an executable shipment plan to all our servicing plants while optimizing service performance. In this, we automated the analysis of a lot of business processes, and we've had millions of dollars of save from customer service penalties. We've had a 10% improvement in the quantity that we can fulfill, 14% improvement in overall service performance, so that's been pretty meaningful. We're also working on a larger scale automation in terms of robotics that we could fit into some of our manufacturing facilities as well. In Everrise, where we've been quite a leader, we've enabled automated AI-driven agent recruiting, screening, hiring, and training for our operations at scale. Just keep in mind that this business employs over 14,000 people, so there's quite a bit of HR work that you can automate. We've reduced training time there by about 20%. We've reduced the cost of hiring an FTE by about 40%, and we've increased the speed to offer or hire across five different countries by about five times, so that's another example. We've done similar things with CDK, where we launched AVA, which is Artificial Intelligence Virtual Assistant, and our core software offerings, which helps dealers do a more quick conversational responses to consumers in real time, answers every call, schedules appointments, uses intuitive conversations, speaks 50 languages, and has a GPT-like experience for customers. We've got four times the increase in touch points per lead. We have a 47% increase in sales calls per lead, and overall improve the dealer experience. And I think the last one I touch on is Nielsen, where we've been able to reduce the manual effort required in video segmentation of our ad intelligence operations, and we've been able to reduce costs and labor. We've shifted away from manual video coding, which was done by 1,000 people. We've accelerated some market launches, and we've also enhanced the data quality. This is about $10 million in annual run rate cost savings that we're projecting, and it achieves about an 80% accuracy across the segments. It's more faster, it's more scalable. Client delivery, you know, down to days versus two-plus months to do the same thing before. So these are just a few kind of like, I guess, key case studies, but I just say that there's hundreds and hundreds of more of these across the portfolio.

speaker
Gary Ho
Desjardins Analyst

That's great. Thanks for providing the color there. The second one I have, now that the one big beautiful bill is signed, if your team kind of done some work on the potential read-through, the positives and negatives, obviously you have the 45X, if you can elaborate on the status and what you hope to receive at Clarios. And the second, how to see accelerated depreciation kind of impact some of your businesses in the U.S.

speaker
Jaspreet Dhal
Chief Financial Officer

Hi, Gary. It's stress-free. I'll take that. So the team is kind of working through all of the provisions in the big beautiful bill. It's, I'm sure you know it's a thousand pages, so we're still going through it. But I'd say overall, our assessment is that it's going to be a net positive. There's a number of tax changes or extensions that are being provided. You mentioned the bonus depreciation. So for our, specifically for our industrial businesses in the U.S. And we've got a number of them, Clarios being the largest by tax goal, now Camel X. That should help all of those businesses with the accelerated depreciation. They're restoring the deduction R&D. And that will be helpful to CDK. And then I'd say across kind of most of the businesses, the enhancement to the deductibility of interest. I think we'll also, because we, a number of our businesses were capped on the interest deductibility. And that cap being increased is going to be helpful. So I'd say overall, while we're still kind of working through all of the details and the exact impact, we expect it's going to be net positive for our business. The second part of your question on 45X. So we're still waiting on the check for last year's filing. And again, we're not expecting with the changes that were made with the bill that was passed, it's all positive. And it kind of keeps intact all of the benefits. So we're not expecting that there's going to be any change in our filing or our entitlement to the tax benefit. And it's more of a matter of time to get it processed. And I think a lot of the tax processing this year has been slower than normal. So we still expect, you know, we fully expect that we will get paid. It's just a matter of time.

speaker
Gary Ho
Desjardins Analyst

Okay, great. Thanks for that, Shree. And then while I have you, it just sounds like on the capital allocation you remain committed to renewing your five-act later this month. We have seen your BBUC shares versus unit spread blown out. And I think that's a good question. Just remind me, you look at both structures economically the same and, and any thoughts on narrowing that discount? I believe your IDR is tied to the unit's price and not the corporate shares.

speaker
Jaspreet Dhal
Chief Financial Officer

Yes, that's right. The IDR is tied to the unit price. And okay. I think it's. Really Gary. Matter of just the market activity. From a buy back perspective, we've been buying back whatever is available in the market on both the units and the shares. As you're aware, there's, you know, limitations, just on what we could buy on a daily or weekly basis with our trading volumes. So we've been buying back equally on both BBU LP units, as well as BBU C shares. So, I don't think the buyback is necessarily kind of driving any of that discrepancy between the price of the units versus shares. But the whole rationale for setting up BVUC was to attract kind of a broader base of investors. So, we have had some net new investors buying into both the units and the shares, and maybe that explains some of it, the broadening of that premium. But look, I think the shares and the units have both been trending in a good direction. So, we're glad to see that. But also at these levels, we'll continue our buyback program because it still is very creative relative to intrinsic value.

speaker
Gary Ho
Desjardins Analyst

Okay, that all makes sense. Those are my questions. Thank you.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Our next question comes from Bart Jarski with RBC Capital Markets.

speaker
Bart Jarski
RBC Capital Markets Analyst

Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to talk about the secondary transaction. Could you give us some colour as to how you decided to, on the three assets that were vended in versus, say, other portfolio investments? Like, how did those three come about?

speaker
Jaspreet Dhal
Chief Financial Officer

Hi, Bart, it's Jess Freed. Maybe I could get started and then I can add a new ad to it. So, you know, we went through a process and we identified, you know, investments where we had kind of an outsized share through Co-Investment or others, and just the equity that we had invested in certain businesses where we would look and be open to kind of selling down. So we put a list together, we looked at valuations, and we had discussions with the team that's running the new fund strategy. And we set up a special committee of our board, an independent special committee of our board to oversee the process. The retail, the team that's looking after the Evergreen Fund strategy, they looked at the assets, they did a review based on kind of the requirements of that fund, and came back to us on, you know, which assets they would be open to buying from BBU. And we had a valuation discussion and looked at kind of where secondaries trade and ended up kind of with the deal that we did. The independent committee of the board then hired, you know, financial advisors to do a third party valuation around the fairness of the transaction. And that's how we kind of ultimately ended up with that .6% discount, which, you know, we think from a BBU perspective is very accretive, just given, you know, the fact that our units are trading at closer to a 50% discount relative to our view of NAF. So being able to monetize these assets at that .5% discount, getting that cash in the store and redeploying it, whether to buy back units, pay down debt, or, you know, find future growth into new investments where we think we could earn a higher return, we thought it was very good for BBU. And, you know, we're going to continue to, like, these are still businesses that we like and we have a lot of conviction around, and we've retained significant ownership in all of them. So we've only sold down, you know, part of our ownership. So, you know, we expect that we'll continue to participate in the upside of these businesses through our retained ownership.

speaker
Bart Jarski
RBC Capital Markets Analyst

Very helpful. Thank you. And if I could just follow up on the mark. So the 9% discount to NAF, totally agree that it is highly accretive to your unit. When we look at secondary pricing, like, pricing improved last year to about 6%, call it, and, you know, I would think BBU with your alpha generated versus other buyout players over the long term would probably warrant a smaller discount. So can you just help us understand, like, how that 9% was sort of calibrated and triangulated against what you're seeing in the market?

speaker
Jaspreet Dhal
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, I'd say there's, you know, there's a wide kind of range of discounts that secondaries trade at, and it's based on a lot of different factors. The age of the investments are kind of where they are on the maturity scale, the types of businesses, the, you know, the control versus not, the vintage of the funds. So there's a lot of factors that go into the discounts, and they say the discounts vary quite a bit, but broadly if you look over the years, you know, about a 10% discount on average is pretty normal. You know, you might have a year where there was a particular transaction that narrowed the discount a little bit, and there are years where it's been significantly wider, but based on kind of a lot of the work that we did, you know, we were quite comfortable that around that 10% range is quite a normal kind of discount for secondary trades.

speaker
Bart Jarski
RBC Capital Markets Analyst

Awesome. Thanks, Jess, Brie.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Jamie Cloyne with National Bank Financial.

speaker
Jamie Cloyne
National Bank Financial Analyst

Thanks. Just wanted to follow up on that theme on the secondary, and you talked about significant demand in secondaries increasing over the past several years, and just curious as to, you know, the decision to place it with BAM, and, you know, are you receiving other inbounds? Is it a case of, you know, the bid ask is too wide or the discount is too wide, I should say, from other third party players? Like, maybe walk us through how this increase in secondary demand is starting to, or has been flowing through into the BDU businesses that you might look to monetize.

speaker
Anuj Ranjan
Chief Executive Officer

Thanks for the question. It's Nudge here. I wouldn't say that we were actively looking to monetize through secondary transactions the time that we did this, although perhaps that could change in the future. The opportunity arose, and it was quite a unique opportunity for, you know, BAM or Brookfield with its brand, its capability and its reach in the retail wealth markets to be able to provide something that we thought was quite accretive to our shareholders and probably a better discount to now than what we felt could be achieved in the broader secondary markets, just based on our analysis, given some of the criteria that Jaspreet mentioned earlier about timing of investments, how close they are to liquidity otherwise, and things like that. So it was more opportunistic, but there is definitely a growing secondary market. It is well established. There are opportunities outside of this as well to explore secondaries if we chose to. We just weren't actively looking at that at the time that we came across this opportunity.

speaker
Jamie Cloyne
National Bank Financial Analyst

Good, understood. Shifting into the operations, looking at the other business services line, nice step up in growth there. Can you talk to some of the organic drivers and businesses that are supporting that result in the other business services segment?

speaker
Jaspreet Dhal
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, it's Jaspreet. Just a couple of things. The biggest impact is probably coming through from our construction operations. So you might recall last year we had a couple of projects in Australia that were quite challenged and had some cost overruns. So we booked those cost overruns through EBITDA and the business has now completed those projects and they're behind us. And overall the book at our construction business is quite good. All the projects are performing well and you're seeing kind of normalized EBITDA performance come through. So I'd say just that year over year depressed performance last year versus more normalized performance this year is accounting for that increase. And then broadly some of the other businesses are also marginally better. And some of that is offset by the sale of our road fuels operations business. So that would have been in the results last year and since we sold the business it's not in our results this year.

speaker
Jamie Cloyne
National Bank Financial Analyst

On the buybacks, or I guess maybe a broader capital allocation question here as well too, but I believe you'd mentioned targeting 250 million of share buybacks. I think that was in 2025. Maybe just refresh me on that previous guidance and does it still hold? And then the second question around this is how are you viewing the Brookfield preferred share and then pay down of corporate borrowings as part of the use of this liquidity today that is I believe it's at like all-time highs for Brookfield or for BBU?

speaker
Jaspreet Dhal
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, so I think we've always talked about kind of our capital allocation priorities in three buckets, paying down the corporate leverage just so that we can continue to have flexibility at the BBU level to fund the growth of the business and not have our bridge facilities or our CFs kind of fully drawn. The second is around funding growth of the business when we see good opportunities to make accretive acquisitions. And then finally at the current kind of trading price, repurchases continue to be very good use of capital for us just because they're so accretive to underlying intrinsic values. So those are still kind of our three priorities. And I'd say we've progressed on all three this year. We've paid down our corporate line by about a billion dollars. With the first national announcement that will be kind of the third acquisition for BBU. And on each of the acquisitions we've committed $150 to $200 million. So a decent size to continue to fund growth. And then specifically on your question on repurchases, at these trading levels, it makes a lot of sense to continue to buy back. You're exactly right. It was a $250 million repurchase program that we announced earlier this year. We've now bought back $160 million on that $250. And we are at the point where we're bumping up against kind of our NCIB or normal cost issuer bid limits. But that NCIB will renew mid-August. And when that renews, you know, we'll continue the buyback program. So we're still committed to that $250.

speaker
Jamie Cloyne
National Bank Financial Analyst

Okay. And just a quick comment on the pressure.

speaker
Jaspreet Dhal
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, so the PREF shares, we paid half of them down and we've still got the other half outstanding. Brookfield does have, BAN, Brookfield Corporation does have the right to ask for a redemption of those shares from either equity issuances or monetization activity. So that is an ongoing dialogue that we have with Brookfield. But as you know, they're very supportive and our largest shareholder. So we'll continue to have those discussions as we continue to kind of generate proceeds. But I'd say the priorities for capital allocations are kind of the things that I laid out.

speaker
Jamie Cloyne
National Bank Financial Analyst

Yeah, you said last one, just Jess, can you just refresh? I noticed in the letter, there's a couple of nice refinancing transactions at the operating companies levels. Can you just refresh where we are on, let's say, a debt maturity schedule? You know, how the rates of upcoming maturities compared to current environment? Just a comment on that for the operating companies.

speaker
Jaspreet Dhal
Chief Financial Officer

Sure. So we don't have really any large scale debt maturities in the next 12 months. We've gotten ahead of all of those maturities. The things, the debt that is maturing over the next 12 months is all kind of more of the operating company debt. So if you think of, you know, business like Littrobe in Australia, where we've got debt to fund the mortgage loans that they make. So those are maturing and get refinanced on a regular basis. But if you think about kind of any of the debt in our larger businesses, there's nothing maturing over the next 12 months. We've been very proactive in pushing out any of our debt maturities. Most recently, we did two refinancing. One was at Modulaire, where our debt was maturing in 2028. But the technicals just around the debt markets have been very positive. So we decided to extend the maturity on that debt out another three years. And then we also did refinancing at Clarios for debt that was maturing in 2027. And that maturity has now been pushed out five years. We also did something a little bit more opportunistic at Chemilex, where we were able to reprice the spread on our debt. So the debt was priced at SOFR plus 350, and we were able to narrow that spread to SOFR plus 300. So that'll be a nice interest expense savings for the business. So we're very active. We stay on top of our debt maturities. The average weighted maturity in the portfolio is close to six years, just shy of six years now. And we've got quite a bit of our debt hedged as well. So we feel pretty good about kind of managing the debt within the businesses.

speaker
Devin Dodge
BMO Capital Markets Analyst

Great. Thank you very much.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

That concludes today's question and answer session. I'd like to turn the call back to Anuj Ranjan for closing remarks.

speaker
Anuj Ranjan
Chief Executive Officer

Thank you all for joining and we'll see you next quarter.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.

Disclaimer

This conference call transcript was computer generated and almost certianly contains errors. This transcript is provided for information purposes only.EarningsCall, LLC makes no representation about the accuracy of the aforementioned transcript, and you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the information provided by the transcript.

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