Stock Markets June 19, 2026 06:46 AM

Bernstein Favors Veolia and Severn Trent as UK, France Move into Large-Scale Water Investment

Analyst house highlights a substantial rise in required spending across British and French water systems and backs key utilities positioned to benefit

By Maya Rios
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Bernstein has designated Veolia and Severn Trent as its leading water-sector picks, citing a pronounced increase in infrastructure spending in the United Kingdom and France. The firm maintained outperform ratings on the two names and reiterated calls on several other UK water companies as the sector prepares for a major capital expenditure cycle driven by ageing networks and tougher environmental standards.

Bernstein Favors Veolia and Severn Trent as UK, France Move into Large-Scale Water Investment
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Key Points

  • Bernstein rated Veolia and Severn Trent as top water-sector picks, assigning "outperform" ratings and targets of ac40 and 3,370 pence respectively; United Utilities was reiterated as "outperform" and Pennon as "market-perform".
  • The UKs AMP8 (April 2025 - March 2030) implies a major uplift in spending to around a3104 billion in 2022/23 prices, up from about a351 billion for 2020-2025, with specific allocations for storm overflows and wastewater upgrades.
  • Frances annual water investment is projected to rise from roughly ac6.7 billion in 2024 to between ac10 billion and ac13 billion by 2040, and Veolia is the leading operator in the French water market.

Bernstein on Friday identified Veolia and Severn Trent as its preferred investments within the water sector, pointing to mounting investment needs in France and the United Kingdom as both countries enter a period of significantly higher infrastructure outlays.

The research house reaffirmed "outperform" ratings for both companies, setting a price target of c40 for Veolia and 3,370 pence for Severn Trent. It also maintained an "outperform" rating on United Utilities with a 1,420 pence target and kept a "market-perform" rating on Pennon Group at 600 pence.


UK investment surge and AMP8

Bernstein characterised the UK water sector as entering "a major capex super-cycle." Under the Asset Management Period known as AMP8, which runs from April 2025 to March 2030, total expenditure is expected to reach roughly a3104 billion in 2022/23 prices. That compares with approximately a351 billion allocated over the 2020-2025 regulatory period.

The AMP8 allocation includes targeted spending on key operational priorities: roughly a311 billion has been earmarked for storm overflow improvements addressing an estimated 2,500 overflows in England, while nearly a35 billion is intended for upgrades at wastewater treatment works. The National Audit Office has put the overall enhancement requirement much higher over the longer term, estimating at least a3290 billion of investment will be necessary by 2050.

According to Ofwat data cited in the report, around 60% of water mains in England and Wales were installed before 1981, and approximately 13% of mains are now more than a century old. Bernstein attributes the step change in planned investment to the dual pressures of renewing ageing infrastructure and meeting stricter environmental standards, particularly on storm overflows and wastewater management.


France: rising annual investment and Veolia's position

In France, Bernstein referenced a June 2026 study by La Banque Postale and SFIL projecting annual water-sector investment to grow from about ac6.7 billion in 2024 to between ac10 billion and ac13 billion by 2040. Within this market, Veolia is identified as the leading operator, ahead of unlisted competitors Suez and Saur.

Veolia reported French water revenues of ac3.16 billion in 2025, representing 7.1% of the groups total revenues. The company also secured a major contract in March 2024: a ac4.3 billion, 12-year agreement with the Greater Paris Water Authority covering 133 municipalities and servicing 4 million residents.

Bernstein noted that budgetary constraints at the level of French local authorities could slow the pace of spending. At the same time, those constraints might prompt municipalities to pursue alternative funding approaches and partnership models, areas where Bernstein believes Veolia has prior experience and capability.


Regulatory contrasts and shared operational challenges

The report emphasises that the UK and France employ fundamentally different regulatory and service-delivery frameworks. The UK operates through a privatised model with regulator-set returns, while France relies on contracting at the municipal level without a national water regulator. Despite that divergence, both countries face similar operational pressures: ageing networks and increasingly stringent pollution standards that are pushing up investment requirements.

Overall, Bernstein's sector note frames the coming decade as a period of accelerated capital deployment for water infrastructure in both markets and highlights a shortlist of companies it views as positioned to capture value from those trends.

Risks

  • Budgetary constraints on French local authorities could slow the pace of planned investment, affecting companies exposed to municipal contracting - impacts concentrated in water services and municipal financing.
  • Operational and regulatory pressures such as ageing networks and tighter pollution standards mean actual capital requirements may shift, with implications for utilities' project execution and cash flow profiles - impacts concentrated in utilities and infrastructure sectors.
  • Differences in regulatory frameworks between the UK privatised, regulator-set return model and Frances municipal contracting could create varied execution risk and revenue certainty for companies operating across both markets - impacts concentrated in cross-border utility operators.

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