Blue Owl data centre operator stack is said to consider US$30bil sale of Asia operations


— Bing Guan/Bloomberg

Stack Infrastructure Inc., a data centre company owned by Blue Owl Capital, is considering options including a sale of its Asia operations, according to people familiar with the matter.

Denver-based Stack has been speaking with prospective advisers about a partial or full sale of the assets in Australia, Japan and Malaysia, the people said, asking not to be identified because the deliberations are private. A transaction might be valued at more than $30 billion, some of the people said.

Other infrastructure-focused funds and industry players may be interested in the business, the people said, adding that considerations are preliminary and no final decisions have been made.

A representative for Blue Owl declined to comment, while Stack didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Data centre companies have drawn in investors, attracted by their close ties to the boom in artificial intelligence. The Asia Pacific has been a busy region for deals -  Stonepeak Partners-backed Digital Edge is exploring a possible sale, people familiar with the matter said last week, while Bain Capital is working on a review of Bridge Data Centres, and Princeton Digital Group has tapped Goldman Sachs Group Inc. for what could be another multibillion-dollar deal. DayOne Data Centers Ltd. is considering an initial public offering in the US.

Moody’s Ratings expects at least $3 trillion to flow into investments in the data sector over the next five years, with much to be financed through debt. Some concerns have been raised about sustainability and AI’s rapid growth. 

Stack operates data centres in the Americas, Europe and Asia, its website shows. Alternative asset manager Blue Owl acquired Stack as part of its takeover of IPI Partners LLC last year. Stack expanded into the Asia Pacific in 2021, setting its regional headquarters in Singapore and targeting organic growth with landowners and property developers, as well as via acquisitions.

Stack was seeking a loan of around A$3 billion ($2.2 billion) to help accelerate development in Australia, people familiar with the plan said in February. In October, it closed a ¥39.7 billion ($253 million) green facility to expand its 36 megawatt campus in Inzai, near Tokyo. - Bloomberg 

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Business News

Maybank completes RM1.2bil Tier 2 subordinated sukuk murabahah issuance
Ringgit closes higher against US$, major currencies ahead of US-China meeting
Dialog records stronger 3Q26 as it keeps focus on long-term plans
Citaglobal inks MOU with Indonesia's Lampung province on green infrastructure
Malaysia Airports wins international carbon accreditation recognition
MISC redesignates Mohammad Suhaimi as chairman
Axis REIT to purchase Shah Alam industrial complex for RM38mil
Bursa Malaysia ends lower as investors remain cautious amid macro, geopolitical concerns
Sunway REIT records higher net profit of RM109.04mil in 1Q
Tencent profit misses forecasts as higher spend offsets gaming gains

Others Also Read