Wednesday, May 3rd 2023

Investment Firm KKR to Acquire CoolIT Systems for $270 Million

KKR, a leading global investment firm, and CoolIT Systems, a leading provider of scalable liquid cooling solutions for the world's most demanding computing environments, today announced the signing of a definitive agreement under which KKR will acquire CoolIT. The deal, valued at $270 million, will give CoolIT Systems added capital and other resources to scale up to meet growing demand for cooling systems from data-center operators, including giant cloud-computing providers such as Amazon.com's Amazon Web Services and Microsoft's Azure cloud unit. CoolIT also works with individual companies running AI applications and other business software in their own data centers.

Founded in 2001, CoolIT designs, engineers and manufactures advanced liquid cooling solutions for the data center and desktop markets. CoolIT's patented Split-Flow Direct Liquid Cooling technology is designed to improve equipment reliability and lifespan, decrease operating cost, lower energy demand and carbon emissions, reduce water consumption and allow for higher server density than legacy air-cooling methods.

"Our business has evolved tremendously over the past few years and today we are proud to be one of the most trusted providers of liquid cooling solutions to the global data center market," said Steve Walton, Chief Executive Officer of CoolIT. "KKR shares our perspective on the significant opportunity ahead for liquid cooling. Having access to KKR's expertise, capital and resources will put us in an even better position to keep scaling, innovating and delivering for our customers."
Kyle Matter, Managing Director and Head of KKR's Global Impact team in North America, said, "Increasing data and computing needs are on a collision course with sustainability considerations - the data center industry is expected to consume 8% of the world's energy by 2030.1 As a firm, we have committed more than $17 billion to digital infrastructure since 2011 and deeply appreciate the mission critical role that it plays in enabling our economy. We also recognize that as a society, we are grappling with the enormous energy usage and related environmental impacts that are only expected to accelerate with the rise of AI and other high performance applications. We believe that liquid cooling has a critical role to play in helping to reduce the emissions footprint of our digital economy and we are thrilled to back CoolIT, a leader in this space."

Evan Kaufman, Director at KKR, added, "By combining our manufacturing and decarbonization expertise with CoolIT's track record of product innovation, we expect to further scale its best-in-class direct liquid cooling solution to meet the anticipated demand for higher density, more energy efficient data centers. Importantly, we look forward to working with Steve and the entire CoolIT management team to invest additional capital and resources into expanding its cooling solutions across new applications, customers and end markets."

As part of this transaction, CoolIT will expand its equity ownership program to make all employees owners of the Company. This strategy is based on the belief that employee engagement is a key driver in building stronger companies. Since 2011, KKR portfolio companies have awarded billions of dollars of total equity value to over 50,000 non-management employees across nearly 30 companies.

KKR is investing in CoolIT through its Global Impact strategy, which is focused on identifying and investing behind opportunities where financial performance and societal impact are intrinsically aligned. Specifically, the strategy focuses on investing in companies that contribute measurable progress toward one or more of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals ("SDGs"). CoolIT directly supports SDG 7 (Affordable and Clean Energy), 9 (Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure) and 13 (Climate Action).

The transaction is expected to close in the second quarter of 2023, subject to regulatory approvals and customary closing conditions.
Source: CoolIt
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9 Comments on Investment Firm KKR to Acquire CoolIT Systems for $270 Million

#1
KrazyT
In the portfolio of KKR, there is also a little company called Epic Games ...
Posted on Reply
#2
W1zzard
meanwhile in Asetek land:

Posted on Reply
#3
64K
W1zzardmeanwhile in Asetek land:

Ouch! That's a heck of a 1 year drop in share price.
Posted on Reply
#4
MachineLearning
W1zzardmeanwhile in Asetek land:

Honestly glad to see the patent trolls fall.
Posted on Reply
#5
trsttte
MachineLearningHonestly glad to see the patent trolls fall.
Not exactly a patent troll, but certainly a patent exploiter
Posted on Reply
#6
TechLurker
I can't wait until Asetek's patent expires; I'm hoping to see better AIOs from non Asetek companies again (stateside at least; I know one could buy European AIOs, but it costs more to import). CoolIT's AIOs were especially good vs their Asetek same year rivals.

On that sidenote, I also wish Enermax made AIOs as good as their old LIQTECH series (which didn't use Asetek at the time).
Posted on Reply
#7
W1zzard
TechLurkerI can't wait until Asetek's patent expires
Asetek's market cap is at only USD 20M right now, someone could just buy them, scrap everything and keep the patent
Posted on Reply
#8
TechLurker
W1zzardAsetek's market cap is at only USD 20M right now, someone could just buy them, scrap everything and keep the patent
Sounds like a certain investment firm, or at least CooIT themselves, should do a little spending.

Although it's just as likely that one of the other PC peripheral players like Corsair or Coolermaster could buy it. The former uses them heavily after switching from CoolIT, the latter as late revenge for the time when they were forced to pull their own AIOs out of the US market due to "infringing" on Asetek's "Patent".
Posted on Reply
#9
trsttte
W1zzardAsetek's market cap is at only USD 20M right now, someone could just buy them, scrap everything and keep the patent
The patent expires in 2025 if they don't figure out a way to extend it (hard given how obvious the design is where it shouldn't have been patented in the first place), cost/benefit might be better to just wait it out
Posted on Reply
Nov 18th, 2024 23:40 EST change timezone

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