
Spark has sold 75% of its data centre operations to Australian Pacific Equity Partners in a deal that values the business at $705 million.
The telco will get $486m cash, with a further $98m - for a total $584m - in FY2027 if performance targets are hit.
The proceeds will go to paying debt, the company said in an NZX filing. Spark had net debt of $2.74 billion as of December 31, 2024.
Shares were flat at $2.61 in midday trading.
The telco says the sale was at an operating earnings multiple of 38.8, FY2025, assuming ebitda of $22.9m for its data centre business. Spark will report its financials next week.
A separate company, currently with the holding name DC Co, will be spun out to run the data centre business. Spark will hold a 25% stake.
Spark plans to boost its data centre capacity from 23 megawatts today - a fraction of that offered by the likes of DCI, CDC and Microsoft locally - to 130MW, which would put it, or now DC Co, toe-to-toe with the tech giants.
In August 2024, Spark said it would explore options, including outside partners, to raise up to $1 billion for a five- to seven-year push to expand its data centre operations - a hot area with the rise of AI.
In February, the telco confirmed a process was under way.
The Sydney-based Pacific Equity Partners (PEP_ has more than A$14 billion ($15.4b) in funds under management. Its largely non-tech portfolio includes financial services and healthcare companies, Singapore Post鈥檚 Australian operation and fleet leasing. It has also owned and sold major New Zealand businesses, including the chicken company Tegel and biscuit maker Griffins.
PEP was also said to be interested in Fonterra鈥檚 consumer brands, although French firm Lactalis is now rumoured to be in exclusive negotiations.
An artist render of the 40 megawatt data centre Spark will build on the Dairy Flat Surf Park development. The 10MW first stage will take around 18 months to contruct. Render / Spark
At a half-year update in February, chairwoman Justine Smyth said Spark had a plan to expand to 130MW of data centre capacity - they are described by the peak power consumption - from its current 22MW from three centres, the largest of which is its recently expanded Takanini facility.
The expansion 鈥渨ill require $1b-plus of capex over the next five to seven years鈥, Smyth said. Spark was exploring equity funding options, 鈥渋ncluding capital partnerships鈥.
Expansion plans include the first stage of Spark鈥檚 planned 10MW data centre in a new surf park at Dairy Flat, north of Auckland. Surplus heat from the computer servers will heat a wave pool. Over time, it will be scaled up to a 40MW - easily the telco鈥檚 largest.
Spark won resource consent for its Dairy Flat build last year, but recently put in a revised application.
鈥淭his is a procedural resource consent application for a potential expansion of capacity at the site, should it be required in the future,鈥 a spokeswoman told the Herald.
Scaling up to a total of 130MW capacity would put it on near level terms with half-Infratil-owned CDC鈥檚 hyperscale data centres in Hobsonville and Silverdale in Auckland鈥檚 north and northwest and Microsoft鈥檚 (completed), DCI (one completed, one under construction) and Amazon鈥檚 (under construction) facilities in the city鈥檚 northwest.
Recent Spark asset sales, including its passive mobile network infrastructure and a sell-down in the Southern Cross Cable network have gone to paying debt and returns to shareholders.
Chris Keall is an Auckland-based member of the Herald鈥檚 business team. He joined the Herald in 2018 and is the technology editor and a senior business writer.
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