Sunday, 14 Dec 2025
Subscribe
logo
  • Global
  • AI
  • Cloud Computing
  • Edge Computing
  • Security
  • Investment
  • Sustainability
  • More
    • Colocation
    • Quantum Computing
    • Regulation & Policy
    • Infrastructure
    • Power & Cooling
    • Design
    • Innovations
    • Blog
Font ResizerAa
Data Center NewsData Center News
Search
  • Global
  • AI
  • Cloud Computing
  • Edge Computing
  • Security
  • Investment
  • Sustainability
  • More
    • Colocation
    • Quantum Computing
    • Regulation & Policy
    • Infrastructure
    • Power & Cooling
    • Design
    • Innovations
    • Blog
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Data Center News > Blog > Colocation > Are Fund-Backed Colos Stable Enough for Your Long-Term Workloads? | DCN
Colocation

Are Fund-Backed Colos Stable Enough for Your Long-Term Workloads? | DCN

Last updated: February 3, 2024 2:35 am
Published February 3, 2024
Share
business graph
SHARE

Using a colocation service provider for your critical infrastructure is serious business, and one of the primary selection or monitoring criteria is financial and operational stability. When your publicly traded colocation SP goes private, they stop disclosing their financial and operating metrics, and that might be a bit unnerving for some customers.

In July we published “Colocation: Private equity acquisitions may pose a market risk” on the Omdia research website. Raul Martynek, CEO of DataBank, a digital infrastructure investment company owned by DigitalBridge, told me the article was provocative and he respectfully disagreed. While DigitalBridge uses private equity money, it identifies itself as a digital infrastructure investor or infrastructure fund.

Recently, Raul spoke with me and shared some deep insight about infrastructure investors and the colocation market.

Differences Between Private Equity and Digital Infrastructure Investors

Digital infrastructure investments are the physical building blocks of the modern internet and include cell towers, data centers, fiber, small cells, and edge infrastructure.

It’s key to understand private equity investor types: The words “private equity investor” can mean a great many things but being an infrastructure fund investor is a very specific type of private equity investing.

Many private equity companies invest on short-term horizons and look to exit investments in roughly five years with double digit returns perhaps at 20-30% internal rate of returns (IRR). Martynek points out that infrastructure fund investors have a much longer-term investment horizon of 15 years or more and target returns in the high single or low double-digit range, say 8% to 12%.

Different investors seek different types of risks and returns, and an infrastructure fund’s long-term investment horizon is primarily due to the:

  • stability and durability of the infrastructure assets themselves
  • necessity of digital infrastructure services to consumers, and
  • A-rated customers who typically sign long-term commitments.
See also  Canada Emerges as Global Data Center Powerhouse

Another benefit is that the long-term investment horizon eliminates the short-term thinking that can be an issue for public companies as their decision making is often driven by Wall Street expectations. It is difficult for organizations to develop and execute realistic long-term plans when Wall Street seeks increasingly better return each quarter. In addition, infrastructure funds attract like-minded investors who find the long game with stable returns appealing.

At the heart of this financial dance is the necessity for cost efficient capital funding which has a direct correlation to market competitiveness, and that is part of the secret sauce for delivering shareholder value.

Could the Deep Pool of Capital from an Infrastructure Fund Lead to Runaway Expansion?

Runaway expansion due to infrastructure fund capital is highly unlikely, according to Martynek. An infrastructure fund doesn’t provide blank checks and all incremental investment opportunities are aggressively interrogated. In fact, most companies owned by an infrastructure fund are responsible for operations and expansion financing. The owner fund may participate in and facilitate financing, but their primary role is oversight to assure such things as runaway expansion are avoided.

Low cost of capital is key to competitiveness and, in turn, creating shareholder value. Martynek explains that companies that look like DataBank (mid-sized private colocation companies) are usually funded with various bank debt instruments, which typically come with a blended interest rate of 6% to 7%. (This can be higher in today’s rising interest rate market).

Is a Colo Taken Private at Risk of Poor Ownership?

While this is always possible, Martynek points out that it’s important to understand that infrastructure funds have become particularly sophisticated owners, and, therefore, make good stewards of the companies they acquire.

See also  Why 'Data Center vs. Cloud' Is the Wrong Way to Think | DCN

The difference is that infrastructure assets have particularly high capital demands which is a risk. If there’s one thing investment companies are keenly attuned to, it is managing investment risk while assuring the best odds of long-term success.

Does Going Private Eliminate Transparency?

There is certainly less transparency for a private company particularly on financial details. However, while a private company may not share specific financial details with the world, they certainly work with their customers to provide the operational and financial details they need to make informed purchase decisions.

Oversight is a primary role for infrastructure funds and their investors, so being privately owned by a fund does not lessen oversight and accountability. In fact, Martynek characterizes DataBank oversight as “intense” because they are directly accountable to the fund’s board and their investors. On top of that, Martynek explained that private companies commonly have syndicated bank debt (loans funded by multiple banks called a loan syndicate) and/or securitized debt so they are rated by rating agencies. Their lenders, who count on those rating agencies’ data to make lending decisions, exert additional influence to ensure disciplined decision making.

Is a Short-term Private Equity Investor Company Acquisition Inherently Good or Bad?

Any company considering being acquired needs a significant amount of due diligence to understand the track record of who is courting them. A risk of being acquired by a short-term private equity investor is they may focus on making changes that enhance the financial profile but may diminish the trajectory or vision that made the company successful already. Martynek points out that short-term private equity investors can also take a mediocre company and make it truly great.

See also  Together AI's ATLAS adaptive speculator delivers 400% inference speedup by learning from workloads in real-time

So, what are the advantages or disadvantages of choosing a public vs private colocation company? All evidence reasonably suggests that the funding aspects of public vs private colocation SPs are largely immaterial from a customer perspective. While the ongoing reporting transparency of a public colocation SP might be comforting to some, it is only one of many assessment characteristics that are important. Services, support, uptime, and the like, are the type of metrics that assure customers of the stewardship of their critical infrastructure. While a private colocation SPs may not report financial performance metrics publicly, most SPs will honor new or existing customer requests for that detail.

In the final analysis, if your public colocation company is acquired by an infrastructure fund, fear not. Martynek, who’s a well-seasoned executive in the data center business, says that infrastructure funds are arguably the smartest investors in the digital infrastructure sector.


Alan Howard, principal analyst, colocation and data center building, Omdia

Source link

Contents
Differences Between Private Equity and Digital Infrastructure InvestorsCould the Deep Pool of Capital from an Infrastructure Fund Lead to Runaway Expansion?Is a Colo Taken Private at Risk of Poor Ownership?Does Going Private Eliminate Transparency?Is a Short-term Private Equity Investor Company Acquisition Inherently Good or Bad?
TAGGED: Colos, DCN, FundBacked, LongTerm, Stable, Workloads
Share This Article
Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Cradlepoint leverages AI to boost enterprise 5G capabilities Cradlepoint leverages AI to boost enterprise 5G capabilities
Next Article data center fans 5 Ways to Optimize Data Center Airflow Efficiency | DCN
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Your Trusted Source for Accurate and Timely Updates!

Our commitment to accuracy, impartiality, and delivering breaking news as it happens has earned us the trust of a vast audience. Stay ahead with real-time updates on the latest events, trends.
FacebookLike
TwitterFollow
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
LinkedInFollow
MediumFollow
- Advertisement -
Ad image

Popular Posts

Microsoft and OpenAI are planning a 100 billion data center project

The Data web site quoted members in non-public talks in regards to the proposal as…

March 30, 2024

NVIDIA launches the successor to its RTX A2000 GPU for edge computers

NVIDIA has launched the follow-up to its RTX A2000 GPU tailor-made for compact workstations and…

February 15, 2024

Belfast launches UK hub to drive digital twin technology innovation

A cutting-edge innovation hub has launched in Belfast, positioning the UK on the forefront of…

May 2, 2025

Jurimesh Raises €1.6M in Pre-Seed Funding

Jurimesh Fuels Up €1.6 million in Pre-Seed Funding to Reshape AI-Pushed Authorized Due Diligence Jurimesh,…

March 3, 2025

Data Center Technology Trends for 2024, Identified by TSS

The 2024 know-how traits that can have a big effect on knowledge facilities, digital transformation,…

March 20, 2024

You Might Also Like

ABB, Ark roll out UK’s first MV UPS for AI workloads
Global Market

ABB, Ark roll out UK’s first MV UPS for AI workloads

By saad
A photograph of a sign with the VMware logo.
Global Market

Chinese cyberspies target VMware vSphere for long-term persistence

By saad
Rural fiber providers eye edge compute as AI pushes workloads out of the cloud
Edge Computing

Rural fiber providers eye edge compute as AI pushes workloads out of the cloud

By saad
Harbor Solutions and Zadara unveil multi-tenant AI cloud built for sovereign workloads
Edge Computing

Harbor Solutions and Zadara unveil multi-tenant AI cloud built for sovereign workloads

By saad
Data Center News
Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram Linkedin

About US

Data Center News: Stay informed on the pulse of data centers. Latest updates, tech trends, and industry insights—all in one place. Elevate your data infrastructure knowledge.

Top Categories
  • Global Market
  • Infrastructure
  • Innovations
  • Investments
Usefull Links
  • Home
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2024 – datacenternews.tech – All rights reserved

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.
You can revoke your consent any time using the Revoke consent button.