Space company Maxar agrees to go private in $6.4 billion deal

Business

In this article

Inside the company’s Palo Alto, California manufacturing facility,
Maxar

Space imagery and infrastructure company Maxar on Friday announced an agreement to go private through an acquisition led by Advent International.

The all-cash deal gives Maxar an enterprise value of about $6.4 billion. Private equity firm Advent is taking a $3.1 billion stake in Maxar, with British Columbia Investment Management Corporation also making a $1 billion equity contribution.

“We’re really excited about it,” Maxar CEO Dan Jablonsky told CNBC. He said it would “allow us to invest even faster in the business, accelerate things like Legion seven and eight [satellites], and other technologies we’ve been developing.”

Shares of Maxar closed at $23.10 on Thursday, so the agreement with Advent at $53 a share represents a price nearly 130% above where the stock has recently traded.

Sign up here to receive weekly editions of CNBC’s Investing in Space newsletter.

Jablonsky has led a multi-year turnaround effort at Maxar since he was appointed CEO in January 2019, with the stock trading near $5 a share. The deal price with Advent is near the highs Maxar shares hit in early 2021, before dropping alongside other space stocks this year.

“We took a very hard and thoughtful look at all of the factors,” Jablonsky said. “This turned out to be the right transaction at the right time.”

A key aspect of Maxar’s agreement with Advent is a 60-day “go-shop period,” which ends on Feb. 14, for the company to consider alternative proposals.

Because of that, Jablonsky noted that it’s “still very early days” for what the future of Maxar would look like under Advent. He declined to comment on whether the new owners may look to carve out Maxar’s businesses, in satellite imagery and manufacturing – or whether he’ll stay on.

“Love what we’ve built and what we’re doing here and probably can’t say a lot beyond that right now,” Jablonsky said.

Articles You May Like

Citadel’s Ken Griffin says Trump’s tariffs could lead to crony capitalism
UniCredit offers to buy rival Italian lender Banco BPM for $10.5 billion
Nordstrom tops Wall Street’s earnings expectations, as shoppers buy more clothes and shoes
Bitcoin vs. gold: State Street worries the crypto rally’s allure is distracting precious metal investors
TJ Maxx parent says holiday shopping is off to a ‘strong start,’ but its guidance tells another story

Leave a Reply

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