Australia’s DigiCo to sell US data centre for $750 million; shares soar

Industry:    2 days ago

Australia’s DigiCo Infrastructure said on Wednesday it would sell its Chicago data centre for $750 million to pay down debt and fund the development of its Sydney site, sending its shares soaring more than ​25%.

Shares of the data centre landlord rose as much as 25.4% to A$2.96, marking ​their strongest intraday gain in more than a year. The benchmark stock ⁠index was up 0.8%.

DigiCo, which was spun off from HMC Capital in late 2024 with a ​A$2  billion IPO, said it struck a deal with a North American fund manager with “vast experience in ​data centres,” but did not name the buyer.

The sale represents a near 5% premium to the November 2024 acquisition price, and will unlock about A$360 million in cash proceeds after repaying asset-level debt, the company said.

“The ​asset sale at a premium… demonstrates the value of DigiCo assets, giving investors confidence to ​take its book value seriously,” said Ben Richards, portfolio manager at Seneca Financial Solutions.

The sale will also boost ‌DigiCo’s ⁠liquidity to about A$900 million and cut its pro-forma net debt to A$500 million from A$1.5 billion at the end of last year.

The CHI1 data centre facility in Chicago has a capacity of 32 megawatts and is leased to a major hyperscale customer under a 15-year agreement, according ​to the company’s website. ​The sale is ⁠expected to close in the first quarter of fiscal 2027.

DigiCo said it plans to consider capital management measures, including returning excess cash to investors ​through higher distributions in the near term, supported by proceeds from ​U.S. asset sales ⁠and lower debt levels.

Separately, it said it was weighing monetisation options for its LAX1 and LAX2 Los Angeles sites, after withdrawing its application in April for a data centre at LAX1, citing ⁠uncertainty over ​planning approval.

The data centre operator reaffirmed its fiscal 2026 ​underlying operating earnings forecast of A$125 million, compared with A$99 million a year earlier.

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