EQT buys Berlin-based SpaceX satellite launch partner Exolaunch

Industry:    23 hours ago

Private equity fund EQT is acquiring Berlin-based space company Exolaunch, which helps satellite companies launch into orbit by partnering with rocket operators such as ​Elon Musk’s SpaceX.

The deal, announced by the companies Thursday, highlights strong investor interest in ‌the space industry and marks the Stockholm-listed fund’s first private equity investment in the field. It is looking to grow the company’s operations around the world and invest in developing new satellite ​launch and deployment technologies.

Exolaunch was spun out of the Department of Space Technology ​at the Technical University of Berlin in 2013, having been founded ⁠by associate professor Dmitriy Sternharz.

“There has never been a better time to be in ​the space economy,” said Robert Sproles, Chief Executive Officer of Exolaunch, in an interview. “There is ​such tremendous growth; it really is a confluence of technology, demand, end-product use and funding that is coming together to enable these opportunities.”

The investment is being made from EQT’s flagship private equity fund, ​which invests equity checks from €300 million to €1.5 billion ($348 million to $1.74 billion). The Exolaunch acquisition ​was at the lower end of the range, a person with knowledge of the matter said, ‌speaking on ⁠condition of anonymity because the terms of the transaction are not disclosed.

“It’s a fantastic moment to invest in that company both from a market perspective but also where the company is in terms of its development,” Nils Ketter, partner and head of industrial ​technology in the EQT ​Private Equity advisory ⁠team, said, adding that they had been eyeing the company since last year. “It is a bit of a hidden gem of ​German industry.”

Exolaunch has deployed over 790 satellites across 47 missions for ​more than ⁠200 commercial and government customers from North America, Europe, Asia and the Middle East.

It has maintained a strategic relationship with SpaceX since 2020, having participated in every Falcon 9 Transporter ⁠and ​Bandwagon rideshare mission since the program’s inception.

The German company ​recently started procuring its own dedicated launches, with the first secured Falcon 9 missions from SpaceX, Exo-1 and ​Exo-2, scheduled for 2027 and 2028.

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