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Apollo Global deploys $3.7 billion for Nippon Sheet Glass in industrial buildout

Marc Rowan pivots toward tangible assets as private credit rhetoric sharpens and industrial exposure deepens.

Published April 20, 2026 Source WSJ From the chopped neck
Subject on the desk
Apollo Global Management
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HENRI IV · April 20, 2026

Apollo Global deploys $3.7 billion for Nippon Sheet Glass in industrial buildout

Marc Rowan pivots toward tangible assets as private credit rhetoric sharpens and industrial exposure deepens.

Source WSJ ↗

Apollo Global Management agreed to acquire Nippon Sheet Glass for $3.7 billion, marking the firm's largest industrial asset purchase in three years and its sharpest pivot toward hard assets since the $5 billion Barnes Group acquisition in 2023. The deal values the Japanese glassmaker at a 12% premium to its trailing twelve-month EBITDA multiple and gives Apollo direct exposure to automotive glass, architectural products, and specialty materials across 30 countries.

The transaction closes Apollo's second-quarter deployment at approximately $11 billion across four continents, with 68% of capital allocated to industrial and infrastructure plays versus 32% to credit. Nippon Sheet Glass reported ¥630 billion in revenue for fiscal 2024 and operates 87 manufacturing sites, including joint ventures with Toyota, Honda, and Volkswagen. Apollo will retain the current management team in Tokyo and has committed to a ¥180 billion capex plan through 2027 for automated production lines in North America and Europe. The deal is expected to close in Q3 2025 pending regulatory clearance in Japan, the EU, and the United States.

The timing matters for two reasons. First, Apollo CEO Marc Rowan publicly criticized private credit managers this week who cannot meet 5% quarterly redemptions, calling fund structures that freeze capital "idiotic" in a CNBC interview. The remark came as $47 billion in private credit redemption requests sat unfulfilled across the industry in Q1 2025, according to Preqin data. Apollo's shift toward industrial buyouts with long-tail cash flows insulates the firm from liquidity mismatches that have strained peers. Second, the Nippon deal positions Apollo inside the electric vehicle supply chain at a moment when automakers are re-shoring glass production to avoid tariff exposure. 23% of Nippon's revenue derives from EV-specific products, including laminated glass with embedded sensors and heads-up display compatibility.

The deal also extends Apollo's Japan strategy, which began with the $1.1 billion acquisition of Air Water's chemicals division in 2022. Nippon's balance sheet carries ¥210 billion in net debt, which Apollo will refinance through its insurance affiliate Athene at an estimated 340 basis points below the company's current cost of capital. That spread alone generates ¥7.1 billion annually in interest savings, covering roughly 19% of the purchase price over a standard seven-year hold. The structure mirrors Apollo's playbook in Europe, where it has deployed $28 billion since 2020 into underlevered industrials with stable margin profiles and limited growth expectations.

Operators should track three developments. Japanese regulatory approval will hinge on national security reviews of Nippon's defense-grade glass contracts, which supply 14% of its specialty division revenue. Apollo will file with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States by late May, given Nippon's $890 million in North American sales. Finally, Rowan's liquidity comments signal Apollo may reduce exposure to open-ended credit vehicles in favor of permanent capital structures—watch for announcements regarding Athene's asset mix in the June earnings call.

Nippon's automotive order book extends through Q2 2027, locked in before the deal was signed.

The takeaway
Apollo's **$3.7 billion** Nippon bet combines EV supply chain access with refinancing arbitrage while Rowan distances the firm from illiquid credit peers.
apollonippon sheet glassm&aindustrialprivate equityjapan
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