Bain Capital is selling its stake in Bridge Data Centres at a $5 billion enterprise valuation through a secondary transaction, according to sources familiar with the matter. The exit closes a multiyear hold on one of Europe's largest data center platforms without testing public markets.
Bain acquired Bridge in 2017 through a consortium that included sovereign wealth capital. The firm built the platform through 12 acquisitions across Germany, the Netherlands, and the UK, adding 250 megawatts of critical IT load. Bridge now operates 18 facilities serving hyperscale and enterprise tenants in markets where power availability has tightened materially since 2021. The secondary buyer pool includes infrastructure funds and pension-backed vehicles seeking long-duration yields on contracted capacity. Pricing implies a roughly 2.8x gross multiple on Bain's initial equity, assuming the consortium structure weighted Bain at 40-45% of the original check.
The exit matters because it signals how secondary buyers now value European data center assets in a capital environment where IPO windows remain effectively closed for infrastructure plays. Bain is not taking Bridge public. It is not selling to a strategic operator. It is selling to capital that wants the income stream and the power contracts. That shift began in 2023 when Blackstone sold a portfolio stake in QTS Realty at a valuation that prioritized contractual escalators over growth multiples. Bridge's valuation sits below the 14-16x EBITDA range that US hyperscale-focused platforms commanded in 2021, but above the 10-12x floor that European assets traded at during the 2022 repricing. The spread reflects two factors: Bridge's tenant mix skews enterprise rather than hyperscale, and European power costs remain structurally higher than US equivalents despite recent moderation.
For allocators, the transaction confirms that secondary liquidity in private infrastructure has become the primary exit path when public comparables compress. Bridge's 18-20% EBITDA margins and 90%+ occupancy would have supported an IPO in 2021. In 2025, those metrics support a private sale to yield-focused buyers who can underwrite 6-7% unlevered returns on long-term power contracts. The valuation also reflects the cost of securing new power capacity in Germany and the Netherlands, where grid connection timelines now extend 24-36 months and require pre-payment structures that were uncommon before 2022. Operators acquiring existing capacity are effectively buying time and regulatory positioning, not just revenue.
Watch for follow-on moves in the European data center secondary market over the next 90-120 days. Bain's exit at $5 billion establishes a reference point for similar platforms held by CVC, EQT, and Brookfield, all of which entered the sector between 2016 and 2019. If secondary buyers absorb this stake without requiring valuation concessions, expect at least two additional European data center exits before September. Also track power procurement announcements from Bridge's buyer once the transaction closes—new capacity additions will signal whether the thesis is income harvesting or platform expansion.
The deal closes at a valuation that reflects what European infrastructure assets earn when hyperscale growth assumptions no longer apply. That number is $5 billion, not the $7-8 billion Bain might have targeted in 2021, and the delta is structural, not cyclical.