Bain Capital is selling its stake in Bridge Data Centres at a $5 billion enterprise valuation, a secondary transaction that marks one of the first meaningful exits from the AI infrastructure build-out cycle that began in early 2023. The sale, structured as a stake transfer to incoming institutional buyers, values the Australian data center operator at roughly 12x forward EBITDA based on disclosed run-rate figures from the company's last funding round.
Bridge operates 11 hyperscale facilities across Australia and Japan, with total IT load capacity near 400 megawatts. Bain acquired its position in 2020 through a combination of primary capital and a buyout of an earlier consortium stake, initially valuing the platform around $2.8 billion. The current exit implies a 1.78x gross multiple over four years, modest by infrastructure standards but consistent with compressed returns across the data center sector as development costs and power procurement timelines have extended. The transaction is expected to close in Q2 2025, subject to regulatory clearance in both jurisdictions.
The timing reflects two overlapping pressures. First, the forward curve for Australian wholesale power has steepened sharply since late 2024, raising input costs for facilities not locked into long-term PPAs. Bridge's average power cost is estimated near AUD $85 per megawatt-hour, roughly 18% above the rate secured by newer entrants with grid-scale solar offtakes. Second, Bain's fund vintage—a 2018 infrastructure vehicle—is approaching its natural distribution window, and LPs have signaled preference for cash over continued exposure to assets with binary re-contracting risk. The $5 billion valuation anchors the market-clearing price for mid-tier hyperscale operators without dedicated AI training cluster tenants.
For allocators, the implication is straightforward: data center returns have normalized. The 2022–2023 bid frenzy, driven by GPU deployment urgency and power scarcity narratives, priced in growth assumptions that have not materialized at pace. Bridge's largest tenant, a Tier 1 cloud provider, recently deferred a 60-megawatt expansion originally slated for mid-2025, citing slower-than-expected AI inference demand in APAC. The deferral removes roughly $140 million in forward contracted revenue from the next 24 months, compressing Bridge's growth trajectory from 22% CAGR to closer to 14%. Secondary buyers are underwriting stabilization, not acceleration.
Operators should watch for follow-on sales from other 2019–2021 vintage infrastructure funds with data center exposure, particularly those holding assets in markets where power costs are variable or where hyperscaler lease renewals come due in 2026–2027. Bain's exit sets a reference point: 10–12x EBITDA for platforms with contracted but not exponentially scaling load. The next tranche of pricing discovery will occur when a portfolio with grid-constrained capacity in Northern Virginia or Frankfurt changes hands, likely within six months.
The transaction closes a chapter on the assumption that data center infrastructure would trade at SaaS-like growth multiples. Bridge remains a sound asset, but the $5 billion marker suggests the market now differentiates sharply between power-abundant, AI-dedicated campuses and general-purpose colocation platforms.