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The capital infusion aligns with growing global demand across sectors driven by e‑commerce growth, artificial intelligence and cloud adoption, and the green energy transition. GLP’s data‑centre division is notably thriving: its annual revenue surged 43 percent year‑on‑year to US $193 million.
GLP oversees approximately US $80 billion in assets through its management arm, GLP Capital Partners. This move marks a strategic shift for ADIA—long an investor in GLP’s funds—into becoming a direct shareholder in the global investment group.
In a statement, GLP co‑founder and chief executive Ming Z Mei emphasised that the enhanced capital base and strategic partnership will enable the company to “accelerate growth” and capitalise on the “secular expansion of new economy sectors in which we operate.” Mohamed Al Qubaisi, executive director of ADIA’s real estate department, noted that the transaction deepens their longstanding relationship with GLP and supports its next growth phase while scaling exposure to new economy segments.
The investment supports GLP's diversified global platform. The firm has operations across Brazil, China, Europe, India, Japan, the US, and Vietnam, spanning logistics real estate, data centres and renewables. Moreover, the investments come amid escalating interest in digital infrastructure, particularly data centres, which are seen as pivotal to AI and cloud services growth.
GLP’s momentum is further underlined by recent capital inflows from regional partners. In China, the company secured 2.5 billion yuan from Zhejiang government‑backed investors to boost its data‑centre operations. Earlier in the year, GLP completed the sale of its ex‑China funds management business to Ares Management for US $3.7 billion, in a deal partly financed with cash and equity. The company also retains stakes in those funds and has backed Ares’s first Japanese data‑centre fund, which completed a US $2.4 billion final closing in June.
GLP’s evolution over the past decade provides further context for this development. Founded in 2009 by Ming Z Mei and Jeffrey H Schwartz, the firm originated as Global Logistic Properties. It went public in 2010 in what was at the time Singapore’s largest IPO. It was taken private in 2018, following a leveraged buyout led by a private‑equity consortium. The company has since transformed into a multi‑sector platform across logistics, digital infrastructure and renewable energy.
On the other side, ADIA stands as one of the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds, managing a diversified global portfolio across asset classes including real estate, private equity and data‑centre platforms. This leap into a direct stake in GLP underscores the fund’s strategy of pursuing active positions in entities driving structural sectoral growth.
Arabian Post Staff -Dubai
Global logistics investor GLP will receive up to $1.5 billion from a wholly owned subsidiary of the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, signalling the sovereign wealth fund’s first move from limited partner to direct stakeholder in the firm. The initial capital deployment of $500 million is earmarked for expanding GLP’s operations in logistics, digital infrastructure, and renewable energy, with further investment to follow in coming months.
The capital infusion aligns with growing global demand across sectors driven by e‑commerce growth, artificial intelligence and cloud adoption, and the green energy transition. GLP’s data‑centre division is notably thriving: its annual revenue surged 43 percent year‑on‑year to US $193 million.
GLP oversees approximately US $80 billion in assets through its management arm, GLP Capital Partners. This move marks a strategic shift for ADIA—long an investor in GLP’s funds—into becoming a direct shareholder in the global investment group.
In a statement, GLP co‑founder and chief executive Ming Z Mei emphasised that the enhanced capital base and strategic partnership will enable the company to “accelerate growth” and capitalise on the “secular expansion of new economy sectors in which we operate.” Mohamed Al Qubaisi, executive director of ADIA’s real estate department, noted that the transaction deepens their longstanding relationship with GLP and supports its next growth phase while scaling exposure to new economy segments.
The investment supports GLP’s diversified global platform. The firm has operations across Brazil, China, Europe, India, Japan, the US, and Vietnam, spanning logistics real estate, data centres and renewables. Moreover, the investments come amid escalating interest in digital infrastructure, particularly data centres, which are seen as pivotal to AI and cloud services growth.
GLP’s momentum is further underlined by recent capital inflows from regional partners. In China, the company secured 2.5 billion yuan from Zhejiang government‑backed investors to boost its data‑centre operations. Earlier in the year, GLP completed the sale of its ex‑China funds management business to Ares Management for US $3.7 billion, in a deal partly financed with cash and equity. The company also retains stakes in those funds and has backed Ares’s first Japanese data‑centre fund, which completed a US $2.4 billion final closing in June.
GLP’s evolution over the past decade provides further context for this development. Founded in 2009 by Ming Z Mei and Jeffrey H Schwartz, the firm originated as Global Logistic Properties. It went public in 2010 in what was at the time Singapore’s largest IPO. It was taken private in 2018, following a leveraged buyout led by a private‑equity consortium. The company has since transformed into a multi‑sector platform across logistics, digital infrastructure and renewable energy.
On the other side, ADIA stands as one of the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds, managing a diversified global portfolio across asset classes including real estate, private equity and data‑centre platforms. This leap into a direct stake in GLP underscores the fund’s strategy of pursuing active positions in entities driving structural sectoral growth.
Also published on Medium.
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