EQT will merge with Coller International Partners for $3.2 billion in newly issued ordinary shares, plus up to $500 million in contingent cash consideration. The transaction hands EQT immediate scale in the institutional secondaries market, where Coller manages roughly $35 billion across funds that span GP-led restructurings and LP portfolio sales. The share consideration keeps EQT's balance sheet dry while locking Coller's founding partners into the combined entity as material equity holders.
The secondaries market crossed $150 billion in transaction volume in 2024, with GP-led continuation vehicles accounting for more than half. Coller has backed GP-led deals in the infrastructure, buyout, and venture spaces since the early 2000s, giving EQT exposure to deal flow it does not currently touch through its core buyout and infrastructure platforms. The firm has raised nine dedicated secondaries funds since inception, with the most recent vehicle closing at just under $9 billion in 2023. EQT's existing secondaries capability is negligible; the Swedish manager has focused on direct control investments and minority infrastructure stakes, not LP portfolio acquisitions or tail-end restructurings.
The contingent $500 million piece ties to fund performance over the next three years, suggesting EQT expects Coller's current vehicles to hit carry thresholds that justify the earnout. The cash portion also implies EQT sees immediate deployment opportunities that will generate returns before the earnout period closes. Coller's investor base includes public pensions, sovereign wealth funds, and insurance general accounts that write nine-figure checks into secondaries funds. EQT gains access to that capital base without spending years building relationships or seeding a new product line from scratch.
Allocators should watch for integration friction between EQT's direct investment culture and Coller's pricing-driven secondaries model. Secondaries buyers underwrite portfolios of assets they will never control; EQT's operators are trained to run companies and infrastructure assets with named management teams. The firms also compete for the same institutional capital, particularly in Europe where overlap among LPs is high. If EQT pushes Coller's team to cross-sell infrastructure or buyout products, portfolio construction discipline may slip. The contingent consideration period runs through 2028, so any culture clash will surface in fundraising results for Coller X by mid-decade.
EQT's share price will absorb the dilution over the next six months. The firm issued equity, not debt, which tells you management sees its own stock as expensive enough to use as acquisition currency. Coller's partners now own a meaningful slug of EQT and cannot exit without triggering lock-up provisions that likely extend past the earnout period. The trade is live the day the deal closes, which both firms expect in the second half of 2025 pending regulatory clearance.