Silver Lake Technology Management, L.L.C. | |
Type: | Private |
Location: | Menlo Park, California, United States |
Locations: | Multiple offices in 4 countries |
Industry: | Private equity |
Aum: | US$103 billion (2024)[1] |
Silver Lake, legally Silver Lake Technology Management, L.L.C., is an American global private equity firm focused on technology and technology-enabled investments. Silver Lake is headquartered in Silicon Valley and New York, and has offices in London, Hong Kong, and Singapore.
In June 2023, Silver Lake were ranked 11th in Private Equity International's PEI 300 ranking of the largest private equity firms in the world.[2]
Silver Lake was founded in 1999, at the height of the late 1990s technology boom to make private equity investments in mature technology companies as opposed to the startups pursued actively by venture capitalists. Among the firm's founders were[3] Jim Davidson who had led the Technology Investment Banking business at Hambrecht & Quist; David Roux who had an operational and entrepreneurial background having served as chairman and CEO of Liberate Technologies, executive vice president at Oracle Corporation and senior vice president at Lotus Development; Roger McNamee, as the representative of Integral Capital Partners, a hybrid investment fund that made investments in publicly traded companies and venture capital investments in early-stage startups; and Glenn Hutchins, who came from Blackstone Group and served as a Special Advisor on economic and healthcare policy in the early Clinton Administration and previously worked at Thomas H. Lee Partners.[4]
The firm raised its first fund, Silver Lake Partners, with $2.3 billion of investor commitments.[5] Silver Lake's first fund was among the best performing funds of its vintage.[6]
The firm's second fund, Silver Lake Partners II was raised in 2004 with $3.6 billion of commitments.[7]
The firm's third fund, Silver Lake Partners III was raised in 2007 with $9.6 billion of commitments.[8] Also in 2007, the firm launched a middle-market investment business, Silver Lake Sumeru, hiring Ajay Shah and the former investment team of Shah Capital Partners. Sumeru completed fundraising for its debut fund in 2008 with $1.1 billion of capital.[9]
In 2011, Silver Lake Kraftwerk was launched to provide growth capital to later-stage companies in technology and tech-enabled businesses across the operations, energy, and resources industries.[10]
After the sale of Skype to Microsoft in 2011, Silver Lake was accused of unfairly depriving Skype employees of an options windfall.[11] At issue was a clause in the Skype employee stock option grant agreement. The repurchase right gave Skype the authority to buy back shares at the grant price, when an employee left the company, even when those shares were vested.
In 2013, the firm raised its fourth fund, Silver Lake Partners IV, which closed in 2013 with $10.3 billion in committed capital.[12]
In 2017, the firm raised its fifth fund, Silver Lake Partners V, which closed at $15 billion of commitments. Jim Davidson retired from the managing partner committee.[10]
In September 2020, it was announced that Silver Lake was having negotiations to invest over $1 billion in Indian retail company Reliance Retail.[13]
In January 2021, the firm raised $20 billion for its sixth fund, Silver Lake Partners VI.[14] In December, Silver Lake purchased a minority 33.3% stake in the Australian Professional Leagues, otherwise known as the APL.[15] The group is responsible for organising Australia's national association football leagues, being the A-League Men, A-League Women and A-League Youth, with Silver Lake also having a stake in City Football Group, who own A-League club Melbourne City. Silver Lake has estimated the value of the APL and its affiliate holdings at over US$300 million.[16]
In May 2024, the firm raised $20.5 billion for its seventh fund, Silver Lake Partners VII.[17]
In December 2019, Silver Lake appointed Egon Durban and Greg Mondre as Co-CEOs and promoted Joe Osnoss to managing partner. Silver Lake announced Ken Hao as chairman and Mike Bingle vice chairman and managing partner emeritus, with the launch of Silver Lake Partners VI.[18] [19] In December 2023, Silver Lake promoted Christian Lucas to managing partner.[20]
Since 1999, Silver Lake made investments through leveraged buyout transactions, minority growth investments and private investment in public equity (PIPE) investments.The following table details some of Silver Lake's private equity investments:
Investment | Year | Sector | Company description | Reference | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Diamond Baseball Holdings | 2022 | Sports | Silver Lake acquired direct ownership from subsidiary Endeavor in late 2022. Diamond Baseball Holdings owns and operates over 20 Minor League Baseball teams. | [21] | |
Software AG | 2022 | Integration software | In February 2022, Silver Lake Invested €344 million. In April 2023, it offered to buy out the firm for | [22] [23] | |
Integrity | 2021 | Insurtech | In December 2021, Silver Lake Invested $1.2 billion | [24] | |
A League | 2021 | Sports | In December 2021, Silver Lake acquired a 33.3% shareholding | [25] | |
Group 42 | 2021 | Information technology | In April 2021, Silver Lake announced an investment of around $800 million to Group 42, a major part of the Emirates' Covid-19 response and vaccination programme. | [26] [27] | |
Klarna | 2020 | Financial | In September 2020, Silver Lake made investments in Klarna Bank totaling a reported $500 million, for less than 5 percent a stake. | [28] | |
Jio | 2020 | E-commerce | In May 2020, Silver Lake invested a reported $753 million in Reliance Retail's digital unit, Jio. In June 2020, Silver Lake invested another reported $602 million in the company. | [29] | |
Expedia Group | 2020 | E-commerce | On April 23, 2020, Silver Lake and Apollo Global Management, Inc. anchored Expedia Group's $3.2 billion new capital raising. | [30] | |
Airbnb | 2020 | E-commerce | On April 6, 2020, Silver Lake and Sixth Street Partners invested $1 billion. | [31] | |
2020 | Social media | On March 9, 2020, Silver Lake made a $1 billion investment. | [32] | ||
Waymo | 2020 | Autonomous driving | On March 2, 2020, Silver Lake led Waymo's first external investment round. | [33] | |
First Advantage | 2019 | Worker analysis | On November 27, 2019, Silver Lake agreed to acquire First Advantage from Symphony Technology Group (STG) for $1.25 billion. | [34] | |
City Football Group | 2019 | Sports | On November 27, 2019, Silver Lake announced a definitive agreement to make a $500 million equity investment in City Football Group. | [35] | |
Verily | 2019 | Biotechnology | On January 3, 2019, Silver Lake led a $1 billion investment round in Alphabet's subsidiary. | [36] | |
ServiceMax | 2018 | Information technology | On December 13, 2018, GE Digital announced its intention to sell the majority of ServiceMax to Silver Lake Partners, while retaining a minority stake of 10% in the future of the company. | [37] | |
AMC | 2018 | Entertainment | On September 14, 2018, Silver Lake Alpine invested $600 million. | [38] | |
GoodRx | 2018 | Telemedicine | In 2018, Silver Lake bought a reported 35.3% of equity in GoodRx, valuing the company at a reported $2.8 billion. In 2020, Silver Lake invested another $100 million into GoodRx through a private placement set to the price of GoodRx's IPO. | [39] | |
Ant Group | 2018 | Financial | In 2018, Silver Lake made investments in Ant Group totaling a reported $500 million. In 2020, as Ant Group approached its IPO, the company was reportedly worth $210 billion in comparison to its 2018 reported worth of $150 billion. This increase would create a 40% return for these funds if they were to sell in the IPO at that valuation. | [40] | |
Credit Karma | 2018 | Financial | On March 28, Silver Lake made a $500 million secondary investment. | [41] | |
Blackhawk Network | 2018 | E-commerce | On January 16, 2018, Silver Lake and P2 Capital Partners purchased Blackhawk Network, a company offering prepaid gift, reward and incentive technologies and solutions. | [42] | |
WP Engine | 2018 | Information technology | On January 4, 2018, Silver Lake invested $250 million in WP Engine, a WordPress digital experience platform. | [43] | |
Cornerstone OnDemand | 2017 | Worker management | On November 8, 2017, Silver Lake Alpine led a $300 million investment in Cornerstone OnDemand, a cloud-based learning and human capital management software company. | [44] | |
Unity Technologies | 2017 | Game engine | On May 24, 2017, Silver Lake announced an investment in Unity | [45] | |
SoFi | 2017 | Financial | On February 24, 2017, Silver Lake led a $500 million Series F financing round. | [46] | |
Ancestry | 2016 | Genealogy | On April 1, 2016, Silver Lake and GIC made an investment in Ancestry, the online family history data and personal DNA testing company. | [47] | |
Symantec | 2016 | Cybersecurity | On February 4, 2016, Silver Lake made a strategic investment of $500 million in Symantec. On June 13, 2016, it was announced that Symantec would acquire Blue Coat, and Silver Lake invested another $500 million in conjunction with the transaction. | [48] | |
SolarWinds | 2015 | Information technology | On October 21, 2015, Silver Lake purchased SolarWinds for $60.10 per share, giving the company a total equity value of $4.5 billion. In October 2018, SolarWinds went public through an IPO. | [49] | |
EMC | 2015 | Information technology | On October 12, 2015, EMC announced that they had agreed on a buy-out by Michael Dell and Silver Lake for $33.15 per share in a complicated cash transaction which included tracking stock in VMware, which remained a publicly traded company. The November 2023 sale of VMware to Broadcom yielded the largest-ever gain in the private equity industry for Silver Lake and Dell, a combined total of $70 billion in cash and stock.[50] | ||
Motorola Solutions | 2015 | Information technology | On August 5, 2015, Silver Lake invested $1 billion in Motorola Solutions in convertible senior notes with a 5-year term at $68.50 per share to help the company make new partnerships, investments, and acquisitions for its public safety solutions and services businesses. The company was then valued at $12.6 billion. Motorola Solutions also used a portion of the investment to fund a share buyback. | [51] | |
Dell | 2013 | Information technology | On February 5, 2013, Dell announced that it had agreed on a buy-out by Michael Dell and Silver Lake for $13.65 per share in cash. The shares of founder and CEO Michael Dell and some of its key management were not included in this purchase. Microsoft additionally provided $2 billion in the form of a loan to assist with the buy-out.[52] [53] Upon completion of the deal Dell de-listed from NASDAQ and the Hong Kong Stock Exchange and became fully privately owned company as it was before its first initial public offering. According to Michael Dell, this move made it easier to work on a long-term growth strategy as the company could make choices that would payout on the longer term, without the need the address to demands of (short term) individual share-holders. The deal was completed on October 30, 2013, and at $24.4 billion was then the largest technology buyout ever, surpassing the 2006 buyout of Freescale Semiconductor for $17.5 billion.[54] Other smaller investors were MSD Capital, an investment firm established to manage the wealth of Michael Dell, and Microsoft with its $2 billion loan, and there were several debt-facilities from banks like Barclays, Credit Suisse, Bank of America and Royal Bank of Canada.[55] In December 2018, Dell shareholders agreed to a proposal by Dell to engage in a reverse merger with the tracking stock tied to its interest in software provider VMware in which existing holders were invited to cash out some or all of their interest. Dell Technologies is now a public company again. | ||
Global Blue | 2012 | Financial | On May 24, 2012, Silver Lake acquired Global Blue, a leading VAT services provider in Europe, for around €1 billion. | [56] | |
Endeavor | 2012 | Sports and entertainment | On May 2, 2012, Silver Lake acquired a minority stake in William Morris Endeavor (WME). In December 2013, WME and Silver Lake announced they would acquire IMG. In July 2016, Silver Lake helped back WME-IMG's acquisition of UFC. In October 2017, WME-IMG announced the formation of a new holding company, Endeavor, which took on the full portfolio of owned and operated brands formerly under the WME-IMG banner. Endeavor went public in 2021, trading under ticker symbol "EDR" on the NYSE. In April 2024, Silver Lake acquired the remaining shares of the company to take it private in a deal that valued Endeavor at $13 billion. | [57] [58] [59] | |
Alibaba | 2011 | E-commerce | In 2011 and 2012, Silver Lake made investments in Alibaba totaling a reported $500 million. In September 2014, Alibaba listed on the NYSE in the largest ever US-listed IPO, with Silver Lake maintaining a stake worth more than $5.1 billion at the time. | [60] | |
GoDaddy | 2011 | Web hosting | On July 1, 2011, Silver Lake and others joined with Bob Parsons to take GoDaddy private. In 2015, GoDaddy re-entered the public market. | [61] | |
Skype | 2009 | Communication software | Silver Lake, Andreessen Horowitz and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board announced the acquisition of 65% of Skype for $1.9 billion from eBay, valuing the business at $2.75 billion. In May 2011, Microsoft agreed to acquire Skype for $8.5 billion in cash. | [62] [63] [64] [65] | |
Avaya | 2007 | Communication software | Silver Lake and TPG Capital completed an $8.2 billion leveraged buyout of the enterprise telephony and call center technology company that was formerly a unit of Lucent. | [66] | |
Sabre | 2006 | E-commerce | Silver Lake and TPG Capital announced a deal to buy Sabre, which operates Sabre Travel Network and Sabre Airline Solutions, for approximately $4.3 billion in cash, plus the assumption of $550 million in debt. Earlier in 2006, Blackstone acquired Sabre's chief competitor Travelport. | [67] | |
NXP Semiconductors | 2006 | Electronics | In August 2006, a consortium of Silver Lake, KKR and AlpInvest Partners acquired a controlling 80.1% share of the semiconductors unit of Philips for €6.4 billion. The new company, based in the Netherlands, was renamed NXP Semiconductors. | [68] [69] | |
SunGard | 2006 | Information technology | SunGard was acquired by a consortium of seven private equity investment firms in a transaction valued at $11.3 billion. The partners in the acquisition were Silver Lake, which led the deal as well as Bain Capital, the Blackstone Group, Goldman Sachs Capital Partners, KKR, Providence Equity Partners, and TPG Capital. This represented the largest leveraged buyout completed since the takeover of RJR Nabisco at the end of the 1980s leveraged buyout boom. Also, at the time of its announcement, SunGard would be the largest buyout of a technology company in history, a distinction it would cede to the buyout of Freescale Semiconductor. The SunGard transaction is also notable in the number of firms involved in the transaction. The involvement of seven firms in the consortium was criticized by investors in private equity who considered cross-holdings among firms to be generally unattractive. In 2015 the consortium sold the bulk of the Sungard business to FIS. | [70] | |
Broadcom | 2005 | Electronics | In 2005, the semiconductor division of Agilent was acquired by Silver Lake and KKR, to form Avago Technologies, one of the largest privately held semiconductor companies in the world. In 2009, Avago completed a $650 million initial public offering. In 2013, Silver Lake reinvested $1 billion in Avago to help finance its acquisition of LSI. In 2015, Silver Lake supported Avago's $37 billion acquisition of Broadcom, the biggest tech deal on record at the time. | [71] [72] [73] |
Silver Lake operates through four primary strategies, all focused on technology investments: