Bain Capital has divested its entire shareholding in flash memory chip manufacturer Kioxia, concluding a transaction that reshaped Japan's technology and investment landscape.
"We no longer hold any Kioxia shares," stated David Gross, a managing partner at Bain, in a media interview. Fueled by the global artificial intelligence investment boom, Kioxia's share price has surged over 4000% since its initial public offering, propelling the chipmaker to become one of Japan's most valuable companies and delivering a record-breaking return for Bain.
"This has been tremendously successful for all stakeholders involved," Gross remarked. Prior to the complete divestment, Bain's stake had decreased from approximately 44% in December of last year to around 14% by mid-June. Its exit coincides with growing market skepticism over the lofty valuations of AI-related companies. Global semiconductor stocks hit record highs earlier this year but have since experienced volatility amid concerns about intensifying competition, potential overcapacity, and the return prospects on hundreds of billions of dollars in investments.
In 2018, a consortium led by Bain Capital, which included SK Hynix, acquired this memory business spun off from Toshiba for roughly $18 billion. In the subsequent years, Kioxia navigated one of the memory industry's most severe downturns. However, since its 2024 listing, Kioxia's shares have skyrocketed, ranking among the top performers in the MSCI Developed Markets Index, driven by surging demand for AI memory chips.
Although Kioxia's share price has retreated approximately 33% from its June peak, the company's remarkable turnaround story is likely to remain one of the most successful cases in the history of private equity investment.
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