EQT Billionaire Eyes Major Asia Expansion Amid Global Shift

Published: November 16, 2025 | Category: Real Estate
EQT Billionaire Eyes Major Asia Expansion Amid Global Shift

Billionaire investor Jean Eric Salata’s journey into Asia was fraught with challenges. His first foray into India resulted in five write-offs and losses amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars. Times were so tough that Salata changed his computer password to “perseverance” as a daily reminder to keep going. Fast forward two decades, and Asia is now a key growth driver for Salata’s current firm, EQT AB. The buyout fund is taking the private equity world by storm with significant cash outs and top-level returns.

EQT AB, which Salata co-founded, is aiming to triple its Asia investments to as much as $110 billion in the next five years, outpacing deployment in its home turf of Europe. The firm projects another $10 billion in exits from the region over the next year. Salata, 59, who was recently nominated global chairman of the Swedish buyout firm, said EQT is capitalizing on global investors’ shift from US political turbulence toward Europe and Asia.

“Being European, being Nordic in its roots and heritage, we have a good position globally in this new world order where we can be a little bit more neutral in the way we view things,” Salata noted. EQT, though not a household name, has grown to become the largest non-US private equity firm in the world, with $310 billion in assets. Its total fundraising over the past five years is just shy of KKR & Co.’s, according to Private Equity International.

The new Asia fund, BPEA IX, secured $600 million in fresh commitments from two major US pension funds over the last six months, in addition to $200 million from the New Jersey Pension Fund earlier this year. Repeat investors include the Teacher Retirement System of Texas and the Employees’ Retirement System of Rhode Island.

Under Salata and new CEO Per Franzen, EQT is embarking on its next chapter, aiming to raise €100 billion ($116 billion) in the current fundraising cycle, while investing $650 billion globally in the next half decade. The firm has returned €25 billion to investors in the past 12 months, with a significant portion coming from Asia.

The buyout fund is riding a shift toward non-dollar assets, even while targeting infrastructure and real estate in the US, including data centers, student housing, and medical offices. EQT’s pace of cash distributions has stood out amid a broader slowdown, as many private equity firms contend with weak payouts and prolonged fundraising challenges. It offloaded $9.3 billion of Galderma Group AG shares with other investors this year, the biggest single-year cash out by a private equity firm, eclipsing the London Stock Exchange Group Plc’s $8.2 billion sale in 2023.

In Asia, the asset manager generated $10.1 billion for investors from selling Nord Anglia Education Inc., among Asia’s top exits, bringing total distributions from the Asia fund and its co-investors to $16 billion in the past 12 months. Asia will take center stage in EQT’s growth plans. Its merger with Baring Asia, founded by Salata in 1997, has opened a major gateway to the world’s fastest-growing markets. Regional deal flow has more than doubled, fueled by Japan, Korea, and Australia, while India has remained consistently active.

BPEA’s two most recent funds—the 2018 and 2022 vintages—have delivered strong results, posting net internal rates of return of around 20%, and achieving gross multiples on invested capital of 2.7 times and 1.3 times, respectively. The newest Asia fund targets 25% gross returns and a 2.5 times multiple.

Breaking the grip of US giants in Asia won’t be easy. While EQT has completed $3.3 billion of exits this year, that trails KKR at $5.1 billion, including real estate divestment. In India, Blackstone has a two-decade head start and can write big checks quickly. EQT plans to increase its deal capacity in Japan severalfold to $5 billion.

Despite the solid returns and robust fundraising, investors haven’t rewarded EQT in public markets as much as rivals. Its shares in Stockholm have gained about 11% annually over the past five years in US dollars, less than half the returns posted by KKR and Blackstone. “We’re in this business for generations,” Franzen said, citing the Wallenberg family’s roughly 17% stake. “The mindset is not to maximize the share price in the next five to 10 years. It’s to win in the very long term.”

The promotion of Salata, a Chilean who will succeed co-founder Conni Jonsson, was part of the most significant leadership transition in years. Franzen, previously head of private capital for Europe and North America, replaced Christian Sinding in May. Salata’s success in Asia didn’t come easily, forged on scars from hype-driven bets and fizzled internet deals at Baring. His first push into India was a debacle: $360 million invested, five write-offs, with just one deal breaking even. The fallout was brutal.

By 2002, recognizing the need for a reset, the entire team flew to Omaha, Nebraska, to hear Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger reflect on discipline and value investing. They then holed up in a windowless Marriott hotel basement with only whiteboards. A dozen colleagues debated into the night, coining a mantra of “buying growth at a discount.” It marked a turning point away from spreading capital thinly across small, minority stakes.

Salata and his team refocused on larger, profitable companies and full-control deals. The firm’s fortunes turned with its $490 million third fund in 2005. BPEA made a $50 million investment in Chinese miner Hidili Industry International Development Ltd., and parlayed that into $604 million when it went public. By negotiating an early release in October 2007, just before the financial crisis, the firm locked in profits and shielded investors from the collapse that followed.

More recently, EQT’s winning Asia bets have been in healthcare, technology, and education, sectors largely insulated from tariffs. Its domestically focused portfolio, from hospitals in India to schools in Hong Kong and Vietnam, further limits exposure to trade tensions. By selling to EQT for $6.7 billion in cash plus shares, BPEA gained instant institutional heft and worldwide dealmaking access. The deal may also have been among Salata’s best: He emerged with a 10% stake worth about $4.3 billion.

Salata counts himself lucky to have found the Nordic firm, which shares his belief that every market is unique, especially in Asia. A one-size-fits-all approach rarely succeeds. “The cultural fit is a key reason why this deal has worked,” he said. “I’ve had discussions in the past with American firms, and it just wasn’t gelling for me.”

Stay Updated with GeoSquare WhatsApp Channels

Get the latest real estate news, market insights, auctions, and project updates delivered directly to your WhatsApp. No spam, only high-value alerts.

GeoSquare Real Estate News WhatsApp Channel Preview

Never Miss a Real Estate News Update — Get Daily, High-Value Alerts on WhatsApp!

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What is EQT AB's current focus in Asia?
EQT AB is focusing on tripling its Asia investments to $110 billion in the next five years, targeting healthcare, technology, and education sectors while diversifying its portfolio in infrastructure and real estate.
2. How has EQT AB performed in recent years?
EQT AB has returned €25 billion to investors in the past 12 months, with a significant portion coming from Asia. The firm has also secured $600 million in fresh commitments from major US pension funds.
3. What challenges did Jean Eric Salat
face in his early investments in Asia? A: Jean Eric Salata faced significant challenges in his early investments in India, including five write-offs and losses amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars. He changed his computer password to 'perseverance' as a daily reminder to keep going.
4. How does EQT AB plan to break the grip of US giants in Asia?
EQT AB plans to increase its deal capacity in Japan severalfold to $5 billion and focus on larger, profitable companies and full-control deals, leveraging its strong returns and robust fundraising.
5. What is EQT AB's long-term strategy?
EQT AB's long-term strategy is to focus on sustainable growth and win in the very long term, with a mindset not to maximize the share price in the next five to 10 years but to build a strong and resilient portfolio.