SoftBank-backed robotics firm AutoStore said on Tuesday it was seeking to raise $315 million by listing on the Oslo Bourse for an initial public offering (IPO) at a valuation that could make it Norway’s largest stock launch in two decades.

In April, SoftBank bought a 40% stake in the Norwegian company for $2.8 billion, valuing AutoStore at about $7 billion. Thomas H. Lee Partners and EQT are among its other investors.

AutoStore did not disclose its expected valuation, but based on its last funding round the company could top Adevinta’s $6.20 billion IPO in 2019 and also become the largest since the 2001 listing of Statoil, now known as Equinor.

Free Webinar: Digitization in Private Equity: The Paradigm Shift to Increased Returns

  • How private equity firms can digitise their portfolio companies
  • Development and implemention of effective tech strategy roadmaps
  • What the future holds for those who do digitize their portfolios, and where those who don’t will end

The company did not consider any other venue other than Oslo for listing. “We are a Norwegian company … it was only natural for us to list in Oslo,” CEO Karl Johan Lier told Reuters.

Founded in 1996, AutoStore has 20,000 robots deployed across more than 35 countries to automate warehouse operations. The company also uses robots to densely store and retrieve products, allowing customers to store four times the inventory in the same space.

“We expect that we will continue to grow strongly in Europe, we will grow even stronger in North America and the APAC region going forward,” Lier said.

He declined to give any details on valuation.

Source: Reuters

Can’t stop reading? Read more