Americold Realty Trust has officially joined forces with EQT’s Active Core Infrastructure fund to create one of the largest temperature-controlled warehouse platforms in North America. The deal allows Americold to de-lever its balance sheet while maintaining operational control over a critical segment of the food supply chain.
1. The Deal Structure: Strategic Monetization Americold is contributing 12 high-performance facilities to the joint venture, valued at over $1.3 billion.
- Ownership: EQT takes a 70% majority stake, while Americold retains 30% and continues to manage daily operations.
- Capital Inflow: Americold receives $1.1 billion in net cash proceeds.
- Debt De-leveraging: The proceeds are earmarked for debt repayment, a move that boosted shares by over 3% in premarket trading.
2. Macro Catalyst: The “Fresh & Frozen” Infrastructure Boom The demand for cold storage is outpacing traditional dry warehousing. Retailers and food producers are investing heavily in “Direct-to-Consumer” frozen goods and resilient supply chains to combat inflation and logistics volatility.
- Criticality: Temperature-controlled logistics are now viewed as “Active Core Infrastructure,” similar to power grids or telecom towers, due to their essential role in food security.
3. Financial Performance: Beating the Street The JV announcement coincides with a massive guidance raise for Americold, signaling strong organic growth in the sector.
- 2026 AFFO Guidance: Raised to $1.20 – $1.30 per share.
- Market Beat: This guidance sits significantly above the Wall Street consensus of 92 cents, proving that cold storage margins are expanding faster than analysts anticipated.
4. The Timeline The transaction is expected to close in Q3 2026, pending regulatory approvals. By offloading the real estate ownership to EQT while keeping the management fees, Americold is shifting toward an “Asset-Light” model that prioritizes operational expertise and recurring income.
The Investor Takeaway: This deal is a win for both parties. EQT secures long-term, inflation-protected infrastructure assets with a 70% stake. Americold cleans up its balance sheet with $1.1B in cash while retaining the high-margin operational contracts for the facilities. In a high-interest-rate environment, this “Real Estate-to-Cash” rotation is a textbook move for REITs looking to fund future growth without diluting shareholders.
