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Advent, ADIA-backed gas engine maker Innio raises $2.43 billion in US IPO

By Thomson Reuters Jun 3, 2026 | 9:47 PM

June 3 (Reuters) – Gas engine manufacturer Innio said on Wednesday it has raised $2.43 billion in its U.S. initial public offering, as investors flock to companies powering the AI ​boom.

Munich, Germany-based Innio’s principal shareholder AI Alpine, co-owned ‌by funds managed by Advent International and the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, sold 90 million shares in the IPO at $27 each, at the top of its indicated price range of $24 to $27.

The listing comes against a favorable backdrop ‌for ​AI infrastructure-linked firms, with investors flocking to ⁠companies powering the technology’s ⁠buildout, from electrification to supply chain for data centers.

Innio is among several companies spanning sectors from software to insurance that are set to go public in New York on Thursday, ​supported by stronger markets and pent-up demand for new listings.

Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan and Morgan Stanley were joint lead book-running ⁠managers for the offering.

Innio will begin ⁠trading on the Nasdaq under the symbol “INIO” on ​Thursday.

Innio was formed after Advent agreed to buy General Electric’s distributed ​power business in a $3.25 billion deal in 2018. Five ‌years later, sovereign wealth fund ADIA took a minority stake in the firm.

Under Advent’s ownership, Innio has sharpened its focus on high-growth opportunities and strengthened its North American footprint, ramping up investments ⁠in U.S. manufacturing and assembly capacity.

Innio makes gas engines under its Jenbacher and Waukesha brands for critical infrastructure, including data centers, microgrids, grid ⁠stabilization, industrial energy ‌and gas compression.

Demand for its gas engines has ⁠grown as data center operators increasingly pair ​new facilities ‌with on-site distributed power generation.

Innio’s annual data ​center equipment ⁠order intake increased to $2.28 billion in 2025, from $27 million in 2023. It has also landed marquee wins, including an agreement for a multi gigawatt power plant for a major data center.

(Reporting by Arasu Kannagi Basil and Angela Christy in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar ​and Sherry Jacob-Phillips)