EQT has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Exolaunch, the Germany-based satellite deployment technology and launch mission management company, in a deal that pushes the private equity group deeper into space infrastructure.
The transaction is being made through EQT X and will see EQT acquire Exolaunch from founder Dmitriy Sternharz. Financial terms have not been disclosed. EQT described Exolaunch as a global leader in mission management, satellite integration and deployment technologies, supporting satellite operators that need reliable access to orbit.
Exolaunch has built a position in a part of the space economy that sits between satellite manufacturers and launch providers. The company provides deployment hardware, mission management, integration and launch coordination, allowing a wide range of satellites to be aggregated with different launch vehicles and deployed into target orbits. According to EQT, Exolaunch has deployed more than 790 satellites across 47 missions for more than 200 commercial and government customers across North America, Europe, Asia and the Middle East.
The acquisition gives EQT exposure to a fast-expanding section of the space industry without relying on the higher-profile rocket manufacturing or satellite ownership models that often attract public attention. Satellite deployment, mission integration and launch management are lower-visibility activities, but they are essential to the growth of communications, earth observation, defense, climate monitoring and data infrastructure applications.
Robert Sproles, Chief Executive Officer of Exolaunch, will remain central to the company’s next phase as EQT backs international expansion, product development and additional services across the satellite mission lifecycle. The company’s management team is expected to work with EQT’s industrial technology expertise as Exolaunch scales its global customer base and strengthens its launch and deployment capabilities.
Nils Ketter, Partner and Head of Industrial Technology within the EQT Private Equity advisory team, is directly attached to the transaction from EQT’s side. The deal fits EQT’s active ownership model, which focuses on developing companies across sectors and geographies. EQT reported €270 billion in total assets under management as of 31 December 2025, giving it the scale to support Exolaunch’s expansion plans while keeping the business focused on specialist space infrastructure.
The leadership angle sits in how private capital is moving into strategic industrial technology. Space infrastructure is increasingly linked to defense resilience, connectivity, logistics, climate data, mapping, telecommunications and national capability. That makes companies such as Exolaunch more strategically relevant than their profile might suggest, particularly as governments and businesses depend on satellite-enabled services across supply chains, security systems and digital operations.
The acquisition also shows how specialist infrastructure companies can become attractive targets when they occupy a technical control point in a growing market. Exolaunch does not need to own every part of the space value chain to be strategically important. Its role in helping customers reach orbit gives it a position inside the operational flow of the satellite economy.
Investors watching the space sector should read the deal as a signal that private equity is looking beyond headline launch companies and into enabling infrastructure. As satellite demand rises, leadership teams will need to understand where value is created: not only in spacecraft and launch vehicles, but in the systems, partnerships and mission capabilities that make access to orbit scalable.
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