The firm, which manages approximately $18.6 billion in assets, views Japan as a primary market for its operational-improvement model. Michael Psaros, co-founder of KPS, cited a shifting corporate landscape in Japan—marked by a growing appetite for transformational deals and portfolio rationalizations—as the catalyst for the expansion. The move mirrors the firm’s 2010 entry into Europe, where it successfully utilized corporate carve-outs to build a significant industrial investment platform.
Takajiro Ishikawa, who joins the firm after a 43-year career spanning Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and Mitsubishi Corporation, will spearhead the effort. His background includes overseeing multibillion-dollar asset management platforms and executing complex industrial transactions globally. KPS intends to leverage this local expertise to replicate its track record of acquiring non-core businesses from global corporations, a strategy that has defined 70% of its past investments. With institutional investors in the region having already committed over $4 billion to KPS funds since 2004, the firm aims to transition from a long-term visitor to a permanent, localized partner in the Japanese industrial sector.

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