Sweden’s EQT said it will launch a 57.0 billion yen ($371 million) tender offer to take private MAMEZO, a Tokyo-based IT services and consulting firm, in the private equity group’s first Japan investment focused on IT services.
BPEA EQT Mid-Market Growth Partnership will offer 3,551 yen per share for MAMEZO (ticker: 202A), EQT said, adding that it expects to seek full ownership after the tender offer to support the company’s strategy and operations.
MAMEZO advises corporate clients on modernising IT systems, designing digital platforms and system architecture, and building organisational capabilities for adopting newer technologies such as cloud computing and artificial intelligence, EQT said.
The company works with customers in manufacturing, automotive and financial services, aiming to help address labour and productivity challenges through deployments that can include AI and robotics.
EQT said it will collaborate with Itochu Corp as a strategic partner to drive long-term value at MAMEZO, drawing on EQT’s technology-enabled services experience and its long-standing presence in Japan.
The deal adds to a growing pipeline of take-private transactions in Japan, as global buyout firms and domestic players seek targets where operational upgrades and governance reforms can unlock value amid a shifting corporate landscape.
“Japan is entering a pivotal phase in its digital and AI transformation, and MAMEZO is well-positioned to support enterprises navigating this shift,” EQT Partner Tetsuro Onitsuka said in a statement.
EQT said the transaction aligns with its global thematic focus on technology and technology-enabled services.
In Japan, its mid-market portfolio includes CareNet and HRBrain, and in the wider Asia-Pacific region it has investments including Compass Education in Australia and WSO2 and Indium in India.
The tender offer is expected to mark EQT’s first IT services investment in Japan, extending the firm’s Asia-Pacific franchise following the integration of BPEA with EQT.
Demand for IT modernisation and AI adoption in Japan is rising as companies grapple with labour shortages, ageing workforces and legacy systems, supporting investor interest in mid-sized tech services providers.
However, value creation will depend on execution: retaining scarce engineering talent, scaling repeatable higher-margin services beyond project work, and sustaining growth as more consultancies and global systems integrators compete for the same transformation budgets.