PRIVATE EQUITY AIRPORT EXITS
Why Advent International Abandoned Airport Privatization After $450M+ Investment: The Aerodom Exit Decoded
Published: Q4 2027
This executive intelligence dossier dissects Advent International’s complete entry and exit from airport privatization between 1996 and 2016, centering on the 7.5-year ownership of Aerodom (Dominican Republic, six airports, 4.5 million passengers). Unlike active infrastructure investors, Advent executed a deliberate sector exit despite operational success—passenger growth, capital deployment exceeding commitments, and international service quality recognition. The analysis reveals how a $92 billion private equity firm with Latin American dominance and dedicated airport expertise dismantled its platform strategy, selling to Vinci Airports and redirecting capital away from airport concessions entirely. Decision-makers evaluating PE partnerships for airport privatization require this precedent: when does short-cycle capital exit long-cycle infrastructure, and what operational fingerprints remain? The dossier provides granular reconstruction of Advent’s governance structure (Managing Director Luis Solórzano’s role), capital deployment mechanisms (leveraged buyout with Scotiabank/ING, $450M+ CAPEX execution), partnership models (Vancouver Airport Services retention, commercial revenue focus), and value-creation levers (energy reduction, terminal optimization, route development). With 25 primary-source citations, asset-by-asset breakdowns, and explicit data gap documentation, this research equips boards, sovereign wealth funds, and infrastructure advisors to assess: (1) PE operational contributions versus strategic misalignment in airports, (2) concession contract fulfillment under private ownership, (3) exit timing relative to remaining concession terms (14 years surrendered to Vinci), and (4) competitive positioning against permanent capital models. Advent’s absence from post-2016 airport markets signals strategic calculus—this dossier decodes it.
Includes:
Executive Summary: Current Holdings and Historical Footprint | Timeline of Entry (1996) Through Full Exit (2016) | Fund Structure: LAPEF Series Capital Deployment ($8B+ Latin America) | Decision-Making Architecture: Investment Committee and Regional Mandates | Aerodom Asset Sheet: Six Airports, Concession Terms, Traffic Analysis, CAPEX Fulfillment | Partnership Ecosystem: Vancouver Airport Services, Lenders, Exit to Vinci | Operational Value Creation: Energy Reduction, Terminal Remodeling, Route Development | Risk Mitigation Framework: Concession Compliance, Currency Exposure, Demand Shocks | Exit Rationale Analysis: Why Strategic Sale After 7.5 Years with 14-Year Concession Remaining | Data Gaps and Undisclosed Terms: Acquisition Price, Sale Price, Debt Structure, Returns | Comparative Context: Aeroplazas, AMAIT, Fumisa (Mexico Commercial Operations) | 25 Primary Source Citations with URLs and Access Dates