DigitalBridge
DigitalBridge Group, Inc. (NYSE: DBRG) is an American alternative asset management firm specializing in digital infrastructure investments worldwide.[1][2] Founded in 2013 by Marc C. Ganzi as Digital Bridge Holdings, the firm has evolved into a major player in the sector, managing approximately $106 billion in assets under management as of June 30, 2025.[3][4] It focuses on owning, operating, and investing in assets such as data centers, cell towers, fiber networks, small cells, and edge infrastructure, leveraging a team with over 30 years of expertise in digital investments.[3] Under CEO Ganzi, DigitalBridge has pursued growth through strategic acquisitions and fundraising, achieving significant increases in fee-earning equity under management (FEEUM), which rose to $33 billion in 2023 amid a 47% year-over-year expansion.[5][4] The firm operates across multiple business segments, including core plus strategies, ventures in emerging "InfraTech," digital credit, and liquid strategies, positioning it to capitalize on the convergence of digital ecosystems driven by technologies like generative AI.[6] Its portfolio includes high-profile investments in data center operators and telecommunications infrastructure, reflecting a commitment to long-term value creation in essential digital backbone assets.[3]History
Formation and Early Development
Digital Bridge Holdings was founded in 2013 by Marc C. Ganzi, a veteran in telecommunications infrastructure with prior experience founding Global Tower Partners in 2003, which grew into one of the largest privately held tower companies in the United States before its sale.[4][7] Ganzi, alongside co-founder Ben Jenkins, established the firm to focus on acquiring, investing in, and operating digital infrastructure assets, including cell towers, data centers, and fiber networks, amid rising global demand for mobile and internet connectivity.[4][8] In its initial years, Digital Bridge Holdings prioritized building a specialized portfolio in digital real estate, leveraging Ganzi's operational expertise to target undervalued assets in the evolving telecommunications sector.[4] The firm raised capital from institutional investors to pursue opportunities in high-growth areas like tower portfolios and early-stage data center developments, establishing itself as an operator rather than a passive investor.[9] By emphasizing hands-on management and strategic acquisitions, the company achieved rapid scale, managing assets that supported expanding network demands driven by smartphone proliferation and cloud computing adoption.[8] This foundational phase positioned Digital Bridge as a pioneer in institutional-grade digital infrastructure investment, with early successes in consolidating fragmented tower and connectivity assets, setting the stage for broader expansion.[4] The firm's approach integrated operational improvements with financial engineering to enhance asset value, reflecting a first-mover advantage in recognizing digital infrastructure's long-term economic role.[8]Key Mergers and Rebranding
In July 2019, Colony Capital acquired Digital Bridge Holdings LLC for $325 million, integrating its digital infrastructure investment platform and establishing Digital Colony as a key subsidiary focused on assets such as data centers and fiber networks.[10][11] This transaction, valued at the time to create a combined entity with approximately $60 billion in assets under management, marked a strategic pivot toward digital assets under the leadership of Marc Ganzi, who transitioned to CEO roles within the enlarged firm.[10] On June 8, 2021, Colony Capital announced its rebranding to DigitalBridge Group, Inc., effective June 22, 2021, with shares trading under the new NYSE ticker DBRG.[12][13] The rebrand revived the "Digital Bridge" name from the 2019 acquisition, emphasizing an exclusive focus on digital infrastructure amid divestitures of non-core holdings, including a sale of senior housing and healthcare assets valued at $3.2 billion.[14][15] Digital Colony was consolidated under the DigitalBridge brand, streamlining operations to prioritize sectors like cell towers, edge computing, and small cells.[13] In February 2023, DigitalBridge acquired AMP Capital's global infrastructure equity investment management business for $316 million, including $141 million in upfront cash, and rebranded the unit as InfraBridge, which managed $5.6 billion in fee-earning assets across four funds.[16] This deal expanded DigitalBridge's capabilities in infrastructure equity while maintaining InfraBridge as an autonomous entity.[16]Expansion into Digital Infrastructure
In June 2021, Colony Capital, Inc., rebranded as DigitalBridge Group, Inc., to consolidate its pivot toward digital infrastructure assets, including data centers, cell towers, fiber networks, and edge computing facilities, while divesting legacy non-digital real estate holdings.[13] This strategic shift built on prior digital investments, such as the 2020 acquisition of Zayo Group Holdings, Inc.—a provider of fiber-optic networks—in partnership with EQT, which expanded DigitalBridge's footprint to over 135,000 route miles of fiber.[17] By early 2022, DigitalBridge completed its transformation into a pure-play digital infrastructure investment firm, having sold off traditional real estate portfolios to streamline operations and allocate capital exclusively to high-growth digital sectors driven by cloud computing, 5G deployment, and emerging AI demands.[18] The firm's assets under management grew from approximately $15 billion in 2021 to over $80 billion by 2024, fueled by dedicated funds targeting digital credit, core-plus equity, and ventures in these verticals.[19] Subsequent expansions included bolstering data center capacity through investments in Vantage Data Centers, which by August 2025 secured additional funding to scale hyperscale facilities amid AI-driven power demands exceeding 16 gigawatts across 200+ sites in 90 markets.[20] In March 2025, portfolio company Zayo agreed to acquire Crown Castle's fiber solutions business, adding 90,000 route miles and enhancing enterprise connectivity for bandwidth-intensive applications.[17] Further, the July 2025 acquisition of Yondr Group with La Caisse du dépôt et placement du Québec targeted sustainable, AI-optimized data centers in Europe.[21] DigitalBridge's infrastructure strategy emphasizes operational expertise across macro cell towers (over 30,000 assets), small cells, and managed services, positioning it to capitalize on projected $4 trillion in AI-related capital expenditures through 2030, though this relies on sustained technological adoption and regulatory support for network expansions.[22][19]Business Model and Strategy
Investment Verticals and Approach
DigitalBridge focuses its investments on five primary digital infrastructure verticals: data centers, macro cell towers, fiber networks, small cells, and edge infrastructure.[6] These sectors underpin the global digital economy by enabling data processing, wireless connectivity, broadband distribution, densification of mobile networks, and localized computing capabilities, respectively.[6] The firm targets assets that support escalating demand driven by cloud computing, 5G deployment, and artificial intelligence applications, with a portfolio encompassing over 45 companies as of June 30, 2025.[6] The investment approach emphasizes a scalable, asset-light business model that prioritizes capital efficiency and operational leverage over direct asset ownership.[23] DigitalBridge manages approximately $106 billion in assets under management as of June 30, 2025, deploying institutional capital through proprietary deal sourcing, strategic partnerships, and a full-stack ecosystem strategy that integrates physical and software layers of infrastructure.[6] This includes value-add equity investments in operating platforms, core-plus opportunities for stabilized yields, digital credit facilities to finance expansion, liquid strategies via public market securities, and venture investments in InfraTech—emerging software technologies at the intersection of infrastructure and digitization.[6] By leveraging 30 years of sector expertise and deep industry relationships, the firm pursues high-return profiles amid annual global capital expenditures exceeding $400 billion in digital infrastructure.[6] Risk management in this approach centers on asset quality, customer creditworthiness, and alignment with secular growth trends, such as AI-driven data center power demands projected to reach 16 GW in DigitalBridge's global holdings.[5] [19] The strategy avoids over-reliance on any single vertical, diversifying across geographies and sub-sectors to mitigate cyclical exposures while capitalizing on converged connectivity solutions that bundle services like fiber and towers.[3] This disciplined, opportunity-driven framework has enabled DigitalBridge to refocus from legacy real estate into a pure-play digital infrastructure orientation since 2020.[5]Asset Management and Capital Raising
DigitalBridge functions as an alternative asset manager specializing in digital infrastructure, overseeing approximately $106 billion in assets under management (AUM) as of late 2024, encompassing investments in data centers, cell towers, fiber networks, and related assets across opportunistic, core-plus, credit, and venture strategies.[3][1] The firm's asset management approach emphasizes value creation through active oversight of over 45 portfolio companies, supported by a global team exceeding 100 digital infrastructure professionals with collective experience spanning 30 years.[6] Fee-earning equity under management (FEEUM) has grown significantly, reaching targets that contributed to AUM expansion from $45.3 billion at the end of 2021 to over $80 billion by mid-2024, driven by deployments into high-growth sectors like AI-enabled data centers.[24][5][25] In capital raising, DigitalBridge targets institutional limited partners with diversified fund vehicles, including its flagship DigitalBridge Partners (DBP) series for opportunistic investments. The firm closed DBP II at $8.3 billion in commitments on January 19, 2022, surpassing its initial target through commitments from sovereign wealth funds, pensions, and endowments.[26] DBP III amassed $6.3 billion by May 6, 2025, escalating to $6.9 billion by July 2025 en route to a third-quarter final close, reflecting sustained demand for digital assets amid cloud and AI expansion.[27][28] Complementing equity funds, the DigitalBridge Credit strategy, focused on debt across digital subsectors for income generation, secured $1.1 billion in total commitments by November 27, 2023.[29] Capital formation efforts have yielded over $7 billion in new FEEUM during 2023 alone, with year-to-date 2024 inflows exceeding prior quarterly benchmarks and supporting deployments like the $9.2 billion equity recapitalization of Vantage Data Centers on June 13, 2024, upsized by $2.8 billion to fund hyperscaler demand.[5][30] To bolster these activities, DigitalBridge enhanced its global team, including the appointment of Wendy Pryce as Managing Director on October 2, 2025, to co-lead stabilized data center strategies following her capital-raising role at Nuveen, and earlier hires like a London-based specialist in 2023 with two decades in institutional fundraising.[31][32] The firm aims for $40 billion in FEEUM by end-2025 via multi-strategy growth, though investor concerns over fundraising momentum have prompted speculation of potential acquisition scenarios if targets falter.[33][34]Portfolio and Investments
Core Assets and Holdings
DigitalBridge's core assets and holdings encompass a broad array of digital infrastructure platforms, including data centers, cell towers, fiber networks, small cells, and supporting real estate infrastructure, managed through its investment vehicles and affiliates. These assets generate long-duration cash flows from essential services supporting cloud computing, mobile connectivity, and data transmission, with collective operations spanning thousands of facilities and millions of route miles across North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and Latin America. The portfolio emphasizes hyperscale and edge data centers alongside wireless and broadband networks, reflecting DigitalBridge's strategy of scaling platforms to meet demand from hyperscalers and telecom operators.[35][3] In the data center vertical, flagship holdings include Vantage Data Centers, which operates hyperscale campuses in North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and through subsidiaries like SDC, with campuses in Silicon Valley and an acquisition of PCCW's Hong Kong data centers in November 2021; the firm committed additional capital to Vantage in August 2025 to expand for AI-driven demand. DataBank manages over 60 data centers and 20 interconnection hubs across more than 30 U.S. markets, supported by DigitalBridge's participation in a $2 billion equity raise announced October 15, 2024, and further financing in January 2025. Other key operators are Switch, with renewably powered facilities in Nevada, Texas, Georgia, and Michigan; Yondr Group, a global hyperscale developer acquired with La Caisse on July 1, 2025; and regional players like Scala Data Centers in Brazil, Mexico, and Chile, alongside edge-focused assets such as AtlasEdge (over 100 sites in Europe) and AIMS in Southeast Asia.[35][20][36] Cell tower holdings form a significant portion, with Vertical Bridge as one of the largest private tower owners in the U.S., alongside international assets like GD Towers (over 40,000 sites in Germany and Austria, adding 1,000+ annually for Deutsche Telekom), Highline do Brasil, and Andean Telecom Partners in Peru, Chile, and Colombia. Fiber network assets are anchored by Zayo Group Holdings, which spans over 125,000 route miles globally and announced a $4.25 billion acquisition of Crown Castle's fiber solutions business on March 13, 2025, following DigitalBridge's 2020 partnership acquisition of Zayo with EQT. Complementary fiber holdings include Netomnia's full-fiber broadband in the U.K. and Beanfield Metroconnect in Canada. Small cell and distributed antenna systems (DAS) are covered by Boingo Wireless for global venues, ExteNet Systems in North America, and FreshWave in the U.K., while real estate support comes from Landmark Dividend, focusing on properties for data centers and towers.[35][37][21]| Category | Key Holdings | Scale and Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Data Centers | Vantage, DataBank, Switch, Yondr | Hyperscale and edge facilities; 100+ sites globally, AI expansion |
| Cell Towers | Vertical Bridge, GD Towers, Highline do Brasil | 40,000+ sites; serving major MNOs in U.S., Europe, Latin America |
| Fiber Networks | Zayo, Netomnia, Beanfield | 125,000+ route miles; enterprise bandwidth and broadband |
| Small Cells/DAS | Boingo, ExteNet, FreshWave | Venue and urban coverage; Wi-Fi integration |
Recent Acquisitions and Deals
In August 2025, DigitalBridge Group, Inc., alongside Crestview Partners, agreed to acquire WideOpenWest, Inc. (WOW!), a U.S. broadband provider, in a $1.5 billion take-private transaction, offering $5.20 per share in cash to public stockholders, representing a 63% premium to WOW!'s unaffected share price.[38] The deal aims to position WOW! for growth in fiber broadband and enterprise services amid competitive pressures in the cable sector.[39] In July 2025, DigitalBridge and La Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec completed the acquisition of Yondr Group, a global hyperscale data center developer and operator, from Cathexis Holdings, L.P., establishing joint control to expand capacity for AI-driven demand.[40] The transaction, initially announced in October 2024, targets Yondr's pipeline of over 1 gigawatt in development across Europe and North America.[41] In February 2025, DigitalBridge portfolio company Zayo Group announced a $4.25 billion agreement to acquire Crown Castle's fiber solutions business, enhancing Zayo's enterprise and wholesale fiber network amid rising data transmission needs.[17] In April 2024, the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) acquired a 40% stake in Landmark Dividend LLC, a DigitalBridge-managed owner of digital infrastructure including data centers and towers, from DigitalBridge's funds, while DigitalBridge retained operational control.[42] Earlier in 2024, DigitalBridge-supported Vertical Bridge completed a $3.3 billion sale of towers to Verizon, bolstering Vertical Bridge's portfolio of over 20,000 U.S. communications sites.[40]Leadership and Governance
Executive Leadership
Marc C. Ganzi has served as Chief Executive Officer of DigitalBridge since its formation, bringing over 30 years of experience as an investor and operator in the digital infrastructure sector. Ganzi founded Digital Bridge Holdings in 2013, which evolved into DigitalBridge, focusing on mobile and internet infrastructure assets globally. Under his leadership, the firm has expanded into data centers, fiber networks, and edge computing to capitalize on demand driven by cloud computing and artificial intelligence.[4] Ben Jenkins acts as President and Chief Investment Officer, co-founding Digital Bridge Holdings alongside Ganzi and overseeing the firm's investment strategy across digital infrastructure verticals. Jenkins previously served as Chairman of the board for several portfolio companies and has directed capital deployment into assets generating stable cash flows from hyperscale operators and enterprises. His role emphasizes opportunistic acquisitions and value creation through operational improvements in towers, data centers, and small cells.[43] Liam Stewart holds the position of Chief Operating Officer, managing day-to-day operations and portfolio asset management for DigitalBridge's global holdings. Stewart's responsibilities include optimizing platform performance and scaling infrastructure to meet rising data traffic demands, drawing from his expertise in operational leadership within alternative asset management.[44] Thomas Mayrhofer was appointed Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer effective in the second quarter of 2024, succeeding Jacky Wu who transitioned to a strategic advisory role. Mayrhofer oversees financial planning, capital raising, and investor relations, with prior experience as CFO and COO at financial services firms, including roles at The Carlyle Group where he managed fund finances and acquisitions. His appointment supports DigitalBridge's growth in raising perpetual capital vehicles for digital investments.[45][44]Board Composition and Oversight
DigitalBridge Group, Inc.'s Board of Directors comprises nine members, with eight classified as independent under New York Stock Exchange listing standards.[46] Marc C. Ganzi, the company's Chief Executive Officer, serves as the sole non-independent director, while Nancy A. Curtin acts as the independent Chairman of the Board.[47] The board's composition reflects ongoing refreshment efforts led by the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee, with an average director tenure of approximately 4.8 years as of mid-2024.[48] Key independent directors include Dale Anne Reiss, Gregory J. McCray, Sháka Rasheed, Jeannie H. Diefenderfer, David M. Tolley, James Keith Brown, and Ian Schapiro.[46] Gregory J. McCray chairs the Human Capital and Compensation Committee and serves on the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee.[49] In July 2024, the board appointed Ian Schapiro, a seasoned financial executive with prior roles at firms including Greenhill & Co. and Lazard, as an independent director effective July 10, replacing Jon A. Fosheim; Schapiro joined the Audit Committee and Human Capital and Compensation Committee upon appointment.[50][51] The board maintains three standing committees to facilitate independent oversight of management, financial reporting, executive compensation, and corporate governance matters: the Audit Committee, the Human Capital and Compensation Committee, and the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee.[46] All committees consist exclusively of independent directors, with the Audit Committee including financial experts responsible for overseeing internal controls, external audits, and risk management.[52] The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee handles director nominations, board evaluations, and oversight of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) initiatives, while the Human Capital and Compensation Committee aligns executive pay with performance metrics and administers stock ownership guidelines, such as six times base salary for the CEO.[53][54] These structures support the board's broader responsibilities, including strategic guidance, risk assessment, and compliance with corporate governance guidelines adopted to promote accountability and ethical conduct.[52]| Committee | Key Responsibilities | Composition Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Audit | Financial reporting oversight, audit processes, internal controls, and enterprise risk management | Entirely independent directors; includes designated financial experts[46] |
| Human Capital and Compensation | Executive compensation design, pay-for-performance alignment, incentive plans, and clawback policies | Entirely independent; chaired by Gregory J. McCray, with recent addition of Ian Schapiro[49][50] |
| Nominating and Corporate Governance | Director recruitment, board composition, governance policies, and ESG program supervision | Entirely independent; oversees annual board self-assessments and stockholder engagement[53][54] |