Kinnevik AB
Kinnevik AB is a Swedish investment company founded in 1936 by Hugo Stenbeck, Wilhelm Klingspor, and Robert von Horn, initially focusing on stakes in traditional Swedish industries such as agriculture, confectionery, and forestry before evolving into a venture and growth capital firm emphasizing digital consumer businesses in healthcare, software, and climate technology.[1] The company operates as an active owner and operational partner, providing capital and expertise to early- to late-stage enterprises primarily in Europe and the United States, with a portfolio of over 20 core companies including TravelPerk, Cityblock Health, Spring Health, and Enveda.[2] Historically, Kinnevik played a foundational role in building several prominent telecommunications and media entities, including co-founding Millicom in 1990, Tele2 in 1993, and Metro International in 1995, which expanded into major regional operators before subsequent divestments that returned significant value to shareholders, such as the full exit from Tele2 completed in 2024 generating SEK 637 million in final proceeds and earlier distributions from Zalando in 2021 and Millicom in 2019.[1][3] These moves reflect Kinnevik's strategy of concentrating capital on high-potential growth areas, evidenced by recent portfolio performance where core companies reported average revenue increases exceeding 35% and EBITDA margin expansions of 4 percentage points in the first half of 2025.[4] Under CEO Georgi Ganev, appointed in 2018, the firm maintains a listed structure on the Stockholm Stock Exchange, prioritizing sustainable, transformative investments over short-term gains.[5]History
Founding and Early Development (1936–1960s)
Kinnevik AB was founded on December 18, 1936, as an investment company by Swedish entrepreneurs Hugo Stenbeck, Wilhelm Klingspor, and Robert von Horn.[6] [1] The initial portfolio comprised shares in Mellersta Sveriges Lantbruks AB, an agricultural enterprise; Lidköpings Konfektyr Industri AB, a candy manufacturer; and Korsnäs Sågverks AB, a forestry operation.[1] These holdings reflected a focus on Sweden's foundational sectors, including agriculture and early industrial processing. During the late 1930s and 1940s, Kinnevik pursued growth through targeted acquisitions and share purchases in domestic industries, acquiring stakes in Nordiska Suchard for chocolate production and Halmstads Järnverk, an iron foundry.[1] This strategy emphasized iron, paper, and woodworking, aligning with Sweden's resource-based economy. In 1954, the company listed on the Stockholm Stock Exchange through a new share issuance, which facilitated expanded capital access for further industrial investments.[1] By 1960, Kinnevik had strengthened its position in forestry via increased ownership in Korsnäs, which acquired Marma Långrörs AB, elevating it to Sweden's third-largest forestry owner.[1] Early in the decade, leadership transitioned as Hugo Stenbeck replaced Wilhelm Klingspor as chairman around 1963, with Stenbeck having served as CEO from 1947 to 1963; his son, Hugo Stenbeck Jr., assumed the managing director role.[7] [8] This shift marked the deepening involvement of the Stenbeck family in steering the company's direction amid postwar industrial consolidation.[9]Media and Telecom Expansion (1970s–1990s)
Under the leadership of Jan Stenbeck, who assumed control of Kinnevik in 1976 following the death of his father Hugo Stenbeck, the company initiated diversification beyond traditional industries into telecommunications and media, capitalizing on Sweden's regulatory shifts toward liberalization.[1] In the late 1970s, Kinnevik began exploring telecom opportunities amid the impending deregulation of Sweden's state-controlled sector dominated by Televerket.[10] In the early 1980s, Kinnevik founded Comvik AB to develop mobile telephony services, launching Sweden's first commercial cellular network despite legal opposition from Televerket; the company prevailed in a landmark Supreme Administrative Court ruling, enabling nationwide operations.[1] By 1989, Comvik secured authorization for an expanded mobile network, further solidifying its challenge to the telecom monopoly.[1] This momentum led to the 1990 formation of Millicom International Cellular S.A. (MIC) through the merger of U.S.-based Millicom Inc. and Comvik's international licenses, positioning Kinnevik as a global player in cellular services across emerging markets in Latin America, Africa, and Asia.[1] In 1993, Kinnevik established Tele2 as a fixed-line and mobile operator, which rapidly grew by offering competitive pricing and was listed on the Stockholm Stock Exchange in 1996.[1] Parallel to telecom ventures, Kinnevik entered media in the mid-1980s with the completion of a satellite distribution system in 1985, enabling pan-Nordic broadcasting.[1] This infrastructure supported the 1987 premiere of TV3, Sweden's first commercial television channel, transmitted via satellite from London to circumvent domestic advertising restrictions on broadcasters.[1][11] By 1991, Kinnevik launched its initial radio broadcasts and acquired a 20% stake in the newly established TV4, becoming its largest shareholder and facilitating satellite transmission from 1990 followed by terrestrial rollout in 1992.[1][9] These moves aggregated media assets under what became Modern Times Group (MTG), incorporating TV, radio, and publishing; MTG was formalized as a Kinnevik subsidiary in 1995 and spun off with listings in Stockholm and New York by 1997.[1][12] In 1995, Kinnevik also founded Metro International, a free daily newspaper that expanded rapidly across Europe.[1] This era's expansions transformed Kinnevik from an industrial holding into a media-telecom powerhouse, with Stenbeck's aggressive strategy—often involving legal confrontations and satellite innovations—driving market disruption and substantial value creation, though not without regulatory and competitive hurdles.[13][14]Digital Transformation and Divestitures (2000s–2010s)
In the early 2000s, Kinnevik divested its forestry and traditional industrial assets, redirecting capital toward mobile telephony and media as core areas of growth amid the rise of digital communications infrastructure.[1] This shift aligned with broader industry trends toward wireless networks and content distribution, where Kinnevik held significant stakes in Tele2, a pan-European mobile operator founded in 1993, and Millicom International Cellular, focused on emerging markets.[1] In 2005, Kinnevik merged with Invik AB, another Stenbeck family-controlled entity, consolidating ownership in telecom and media holdings including Tele2 and Modern Times Group (MTG), a digital entertainment firm encompassing TV, gaming, and online services.[1] The merger enhanced Kinnevik's scale, with combined assets exceeding SEK 50 billion by value at the time, enabling deeper involvement in digital ecosystem development. By mid-decade, Kinnevik entered online marketplaces, co-founding Avito.ru in 2007 as Russia's leading classifieds platform, which grew to over 40 million monthly users by 2010 through digital advertising and user-generated content models.[1] In 2010, it invested in Zalando, an early-stage e-commerce venture specializing in fashion, marking an explicit pivot to consumer internet platforms amid accelerating broadband adoption.[1] These moves reflected a strategic emphasis on scalable digital models over legacy operations, with Kinnevik's telecom investments yielding steady revenue from data services. The 2010s saw accelerated digital expansion, including stakes in Rocket Internet (2011), a global incubator for e-commerce clones, and Global Fashion Group, bolstering Kinnevik's exposure to online retail in emerging economies.[1] Divestitures continued to refine the portfolio: in 2013, Kinnevik sold its remaining shares in BillerudKorsnäs, a paper and packaging firm, for approximately SEK 2.5 billion, exiting cyclical industrial sectors.[1] Zalando and Rocket Internet achieved IPOs on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange in October 2014, generating returns exceeding SEK 10 billion for Kinnevik and validating its thesis on digital disruption in retail.[1] Later in the decade, Kinnevik streamlined legacy telecom and media positions: in 2018, it distributed its MTG shares to shareholders via a dividend-in-kind and supported Tele2's SEK 72 billion merger with Com Hem to create a converged digital services provider.[1] In 2019, following an aborted public offering, Kinnevik distributed its entire 37.2% stake in Millicom—valued at around SEK 20 billion—to shareholders, citing a desire to concentrate on unlisted growth assets amid maturing telecom valuations.[1][15] These actions culminated a transformation from diversified holdings to a focused digital investor, with net asset value growth averaging 15% annually over the period.[1]Modern Focus on Growth Investing (2020s)
In the early 2020s, Kinnevik accelerated its transformation into a dedicated growth investor, emphasizing technology-enabled companies with scalable models in health & bio, software, and climate tech sectors. This shift built on prior divestitures but intensified with the reallocation of capital from mature assets to support early- to growth-stage ventures, aiming for long-term value creation through active ownership. By 2023, over 80% of investments targeted these focus areas, reflecting a deliberate pivot away from legacy telecom and media holdings toward high-potential challengers.[16][1] Key divestitures facilitated this focus, including the distribution of Zalando shares to shareholders in 2021, the exit from Teladoc in 2023, and the complete sale of its Tele2 stake—announced in February 2024 and finalized in August 2024 for approximately SEK 13 billion in gross proceeds—to an investment vehicle controlled by iliad and NJJ. These moves streamlined the portfolio, reducing exposure to public telecom assets and generating liquidity for new deployments, with Tele2's divestment alone providing significant capital for growth initiatives.[1][17][3] Notable investments underscored the strategy's execution, such as entry into Spring Health in 2021 for digital mental health platforms, followed by commitments to Mews (hospitality management software) and Recursion (AI-enabled drug discovery) in 2022, and Enveda (biotech) and Aira (clean energy solutions) in 2023. The core portfolio, comprising Pleo (expense management), TravelPerk (business travel), Mews, Cityblock (healthcare delivery), and Spring Health, represented over 50% of asset value by mid-decade, with these companies achieving average revenue growth of 35% and EBITDA margin expansions of 2 percentage points in the first nine months of 2025 alone. Kinnevik's model combines venture agility with family-office permanence, often involving board seats and follow-on funding to drive operational scaling.[1][16][18] This approach positioned Kinnevik as a patient capital provider, targeting Europe's premier growth investor status by 2030 through selective partnerships with founders and a bias toward sustainable, tech-driven disruption over short-term exits. Portfolio maturation was evident in 2024 funding rounds, including Spring Health's USD 100 million raise at a USD 3.3 billion valuation, TravelPerk's USD 104 million at USD 1.4 billion, and Mews' USD 110 million at USD 1.2 billion, signaling robust external validation amid economic headwinds.[16]Business Model and Investment Philosophy
Core Investment Approach
Kinnevik AB adopts a long-term, multistage investment strategy, deploying its permanent capital to support companies from early-stage ventures through growth phases and potentially beyond initial public offerings. This approach leverages the firm's own balance sheet without the constraints of fixed fund lifecycles, enabling flexible scaling of investments in high-conviction opportunities.[19] The strategy emphasizes backing disruptive, tech-enabled businesses that challenge established norms, drawing on Kinnevik's historical expertise in sectors evolving from traditional industries to digital innovation.[19] At its core, Kinnevik acts as an anchor investor, providing substantial capital commitments without predefined upper limits to foster stability and alignment with founders focused on scalable, long-term growth.[19] The firm maintains a concentrated portfolio of more than 20 larger holdings, prioritizing sectors such as healthcare, software, and climate technology, where it offers active operational partnership, board influence, and strategic guidance informed by nearly 100 years of investing experience.[2] Sustainability principles are embedded throughout the investment process, with selections favoring models that integrate environmental and social factors for enduring commercial viability and shareholder returns.[20] Exits are pursued opportunistically based on value creation milestones rather than external timelines, as evidenced by the 2021 distribution of Zalando shares, which yielded an 8.6x return on that investment.[19] Since its strategic pivot toward a fully private growth focus around 2018, Kinnevik has intensified portfolio discipline, systematically divesting underperformers to concentrate resources on outperformers, resulting in a $3.4 billion portfolio as of late 2024 predominantly comprising private growth-stage assets alongside substantial cash reserves.[16][21]Active Ownership and Value Creation
Kinnevik AB employs active ownership to influence its portfolio companies, primarily through strategic capital allocation, board representation, and provision of ongoing operational support. This approach enables the company to guide investee firms in establishing ambitious strategic visions and performance targets, fostering the development of sustainable businesses capable of achieving market leadership. By securing seats on boards, Kinnevik exerts direct oversight on key decisions, ensuring alignment with long-term growth objectives in sectors such as digital consumer services, healthcare, software, and climate technology.[22][23] As active partners, Kinnevik provides not only financial capital but also operational expertise to refine company strategies, strengthen management teams, and navigate scaling challenges. This involvement extends across investment stages, from early venture rounds to post-IPO support, leveraging permanent capital to offer stability without the constraints of traditional fund timelines. For instance, Kinnevik's multistage commitments, such as in TravelPerk (with investments in a $44 million Series C and subsequent $104 million extension) and Spring Health ($190 million Series C followed by additional rounds), demonstrate how consistent backing and sector-specific insights accelerate expansion and value realization, as evidenced by historical exits like Zalando yielding an 8.6x return.[1][19] Active ownership is integral to Kinnevik's value creation process, with sustainability factors embedded to mitigate risks and capture opportunities, such as climate-related transitions. Pre-investment, the sustainability team evaluates portfolio candidates using ESG criteria, Impact Management Norms, and low-carbon alignment before approval by the Executive Investment Committee. Post-investment, Kinnevik collaborates on double materiality assessments, sustainability roadmaps, and impact measurement to enhance ethical standards and compliance across holdings. The Board of Directors oversees this integration, embedding sustainability into overall strategy and monitoring governance in investee companies to promote resilient, long-term performance.[22][24]Risk Management and Exit Strategies
Kinnevik maintains a centralized financial risk management framework under the CFO's office, governed by Finance and Risk Management Policies that are reviewed annually and approved by the Audit & Sustainability Committee and the Board of Directors. This approach focuses on identifying, controlling, and mitigating risks that could impede growth in net asset value, with particular emphasis on financial reporting, investments, and portfolio company governance.[25][26] Key financial risks include valuation uncertainty from its predominantly private portfolio, which comprised 96% of assets as of December 31, 2024; a ±10% change in revenue multiples could alter fair value by ±SEK 2.1-2.2 billion. Liquidity and financing risks are minimized through a net cash position of SEK 10.9 billion at year-end 2024, comprising SEK 14.6 billion in cash, SEK 4.2 billion in unused credit facilities, and SEK 7.7 billion in debt with diversified maturities. Foreign exchange risks arise from 67% USD and 27% EUR portfolio exposure, where a ±10% currency fluctuation impacts value by SEK 2.8 billion, while interest rate risks on SEK 3.5 billion in liabilities are hedged using swaps, limiting exposure to ±SEK 42-44 million per ±1% rate shift. Mitigation involves best-in-class valuation standards, proactive refinancing at least six months ahead, and structured hedging.[25] Broader operational and strategic risks are assessed via a dedicated model that evaluates threats to accounting, financial reporting, and investments, with bi-annual reporting to the Board including analysis and mitigation plans. The Audit & Sustainability Committee oversees this process, internal controls, and compliance, while management implements documented routines for continuous evaluation; third-party auditors review unlisted investment valuations, such as those conducted as of March 31, 2024. Kinnevik also requires portfolio companies to maintain structured risk management frameworks as part of its sustainability policy.[26][27] Kinnevik's exit strategies leverage its permanent capital structure and balance sheet funding, distinguishing it from traditional venture funds by avoiding predefined exit timelines tied to limited partner commitments. This enables flexible timing to maximize value realization, including the option to retain stakes post-IPO or double down on high-potential investments before divestment. For instance, Kinnevik invested in Zalando in 2010, supported its 2014 IPO at a €5 billion market cap, and distributed shares to shareholders in 2021, generating an 8.6x return.[19][28] Strategic divestitures align with portfolio refocusing, such as the 2019 offer to divest 29% of its 37.2% stake in Millicom, distributing proceeds to shareholders while retaining a minority holding. More recently, in the first quarter of 2025, Kinnevik executed transactions to concentrate resources on investments yielding the strongest returns, supported by its SEK 12.2 billion net cash position as of Q3 2024, which facilitates selective exits amid improving IPO markets.[29][30][31]Governance and Ownership
Major Shareholders
As of September 30, 2025, Kinnevik AB's major shareholders include a mix of institutional investors and entities linked to founding families, with ownership dispersed but voting rights concentrated among holders of Class A shares, which carry 10 votes per share compared to one vote per Class B share.[32] The company has a total of 281,771,701 shares outstanding, comprising Class A and Class B shares that confer equal economic rights but differ in voting power.[32] The top 10 shareholders collectively hold approximately 39.8% of the capital and 43.9% of the votes, reflecting a structure that allows minority stakes in voting shares to exert significant influence.[32] The largest shareholders by capital ownership are dominated by international and Swedish investment firms focused on growth stocks:| Shareholder | Capital (%) | Votes (%) | Shares Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baillie Gifford & Co. | 10.08 | 4.85 | 28,412,085 Class B |
| Spiltan Funds | 6.78 | 3.26 | 19,093,559 Class B |
| Verdere S.à r.l. | 5.65 | 27.19 | 15,918,123 Class A |
| Shareholder | Votes (%) | Capital (%) | Shares Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Verdere S.à r.l. | 27.19 | 5.65 | 15,918,123 Class A |
| AMS Sapere Aude Trust fbo HS | 5.76 | 1.20 | 3,371,072 Class A |
| Marie, Amelie och Wilhelm Klingspor | 5.60 | 1.52 | 3,167,026 Class A; 1,121,868 Class B |
Leadership and Board Structure
Kinnevik AB's executive leadership is headed by Chief Executive Officer Georgi Ganev, who has held the position since December 31, 2017.[35] Ganev, born in 1976 and a Swedish national, joined the company in 2018 and serves on the boards of portfolio companies Aira and Reach for Change.[36] The executive team includes Chief Financial Officer Samuel Sjöström, appointed in December 2012, responsible for financial strategy and reporting.[35] Other key roles encompass Investment Director Tatiana Shalalvand and Director Torun Litzén, focusing on investment analysis and communications, respectively, supporting the firm's active ownership model.[37] The board of directors, comprising seven members as resolved at the 2025 Annual General Meeting on May 12, 2025, provides strategic oversight and integrates sustainability into decision-making.[38] Cristina Stenbeck serves as Chairman, elected to the role effective May 11, 2025, following a nomination committee proposal in April 2025; she represents continuity from the Stenbeck family legacy in the company's history.[39] Other members include re-elected directors Jan Berntsson, Claes Glassell, and Maria Redin, alongside newly elected Camilla Giesecke, Henrik Lundin, and Rubin Ritter.[38]| Board Member | Role/Committee Involvement | Election/Re-election Date |
|---|---|---|
| Cristina Stenbeck | Chairman | May 11, 2025 |
| Jan Berntsson | Director | Re-elected May 12, 2025 |
| Claes Glassell | Director | Re-elected May 12, 2025 |
| Maria Redin | Director | Re-elected May 12, 2025 |
| Camilla Giesecke | Director | Elected May 12, 2025 |
| Henrik Lundin | Director | Elected May 12, 2025 |
| Rubin Ritter | Director | Elected May 12, 2025 |
Family Influence and Succession
Kinnevik AB was established in 1936 by Hugo Stenbeck alongside Wilhelm Klingspor and Robert von Horn, with the founding families retaining control through Class A shares that carry 10 times the voting rights of Class B shares, ensuring long-term family oversight despite public listings.[1][43] The Stenbeck family, in particular, has exerted dominant influence, evolving the firm from forestry and paper into telecom, media, and digital investments under successive generations. Hugo Stenbeck's son, Jan Stenbeck, assumed management after his brother's death in 1976 and expanded the conglomerate aggressively, founding entities like Tele2 and Metro International.[14] Jan Stenbeck's sudden death from a heart attack on August 19, 2002, at age 59 prompted a structured succession, with his daughter Cristina Stenbeck, then 24, inheriting significant stakes and assuming leadership roles.[44] Designated as heir apparent by Jan as early as 1999, Cristina joined the board in 2003 and became executive chair, guiding divestitures and digital pivots while simplifying the group structure by merging holdings into Kinnevik.[45] The estate distribution, finalized on May 18, 2010, allocated shares among Jan's four children—Cristina, Hugo, Sophie, and Max—preserving family voting power without immediate fragmentation.[46] Cristina Stenbeck chaired Kinnevik until 2016, served on the board intermittently thereafter, and stepped down in January 2019 amid strategic shifts, including the proposed Millicom sale.[47] Family influence endured through ownership, with the Stenbecks controlling substantial voting rights via entities like Verdere, which acquired 683,617 Class A shares on May 12, 2025, for SEK 58 million.[48] In April 2025, the nomination committee proposed Cristina's return as board chair effective post-AGM, signaling continued generational stewardship alongside professional management under CEO Georgi Ganev, appointed in 2018.[39][49] The Klingspor family holds about 12.5% of shares, complementing but not supplanting Stenbeck dominance in strategic decisions.[50] This dual-family structure, rooted in founding pacts, prioritizes active ownership over short-term gains, though succession beyond Cristina remains undisclosed, relying on board processes and estate mechanisms to mitigate risks.[51]Portfolio and Holdings
Current Key Investments
As of September 30, 2025, Kinnevik's core portfolio consists primarily of growth-stage companies in healthcare, software, and climate technology, with a focus on 20+ holdings where the firm acts as an active owner.[2] These core companies collectively achieved 35% year-on-year revenue growth and a 2 percentage point improvement in EBITDA margins during the first nine months of 2025, reflecting operational scaling amid market recovery.[18] In healthcare, key investments include Spring Health, which provides mental health solutions and demonstrated strong revenue growth exceeding 35% in Q2 2025; Cityblock Health, targeting integrated care for underserved communities; and Tandem Health, where Kinnevik led a EUR 40 million funding round in June 2025 with a EUR 30 million commitment to expand virtual primary care.[2][52][4] Additional biotech-focused holdings encompass Enveda Biosciences, which advanced AI-driven drug discovery with clinical validations following a USD 150 million funding round in Q3 2025, and Strand Therapeutics, a clinical-stage mRNA therapeutics firm supported by Kinnevik's leadership in a SEK 335 million round.[53] Kinnevik also maintains a notable public holding in Recursion Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: RXRX), comprising its primary disclosed equity position valued at approximately USD 68 million as of mid-2025 filings.[54] Software holdings feature TravelPerk, a business travel management platform with AI enhancements, achieving over 35% revenue growth in core metrics during Q2 2025; Mews, a hotel operations system surpassing EUR 330 million in annual run-rate revenues after Kinnevik's EUR 15 million secondary investment in Q3; and Pleo, a spend management tool similarly contributing to the portfolio's 35%+ average growth.[2][52][53] Climate tech investments highlight Aira, a heat pump provider that reached EUR 200 million in annual run-rate sales following Kinnevik's participation in a EUR 150 million round, underscoring sector momentum in sustainable energy transitions.[53] The firm's Q3 2025 deployments totaled SEK 1,015 million, with SEK 685 million directed to these focus areas, maintaining a bias toward high-conviction, maturing assets.[18]Sector Allocations and Geographic Focus
Kinnevik AB's investment portfolio is concentrated in technology-enabled growth sectors, primarily health and bio, software, and climate tech, with additional allocations to other large and small investments.[2][18] The firm partners with companies from early-stage ventures to growth-phase operations, emphasizing innovative applications of technology to address market challenges in these areas.[2] As of September 30, 2025, the portfolio's sector allocation by share of value reflects a balanced emphasis on health and bio (33%) and software (30%), followed by climate tech (12%), with the remainder in other categories.[18]| Sector | Share of Value | Value (SEK million) |
|---|---|---|
| Health & Bio | 33% | 9,730 |
| Software | 30% | 8,888 |
| Climate Tech | 12% | 3,455 |
| Other Large Investments | 12% | 3,646 |
| Other Small Investments | 11% | 3,221 |
Notable Past Exits and Divestments
Kinnevik has historically executed exits through outright sales, public offerings, and distributions to shareholders, often to realize value from mature holdings and refocus on growth-oriented investments. These divestments have included significant stakes in telecommunications, e-commerce, and digital platforms, generating substantial proceeds while aligning with the company's shift toward earlier-stage ventures in sectors like climate tech and healthcare.[55] In 2024, Kinnevik completed the full divestment of its stake in Tele2 AB, a long-held telecom operator. On February 26, 2024, Kinnevik agreed to sell its entire shareholding to an investment vehicle controlled by Iliad SA and NJJ Capital, valued at SEK 13 billion, representing a 13% premium to the then-current market price. The transaction unfolded in three steps: the first yielding SEK 2.9 billion in March, the second SEK 9.4 billion in April, and the final SEK 637 million in August for 6.5 million Class A shares. This exit contributed to total 2024 divestment proceeds of SEK 12.9 billion, bolstering Kinnevik's cash position for new allocations.[17][3][55] Earlier, in 2021, Kinnevik distributed its entire remaining stake in Zalando SE, Europe's leading online fashion retailer, to shareholders as part of its strategic transformation. The board announced the intention on February 17, 2021, to return a €5.5 billion-valued holding built since 2010; the distribution ratio was set at 28 Zalando shares for every 143 Kinnevik shares, with completion on June 23, 2021. This followed a partial sale of 4.4% in June 2020, which enabled a SEK 1.9 billion special dividend. The move unlocked significant value from a high-performing asset while streamlining Kinnevik's portfolio.[56][57][58] Kinnevik's 2019 exit from Millicom International Cellular SA involved divesting its 37.2% controlling stake via a public offering and shareholder distribution. Announced on June 3, 2019, the plan included offering approximately 11 million shares (29% of the stake) publicly, with the remainder distributed pro rata to Kinnevik shareholders, effectively ending a decades-long telecom exposure originating from the Stenbeck era. This transaction facilitated capital recycling amid Kinnevik's pivot to digital consumer tech.[59][29] Other notable divestments include the 2018 distribution of Kinnevik's 20.24% stake in Modern Times Group (MTG) AB, completed on August 16, 2018, and valued at SEK 4.9 billion, which expedited regulatory approval for Tele2's merger with Com Hem. In 2017, Kinnevik fully exited Rocket Internet SE, selling its remaining 6.6% stake (10.9 million shares) on June 8 for approximately $244 million, achieving over 90% internal rate of return on the investment initiated in 2009. Earlier, in June 2012, Kinnevik sold its direct 8.4 million-share holding in Groupon Inc., marking an early realization from its venture into daily deals platforms. Historical spin-offs, such as Invik & Co. AB in 1985 and earlier MTG separations, underscore Kinnevik's long tradition of using demergers to devolve assets to owners.[60][61][62]Financial Performance
Historical Returns and Metrics
Kinnevik AB's total shareholder return (TSR), which measures the annualized return on the Kinnevik B share assuming reinvestment of dividends, has exhibited significant volatility over recent years. From 2020 to 2024, annual TSR figures were 85% in 2020, 29% in 2021, -56% in 2022, -25% in 2023, and -17% in 2024.[63] [64] This performance reflects the impact of portfolio divestments, market conditions in tech sectors, and strategic capital returns, including distributions totaling SEK 6.4 billion in 2024.[64] Over longer horizons, Kinnevik's TSR annualized to -8% for the five years ending 2024, 0% for the ten years ending 2024, and 10% for the thirty years ending 2024.[64] [65] The company's net asset value (NAV), representing the fair value of its portfolio plus net cash, declined from SEK 111.7 billion in 2020 to SEK 39.2 billion in 2024, with annual changes of 52% in 2020, 16% in 2021, -27% in 2022, -9% in 2023, and -5% in 2024 (adjusted for distributions).[63] [64] NAV per share followed a similar trajectory, falling from SEK 402 in 2020 to SEK 142 in 2024.[63]| Year | TSR (%) | NAV Change (%) | NAV (SEK million) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 85 | 52 | 111,671 |
| 2021 | 29 | 16 | 72,391 |
| 2022 | -56 | -27 | 52,906 |
| 2023 | -25 | -9 | 48,161 |
| 2024 | -17 | -5 | 39,202 |
Recent Results (2020–2025)
Kinnevik AB's net asset value (NAV) declined substantially from SEK 111.7 billion in 2020 to SEK 39.2 billion by the end of 2024, driven by market downturns, write-downs of underperforming assets, and strategic distributions to shareholders, though the portfolio shifted toward higher-growth private tech-enabled companies.[63] The company reported profits in 2020 (SEK 40.3 billion) and 2021 (SEK 14.8 billion), reflecting gains in legacy telecom holdings amid digital acceleration, but incurred losses thereafter: SEK 19.5 billion in 2022, SEK 4.8 billion in 2023, and SEK 2.6 billion in 2024.[63]| Year | NAV (SEK million) | NAV per Share (SEK) | Profit/Loss (SEK million) | Total Shareholder Return (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 111,671 | 402 | 40,274 | 85 |
| 2021 | 72,391 | 260 | 14,777 | 29 |
| 2022 | 52,906 | 189 | -19,519 | -56 |
| 2023 | 48,161 | 174 | -4,766 | -25 |
| 2024 | 39,202 | 142 | -2,623 | -17 |