Stock Markets April 15, 2026 05:10 PM

Madison Air Secures $2.23 Billion in U.S. IPO, Valuing Company at $13.2 Billion

Chicago-based indoor air systems provider priced at top of marketed range amid investor interest in data center and infrastructure plays

By Avery Klein
Madison Air Secures $2.23 Billion in U.S. IPO, Valuing Company at $13.2 Billion

Madison Air Solutions raised $2.23 billion in its initial public offering by selling 82.7 million shares at $27 each, giving the company a $13.2 billion valuation. The firm, which serves commercial and residential markets including data centers, estimates an addressable North American market of about $40 billion and reported a $2.02 billion backlog as of December 31. Proceeds will be used to repay loans and for general corporate purposes.

Key Points

  • Madison Air sold 82.7 million shares at $27 per share, raising $2.23 billion and valuing the company at $13.2 billion.
  • The company estimates a roughly $40 billion North American addressable market and reports approximately an 8% share, with data centers among the faster-growing verticals.
  • Commercial sales made up 66% of total revenue last year; Madison Air had a backlog of $2.02 billion as of December 31.

Madison Air Solutions said it raised $2.23 billion in its U.S. initial public offering, selling 82.7 million shares at $27 each. The price came in at the top end of the advertised $25 to $27 range and places the Chicago-based indoor air systems provider at a $13.2 billion valuation.

The company highlighted demand from investors for businesses tied to infrastructure and data centers, citing the higher cooling and power requirements driven by expanding artificial intelligence workloads. The filing also noted geopolitical tensions in the Middle East as a factor contributing to caution in the broader U.S. IPO market.

Madison Air’s own filing estimates the North American market for its products at roughly $40 billion, where the company holds about an 8% share. Within its served verticals, data centers were identified as one of the faster-growing end markets for the company’s air quality solutions.

Founded in 2017 through a series of acquisitions, Madison Air provides indoor air systems across residential and commercial segments. Its customer base spans data centers, advanced manufacturing, education and health care. Last year the company derived 66% of total sales from its commercial business, with the remaining 34% coming from residential operations.

Madison Air, previously operating under the name Madison Indoor Air Quality, was formed under the leadership of Larry Gies, who is the founder and CEO of privately held Madison Industries. The company reported a backlog of $2.02 billion as of December 31.

Certain cornerstone investors had separately indicated interest in buying shares in the offering. Durable Capital Partners, Morgan Stanley’s Counterpoint Global and HRTG each indicated support, with a combined potential commitment of up to $525 million.

The company said it intends to allocate IPO proceeds toward repaying outstanding loans and for general corporate purposes.

Goldman Sachs, Barclays, Jefferies and Wells Fargo Securities served as the joint lead book‑running managers for the offering. Madison Air will trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol "MAIR."


Additional context

The offering underscores continued investor appetite for firms connected to infrastructure and data center needs, areas the company identified as growth drivers. Madison Air’s commercial focus and backlog figure provide indicators of near-term demand across the sectors it serves.

Risks

  • Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East have contributed to volatility in the broader U.S. IPO market, which could affect market sentiment for similar offerings - this chiefly impacts the equity and IPO market sectors.
  • A meaningful portion of the company’s revenue is tied to commercial customers, so fluctuations in demand from data centers, advanced manufacturing or other large commercial buyers could influence sales performance - this affects infrastructure and commercial facility sectors.
  • The company plans to use IPO proceeds to repay loans and for general corporate purposes; reliance on these proceeds for debt repayment introduces financing execution risk if plans change - relevant to corporate finance and credit markets.

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