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BC Partners LLP is a British international investment firm with over $40 billion of assets under management across , credit and real estate in Europe and North America. Its global headquarters are in . The firm invests across all industries. BC Partners was founded in 1986 and has offices in New York, and . Since inception, BC Partners has completed 113 private equity investments in companies with a total enterprise value of €145 billion.

As one of the largest European private equity firms, BC Partners competes for buyouts and investment opportunities with other large cap private equity firms including , KKR, CVC Capital Partners, Advent International and The Carlyle Group. The firm raised its eighth fund in 2005, which at the time made it the largest European buyout fund. Raised in less than five months, the fund was heavily oversubscribed. Investors in previous funds supplied 90% of the capital. The firm's most recent fund, BC Partners X, was one of the largest buyout funds raised in 2018.

BC Partners was until recently majority shareholder of , the global satellite services provider valued at US$16.6 billion in its leveraged buyout in 2007—one of the largest private equity buyouts of all time led by a consortium of investors including BC Partners and Silver Lake Partners. In 2008, BC Partners replaced Intelsat's chairman with Raymond Svider, BC's New York–based co-chairman. Sometime between 2008 and 2018, BC Partners sold all of Intelsat to the company.

In August 2025, the firm attracted international scrutiny after leaked recordings showed executives of its portfolio company United Group discussing cooperation with state-owned and Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić in ways that could weaken , the country’s last major independent broadcaster.


History
The firm, founded in 1986 as Baring Capital Investors Ltd. by Otto van der Wyck, who was also a co-founder of CVC Capital Partners. Originally, BC Partners was formed by to advise funds providing development capital, in particular for management buyouts. John Burgess joined him from Candover, the US and UK buyout house, a month after. The principals of Baring Capital Investors completed a spinout of what would become BC Partners following the collapse of in 1995. Van der Wyck left the firm in 2001, and has held senior roles with firms including , Climate Change Capital and AlpInvest Partners.

€7.0 billion
€6.7 billion
€5.9 billion
€4.3 billion
€1.1 billion
€450 million


Significant transactions
BC Partners portfolio includes 114 companies with aggregate sales revenue of €145 billion. BC Partners can commit over $2.75 billion (€2.0 billion) of equity to any single transaction. The firm's most successful and profitable realized investments include General Healthcare (leading acute care hospital provider and independent provider of psychiatric care), C&C Group plc (leading seller of alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages), Galbani (market-leading cheese company) and Phones 4u (leading mobile phone provider in the UK - until its bankruptcy in September 2014).
     

In June 2013, BC Partners agreed to buy German publisher Springer Science+Business Media for about 3.3 billion euros.

BC Partners revealed in January 2015 that it would sell its 40.25 percent stake in its supermarket chain Migros Türk to the conglomerate Anadolu Endustri Holding AS for around $2.74 billion. BC Partners to sell half of its stake in Migros to Turkey's Anadolu. , 31 December 2014

In June 2019 Chewy, which was acquired by BC Partners in 2017, and is the online pet retailer division of , announced its IPO on the NYSE when it was valued at $8.8 billion.

In 2019, BC Partners announced their backing for the acquisition (via the United Group) of , the largest Bulgarian telecom. The acquisition became an issue of the media and legal dispute with the company's previous owner, Empreno Ventures, which asked BC Partners to wait until judicial resolution.

On November 7, BC Partners was added to a lawsuit by Empreno seeking to ban the sale of Vivacom.

In early 2021, the firm entered into talks with owner Suning about potentially buying the football club.

2022US$3.0 billion for 50% stake
2022Havea GroupUS$1.1 billion (approx.)
2018GFL Environmental$5.1 billion for majority stake in waste services company GFL Environmental.
2018€2.6 billion for majority stake in telecom provider .
2018Navex GlobalAcquisition of ethics and compliance software and services company NAVEX Global from Vista Equity Partners
2017Chewy$3.4 billion for the e-commerce company specializing in pet products — largest e-commerce acquisition in history
2016$2.3 billion acquisition of data center operations.
2016€1.4 billion for the acquisition of global manufacturer of quality resin consumer products
2016Elysium Healthcare£360 million for the acquisition of a portfolio of mental health hospitals from Partnerships in Care and the Priory Group
2014CartrawlerCar rental technology platform bought from
$8.7 billion acquisition of pet services and products vendor
Acquisition of MergerMarket, now called Acuris, news service from
$3.4 billion of industrial business engaged in the design, manufacture and supply of specialist pumps and compressors
$6.5 billion LBO of 7th largest cable communications system operator in the US; sale of 70% interest in Suddenlink held by BC and Canada Pension Plan Investment Board for $9.1 Bn announced in May 2015Scott, Mark, and Emily Steel, "Altice's Deal to Buy Suddenlink May Be Prelude to Pursuit of Time Warner Cable", New York Times, May 20, 2015. Retrieved 2015-05-21.
Bought for £700 million; entered into administration on 15 September 2014
Largest LBO in Europe in 2011
$3.1 billion LBO of provider of health care cost management services
provider of office products and services
2008Manufacturer of transformers (sold in 2017)
Turkey's leading supermarket chain
$16.6 billion acquisition of fixed satellite service provider
UK estate agency, bought at the top of the property market in May 2007 for £370 million In December 2009, BC Partners lost control of Foxtons, less than three years after buying it, after creditors reorganized the real estate broker's debt.
Second largest LBO in Germany to date
Largest public-to-private LBO in Greece to date
Largest LBO in Spain to date
Largest LBO in France that year
Largest LBO in Europe at the time
Largest LBO in Switzerland that year
Largest public to private LBO in Finland to date
Largest LBO in the US by a European sponsor at the time


United Group recordings controversy
In August 2025, BC Partners’ portfolio company United Group became the subject of public scrutiny in Serbia following the publication of leaked recordings of its chief executive officer, Stan Miller. The recordings, published by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), revealed discussions between Miller and Vladimir Lučić, the director of state-owned , about strategies that could weaken , a subsidiary of United Group and the last major independent broadcaster in the country.

The recordings also included references to United Media’s long-time director, Aleksandra Subotić. In the conversation, Miller stated that he could not yet dismiss Subotić, while adding that he understood President Aleksandar Vučić had called Lučić and was upset about the delay. Miller also said he needed to “make the very small in Serbia” and to separate it, referring to restructuring plans that would affect United Media. He further mentioned the need to accelerate arrangements with banks and an escrow account in order to facilitate the process.

The recordings also showed Miller referring to Nikos Stathopoulos, chairman of BC Partners, suggesting that awareness of the talks extended beyond local management to the main shareholder level. United Group subsequently confirmed the authenticity of the recordings, while stating that the conversations were taken out of context.

The incident sparked concerns among media-freedom advocates, given the close ties between Telekom Srbija and Vučić’s government. Analysts suggested that the controversy raised questions about BC Partners’ stewardship of its media assets in the region and whether investor interests were being adequately safeguarded. Commentators also noted that the conversations were unusual because Telekom Srbija is a direct competitor of United Group and United Media in the Serbian telecommunications and media market. Media analysts and press freedom advocates interpreted the recordings as evidence of political pressure aimed at bringing Serbia’s last major independent broadcaster under closer government influence, with BC Partners’ management appearing to cooperate in the process.


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