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Maas Group falls on AI pivot after $1.2 billion materials outflow spooks investor

Maas Group falls on AI pivot after $1.2 billion materials outflow spooks investor
Maas Group falls on AI pivot after $1.2 billion materials outflow spooks investor

Maas Group, an Australian company, announced on Thursday that it would be selling its building materials division up to A$1.70billion ($1.19billion) in order to pivot to artificial intelligence infrastructure. This caused its shares to drop by more than 26%.

Maas Group is selling its Construction Materials (CM), a?unit, to Heidelberg Materials' local subsidiary, HMA. It will also invest A$100m in Nvidia AI infrastructure?firm Firmus Group, for a 1.7% share.

The conglomerate was founded by former rugby player Wes Maas over 20 years ago. It is now selling an unit that generated approximately half of the A$219 millions in core operating profits?in fiscal year 2025.

The firm's shares plunged by as much as 26,1%, the steepest drop in a single day ever. Meanwhile, the benchmark index dropped 0.4%.

Ron Shamgar is the head of Australian equity at TAMIM Asset management. He said that the market was surprised by the fact that the company will be exiting its construction business in Queensland. The population growth and Brisbane Olympics are driving the expansion.

The money will be spent on the AI/Datacenter sector, which is a capex-intensive industry.

The divestment was part of a broader shift by the Australian construction materials and equipment provider towards data center construction. This sector has been attracting investor interest, as the demand for AI-supporting facilities is growing.

Goodman Group, a data center owner in Australia, has already begun a shift towards data center development.

Maas Group has invested A$100m in Firmus, following earlier deals with the company. Firmus Technologies signed a A$200m electrical infrastructure contract in mid-December.

It said that after the?completion of the transaction?, approximately 1,140 employees would transfer to HMA with the construction material business and ensure the?continuity? of operations.

The transaction will be completed by the end of 2026. It is still subject to shareholder and regulatory approvals. ($1 = 1,4292 Australian Dollars) (Reporting from Sherin Sunny, Bengaluru; additional reporting by Roshan Thomsen; editing by Alan Barona, Rashmi aich and Rashmi Aich).

(source: Reuters)