But the story of AirTrunk’s creation departs a little from the conventional young entrepreneurial inventor creating something in their parents’ garage.
Khuda came to Australia at 18 to study accounting at university. He worked in tech-related areas, including a stint with serial tech entrepreneur Bevan Slattery, who introduced him to data infrastructure.
But it was a job with a mobile payment device supplier called Mint Wireless, which ended in tears when he was “asked to leave”, that set Khuda on the path to launching his start-up.
His attempts to find funding follow the more traditional narrative of rejection, and in his case, the innovative financing trick of dipping into his own superannuation.
At an Australian Financial Review address last year, Khuda regaled the audience with the tale of AirTrunk securing a contract to build its first data centre in mid-2016, one year after the business was launched, and its struggle to find financing. He said investors and banks were sceptical about providing capital for alternative assets, and funds were running low.
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“It was Christmas 2016 and I had to deliver our first data centre by September 2017,” he said. “We got to the point where we had run out of money. I even took money from my superannuation fund, so that was naughty of me.
“I was desperate, and I genuinely believed in something but couldn’t get much support. I even rang up my lawyer and said I needed insolvency advice.”
Eventually, he secured $400 million in offshore funding, and four years ago a joint venture between Macquarie and a Canadian pension fund, PSP, acquired 88 per cent of AirTrunk, while Khuda retained most of the remainder.
Under the deal, the joint venture will sell its stake to New York-based financial behemoth Blackstone, which already has data storage among its vast global assets. (Blackstone is best known in Australia as the owner of Crown Resorts.)
For Macquarie, it’s a shot in the arm – not only because of the fees it will generate but because AirTrunk was valued at $3 billion when Macquarie invested. The transaction represents a massive payday.
Today AirTrunk is the proud owner of 11 hyperscale data centres throughout Asia, and Khuda is a billionaire with a portfolio of prestige homes. He retains about 5 per cent of the business he started.
A bumpy corporate fairytale.