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Kodiak Gas Services stock jumps on $675 million DPS buy as data-center power demand bites
6 February 2026
1 min read

Kodiak Gas Services stock jumps on $675 million DPS buy as data-center power demand bites

New York, February 6, 2026, 10:06 (EST) — Regular session

  • KGS shares climbed roughly 4% in early trading following a $675 million DPS acquisition deal
  • The deal combines $575 million in cash with about $100 million worth of Kodiak stock, according to company disclosures
  • Investors are focused on leverage levels, regulatory approval, and the upcoming update during the Feb. 26 earnings call

Kodiak Gas Services (KGS) shares climbed roughly 4.2% on Friday, closing at $49.29. This came a day after the contract compression firm agreed to purchase Distributed Power Solutions (DPS) for about $675 million. CEO Mickey McKee described distributed power as “a natural extension” of Kodiak’s large-engine business. DPS President Scott Milligan called the acquisition an “important milestone” for his company. Kodiak Gas Services, Inc.

Kodiak is shifting gears with this acquisition, stepping beyond natural gas compression into distributed power. These are generators placed on-site, behind the utility meter, designed to deliver electricity during times of grid congestion.

This is crucial now as major consumers, particularly data centers, rush to secure power amid utilities’ slow capacity expansion. For investors, these agreements promise longer contracts and more reliable cash flow—provided the financing stays intact.

Kodiak revealed in an SEC filing that the $575 million cash portion of the deal will come from a new asset-based lending (ABL) facility—a revolving credit line backed by assets—plus roughly $100 million in stock issued to the sellers. The company valued the purchase at about 7.4 times DPS’s projected 2026 adjusted EBITDA, a measure of profitability. Kodiak expects the acquisition to be accretive, boosting both per-share earnings and discretionary cash flow. DPS’s fleet, it said, totals around 384 megawatts of Caterpillar-powered generation. The deal is slated to close in early Q2 2026, with Kodiak maintaining its leverage target between 3.5x and 4.0x.

A securities filing revealed the deal hinges on standard closing conditions, including antitrust approval under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act. The agreement sets a hard deadline of May 31, 2026, with only limited options to extend. The filing also outlined a 180-day lock-up on the Kodiak shares given to the sellers, subject to some exceptions.

But the wager isn’t straightforward. Distributed generation depends heavily on equipment availability, assumptions about customer demand, and financing costs. Any regulatory delays could push the closing further into the year.

Traders want clarity on the contract structure, particularly the portion of DPS’s backlog that’s long-term and its pricing. They’re also watching Kodiak’s borrowing costs closely as the cash draw flows onto the balance sheet.

Kodiak’s next key event is its Q4 2025 earnings call set for Feb. 26. Investors want fresh details on when regulatory approval might come through and the deal could close, along with initial clues on how the DPS business will impact 2026 cash flow and debt levels.

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