Octopus Energy Group has picked bankers to oversee the sale of a minority stake in Kraken Technologies, its multibillion pound software arm.
Sky News has learnt that Octopus Energy – now Britain’s biggest household gas and electricity supplier – has engaged Goldman Sachs to handle the demerger of Kraken Technologies.
The Wall Street bank will also orchestrate discussions with prospective investors about the disposal of a minority stake in Kraken, sources said on Thursday.
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A deal could value Kraken in the region of $10bn, the sources added.
The demerger plan – revealed by Sky News in July – would reinforce Octopus Energy’s status as one of the UK’s most valuable private companies.
A deal will augment Octopus Energy chief executive Greg Jackson’s paper fortune, and underline his success at building a globally significant British-based company over the last decade.
Octopus Energy now has 7.5m retail customers in Britain, following its 2022 rescue of the collapsed energy supplier Bulb, and the subsequent acquisition of Shell’s home energy business.
In January, it announced that it had become the country’s biggest supplier – surpassing Centrica-owned British Gas – with a 24% market share.
It also has a further 2.5 million customers outside the UK.
Sources said a $10bn valuation of Kraken would imply that the whole group, including the retail supply business, was worth in the region of £15bn.
That would be double its valuation of little more than a year ago, when the company announced that it had secured new backing from funds Galvanize Climate Solutions and Lightrock.
Shortly before that, the former US vice president Al Gore’s firm, Generation Investment Management, and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board increased their stakes in Octopus Energy in a transaction valuing the company at $9bn (£7.2bn).
Kraken is an operating system which is licensed to other energy providers, water…

