Infinitas Capital is launching a Swedish investment platform targeting a Nasdaq Stockholm listing in 2026, which will provide public market investors with easy access to private growth companies without traditional management fees

Infinitas Capital, a family office in Switzerland, is now assembling a portfolio of selected unlisted investments in a planned holding company that will seek listing on Nasdaq Stockholm. This is how Infinitas will establish a new investment platform at the intersection of private growth cases and the Nordic stock market.
Alexander Landorph (pictured), Head of Capital Markets at Infinitas, is in charge of the IPO and was hired last autumn with a distinctly Nordic focus.
Infinitas Capital points to a distinct demand for private market opportunities that are typically only available to investors with a large network or significant capital. The aim is to give IPO investors access to what Infinitas believes are high-quality growth companies in the private market, but in a structure similar to a regular listed equity investment without traditional fund fees.
Infinitas explicitly points to Sweden as one of Europe's most dynamic capital markets for growth-oriented companies. The Swedish capital markets culture, with a strong investor base in small and medium-sized companies and long tradition of listed investment and holding companies, is a key rationale for adding the platform to Nasdaq Stockholm. For Nordic investors, the structure could provide a familiar exchange framework around an otherwise difficult-to-access asset class, while at the same time Infinitas strives to build a role as a long-term anchor shareholder in selected companies.
The planned listed entity is to be established as a single Swedish holding company, to be initially filled with a portfolio consisting primarily of existing investments from Infinitas Capital. At the same time, this holding company will become the IPO tool itself and will invest side by side with Infinitas through the family office's established footprint in private markets and long-standing relationships with entrepreneurs, venture investors and growth companies globally. Details of the final structure, schedule and composition of the portfolio are to be communicated at a later date, leaving pricing, liquidity profile and tangible exposure still to be unclear to potential investors.
Founder Robin Lauber of Infinitas Capital describes the venture as an attempt to combine entrepreneur-driven capital with active capital markets expertise into one structure. The ambition is to act as an anchor shareholder and build long-term value creation, rather than short-term transactions. For investors, this means that the exposure to private growth cases takes place through an exchange-regulated investment company, where governance, reporting and regulation follow the Swedish stock exchange regime. Infinitas highlights that they also build their own companies where they see market gaps and a strategic advantage, as well as investing throughout the lifecycle from pre-seed to stock exchange.