Holyvolt moves to scale BatteryTech footprint with Wildcat deal
Swedish BatteryTech startup Holyvolt has agreed to acquire US-based battery materials specialist Wildcat in a deal valued at €63.1 million, marking a significant consolidation move in the global battery materials and electric vehicle (EV) supply chain.
The transaction positions Holyvolt as a more integrated player in the rapidly expanding market for advanced lithium-ion batteries and next-generation energy storage solutions, as demand for cleaner transport and grid-scale storage accelerates worldwide.
Strategic rationale behind the acquisition
By bringing Wildcat under its umbrella, Holyvolt gains direct access to proprietary cathode and anode materials technologies, as well as a portfolio of R&D capabilities developed in the US market. This is expected to shorten development cycles, reduce dependency on third-party suppliers, and improve cost control across Holyvolt’s product pipeline.
The acquisition also supports Europe’s push to secure more resilient battery supply chains. With production increasingly shifting closer to EV assembly plants, the integration of a US materials innovator gives Holyvolt a transatlantic footprint and access to both North American and European gigafactory ecosystems.
Implications for the EV and storage ecosystem
Boosting innovation and scale
Industry observers expect the deal to accelerate the commercialization of high-performance battery chemistries, potentially improving energy density, charging speed, and battery life. Combining Holyvolt’s manufacturing focus with Wildcat’s materials research could lead to faster deployment of advanced cells for EVs, commercial fleets, and stationary storage.
Competitive landscape and market signals
The €63.1 million acquisition underscores growing investor confidence in BatteryTech as a strategic pillar of the clean energy transition. It also reflects intensifying competition among European and US players to secure key intellectual property and materials expertise as global regulators tighten emissions rules and OEMs race to electrify their portfolios.
With the deal, Holyvolt signals its ambition to become a leading integrated provider in the battery value chain, from advanced materials through to finished cells, at a time when scale, technology differentiation, and supply security are becoming decisive advantages.

