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Carlisle Companies
Chris Koch runs Carlisle Companies, the Scottsdale-based industrial acquirer that transformed from a 1917 tire maker into a $4.6B building-products...
Carlisle Companies
Carlisle Companies was incorporated in 1917 as Carlisle Tire & Rubber, a single-product tire manufacturer in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. The firm shifted its center of gravity over decades, relocating headquarters to Scottsdale, Arizona, and systematically divesting legacy commodity lines — including its original tire business in 2021 — to concentrate on high-margin, specification-driven engineered products. Today the company operates through two reportable segments: Carlisle Construction Materials, which produces single-ply roofing membranes, insulation, and weatherproofing systems for commercial buildings; and Carlisle Weatherproofing Technologies, covering sealants, coatings, and below-grade waterproofing solutions used in institutional and infrastructure projects. The firm's acquisition strategy focuses on founder-led or family-held manufacturers with strong brand equity, channel density, and pricing power within niche building-product verticals. Post-acquisition, Carlisle deploys the Carlisle Operating System — its proprietary lean-management framework — to drive margin expansion and free-cash-flow conversion across the portfolio. Recent deals include the $1.6 billion purchase of Henry Company in 2021, which deepened its position in cold-applied roofing and air-barrier solutions, and the acquisition of PFB Corporation in 2024 for expanded geographies in foam insulation across Canada. The firm directly employs 11,000 people across more than 50 manufacturing facilities in North America, Europe, and Asia. Carlisle is publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange under ticker CSL, with a market capitalization north of $20 billion as of mid-2025. Chris Koch has chaired the board since 2016 and has held the CEO role since 2016 (having served as President since 2014), overseeing a period in which the company shed its Carlisle Brake & Friction and Carlisle FoodService Products units to focus entirely on the building-products thesis. May 2024: The firm completed the separation of its Carlisle Fluid Technologies platform into a standalone entity, completing its pivot to a pure-play building-envelope portfolio. The company's structural differentiator is its perpetual M&A operating model — a flywheel where acquired niche manufacturers are folded into a centralized lean-operating system, cash generated from improved margins funds the next acquisition, and management incentives are tied directly to return on invested capital rather than top-line growth. This architecture makes Carlisle behave less like a conventional industrial conglomerate and more like a private-equity platform with permanent holding periods.
General information
Firm type
Asset Manager
Year founded
1917
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Scottsdale
Corporate office
Scottsdale, AZ, United States
Additional offices
St. Augustine, FL · Franklin, WI · Portland, OR · multiple international manufacturing sites
Principals
D. Christian Koch
Chair, President and CEO
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
What is Carlisle's acquisition criteria and typical deal profile?
Carlisle targets founder-owned or family-held engineered-product manufacturers with $50 million to $500 million in enterprise value, historically purchasing at 8–12x EBITDA multiples. Target companies must hold strong installed bases with recurring aftermarket revenue, operate in fragmented sub-segments of the building-products industry, and offer pathways to margin expansion through the Carlisle Operating System. The firm evaluates approximately 200–300 candidates per year and closes 3–5 transactions annually (per the firm's investor presentations).
How did Carlisle evolve from a tire company into a building-products pure play?
The pivot was incremental over three decades, beginning with the foundation of Carlisle Construction Materials in the 1980s to produce single-ply EPDM and TPO roofing membranes. Management deliberately exited commoditized divisions — selling Carlisle Tire & Wheel in 2021, Carlisle Brake & Friction in 2022, and Carlisle Fluid Technologies by 2024 — while reinvesting proceeds into sealants, insulation, and waterproofing assets. The transformation reflects a thesis that specification-grade building components command higher margins and face less substitution risk than industrial equipment.
Who runs investment decisions at Carlisle Companies?
M&A strategy is overseen by CEO Chris Koch and corporate development leadership reporting directly to him, with all deals above a threshold requiring board approval. Koch has publicly described Carlisle as a 'perpetual M&A machine' where pipeline development, due diligence, and post-close integration are managed by a dedicated internal corporate-development team rather than external advisors. Individual business-unit presidents, such as those leading Carlisle Construction Materials and Carlisle Weatherproofing Technologies, identify bolt-on targets within their verticals.
What is the Carlisle Operating System, and why does it matter to the acquisition thesis?
The Carlisle Operating System is the company's proprietary continuous-improvement methodology derived from lean manufacturing, Six Sigma, and Toyota Production System principles. It standardizes procurement, factory-floor efficiency, inventory management, and safety protocols across all portfolio companies post-acquisition. Investors track its impact through expanding EBITDA margins and rising free-cash-flow conversion, which funded over $1.6 billion in acquisitions in 2021 alone while the company simultaneously returned capital through share buybacks and dividends.
Is Carlisle Companies publicly owned, and what is its governance structure?
Carlisle Companies has traded on the New York Stock Exchange since its 1960 IPO. The board is 83% independent, with a separate chairman and CEO role currently held by Chris Koch. The company maintains a single-class share structure. Institutional investors hold roughly 80% of outstanding shares, with Vanguard, BlackRock, and State Street among the three largest shareholders. No single family or founder retains a controlling stake.
Which sectors or asset types does Carlisle explicitly avoid?
Carlisle does not invest in raw-materials extraction, commodity chemicals, or businesses with heavy dependency on cyclical industrial production. Since the Fluid Technologies divestiture in 2024, the firm has explicitly positioned itself as a building-envelope pure play and does not pursue aerospace, defense, consumer products, or automotive-related acquisitions — a marked shift from its earlier conglomerate structure. Management has also publicly stated it avoids turnarounds, preferring stable businesses where its operating system can elevate an already-competent manufacturer.
How does Carlisle's M&A engine differ from a private-equity platform?
Carlisle holds acquired businesses permanently rather than flipping them after a five-to-seven-year hold period. Unlike PE firms, it does not use acquisition-specific debt siloed within portfolio companies — debt is held at the corporate level and rated across the enterprise. The company's 127-year operating history and public-company disclosure requirements impose governance and transparency standards beyond what closed-end funds typically offer, while the Carlisle Operating System provides the operational intensity of a buyout shop without the exit clock.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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