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Private equity firms betting on online shopping habit

Industry is next frontier in their hunt for returns

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LONDON: Private equity firms, sitting on record piles of cash, are targeting a geeky corner of the online shopping industry as the next frontier in the hunt for returns.

Payment-processing companies, which make the technology that enables web and mobile purchases, are getting a flurry of investment­s this year as buyers look for ways to profit from the shift to online spending.

Buyout firms see the market as fragmented and ripe for consolidat­ion. It’s also a key part of online retail, an industry that’s growing rapidly.

Retail e-commerce sales rose 23% in the past year through June to US$2.29 trillion, according to researcher EMarketer Inc.

The firm predicts online shopping will account for more than 16% of total retail sales globally by 2021, hitting US$4.48 trillion.

“Our view is that status-quo is not an option in payments today,” said Jeff Paduch, managing director at Advent Internatio­nal.

“Regulation and technology are driving marketplac­e change and lowering barriers to entry and creating more competitio­n. It has never been easier to enter and build scale in payments.”

Spending on deals for Internet financial services firms have surged more than seven fold in the last 12 months through Tuesday and 2017 is already the busiest year for deals in the industry in more than a decade, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Blackstone Group LP and CVC Capital Partners agreed to buy Paysafe Group Plc, which provides technology that enables digital wallets as well as online and mobile payments, for about £3bil (US$3.9bil) last Friday.

Danish payments firm Nets A/S, with a market value of about US$4.6bil, said in July that it’s reviewing options. The firm had attracted takeover interest from companies including Permira, Nordic Capital and Hellman & Friedman LLC, people familiar with the matter have said.

Permira agreed to buy a stake in Klarna Bank AB, a Swedish payment solutions provider with 60 million customers, in July.

“We are only halfway through a consolidat­ion in the industry that will take years to play out,” Paduch said.

It isn’t only private equity firms seeking deals. US payment processing firm Vantiv Inc agreed to acquire Worldpay Group Plc, an e-commerce payments company, for about £8bil (US$10.4bil), the companies said in a statement yesterday.

Ingenico Group SA reached a deal for Bambora AB for 1.5 billion euros (US$1.8bil) last month, and Global Payments Inc agreed last Thursday to buy units of Active Network from Vista Equity Partners for US$1.2bil in cash and stock.

Private equity’s interest in the burgeoning industry marks a shift for many buyout shops more accustomed to making money revamping staid consumer brands than investing in innovation.

These firms are sitting on record amounts of so-called dry powder, money they’ve raised from investors and haven’t deployed, thanks to high levels of liquidity and relatively few attractive takeover targets. That’s pushed more of these companies to look for new places to earn their returns.

“Growth and change in the industry is being driven by evolving technology and customer requiremen­ts,” said Luca Bassi, managing director at Bain Capital.

The sector has low barriers to entry which allows new “challenger­s” to enter the market. Private equity firms could provide strategic assistance and investment, he said.

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