Scottish Daily Mail

Making of a UK tech giant

Aveva is Britain’s most valuable software firm after swoop on US rival

- by Matt Oliver

AVEVA is poised to become Britain’s most valuable software company after it completed the £3.8bn takeover of an American rival.

The firm, which makes computer programmes used to design oil rigs (pictured), ships and nuclear power stations, is buying data company Osisoft in a deal expected to boost its market value to more than £10bn.

That will propel it above Sage, the accountanc­y software firm that was worth £8.1bn yesterday.

Aveva said the takeover will allow it to benefit from the trend in manufactur­ing that has seen companies increasing­ly use software to track the performanc­e of equipment and supply chains, to find ways to cut costs.

Osisoft specialise­s in collecting this type of data from mines, factories and other industrial sites using an array of sensors connected to the so-called ‘internet of things’.

It is the second major tie-up by Aveva in three years, after the company merged with French giant Schneider Electric in 2017.

Another winner from the deal will be Japan’s Softbank, which owns 45pc of Osisoft and now stands to make about £1.5bn.

Craig Hayman, the chief executive of Aveva, said: ‘The acquisitio­n is perfectly in line with our strategic vision and it will accelerate the enlarged group’s role in the digitisati­on of the industrial world.’

He said the deal would also allow Aveva to ‘broaden and deepen’ relationsh­ips with its customers, providing an opportunit­y for it to sell them new services.

California-based Osisoft already caters to hundreds of the world’s biggest companies, including most of the top oil and gas firms, providing software to 14,000 sites in 127 countries.

It was founded in 1980 by Dr Patrick Kennedy and employs 1,400 people.

In an online advertisem­ent, it asks: ‘How come your data isn’t performing incredible feats? How come you haven’t achieved digital transforma­tion nirvana yet?’

The company promises to collect data and turn it into ‘insight’ for customers.

It reported that it made adjusted annual profits of £116m after revenues of £373m in its most recent financial year.

Its ownership is largely split between Kennedy and his family, who own just over 50pc of the shares, and Softbank, which has just under 45pc.

A third investor, Mitsui & Co, owns the remaining 5pc but will also sell this as part of the deal.

Kennedy is being paid with shares in Aveva and will own about 4pc of the company after the takeover.

Aveva said it would also issue £2.7bn worth of new shares to help fund the transactio­n, with another £685m coming from its cash reserves and borrowing.

The company’s shares rose 7.3pc, or 314p, to 4646p after the announceme­nt yesterday, taking its value to £7.5bn.

It has received the backing of Schneider, which owns 60pc of Aveva after the 2017 takeover and will also participat­e in the shares issue.

Softbank will gain a muchneeded cash boost from the takeover, after coming under pressure to sell assets from activist investor Elliott. Billionair­e founder and chief executive of Softbank Masayoshi Son has been forced to rein in his expansion plans after suffering losses from investment­s in an array of technology companies through the company’s $100bn (£76bn) ‘vision fund’.

The deal is expected to complete at the end of the year, with Osisoft then becoming a division of Aveva.

The deal met with approval from industry observers.

Analysts at Barclays commented: ‘We expect the market to like the deal.

‘Industrial software will continue to consolidat­e and this deal will move forward Aveva’s strategic ambitions, in our view.’

It comes after Aveva warned in April that its performanc­e in the first half of this year would be hit by the global economic downturn which has been caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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