Scottish Daily Mail

British tech trio set to scoop millions more

Regulator sets scene for full-scale US takeover war for Blue Prism

- By Lucy White

tHree British tech bosses will be hoping to secure an even greater windfall then expected after a bidding war threatened to break out over their software firm.

Jason Kingdon, alastair Bathgate and David moss were already set to rake in more than £130m between them, after US private equity firm Vista equity partners tabled a £1.1bn offer for Blue prism.

But that sum is set to climb, after the takeover panel yesterday set the scene for a full-scale bidding war.

the deal-making watchdog ordered SS&C, a rival suitor that gatecrashe­d Vista’s offer earlier this month, to either make a formal offer by next thursday or walk away.

on thursday Vista – founded in 2000 by american tycoon robert Smith (pictured right with wife Hope Dworaczyk) – upped its own offer to £1.2bn, trying to ward off SS&C before a battle began.

the new offer means Blue prism’s chairman and chief executive Kingdon will pocket £73.8m – up from £66.5m. Co-founders Bathgate and moss will earn £57.5m and £18m respective­ly when they sell their stakes. But they will be hoping that SS&C, a US tech firm, comes back with an even better offer before the takeover panel’s deadline.

Warrington-based Blue prism, which makes technology for companies to automate office tasks, initially agreed a £1.1bn takeover deal with Vista in September. Blue prism was due to hold a meeting on November 19 where shareholde­rs could vote on the deal – but it had to cancel its plans after SS&C bowled in with its own approach. But SS&C has failed to come up with a formal bid.

Blue prism has rearranged its vote on the Vista deal for December 9, and the takeover panel said SS&C has until December 2 to make a move. Blue prism’s investors will be hoping SS&C comes back with a bigger offer – and not just because they stand to pocket a larger windfall. Vista’s deal has angered shareholde­rs. the private equity predator warned it would slash jobs if it bought Blue prism. It also refused to commit to Blue prism’s UK headquarte­rs. It wants to merge Blue prism with tibco, a Silicon Valleybase­d data analytics firm it bought for £3.1bn in 2014. Critics have branded the deal ‘private equity at its worst’. But Kingdon, a serial entreprene­ur who joined Blue prism in 2008, said: ‘Vista and tibco recognise the strength of what we have built and the exceptiona­l products and services we provide.’

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