Boston Herald

TREATMENT PLAN

Watertown’s athenaheal­th gets buyout offer

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Athenaheal­th shares soared yesterday after the struggling medical billing software maker received a $5.7 billion cash buyout offer.

Veritas Capital and Evergreen Coast Capital plan to give the Watertown-based company’s shareholde­rs $135 per share in a deal that will take the company private. That represents a roughly 12 percent premium over the closing price of athenaheal­th shares on Friday.

But the latest deal is smaller than a $6.5 billion bid that prominent investor Elliott Management Corp. made in May.

Elliott Management made its offer for $160 per share in cash after saying it had grown frustrated with athenaheal­th’s struggles, which included missed guidance targets and churning through five chief financial officers in the past four years.

A month after Elliott made its offer, co-founder and CEO Jonathan Bush said he was stepping down.

Athenaheal­th said yesterday that Elliott Management supported the latest deal offer. Evergreen Coast Capital is an Elliott affiliate that invests in technology.

Athenaheal­th makes med- ical record, revenue cycle and care coordinati­on products and delivers most of it through the cloud. On Friday, it reported third-quarter earnings that topped analyst expectatio­ns, but its revenue fell short of the average forecast on Wall Street.

The latest athenaheal­th bid offers “a decent valuation for what has increasing­ly appeared to be a struggling business,” Leerink analyst David Larsen said in a research note.

“We believe that following the long and tumultuous sales process it is unlikely another bidder will emerge,” he wrote.

Evergreen and Veritas plan to pair athenaheal­th with Virence Health, which Veritas bought earlier this year. The combinatio­n will operate under the athenaheal­th brand and stay headquarte­red in Watertown.

Virence Chairman and CEO Bob Segert will lead it.

Athenaheal­th’s board of directors unanimousl­y approved the deal, which the company expects to close in the first quarter. Shareholde­rs still have to vote on it.

Athenaheal­th stock jumped about 9.5 percent, to $131.73 while broader indexes slipped.

 ?? NANCY LANE / BOSTON HERALD FILE ?? ‘STRUGGLING BUSINESS’: Athenaheal­th, headquarte­red in Watertown, above, has received a $5.7 billion cash buyout offer. The deal is smaller than a bid made by prominent investor Elliott Management Corp. in May. A month later, the struggling business’ co-founder and CEO Jonathan Bush, far left, resigned.
NANCY LANE / BOSTON HERALD FILE ‘STRUGGLING BUSINESS’: Athenaheal­th, headquarte­red in Watertown, above, has received a $5.7 billion cash buyout offer. The deal is smaller than a bid made by prominent investor Elliott Management Corp. in May. A month later, the struggling business’ co-founder and CEO Jonathan Bush, far left, resigned.
 ?? ANGELA ROWLINGS / BOSTON HERALD FILE ??
ANGELA ROWLINGS / BOSTON HERALD FILE

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