Daily Press

Informatio­n providers join in deal worth $44B

- By Michelle Chapman

The value that Wall Street places on access to billions of bytes of data, rather than old-school stock picking, became abundantly clear Monday as two of the biggest providers of such informatio­n become one in the biggest takeover of the year.

S&P Global announced that it would acquire IHS Markit, based in London, for about $44 billion in an all-stock deal.

Data collection has become pivotal on Wall Street as algorithms and high-speed trading drive global markets. Growth has exploded for companies that can provide that informatio­n instantly and in bulk.

IHS and Markit merged just four years ago to create a $13 billion company. The company has almost tripled in value since then, and is now worth close to $37 billion.

The size of the deal announced Monday eclipsed Nvidia’s acquisitio­n of rival chipmaker Arm Holdings for $40 billion in September, and Nippon Telegraph & Telephone acquisitio­n of a subsidiary for nearly that much in the same month.

The newcomer IHS Markit is being acquired by a company with roots dating back to the 19th century, when Henry Varnum Poor published the History of the Railroads and Canals of the United States to provide transparen­cy for investors.

IHS Markit has more than 50,000 business and government customers, including 80% of the Fortune Global 500 and the world’s leading financial institutio­ns.

Each share of IHS Markit common stock will be exchanged for a fixed ratio of 0.2838 shares of S&P Global stock. Current S&P Global shareholde­rs will own approximat­ely 67.75% of the combined company, while shareholde­rs of IHS Markit, based in London, will own about 32.25%.

The transactio­n puts IHS Markit’s enterprise value at $44 billion, including $4.8 billion of debt.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States