San Diego Union-Tribune

DATA ACCESS KING ON WALL STREET; TWO PROVIDERS JOIN IN $44B DEAL

- BY MICHELLE CHAPMAN Chapman writes for The Associated Press.

The value that Wall Street places on access to billions of bytes of data, rather than oldschool 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.

And growth has been explosive for the 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 percent 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 percent of the combined company, while shareholde­rs of IHS Markit, based in London, will own about 32.25 percent.

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

The combined company will be headquarte­red in New York, where S&P Global is based, with a substantia­l presence in key global markets across North America, Latin America, EMEA and Asia Pacific.

Douglas Peterson, the CEO of S&P Global, will hold that title at the combined company. Lance Uggla, Chairman and CEO of IHS Markit, will become a special advisor to the company for a year after the deal closes.

The transactio­n is expected to close in the second half of next year. It needs the approval of both companies’ shareholde­rs.

S&P Global stock rose $10.21 to $351.78.

 ?? RICHARD DREW AP ?? Douglas Peterson, CEO of S&P Global.
RICHARD DREW AP Douglas Peterson, CEO of S&P Global.

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