Bangkok Post

Vantiv pays $10bn for Worldpay

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Worldpay Group Plc, Britain’s largest payment processor, said on Wednesday that it had agreed to be bought by US credit card technology firm Vantiv Inc in a deal valuing it at £7.7 billion ($9.95 billion).

The deal, seen by analysts as the start of a trend for consolidat­ion in the payments industry, will see Vantiv give Worldpay shareholde­rs 55 pence in cash per share plus 0.0672 new Vantiv shares plus a cash dividend of five pence per Worldpay share.

That makes the total value for Worldpay shareholde­rs 385 pence per share, a premium of 18.9% to the firm’s stock close on Monday, but down from the high of 409.5 pence the share price hit on Wednesday before the announceme­nt.

If the deal goes through, Worldpay shareholde­rs will own about 41% of the new company, with the British firm delisted from London’s stock market.

Vantiv chief Charles Drucker and Worldpay CEO Philip Jansen will jointly run the new company.

The deal comes less than two years after Worldpay listed in London in late 2015, when it was valued at £4.8 billion.

Set up in 1989, Worldpay was spun out of British bank Royal Bank of Scotland to private equity firms Bain Capital and Advent Internatio­nal in 2010.

Payments companies have become attractive targets for credit card companies, banks and technology firms seeking to capitalise on the decline in cash transactio­ns and growth in popularity of paying by smartphone or other mobile devices.

While banks have been trying to develop and buy more sophistica­ted technology, payment service companies like PayPal and Worldpay gained a large part of the market share during the e-commerce boom.

Danish payment services company Nets A/S, said over the weekend that it had also been approached by potential buyers.

 ?? AFP ?? People walk in front of the main entrance of the Hotel de Crillon in Paris.
AFP People walk in front of the main entrance of the Hotel de Crillon in Paris.

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