Daily Mail

Go Compare is snapped up in £600m deal

Magazine publisher swoops on website

- By Matt Oliver

BRITAIN’S biggest magazine publisher has swooped on the price comparison website Go Compare in a £600m takeover.

Future, which owns dozens of niche print and online titles including Country Life, Games Radar and Cycling Weekly, wants to use the brand’s technology to sell more services to its 400m readers.

It is offering cash and shares in a deal that values GoCompare, which is known for its opera singer mascot Gio Compario, at £594m – or 136p per share.

The takeover will net Sir Peter Wood, the insurance tycoon behind the business, a package worth £170m overall, including a 6pc stake in Future.

It also represents another audacious gambit by Future boss Zillah ByngThorne, who has overseen a near-700pc rise in her company’s share price and scooped an £18m bonus last year.

She said the Go Compare tie-up will let the company’s titles offer a growing array of services to customers, ‘like the shop where the assistant can offer you advice on the best product, then show you where to buy it’.

For example, titles such as Games Radar already publish articles that rank laptops that are best for playing video games, with links to sellers that in turn earn Future commission fees.

And in recent years the publisher has teamed up with third parties to offer readers deals for fast broadband which they need to play games online as well.

Future now wants to bring this inhouse, using Go Compare’s technology to offer readers of Real Homes, Cycling Weekly and other brands deals on home insurance, energy bills and mortgages.

Byng-Thorne, 46, added: ‘ We are already helping audiences choose the best laptops for playing video games.

‘This will allow us to also say, what is the best broadband to play your games on as well?

‘It is all about trying to get the best deal for consumers while also maximising the opportunit­y for Future.’

The chief executive, who formerly led Auto Trader, took over at Future in 2013 and is credited with leading a turnaround that has transforme­d it from a stumbling publisher to a digital trailblaze­r, with titles such as Tech Radar raking in fees from product sales that it funnels to the likes of Amazon.

About 23pc of Future’s revenues now come from ecommerce, with the figure climbing from £ 47.2m to £79.3m in the year to September 30.

Over the same period Future’s revenues rose from £221.5m to £339.6m and profits from £12.7m to £52m, following its takeover of rival TI Media.

Go Compare was founded in Wales in 2006. It was bought by Wood’s Esure for £95m in 2014 and spun out in 2016 with a listing of its own.

In a joint announceme­nt which was issued yesterday, Go Compare owner, Go Co Group, and Future urged shareholde­rs to back the takeover.

But Future’s shares fell 16.7pc, or 328p, to 1634p following the announceme­nt, suggesting that investors were sour on the deal.

Go Co Group’s share price rocketed by 5.8pc, or 6.4p, to 116.4p yesterday.

However Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, said that the tie-up looked like a ‘natural’ fit.

‘Future’s offer is one of those deals where you’re initially taken by surprise but then quickly realise there is logic in the transactio­n,’ he said.

‘A lot of people still associate Future as a magazine publisher yet its business model has significan­tly evolved beyond traditiona­l media. It has a platform to run a wide variety of websites which have a powerful way of getting people to spend money.’

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