US card firm Vantiv clinches $10 billion deal to buy Worldpay
CGTN
["europe"]
US credit card processing company Vantiv moved closer to creating a 29 billion US dollar global payments powerhouse on Wednesday with a formal offer to buy Britain's Worldpay for 8 billion pounds (10 billion US dollars).
Although the deal was first announced on July 5, it has taken several weeks of talks to conclude, with the deadline for a formal offer extended twice as the companies haggled over governance and ways to safeguard British jobs.
Worldpay said on Wednesday that Vantiv has offered 55 pence in cash, 0.0672 of a new Vantiv share, an interim dividend of 0.8 pence per Worldpay share and a special 4.2 pence dividend, valuing the former RBS unit at about 8 billion pounds or 397 pence per share.
The combined company will be renamed "Worldpay" and will be headquartered in Cincinnati with a primary listing in New York and a secondary listing in London.
AFP Photo

AFP Photo

Worldpay shareholders will own approximately 43 percent of the new business, while Vantiv investors will have 57 percent of the combined group whose pro forma enterprise value is more than 22 billion pounds.
The company's international operations will be run from Britain, but there will be no formal guarantees that UK jobs and employees will be protected.
The combined company will be a leading payments firm, processing approximately 1.5 trillion US dollar in payments and 40 billion transactions through more than 300 payment methods in 146 countries and 126 currencies, with a combined net revenue of over 3.2 billion US dollar. 
The group will be led by Vantiv boss Charles Drucker as executive chairman and co-CEO while Worldpay boss Philip Jansen will report to Drucker and act as co-CEO.
AFP Photo

AFP Photo

The combined group is also expected to incur one-off restructuring and integration costs of around 330 million US dollar. 
Craig Bonthron, a fund manager at Kames Capital, told media that the deal was a sensible transaction which allowed UK investors to participate in the upside via a secondary listing in London.
He said the deal will help consolidate "what is a fragmented market and diversify Vantiv's revenues away from struggling 'big box' retailers in the U.S."  
Worldpay's e-commerce payment business saw net revenue rise 16.9 percent, driven by contributions from customers including retail, airline and digital industries. 
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Source(s): Reuters