SandP Global agrees to buy IHS Markit for $39bn in stock

Deal accelerates consolidation among finance industry’s biggest data providers

IHS Markit is a research company that supplies forecasts to most of the world’s biggest companies as well as pricing for bonds and credit default swaps. Photograph: Rafael Henrique/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
IHS Markit is a research company that supplies forecasts to most of the world’s biggest companies as well as pricing for bonds and credit default swaps. Photograph: Rafael Henrique/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

SandP Global has agreed to buy IHS Markit for about $39 billion (€24.2 billion) in stock, a deal that accelerates the wave of consolidation among the finance industry’s biggest data providers.

SandP is offering 0.2838 share for each IHS Markit share, representing a premium of about a 4.7 per cent to IHS Markit's last close, according to a statement on Monday. After the deal, SandP shareholders will own approximately 68 per cent of the combined company, which will be led by SandP's chief executive officer Douglas Peterson.

The deal marries SandP, one of the most famous names in financial markets, with a research company that supplies forecasts to most of the world's biggest companies as well as pricing for bonds and credit default swaps. The combination creates a challenger to the London Stock Exchange Group, which last year agreed to acquire Refinitiv for $27 billion, as financial firms are locked in a race for scale to meet surging demand for data and analytics in increasingly computerized financial markets.

SandP is paying a hefty premium for the IHS business: The deal’s value translates to about 10 times a metric called Ebitda, more than double the comparable valuation that LSE paid for the Refinitiv business.

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"This is a huge consolidation of financial databases and services," said Gary Dugan, chief executive officer of the Global CIO Office, an investment firm in Singapore. "SandP probably gathered that expansion incrementally wouldn't work and instead has gone for a major acquisition, which will deepen their product range and relevance."

Bloomberg, the parent of Bloomberg News, competes with IHS Markit and SandP Global in providing financial analytics and information.

The transaction has an enterprise value of about $44 billion including SandP's assumption of $4.8 billion in net debt. Lance Uggla, CEO of IHS Markit, will stay on as a special adviser to the company for one year after the deal is closed.

Shares of SandP Global and IHS Markit have more than tripled over the past five years, providing ample currency for deal-making. Peterson said on a conference call Monday that he approached Uggla in early autumn.

The enterprise value translates into about 10 times IHS Markit’s revenue in the last full financial year and 28.2 times earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. LSE’s deal for Refinitiv valued the target at about 4.7 times adjusted revenue and 13.1 times underlying Ebitda.

The deal would be the world’s second-largest acquisition of 2020, second only to the $56 billion set of transactions among China’s biggest oil and gas companies to sell their pipeline networks to a new national carrier, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The combined company is expected to result in annual costs savings of approximately $480 million a year, the statement said. Cost savings would include optimizing the real estate footprint, SandP chief financial officer Ewout Steenbergen said on a conference call.

Markit was founded in a UK barn by Uggla, a Canadian who spotted an opportunity to provide pricing for the opaque world of credit default swaps just as trading of the derivatives was taking off in the early 2000s. Uggla built up the company through a breakneck series of acquisitions, culminating in the 2016 merger with IHS. A 2014 IPO of Markit valued it at about $4.5 billion. The company has more than 5,000 analysts, data scientists, financial experts and industry specialists.

Regulatory scrutiny

Regulatory scrutiny could pose one risk for the tie-up, given the overlap between the firms' data offerings, according to Craig A Huber, founder of Huber Research Partners LLC. The LSE is still negotiating with European Union regulators over its deal for Refinitiv, with competition authorities expressing concerns over how some companies' control of data can make them gatekeepers for an industry.

"Antitrust could be an issue since both are market data providers," said Jin Rui Oh, director at United First Partners, an investment and advisory group that specialises in special situations. "That could be a little tricky."- Bloomberg