U.S. private equity giant pays $10.7 billion for SAP rival started in an English barn

U.S. private equity giant pays .7 billion for SAP rival started in an English barn


Frank Calderoni, CEO of Anaplan.

Adam Jeffery | CNBC

U.S. private equity giant Thoma Bravo has bought British enterprise software firm Anaplan for $10.7 billion.

The deal, announced Monday, will see Thoma Bravo pay $66 per share in an all-cash transaction.

Anaplan was founded in 2006 in a barn in Yorkshire, England, by Guy Haddleton, Sue Haddleton and
Michael Gould.

The financial planning software vendor boasts over 1,900 customers around the world and is viewed as a competitor to the likes of SAP, Oracle and Microsoft.

Frank Calderoni, chairman and CEO of Anaplan, said in a statement that the takeover marks the start of a new chapter for the company.

“We are confident that Thoma Bravo’s resources and insights will help us accelerate and scale our growth strategy,” he said.

Thoma Bravo has more than $103 billion in assets under management.

The transaction is expected to close in the first half of 2022 providing there are no objections from regulators or Anaplan’s stockholders. Goldman Sachs and Qatalyst Partners are acting as financial advisors.

Prior to listing on the New York Stock Exchange in 2018 with the ticker “PLAN,” Anaplan raised over $240 million in funding from the likes of Amazon- and Tesla-backer Baillie Gifford, as well as Salesforce. It also relocated its headquarters to San Francisco, California.

Over the past 20 years, Thoma Bravo has acquired or invested in more than 375 companies.

Holden Spaht, a managing partner at Thoma Bravo, said in a statement that his firm has followed Anaplan -— which it called a leader in “connected planning” — for several years.

Last week it emerged that activist investors had taken a stake in Anaplan.

Keith Meister’s Corvex Management and Scott Ferguson’s Sachem Head Capital Management teamed up to pursue changes at Anaplan.

According to regulatory filings released on Thursday, Corvex and Sachem Head bought Anaplan shares because they viewed them as undervalued and “an attractive investment opportunity.” Jonathan Soros, a son of investor George Soros, also joined in the buying spree through JS Capital Management.

The three firms combined own about 9% of Anaplan’s outstanding shares, the filings show.

Anaplan’s stock peaked in February 2021, and last week it was down around 40% on last year’s highs.

On Monday, the company’s share price surged over 25% to around $65 a share in pre-market trading.

— Additional reporting by CNBC’s Jordan Novet.



Source

Major 7.5-magnitude quake hits off Japan, triggers tsunami warnings
World

Major 7.5-magnitude quake hits off Japan, triggers tsunami warnings

This photo shows a warning message on a screen from a live feed on NHK with tsunami alert after an earthquake hit northern Japan, in Tokyo on April 20, 2026. Philip Fong | Afp | Getty Images A magnitude 7.5 earthquake struck off the northeastern coast of Japan on Monday, prompting authorities to urge residents […]

Read More
UniCredit boss plots Commerzbank shake-up as lender continues its takeover pursuit of German rival
World

UniCredit boss plots Commerzbank shake-up as lender continues its takeover pursuit of German rival

UniCredit has unveiled plans for a far-reaching shake-up of takeover target Commerzbank with the intention of transforming the German lender for a “new future-ready era.” Chief executive of UniCredit Andrea Orcel said in a conference call Monday that a “true combination” of UniCredit and Commerzbank would send “a clear signal”, creating a “country leader and […]

Read More
China calls for ‘concerted’ industry efforts to tackle excess solar production
World

China calls for ‘concerted’ industry efforts to tackle excess solar production

Workers check solar panels installed on a lake in Tianchang, east China’s Anhui province on January 12, 2026. – | Afp | Getty Images China has called for “concerted efforts” to ease its solar power industry’s severe overcapacity crisis, as part of Beijing’s campaign to end a fierce price war. The proposed measures include capacity […]

Read More