SoftwareOne Board Says Bain’s $3.2 Billion Offer Isn’t Enough

SoftwareOne Holding AG’s board said Bain Capital’s 2.93 billion Swiss-franc ($3.2 billion) offer to take the IT services provider private undervalues the company, the latest hurdle in the private equity firm’s attempt to buy a European tech company.

(Bloomberg) — SoftwareOne Holding AG’s board said Bain Capital’s 2.93 billion Swiss-franc ($3.2 billion) offer to take the IT services provider private undervalues the company, the latest hurdle in the private equity firm’s attempt to buy a European tech company. 

The board, excluding founder Daniel von Stockar who recused himself, voted unanimously that the offer was not sufficiently substantiated, SoftwareOne said in a statement on Thursday. 

Bain said earlier on Thursday that the offer values the Swiss IT services provider at 18.50 francs per share, a 22% premium to Wednesday’s closing price. SoftwareOne’s founding shareholders, who together own 29.1% of the company, backed the proposal, according to the statement. 

SoftwareOne, based in Stans, Switzerland, consults companies on their software purchases, and partners with providers such as Amazon Web Services Inc., Adobe Inc., IBM Corp. It’s also among the largest resellers of US software giant Microsoft Corp.’s licenses. Its shares have risen 30% in the last year and closed Wednesday at 15.17 francs. 

Bain is currently battling another private equity giant, Silver Lake Management, to take over Germany’s Software AG. In that fight, some investors have criticized management for backing Silver Lake’s bid even though Bain is offering a higher price. 

Read More: Silver Lake Likely to Drop Software AG Acceptance Threshold 

(Updates with board reaction from the first paragraph. A previous version of this story corrected the spelling of the company’s name in the headline.)

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