M and A
Carlyle Buys Wealth Advisor Software Business For Up To $200 Million
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The transaction is designed to boost the position of intelliflo in the UK and accelerate its Australian growth. As part of the deal, US subsidiaries of intelliflo will be set up as a standalone business called Redblack.
Carlyle, the US
private equity house, has acquired UK wealth advisor software
firm intelliflo
from New York-listed Invesco for up to $200 million.
The transaction includes intelliflo’s US-based
subsidiaries, RedBlack, a provider of
software-as-a-service-based portfolio rebalancing tools, and
intelliflo Portfolio, a portfolio management software solution
for US registered investment advisors.
The purchase price – $135 million at closing – is
expected in the fourth quarter of this year subject to certain
closing conditions, and up to an additional $65 million in
potential future earn outs, Carlyle said in a statement
yesterday.
As part of the deal, intelliflo’s US-based subsidiaries will be
established as a standalone business called RedBlack, run by a
separate management team, Carlyle said. The CEO of RedBlack is
Bryan Perryman.
Founded in 2004 and headquartered in London, intelliflo offers a
software platform used by more than 30,000 professionals at about
2,600 advisory firms. In all, they support around £450 billion
($606.8 billion) in client assets. intelliflo’s platform delivers
client relationship management, financial planning, client
onboarding, compliance workflows, and reporting
functionality.
The transaction aims to strengthen intelliflo’s position in the
UK and accelerate its growth in Australia.
This separation will allow both businesses to better serve and
focus on their existing customers and markets. intelliflo will
focus purely on delivering market-leading software and innovation
for the UK and Australian markets, and RedBlack will focus solely
on delivering for RIAs and other financial advisors in the
US.
Carlyle will support the carve-out of both businesses from
Invesco and will partner with both leadership teams to execute
their plans.
Equity for the investment will be provided by Carlyle Europe
Technology Partners ("CETP") V, a €3 billion ($3.5 billion) fund
which invests in technology companies across Europe. The CETP
team’s current and recent investments include SER Group, CSS,
SurePay, and Calastone. (In July, SS&C
Technologies, the Nasdaq-listed financial software and
solutions group, agreed to buy Calastone, a global funds network
and technology solutions provider to the wealth and asset
management industry.)
Evercore served as financial advisor to Invesco and HSF Kramer
acted as legal advisor. Altman Solon, PWC, Oliver Wyman and
Ringstone conducted due diligence on the acquisition. Gibson Dunn
acted as legal counsel to Carlyle.