France’s Publicis to buy US data firm LiveRamp for $2.2 billion

Industry:    4 weeks ago

French advertising group Publicis Groupe has agreed to acquire U.S. data collaboration company LiveRamp for a total enterprise value of about $2.2 billion ​in an all-cash deal, it said on Sunday.

For Publicis, the acquisition extends a ​strategy it has pursued for several years of boosting its data capabilities ⁠in order to target consumers more precisely.

LiveRamp offers businesses a platform that allows them ​to match and connect datasets – such as customer or media data – in a secure way without ​directly sharing personal information.

“It is the latest demonstration of our commitment to investing ahead of market shifts, despite what is an industry being challenged by the rise of AI and a difficult global context,” ​Chief Executive Arthur Sadoun said in a video presentation.

Publicis’ strategy of increasing its access to ​data to target consumers began with its purchase in 2019 of Epsilon in a $4.4 billion deal.

Its approach has ‌helped ⁠it to widen the gap with traditional rivals, overtaking WPP and Omnicom to become the world’s most valuable advertising group by market capitalisation.

Under the terms of Sunday’s agreement, Publicis will pay $38.50 per share for LiveRamp, a 29.8% premium to the company’s closing price on May 15, ​the last trading ​day before the announcement.

The ⁠deal, which has been unanimously approved by both companies’ boards, is expected to be incremental to earnings from the first year of ​consolidation, Publicis said.

It is expected to close by the end of 2026, ​Publicis said, ⁠pending LiveRamp shareholders’ and regulatory approvals.

In Sunday’s statement, the French group also raised its 2027 and 2028 constant-currency growth targets to 7%-8% for net revenue and 8%-10% for headline earnings per ⁠share, up ​from previous guidance of 6%-7% and 7%-9%, respectively.

LiveRamp connects ​more than 25,000 publisher domains and over 500 technology and data partners across 14 markets, and employs around 1,300 ​people.

print
Source: