Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A) stories
Multinational tax teams could save hours each week as a new tool combines internal data with trusted cross-border research across 220 jurisdictions.
The deal gives software vendors a broader route to market as AppDirect adds PartnerStack's 138,000-strong B2B partner network.
Investor relations teams may save more than 40 hours a quarter as Q4 integrates Virtua's analyst consensus database and AI tools.
Poor strategic or cultural fit can wipe out M&A gains, even when the purchase price and synergies look attractive on paper.
The deal gives Seagate an equity stake in Wasabi as enterprise customers face a more crowded cloud storage market and uncertain pricing.
The hire signals a sharper push into overseas growth as the AI customer service software group deepens partnerships in the US and beyond.
The deal caps rapid expansion at the Northern Ireland manufacturer, which lifted revenue 84% and added 300,000 square feet under Foresight.
Customers will soon be able to manage identities and device access alongside payroll and compliance in one system after the Bravas deal.
The deal should widen Plugable’s reach in hybrid work gear, with faster product launches and steadier supply for customers across more markets.
Customers stand to gain tighter control of telemetry as Dynatrace adds Bindplane’s data-routing tools to cut costs and manage compliance.
The deal gives private equity clients wider Salesforce support across sales, pricing and revenue systems, plus delivery teams in three regions.
Local delivery is helping Brennan lift services revenue by about 20 per cent as government and critical infrastructure buyers seek onshore cyber control.
Morningstar users should see no immediate change as the firm keeps using ByAllAccounts after selling the data aggregation unit to Pello.
The investment firm is shifting towards regular portfolio realisations after two major sales, as Antonia Jenkinson takes over the finance brief.
The deal could ease strain on understaffed call centres by automating routine non-emergency calls and redirecting escalations to 911 staff.
After 18 months of integration, the UK managed service provider says improved recurring revenue and retention leave it primed for fresh deals.
Smaller employers are under mounting compliance pressure as the combined platform aims to cut filings, renewals and fines across states.
The deal adds a profitable Scottish service arm and seven staff, giving IntelliAM a stronger base in the central belt for industrial customers.
The acquisitions give the Italian software group a stronger foothold in markets where new tax and billing rules are accelerating digitisation.
The app’s 3 million users will see no immediate changes as ownership shifts to Bolt Group, with the deal due to complete by June.