KKR to buy majority stake in Norway’s software company Visma for $935 mln

27 Sep 2010

1

Private equity firm and leveraged buyout specialist, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts (KKR), yesterday said it is buying 77 per cent stake in Norwegian software company Visma A/S from a consortium led by venture capital firm HgCapital, for $935 million (5.5 billion kroner) in cash.

Oslo-based Visma is a provider of business software and services for accounting and administration. The company comprises four business areas, Visma Software, Visma BPO Payroll and Accounting, Visma Procurement & Collecting, and Visma Retail IT Solutions.

Visma, with 2009 revenues of about $558 million has more than 220 000 customers across Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, the Netherlands, Romania and the UK.

New York-based KKR, which is making its first acquisition in Norway, is paying $935 million for a 77-per cent stake in Visma, valuing the software company at $1.88 billion (11 billion kroner) including debt of $725 million (4.5 billion kroner) and excluding the $148 million (900 million kroner) cash held by Visma.

KKR, which has $54 billion funds under management, is buying the stake from a consortium led by HgCapital, which includes Intermediate Capital Group, a British-based provider of mezzanine finance and Citi Private Equity.

With $3.8 billion under management, London-based HgCapital, which held a 50 per cent stake in Visma, will retain 17.7 per cent, while Visma's management will hold the remaining 5.3 per cent.

HgCapital had acquired Visma in 2006 in a bidding war with Britain's biggest accounting software company Sage Group, which had valued Visma then at 4.3 billion kroner.

Latest articles

Nigeria and South Africa drive global stablecoin demand surge, study finds

Nigeria and South Africa drive global stablecoin demand surge, study finds

Cisco and Qunnect test real-world quantum network over New York fiber cables

Cisco and Qunnect test real-world quantum network over New York fiber cables

Uber to invest $100 million+ in autonomous charging hubs to accelerate robotaxi rollout

Uber to invest $100 million+ in autonomous charging hubs to accelerate robotaxi rollout

The $250 billion pivot: how 2026 became the year AI paid the rent

The $250 billion pivot: how 2026 became the year AI paid the rent

Sweden fines SBB over accounting violations, raising scrutiny on property sector

Sweden fines SBB over accounting violations, raising scrutiny on property sector

Ukraine-Russia peace talks enter second day in Geneva amid pressure concerns

Ukraine-Russia peace talks enter second day in Geneva amid pressure concerns

India asks university to exit AI summit after robot’s origin questioned

India asks university to exit AI summit after robot’s origin questioned

Redmond’s global reach: Microsoft on pace for $50 billion AI investment in the Global South

Redmond’s global reach: Microsoft on pace for $50 billion AI investment in the Global South

Data centres explore funding uranium projects as AI power demand surges, says NexGen CEO

Data centres explore funding uranium projects as AI power demand surges, says NexGen CEO