One scoop to begin: Revolut is in talks to boost new funding from traders at a $65bn valuation in a transaction that may gasoline international growth for Europe’s most respected start-up.
And a sibling rivalry scoop: Grant Thornton’s UK and US companies are vying to take over their German sister agency in a non-public equity-fuelled race to safe a better share of the accounting group’s international community.
Welcome to Due Diligence, your briefing on dealmaking, personal fairness and company finance. This text is an on-site model of the e-newsletter. Premium subscribers can enroll right here to get the e-newsletter delivered each Tuesday to Friday. Normal subscribers can improve to Premium right here, or discover all FT newsletters. Get in contact with us anytime: Due.Diligence@ft.com
In at this time’s e-newsletter:
-
Non-public capital’s UK insurance coverage push
-
A patent cliff for Large Pharma
-
Jane Road’s India downside
Apollo wades deeper into UK insurance coverage
There’s a brand new Apollo-backed entrant within the UK pensions market and it guarantees to reshape Europe’s largest retail market within the coming many years.
Final week, Athora, an insurance coverage group created by Apollo in 2018, struck the UK’s largest deal this 12 months, agreeing to purchase retirement financial savings group Pension Insurance coverage Company for £5.7bn.
The transfer vegetation an enormous Apollo-esque flag within the UK simply because the personal capital behemoth reshapes the US monetary system by matching big lending marketplaces with insurance coverage insurance policies.
And Apollo isn’t alone. America’s personal capital teams have been wanting throughout the pond at European insurers with envy for some time. Now they’re increasing rapidly.
Brookfield, KKR and Carlyle have all began insurance coverage operations within the nation or studied acquisitions over the previous few years. The FT beforehand reported that Carlyle and KKR had additionally studied bids for PIC.
The UK is a profitable marketplace for insurers and one which’s ripe for dealmaking.
Employers within the UK want to transfer pensions liabilities off their stability sheets by promoting them to insurers. British companies are forecast to dump a report £70bn of pensions threat this 12 months, based on pensions marketing consultant WTW.
And there’s far more of that to come back: greater than a 3rd of the UK’s outlined profit pension schemes, managing greater than £1tn of belongings, might afford at hand over their schemes to an insurer, based on the Pension Safety Fund.
Non-public capital teams have develop into the US insurance coverage market’s dominant gamers, however Europe’s sceptical regulators make it more durable to crack.
For the continent’s watchdogs, Italian life insurer Eurovita’s collapse in 2023 looms massive.
Eurovita went into administration as rates of interest rose, and its personal fairness backer didn’t put in all the additional capital that regulators needed. Policyholders rushed for the exits.
Final 12 months, Apollo chief Marc Rowan complained that acquisitions have been proving “politically very tough” in Europe and a few jurisdictions had been “hostile to non-public markets”.
That Athora, minority owned by Apollo, is shopping for PIC as a substitute of its wholly owned US insure Athene is an attention-grabbing quirk of the deal.
Apollo owns solely 1 / 4 of Athora, with its massive traders and administration proudly owning the rest, which means the personal capital group will forgo the complete insurance coverage unfold it retains by means of offers with Athene. As a substitute, it will gather a price for managing some — although not all — of PIC’s belongings.
Athora is presenting itself as a long-term strategic proprietor of PIC, versus the personal fairness backers Reinet Investments and CVC which might be promoting the insurer.
“The commonest query I get is: ‘Do you might have personal fairness fund capital?’ We now have none,” stated Athora chief govt Mike Wells.
Merck courts Verona, reviving Large Pharma’s M&A love affair
Pharma giants are quick approaching patent cliffs they usually’re returning to a tried and examined technique to hold them falling off the brink: shopping for biotechs with promising medication.
Merck’s $10bn deal for Verona Pharma, scooped by DD’s Oliver Barnes on Wednesday, is a working example.
Verona holds the patent for Ohtuvayre, a drug to deal with power obstructive pulmonary illness that’s already been authorized within the US.
Ohtuvayre might plug a income gap when Merck’s trophy product, Keytruda, comes off patent in 2028.
Keytruda is the world’s bestselling drug, raking in $30bn yearly. However as soon as the patent expires, rivals will be capable of promote the drug on a budget, decimating Merck’s gross sales.
So it’s no marvel that Merck splashed the money to come up with Ohtuvayre: the Verona Pharma deal is the second largest in biotech this 12 months and Merck’s largest takeover in two years.
(The deal can also be an enormous coup for Merck’s authorized adviser, Freshfields. The London-based Magic Circle agency hardly ever advises on large US acquisitions.)
All of it comes at a attempting time for Large Pharma, which is contending with the specter of sectoral tariffs from US President Donald Trump and the looming spectre of rivals from China.
And in 2027 and 2028, an alarming $180bn of medication will go off patent, leaving Merck and different pharma giants comparable to Bristol Myers Squibb and Pfizer with a shortfall to fill.
The income hole could possibly be existential for the trade if it doesn’t act quickly.
Thankfully for drugmakers, they’re sitting on $1.3tn of dry powder. In a fallow 12 months for mergers and acquisitions, that’s giving dealmakers hope {that a} biopharma M&A growth could possibly be on the horizon.
Nasdaq’s biotech index was up practically 3 per cent on Wednesday within the wake of Merck’s acquisition, a certain signal that traders foresee a flurry of offers within the sector.
Bother in paradise for Jane Road in India
Per week in the past a number of individuals at New York buying and selling powerhouse Jane Road have been most likely eagerly awaiting an extended, heat and barbecue-filled July 4 weekend. By the top of it they have been shell-shocked.
On the eve of Independence Day within the US, India’s monetary regulator abruptly slapped Jane Road with accusations of “sinister” market manipulation and banned the proprietary buying and selling agency from the nation till it stumps up about $550mn of “unlawful good points” that it says it has discovered to date.
The scandal has forged a pall over Jane Road, which till now appeared prefer it might do no flawed.
Final 12 months it made greater than $20bn of web buying and selling revenues, and within the first quarter of 2025 alone it made $7.2bn, greater than Morgan Stanley’s merchants. Even its interns earn greater than Federal Reserve chair Jay Powell.
Now, the FT reviews that the interim order from the Securities and Alternate Board of India might show to be only the start of its troubles.
For extra particulars on exactly what Jane Road is alleged to have achieved in India, our buddies at Alphaville have zoomed in on what seems to be the crux of the difficulty: heavy buying and selling in India’s wildly engorged choices market.
(Alphaville additionally had an try at “steel-manning” Jane Road’s defence.)
Jane Road strongly disputes the allegations. In an inside e mail seen by the FT, it informed its greater than 3,000 workers that it was “painful to have our agency’s popularity tarnished by a report primarily based on so many faulty or unsupported assertions” and promised to combat the fees.
Nonetheless, many rivals each publicly and privately stated the Indian regulator’s report mirrored poorly on Jane Road.
“Typically you learn a regulator’s grievance and suppose they simply don’t get what’s happening,” an govt at a competitor informed DD. “However on this case Sebi laid out a powerful case.”
Job strikes
-
X’s Linda Yaccarino stated she would step down as chief govt of the social media platform owned by Elon Musk after two years on the helm.
-
Apple has named Sabih Khan as its chief working officer. Khan joined Apple in 1995 and succeeds his present boss Jeff Williams, who will retire later this 12 months. Tim Cook dinner held the position earlier than he was appointed chief govt.
-
EG Group has named Mark Segal as its finance chief. He was most lately at Spin Grasp, the place he was CFO.
-
Lazard has appointed Jon Steinberg as a managing director in its media, leisure and sports activities advisory group. He was most lately chief govt of Future Plc and based Cheddar Information.
-
King Road has employed Philip Brown as a managing director on its US analysis staff. He joins from P. Schoenfeld Asset Administration, the place he was a companion.
Sensible reads
Digital renminbi The US greenback stays the forex of selection for stablecoins. However in mainland China, the place cryptocurrencies are banned, native policymakers are beginning to take curiosity, Lex writes.
Dogefight Elon Musk could also be gone from the so-called Division of Authorities Effectivity, however his allies stay, the Wall Road Journal writes. And so they’re sparring with the White Home for management.
Crypto lobbyists Trump’s Damascene conversion to crypto cheerleader adopted “one of many nice lobbying free-for-alls in current historical past”, the New York Instances writes, in a behind-the-scenes dissection of his transformation.
Information round-up
Nvidia turns into first firm to achieve $4tn in market worth (FT)
BCG’s position in Gaza probed by UK parliamentary committee (FT)
Goldman calls for oath from junior bankers to fend off personal fairness (Bloomberg)
Italian sweet maker Ferrero in talks for storied US cereal maker Kellogg’s (FT)
Singapore’s Temasek sours on European firms amid US tariff threats (FT)
Hedge funds accountable for espresso worth surge, says Lavazza boss (FT)
Apple bids for System 1 rights in US after success of Brad Pitt movie (FT)
Blackstone-owned on line casino operator Cirsa rises on market debut (FT)
High monetary watchdog recommends limits on hedge fund leverage (FT)
Thames Water refuses to claw again bonuses regardless of authorities threats (FT)
Due Diligence is written by Arash Massoudi, Ivan Levingston, Ortenca Aliaj, Alexandra Heal and Robert Smith in London, James Fontanella-Khan, Sujeet Indap, Eric Platt, Antoine Gara, Amelia Pollard, Maria Heeter, Kaye Wiggins, Oliver Barnes, Jamie John and Hannah Pedone in New York, George Hammond and Tabby Kinder in San Francisco, Arjun Neil Alim in Hong Kong. Please ship suggestions to due.diligence@ft.com
Beneficial newsletters for you
India Enterprise Briefing — The Indian skilled’s must-read on enterprise and coverage on the planet’s fastest-growing massive financial system. Enroll right here
Unhedged — Robert Armstrong dissects crucial market tendencies and discusses how Wall Road’s greatest minds reply to them. Enroll right here