US software program funding agency Thoma Bravo introduced at present that it has entered right into a definitive settlement to buy Verint Programs (Nasdaq: VRNT) in an all-cash deal reflecting an enterprise worth of $2 billion. The transaction is topic to customary closing situations, together with regulatory approvals, and is predicted to shut earlier than the top of Verint’s present fiscal 12 months, in early 2026.
RELATED ARTICLES
Thoma Bravo says it is going to merge Verint Programs into workforce engagement software program firm Calabrio, which it owns. Thoma Bravo stated, “Following the shut of the transaction, Calabrio and Verint can be mixed into one firm and can be a number one supplier of Buyer Expertise (CX) Automation Options to the $50B+ market during which they serve. Collectively, they are going to provide an expansive portfolio to advance the important priorities of CX organizations throughout the dimensions and complexity spectrum. The mixture will create extra alternatives for firms to rapidly obtain enterprise outcomes of their interactions with prospects. Calabrio is totally dedicated to sustaining and investing within the merchandise that assist its put in base and prospects’ workflows.”
Verint has a market cap of $1.2 billion thus the deal is at a 60% premium on the corporate’s market cap however effectively under the $3.6 billion market cap in 2022.
Dan Bodner has been CEO of Verint for 3 a long time. It supplies options for name facilities that mix analytics and AI and are designed to boost the consumer expertise. The corporate is predicated within the US, and has a improvement middle in Herzliya, the place it has 200 workers, out of three,800 worldwide. 4 years in the past, Verint spun off its safety options arm Cognyte Software program. Earlier than the spin-off, the corporate had a market cap of $3.7 billion. Verint itself was spun off from Israeli firm Comverse Expertise in 2013.
As reported by “Globes”, Thoma Bravo can also be at the moment analyzing the acquisition of Israeli cybersecurity firm Armis, at a valuation of $5 billion. In 2018, Thoma Bravo purchased Israeli cybersecurity firm Imperva for $2.1 billion, promoting it 5 years later for $3.6 billion.
Revealed by Globes, Israel enterprise information – en.globes.co.il – on August 25, 2025.
© Copyright of Globes Writer Itonut (1983) Ltd., 2025.