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SAP Plans to Take Qualtrics Public Through U.S. IPO

(Bloomberg) -- SAP SE, Europe’s largest technology company, is selling a stake in its Qualtrics customer-survey software unit through a U.S. public offering, less than two years after buying the firm to help compete with Salesforce Inc.SAP will keep a majority interest in Qualtrics while giving the business greater autonomy under existing managers including founder Ryan Smith, Walldorf, Germany-based SAP said in a statement Sunday. Smith, who started Qualtrics with brother Jared in the basement of their parents’ home in Utah, will be the largest individual shareholder.The decision marks a quick turnaround from the $8 billion purchase of Qualtrics in November 2018, which received a lukewarm reception from investors who blanched at its price tag. Qualtrics was the capstone of former Chief Executive Officer Bill McDermott’s $26 billion shopping spree to help push the 48-year-old software giant into faster-growing cloud-based software and services. New CEO Christian Klein must compete with younger companies, such as Salesforce.com and Workday Inc., while managing a shrinking legacy software business.McDermott had defended the deal, believing that combining SAP’s workforce and a trove of operational data with Qualtrics’s customer experience feedback would accelerate growth. The business, which has more than 11,500 customers, had revenue of 508 million euros ($591 million) in the most recent financial year.Read more: SAP’s an Old Company With New Tricks in Battle to Dominate CloudThe timing of the IPO will be determined later and is subject to market conditions, SAP said. As majority owner, the German company plans to continue to fully consolidate Qualtrics’ results and said there will be no affect on 2020 guidance.SAP said earlier this month that while software license revenues were below normal levels in the second quarter, they recovered more than expected in the period buoyed by a resumption in software deals in Asia. The company is due to report its full financial results for the second quarter on Monday.(Corrects to say that SAP will maintain a majority stake in the first deck headline.)For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2020 Bloomberg L.P. Read More...

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(Bloomberg) — SAP SE, Europe’s largest technology company, is selling a stake in its Qualtrics customer-survey software unit through a U.S. public offering, less than two years after buying the firm to help compete with Salesforce Inc.

SAP will keep a majority interest in Qualtrics while giving the business greater autonomy under existing managers including founder Ryan Smith, Walldorf, Germany-based SAP said in a statement Sunday. Smith, who started Qualtrics with brother Jared in the basement of their parents’ home in Utah, will be the largest individual shareholder.

The decision marks a quick turnaround from the $8 billion purchase of Qualtrics in November 2018, which received a lukewarm reception from investors who blanched at its price tag. Qualtrics was the capstone of former Chief Executive Officer Bill McDermott’s $26 billion shopping spree to help push the 48-year-old software giant into faster-growing cloud-based software and services. New CEO Christian Klein must compete with younger companies, such as Salesforce.com and Workday Inc., while managing a shrinking legacy software business.

McDermott had defended the deal, believing that combining SAP’s workforce and a trove of operational data with Qualtrics’s customer experience feedback would accelerate growth. The business, which has more than 11,500 customers, had revenue of 508 million euros ($591 million) in the most recent financial year.

Read more: SAP’s an Old Company With New Tricks in Battle to Dominate Cloud

The timing of the IPO will be determined later and is subject to market conditions, SAP said. As majority owner, the German company plans to continue to fully consolidate Qualtrics’ results and said there will be no affect on 2020 guidance.

SAP said earlier this month that while software license revenues were below normal levels in the second quarter, they recovered more than expected in the period buoyed by a resumption in software deals in Asia. The company is due to report its full financial results for the second quarter on Monday.

(Corrects to say that SAP will maintain a majority stake in the first deck headline.)

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