Nasdaq to buy financial fraud detection firm Verafin for $2.75 billion
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[November 19, 2020]
By Anna Irrera and Noor Zainab Hussain
(Reuters) - Exchange operator Nasdaq Inc <NDAQ.O>
said on Thursday it would buy anti-financial crime software firm Verafin
for $2.75 billion in cash, significantly expanding its reach in the
regulatory technology market.
Verafin, founded in 2003, provides more than 2,000 financial
institutions in North America a cloud-based platform to help detect,
investigate, and report money laundering and financial fraud.
Nasdaq will aim to provide Verafin's technology to the 250 banks,
exchanges, broker-dealers and buy-side organizations, and regulatory
authorities, that use its trade surveillance systems, the company said.
With the deal, the exchange group is doubling down on its push into the
anti-money laundering software sector and furthering its strategy of
repositioning the company as a leading financial technology and data
vendor.
While Nasdaq is best known for operating exchanges in the United States
and globally, it is also a provider of market technology to banks and
other financial institutions.
It has a strong foothold in the trade surveillance software market, as
well as in the trading technology systems sector. It made its first move
in the anti-money laundering software market in September when it
launched artificial intelligence technology to help retail and
commercial banks automate investigations.
"The problem of detecting money laundering and fraud hasn't been solved
very well yet," Valerie Bannert-Thurner, senior vice president and head
of sell-side and buy-side solutions, market technology at Nasdaq, said
in an interview. "With our acquisition we are doubling down on our
belief this as an area that is being disrupted and where we can have a
big impact."
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A view of the exterior of the Nasdaq market site in the Manhattan
borough of New York City, U.S., October 24, 2016. REUTERS/Shannon
Stapleton
Nasdaq's push comes as banks and other financial firms look to automate many of
their more expensive and complex back office processes to reduce costs and
increase efficiency.
This includes compliance and surveillance functions, where costs have been
growing significantly following tougher regulatory crackdowns over the past
decade.
Still, up to $2 trillion is laundered globally each year, representing up to 5%
of global GDP, according to the United Nations.
The acquisition marks another milestone in Nasdaq's effort to diversify its
revenue stream away from trading, where fees have been declining, into areas
such as technology and data.
Nasdaq's revenues from its market technology and investment intelligence
businesses have grown 54% since 2016, and non-trading revenues represent 73% of
the group's overall revenues.
The deal is Nasdaq's largest since its $3.8 billion purchase of Nordic exchange
OMX in 2008.
Nasdaq will finance the transaction, which will add to its earnings per share
beginning in 2022, with a combination of $2.5 billion of debt and cash on hand.
(Reporting by Noor Zainab Hussain in Bengaluru and Anna Irrera in London;
Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila and Mark Potter)
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