Britain's IG to buy tastytrade for $1 billion in U.S.
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[January 21, 2021] By
Muvija M and Indranil Sarkar
(Reuters) - Britain's IG said it plans to
buy U.S. trading platform tastytrade for $1 billion, venturing into
North America after a stellar year for the new breed of retail
investment brokerages.
Coronavirus-driven volatility has fuelled a surge in revenue and profit
for IG and British rivals including CMC Markets and Plus500, while
Robinhood.com and its app-based trading have risen to prominence in the
United States.
IG, which dates back to 1974, said on Thursday that tastytrade
shareholders will get $300 million in cash and 61 million IG shares,
valued at $700 million, in the London-listed company's biggest deal to
date.
News of the planned acquisition, part of June Felix's diversification
strategy since becoming IG Chief Executive in late 2018, saw IG shares
fall 2.3% by 0812 GMT.
The company, which also reported a 129% increase in first-half earnings,
said it expected the deal would be low single- digit accretive to its
adjusted earnings per share in the first full year after closing.
Half of the cash portion of the purchase would be funded through company
resources and the rest through new debt facilities, IG said.
IG's expansion into the United States coincides with the arrival of
President Joe Biden, who was sworn into office on Wednesday.
Wall Street is awash with speculation about the kind of financial sector
regulatory changes his administration might seek, while Janet Yellen,
Biden's Treasury Secretary nominee, has also raised the possibility of
taxing unrealized capital gains.
UK regulators have already tightened certain rules to ensure "mom and
pop" investors are protected from big losses when betting on complex
financial instruments some retail traders do not fully understand.
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Traders look at
financial information on computer screens on the IG Index trading
floor in London, Britain February 6, 2018. REUTERS/Simon Dawson
Massachusetts securities regulators have accused Robinhood of engaging in
aggressive tactics to attract inexperienced investors.
'10-YEAR WAIT'
Tastytrade, which was founded a decade ago, has more than 105,000 active trading
accounts and some 900,000 unique registrations, while its YouTube channel boasts
206,000 subscribers and 8 hours of live programming a day.
By comparison, Robinhood, which had 13 million user accounts in May and was
valued at $11.2 billion as of December, has 3,560 subscribers on the video
sharing platform.
The retail share trading boom seen in 2020 has not shown any signs of waning in
2021.
Illustrating the pent-up demand, Signal Advance's share price skyrocketed to $70
from 70 cents in under a week after it was mistaken for a similarly named
unlisted texting app used by billionaire mogul Elon Musk.
Tastytrade's senior leadership will stay on after the takeover, which the
companies expect to close in the first quarter of the next financial year.
"While our long-term goal has always been to go global, we waited almost 10
years until we found the right partner and perfect match," Co-CEO of tastytrade
Tom Sosnoff said.
(Reporting by Indranil Sarkar and Muvija M in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna
Chandra Eluri, Patrick Graham, Alexander Smith and Sinead Cruise/Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)
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