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Bending Spoons to Acquire Vimeo in $1.38 Billion Deal, Taking Platform Private

Vimeo announced Wednesday it will be acquired by Italian app developer Bending Spoons in a deal worth about $1.38 billion, ending its four-year run as a publicly traded company.

Under the agreement, Vimeo shareholders will receive $7.85 per share in cash, representing a 63% premium to the stock’s previous close. Shares surged more than 60% to $7.74 following the announcement.

Vimeo, spun out of Barry Diller’s IAC, has struggled since its 2021 IPO, losing around 90% of its market value. Despite a surge in popularity during the pandemic, the company has faced mounting competition from YouTube and lower-cost enterprise rivals.

Analysts expect Bending Spoons to implement aggressive cost-cutting and revenue-focused strategies to leverage Vimeo’s technology assets. Analyst Paolo Pescatore noted the deal could mark a turning point, given Bending Spoons’ track record of revitalizing acquired firms.

The Milan-based company, valued at $2.55 billion last year, owns apps such as Evernote and Remini, and acquired WeTransfer in 2023. Vimeo will become its largest acquisition to date. CEO Philip Moyer said the focus will be on expanding self-service tools, OTT streaming via Vimeo Streaming, and enterprise solutions.

Vimeo has already downsized, cutting nearly 10% of its workforce this year after layoffs of 11% in 2023 and 6% in 2022.

Allen & Company LLC advised Vimeo, while J.P. Morgan, Wells Fargo, and BNP Paribas advised Bending Spoons. The transaction is expected to close in Q4 2025, with Bending Spoons seen as a potential U.S. IPO candidate in the near future.

Cadence Design to Acquire Hexagon’s Engineering Unit for $3.16 Billion

Cadence Design Systems (CDNS.O) announced on Thursday that it will acquire the design and engineering (D&E) business of Sweden’s Hexagon AB (HEXAb.ST) for €2.7 billion ($3.16 billion). The U.S.-based chip design software leader will finance the deal with 70% cash and 30% in newly issued shares to Hexagon.

Cadence, whose clients include Nvidia and Qualcomm, is a global leader in electronic computer-aided design (ECAD) tools that underpin chip development and verification. By acquiring Hexagon’s D&E unit, which specializes in structural and multibody dynamics simulation, Cadence will expand into adjacent markets such as aerospace and automotive engineering.

Hexagon’s D&E division generated nearly €265 million in revenue in 2024 and employs over 1,100 people worldwide. Its customer roster includes industry heavyweights such as Volkswagen Group, BMW, and Lockheed Martin, providing Cadence with a stronger foothold in the automotive and aerospace sectors.

The deal builds on Cadence’s acquisition of BETA CAE Systems in 2024 for $1.24 billion, further strengthening its simulation and engineering software capabilities. The Hexagon transaction is expected to close in Q1 2026, subject to regulatory approval. Cadence has agreed to pay a reverse termination fee of up to €175 million if the deal falls through.

With this acquisition, Cadence is positioning itself as not only a key player in semiconductor design software but also as a broader engineering solutions provider, extending its reach beyond chips into high-performance industries reliant on advanced simulations.

Accenture to Acquire Australian Cybersecurity Firm CyberCX in $650 Million Deal

Accenture (ACN.N) announced on Thursday that it will acquire Australian cybersecurity company CyberCX in what represents its largest-ever deal in the sector. The Australian Financial Review reported the transaction is valued at over A$1 billion ($650 million).

The deal highlights the growing demand for advanced cybersecurity services as businesses face increasingly sophisticated digital threats. Australia has seen a series of high-profile cyberattacks, including the 2022 Optus breach that exposed data of up to 10 million users, and a Medibank hack affecting nearly 10 million customers. In July, Qantas Airways also reported a breach of one of its call centres, impacting six million customers.

Melbourne-based CyberCX was created in 2019 through the merger of 12 smaller cybersecurity firms backed by private equity firm BGH Capital, which is selling the company. CyberCX employs around 1,400 staff and operates security operations centres across Australia and New Zealand, with additional offices in London and New York.

The company is led by John Paitaridis, formerly managing director of Optus Business, and Chief Strategy Officer Alastair MacGibbon, who previously served as Australia’s national cybersecurity coordinator. Their experience is notable given Optus’ 2022 data breach that compromised names, dates of birth, addresses, phone numbers, emails, and passport and driver’s license information.

Accenture has been actively expanding its security services, completing 20 acquisitions in the sector since 2015, including Brazilian firm Morphus, MNEMO Mexico, and Spain-based Innotec Security. Domestically, Accenture signed a $700 million collaborative agreement with Telstra in February to implement AI capabilities across the telecommunications company.