Yazılar

Ant Group Says Bright Smart Acquisition on Track Despite Delay Reports

China’s Ant Group has confirmed that procedures for its acquisition of Bright Smart Securities & Commodities Group (1428.HK) are proceeding as planned, following reports suggesting the deal could face delays due to increased regulatory scrutiny.

Shares of Bright Smart fell as much as 26.2% to HK$10.26 on Friday after the Wall Street Journal reported that mainland Chinese regulators might review the transaction more closely. In a filing, Bright Smart said it had observed media reports of a potential delay but reaffirmed that discussions with the relevant authorities are moving forward.

Under the agreement, Ant will acquire a 50.55% controlling stake in Bright Smart Securities for HK$2.81 billion ($359.37 million), according to a filing in April. Ant, founded by billionaire Jack Ma and 33% owned by Alibaba, operates China’s widely used mobile payments platform Alipay.

The deal comes after Chinese regulators blocked Ant’s $37 billion IPO in 2020 and imposed a nearly $1 billion fine following a speech by Ma criticizing financial oversight. Ant is currently working to obtain a financial holding company licence, a step that could support its long-term IPO ambitions.

Rumble Eyes $1.2 Billion Deal for Germany’s Northern Data

Video-sharing platform Rumble (RUM.O), which hosts former U.S. President Donald Trump’s Truth Social, is exploring a $1.17 billion acquisition of German tech firm Northern Data (NB2.DE) to expand its global AI cloud infrastructure.

The potential deal would give Rumble control of Northern Data’s Taiga cloud business, which owns a vast inventory of high-performance Nvidia GPUs (20,480 H100s and over 2,000 H200s), as well as its Ardent data center operations. Rumble plans to integrate these into its existing services.

As part of the transaction, Tether, the world’s largest stablecoin issuer, would become a key customer with a multi-year GPU purchase commitment. Tether, which already owns 48% of Rumble and 54% of Northern Data, invested $775 million in Rumble in December 2023. Under the proposed structure, Tether would emerge as the largest single holder of Rumble’s Class A common stock, while CEO Chris Pavlovski would retain majority voting control.

Rumble is considering offering 2.319 shares for each Northern Data share, valuing the German company at around $18.3 per share—a 32% discount to its recent Frankfurt closing price. If accepted, Northern Data shareholders would hold about 33.3% of Rumble.

Northern Data’s board confirmed it is reviewing the proposal and remains open to discussions, though both companies stressed that talks may not result in a formal offer. Meanwhile, Northern Data would sell its crypto mining unit, Peak Mining, and use proceeds to repay part of a €575 million loan from Tether.

Rumble, which went public in 2021 through a SPAC deal, counts Peter Thiel and Narya Capital (co-founded by U.S. Vice President JD Vance) among its early investors.

If completed, the acquisition would significantly boost Rumble’s AI cloud capabilities and deepen ties between Rumble, Northern Data, and Tether in the fast-growing GPU-driven infrastructure market.

Prosus Secures EU Antitrust Approval for Just Eat Takeaway Bid

Dutch tech investor Prosus has received conditional approval from the European Union for its €4.1 billion ($4.76 billion) acquisition of Just Eat Takeaway, after agreeing to reduce its significant stake in rival Delivery Hero.

The European Commission confirmed that Naspers, Prosus’ majority owner, will lower its 27.4% holding in Delivery Hero to below a minimal threshold within 12 months. Naspers also committed not to exercise voting rights, increase its stake, or influence the management and supervisory boards of Delivery Hero.

Prosus announced the takeover plan in February, aiming to leverage its artificial intelligence expertise to strengthen Just Eat Takeaway, Europe’s largest meal delivery platform. With the EU clearance, this marks the final regulatory approval required for the deal, which is set to close by October 1, provided all offer conditions are met.

Prosus CEO Fabricio Bloisi described the acquisition as a step toward building a “true European tech champion” in the food delivery sector. EU antitrust chief Teresa Ribera emphasized that the ruling safeguards competition and consumer choice, warning that the Commission will continue to take a hard line against anti-competitive practices.

The approval comes months after Delivery Hero and its subsidiary Glovo were fined €329 million for cartel activities, including market division and non-poaching agreements. Once completed, the deal will make Prosus the fourth-largest global food delivery company, behind Meituan, DoorDash, and Uber, according to ING analysts.