Nasdaq raises $1.90 billion via US bond markets to pay for its purchase of Verafin

Darren Sinden

Nasdaq’s newly issued 10-year bond offers investors a yield of around 1.69% and are rated Baa2 by Moodys and BBB by S&P Global.

Nasdaq index 5000 pts

Stock exchange operator Nasdaq has tapped the bond markets to raise money to help fund its acquisition of Verafin, which was announced back in mid November.

Nasdaq has raised an impressive US$1.9 billion through the issue of three bonds including a 10 year tranche that priced just 75 basis points above the US 10 year treasury bond.

Verafin is a specialist in anti-financial crime and Nasdaq is paying $2.75 billion to acquire the business a move that its hopes will allow it to develop a global SaaS product aimed specifically at detecting and preventing financial crimes.

Verafin, which is based in Newfoundland on Canada’s east coast was founded back in 2003 and provides its services to more than 2000 US financial institutions via cloud-based platforms, which help them to detect track and report money laundering and financial fraud.

Nasdaq intends to combine Verafin with its existing Nasdaq Trade and Market Surveillance platforms alongside its buy-side compliance capabilities, which it supplies to around 250 banks and broker-dealers

Nasdaq’s newly issued 10-year bond offers investors a yield of around 1.69% and are rated Baa2 by Moodys and BBB by S&P Global.

Nasdaq didn’t specifically comment on the fundraising but one is forced to wonder why a business that makes its living through the listing and trading of equities chose to tap the debt markets rather than issue new shares to fund the deal?

After all Nasdaq shares have risen by just over +20% year to date and with a current market cap of $21.08 billion raising the $1.90 billion would have represented a relatively modest issuance to a business, which, is 72.59% owned by institutional shareholders.

No doubt Nasdaq’s management has a rationale for that decision, and of course, with interest rates so close to zero in the US, debt is a very cheap currency with which to fund expansion and acquisition, though perhaps we might have expected Nasdaq to wave the flag for the equity markets.

Nasdaq is just one of a number of exchanges which are investing in their data and data services capabilities in order to diversify their income streams away from listing and trading revenues.

The purchase of Verafin is still subject to regulatory approval and one of Nasdaq’s major rivals, the London Stock Exchange Group, recently received European Union approval for its $27 billion purchase of market data and trading platform provider Refinitiv, which is 45% owned by Thomson Reuters.

The deal, which will catapult the LSE into the top tier of market data and trading platform providers, is expected to close in Q1 2021, after which the London Stock Exchange could well find itself going head to head with the market leader Bloomberg.

Read this next

Market News, Tech and Fundamental, Technical Analysis

Solana Technical Analysis Report 25 April, 2024

Solana cryptocurrency can be expected to fall further toward the next support level 130.00, target price for the completion of the active impulse wave (i).

Digital Assets

Morgan Stanley to sell bitcoin ETFs to clients

Morgan Stanley may soon allow its 15,000 brokers to recommend bitcoin ETFs to their clients, as reported by AdvisorHub.

Digital Assets

Masa Announces Comprehensive AI Developer Ecosystem with 13 Dynamic Partners Focused on Leveraging Decentralized Data and Large Language Models

In a groundbreaking development, Masa, the global leader in decentralized AI and Large Language Models (LLMs), proudly announces the launch of its AI Developer Ecosystem, partnering with 13 visionary projects.

Financewire

Kinesis Mint becomes the official partner for the House of Mandela

Kinesis Mint, the certified independent precious metals mint and refinery of Kinesis, the monetary system backed by 1:1 allocated gold and silver, has been appointed the exclusive coin producer for the House of Mandela.

Chainwire

Kadena Announces Annelise Osborne as Chief Business Officer

Kadena, the only scalable Layer-1 Proof-of-Work blockchain, expands its leadership team by onboarding Annelise Osborne as Kadena’s new Chief Business Officer (CBO).

Fintech

TNS brings full-stack market data management to EMEA

“We are also delighted to have Ben Myers join our London-based TNS Financial Markets team as Head of Strategic Sales for EMEA, to bolster our presence in the region.”

Chainwire

Velocity Labs and Ramp Network facilitate fiat to crypto onramp on Polkadot via Asset Hub support

Velocity Labs is proud to announce a fiat to crypto onramp using Ramp Network through the integration of Asset Hub. Through it, Ramp will be able to service any parachain in the Polkadot ecosystem.

Executive Moves

INFINOX hires Mayne Ayliffe as Global Head of HR

“I look forward to working with our teams around the world to develop a strategic HR agenda that supports high performance and is centred on human motivation.”

Fintech

Sterling to provide risk and margin support for fixed income

“Firms must have the tools to effectively manage their risk across all asset classes. As yields rise, we see more exposure from clients in the fixed income space. We understand their need to measure and mitigate risk in a highly regulated environment.”

<