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Thoma Bravo has wasted no time getting a jump on 2019.

The tech-focused buyout juggernaut completed its $950 million purchase of application security business Veracode from Broadcom on the first day of the year. Ten days later, Thoma Bravo finalized its acquisition of cybersecurity business Imperva for roughly $2.1 billion. And at the end of the month, the firm closed its 13th flagship fund on $12.6 billion, its biggest vehicle ever, topping a predecessor that brought in $7.6 billion in 2016 and joining an elite group of private equity firms that have raised $10 billion or more for buyout funds this decade.

Now, in its latest move, the Chicago-based investor has agreed to take mortgage software maker Ellie Mae private in a deal worth some $3.7 billion. Thoma Bravo will pay $99 per share in cash for the company, marking a 47% premium to its average closing share price over the 30 days ended February 1 and a roughly 21% premium to its Monday close. Based in Pleasanton, CA, Ellie Mae will now have a 35-day go-shop period to seek a better deal; otherwise, the buyout is expected to close in 2Q or 3Q.

Founded in 1997, Ellie Mae is the creator of a cloud-based platform used by banks, credit unions and mortgage companies to originate loans, with a client list that includes powerful US government-backed entities Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. (Despite its similar name, Ellie Mae has no direct link to either company or to the government). Over the past eight years, the company has been on an incredible upward trajectory, driven by low interest rates and the recovery of the housing market. When Ellie Mae went public back in 2011, it raised a modest $45 million and established an initial market value south of $150 million—or about 25 times less than its valuation in the Thoma Bravo deal.

Thoma Bravo has had an impressive upward climb of its own, with its 35 completed private equity deals in 2018 representing a YoY increase of nearly 60%, according to the PitchBook Platform. And the Ellie Mae deal is right in line with Thoma Bravo’s usual preferences: Since the start of 2010, more than 80% of the firm’s PE deals have come in the IT sector.

Read More – www.pitchbook.com

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