Bain Capital in talks to buy education-software provider PowerSchool, source says

Reuters

Published May 08, 2024 10:33AM ET

By Anirban Sen and Priyanka G

(Reuters) - Buyout firm Bain Capital is in talks to take education-software provider PowerSchool private, a person familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.

The deal, which is still a few weeks away from getting signed, is likely to value PowerSchool somewhere in the $20s per share, according to the source, who requested anonymity as the discussions are confidential.

At that price, a deal would value PowerSchool at roughly $6 billion, including debt, based on Reuters calculations.

Shares of PowerSchool, which has a market capitalization of about $4.1 billion, jumped as much as 27% in early trading on Wednesday morning after the Wall Street Journal reported on the company's talks with Bain.

A deal for PowerSchool would come at a time when private equity-led buyouts are showing signs of a pickup, following a slowdown last year due to high interest rates that made debt financing for leveraged buyouts more expensive.

Earlier this week, a private equity consortium led by Clearlake Capital and Francisco Partners agreed to acquire the software integrity unit of chip designer Synopsys (NASDAQ:SNPS) for $2.1 billion.

PowerSchool, which is headquartered in Folsom, California, provides cloud-based software for K-12 education in North America. It was unofficially started by Greg Porter as a teenager when he developed record-keeping software at his high school in 1983. The school in California paid Porter and his friend $350 for the program.

Fourteen years later, Porter sold the first version of PowerSchool Student Information System. In 2001, it was acquired by Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), before its ownership changed hands again in 2006 when it was taken over by Pearson.