The Inside Story of an Activist Investor’s Fight for Travelport


Skift Take

Few companies other than activist investor Elliott Management expressed a serious interest in acquiring Travelport. Elliott twice lost potential private equity partners after they reviewed Travelport's books. The deal price is underwhelming, and that's a signal that some things haven't been going the company's way.

Elliott Management won. Wednesday was the last day for travel technology giant Travelport to shop for rival bids to Elliott's $4.4 billion buyout offer. The companies have not publicized a better offer. Elliott, a $34 billion hedge fund led by boardroom scourge Paul Singer, will use a private equity arm, Evergreen, for the transaction. It will also partner with private equity firm Siris in a quest to take Langley, UK-based Travelport, the travel tech and travel agent distribution company, private. However, the road to the deal was pot-holed. Elliott wanted a partner to split the risks. It found one, but when that unnamed partner saw Travelport's books, it balked and ran, according to a Travelport Securities and Exchange Commission filing about the run-up to the deal. The same thing happened again over the summer with a different unnamed partner. It wasn't until the fall that Elliott found Siris. Four other financial entities kept their interest limited to making phone calls.