JACKSONVILLE, Fla., – Fidelity National Information Services is buying Worldpay for about $35 billion with financial transactions increasingly moving online.
The online payment industry has been consolidating as companies attempt to scale up to better handle transactions globally, and to cut costs as start-ups challenge established players like Fidelity, often referred to as FIS, and Worldpay.
Under the deal, FIS will own 53 percent of the combined company, which will keep the name Fidelity National Information Services Inc. Worldpay shareholders will own approximately 47 percent.
The combined company will be based in Jacksonville, Florida, where FIS is headquartered. Norcross will continue as CEO and chairman. Worldpay executive chairman and CEO Charles Drucker will become executive vice chairman.
Fidelity National Information Services is one of three Jacksonville companies on the Fortune list of the world's top 500 companies. The other two are Fidelity National Financial and CSX.
Worldpay, a British company, was acquired for more than $10 billion less than two years ago by Vantiv, based in Cincinnati, Ohio. That combined company is what FIS said it would acquire Monday. It's the biggest acquisition for FIS since it spent more than $5 billion for SunGard in 2015.
Worldpay processes more than 40 billion transactions a year and supports more than 300 payment types across more than 120 currencies. Combined, Worldpay and FIS would have had 2018 revenue of $12.3 billion.
With Worldpay's debt included, the companies on Monday put the deal's value at $43 billion. They expect organic revenue growth of between 6 percent and 9 percent through 2021.
"Scale matters in our rapidly changing industry," said Gary Norcross, chairman and CEO at FIS. "Upon closing later this year, our two powerhouse organizations will combine forces to offer a customer-driven combination of scale, global presence and the industry's broadest range of global financial solutions."
Worldpay Inc. shareholders will receive 0.9287 FIS shares and $11.00 in cash for each Worldpay share they own.
The deal, with regulatory and shareholder approval, would likely close in the second half of the year.
Shares of Worldpay Inc. jumped more than 10 percent in early trading Monday. Shares of Fidelity slipped less than 1 percent.