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April 29 (Reuters) – Spanish travel technology firm Amadeus on Wednesday announced a plan to acquire French biometrics company Idemia ‌Public Security, which is owned by Advent International, for ‌1.2 billion euros ($1.40 billion) in an all-cash deal.

Amadeus, which operates the world’s ​largest travel booking system, described the acquisition as immediately earnings-accretive, expecting it to accelerate its growth in airports and border checkpoints while enhancing the firm’s global presence.

The combination of the two businesses ‌should increase Amadeus’ ⁠total addressable market, or total revenue opportunity, to 50 billion euros from 41 billion, it said.

“Potentially ⁠a good deal, and a fit with Amadeus’ portfolio,” Bernstein analysts said in a note to investors, adding that the acquisition ​will likely ​reduce the probability of share ​buybacks for the second half ‌of the year.

Amadeus shares were down 0.65% at 48.9 euros in morning trading on Wednesday.

The closing of the deal is expected in mid-2027 and it includes a potential earn-out of up to 150 million euros on top of the price.

Amadeus ‌expected the acquisition to result in ​high single-digit revenue growth with expanding ​operating margins, and provide ​annual cost synergies of 50 million euros in ‌the medium term.

IPS employs around 3,300 ​people worldwide ​and serves more than 600 public and private sector customers. Aside from passenger processing, IPS works with other regulated ​environments such as ‌access control and government-grade biometric identification and data solutions.

($1 = ​0.8548 euros)

(Reporting by Javi West Larrañaga in Gdansk, editing ​by Louise Heavens, Kirsten Donovan)

 

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