Subscribe

Aon to purchase Willis Towers for $30 billion

handshake Aon buys Willis Towers Watson

The deal will combine the world's second- and third-biggest insurance brokerages

Aon Plc agreed to buy Willis Towers Watson in an almost $30 billion transaction that combines the world’s second- and third-biggest insurance brokerages.

The all-stock deal, the largest ever for the industry, comes almost exactly a year after previous talks between the two companies broke down. Aon Chief Executive Greg Case and CFO Christa Davies will lead the combined company, according to a statement Monday.

Brokerages, which help connect businesses looking for coverage with insurers, have been aggressively merging to diversify, boost commissions and serve customers who increasingly want to deal with fewer intermediaries. Marsh & McLennan Cos.. the largest broker, bought Jardine Lloyd Thompson Group Plc last year for $5.7 billion. Willis Towers was itself formed in 2016 in an $8.9 billion merger.

The Aon deal “combines two highly complementary businesses into a technology-enabled global platform that is more relevant and responsive to client needs,” the companies said in the statement.

Willis Towers investors will receive 1.08 Aon shares for each of their shares, with existing Aon investors owning about 63% of the company once the deal is completed. Willis Towers Watson shareholders will get about $231.99 a share in stock. That’s 16% higher than the company’s closing price on Friday.

Last year, Aon and Willis Towers Watson pulled the plug on a proposed combination less than 24 hours after preliminary talks leaked. A Bloomberg News report thrust the discussions into the public, making it difficult for Aon to move forward because it was still refining the terms of its offer, people familiar with the matter said at the time.

Irish regulations forced the disclosure of early-stage talks last year. Aon said at the time that it reserved the right within 12 months to set aside its announcement that it wasn’t intending to pursue a deal. While Aon was restricted from reaching out to Willis for at least a year, Willis was free to approach its pursuer, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Earnings impact

The deal will add to earnings in the first full year of the combination, and provide annual pretax synergies and cost reductions of about $800 million by the third year, according to the statement. Willis Towers CEO John Haley will become executive chairman.

“We’re very confident in Aon’s ability to build shareholder value from this combination over time,” analysts at Keefe Bruyette & Woods said in a note to clients.

Aon, which plans to keep its operating headquarters in London, fell 11% to $190.91 in early New York trading at 8:08 a.m. Willis Towers increased 1.3% to $202.25.

Aon was advised by Credit Suisse Group while Willis Towers Watson worked with Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

[More: Retirement plan adviser M&A market poised to explode]

Related Topics: ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Banking giant hoping for “global resolution” to drug-money probes

The financial titan’s CEO urges employees to “hold heads high” as it faces anti-money-laundering actions from multiple regulators.

Cracks are showing in private credit, says Moody’s

The ratings agency sees a potential reckoning as “realities of higher interest rates” erode credit quality and create performance challenges.

S&P 500 sees best three-day rally since November

Hopes of Fed rate cuts boosted equities again Monday.

High-tech market makers push deeper into fixed income

Firms such as Citadel, Jane Street aim to disrupt Wall Street domination.

Wealth management unit helps propel UBS back to profit

Net income smashed analysts’ expectations for first quarter.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print