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Aon to sell benefits outsourcing unit to Blackstone for $4.8 billion: Sources

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Aon to sell benefits outsourcing unit to Blackstone for $4.8 billion: Sources

(Reuters) — Private equity firm Blackstone Group L.P. has agreed to acquire insurance broker Aon P.L.C.'s employee benefits outsourcing business for around $4.8 billion, people familiar with the matter said on Thursday.

The deal gives Blackstone ownership of a business that processes work benefits for 15% of the U.S. population.

It also allows Aon to exit a mature, capital-intensive outsourcing business, allowing it to invest in growth areas beyond its core insurance brokerage operations, such as cybersecurity and health insurance.

Blackstone prevailed over buyout firm Clayton Dubilier & Rice L.L.C. in an auction for the benefits administration and human resources business process outsourcing platform of Aon, providing assurances it can successfully carve out the unit, the people said. The deal will be announced by Friday, the people added.

The sources asked not to be identified because the negotiations are confidential. Aon and CD&R declined to comment, while Blackstone could not immediately be reached for comment.

Aon took on the benefits outsourcing unit it has agreed to sell to Blackstone as part of its acquisition in 2010 of Hewitt Associates Inc. for $4.9 billion.

“The potential divestiture of the outsourcing business moves Aon away from the most mature and lower growth area of the business. Selling the benefits administration business would therefore be consistent with the actions to improve the business mix,” William Blair analysts wrote in a note on Jan. 23, after Reuters reported that Aon was in talks to sell the unit.

Private equity firms have been prolific investors in businesses that help companies cut costs by outsourcing large parts of their administrative functions, since such operations can generate strong cash flows. A few years after they invest, they seek to sell ownership of those assets at a big profit.

In September, Canadian pension fund manager Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec said it would acquire a $500 million minority stake in Sedgwick Claims Management Services Inc, which specializes in workers' compensation and is owned by buyout firms KKR & Co L.P. and Stone Point Capital L.L.C.

In another example, Blackstone and Singaporean sovereign wealth fund GIC invested $750 million in 2014 to obtain minority stakes in Kronos Inc., a workforce management solutions company controlled by buyout firm Hellman & Friedman L.L.C.

 

 

 

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