Permira and Warburg Pincus completed their acquisition of Clearwater Analytics Holdings on undisclosed terms, paying $8.4 billion to delist the Boise-based investment accounting platform. The all-cash transaction values Clearwater at roughly 8.1x its last-twelve-months revenue of approximately $1.04 billion, a premium that reflects the firm's 91% gross retention rate and contractually embedded annual price escalators across 1,300 institutional clients managing $7.6 trillion in assets.
Clearwater operates a cloud-native reconciliation and reporting stack for asset managers, insurers, and pension funds—infrastructure that touches daily NAV calculations, regulatory filings, and performance attribution. The company grew revenue 19% year-over-year in its most recent quarter, driven by expansion into European insurance mandates and cross-sell of its Fixed Income+ module. Public shareholders received $27.00 per share in cash, a 35% premium to Clearwater's unaffected closing price the day before acquisition rumors surfaced in early March. The consortium financed the deal through a mix of equity commitments and roughly $2.1 billion in leveraged debt arranged by Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan, according to regulatory disclosures filed in mid-April.
The delisting removes one of the few pure-play SaaS companies serving institutional allocators from public markets, a category that includes SS&C Technologies, Addepar, and BlackRock's Aladdin division. Permira brings experience from its exits of Genesys and Informatica, while Warburg Pincus holds adjacent positions in Carta and Anchorage Digital—firms that also solve for fragmented reconciliation workflows. The timing matters because Clearwater's public multiple had compressed from 12.7x forward revenue in early 2023 to 6.9x by February, despite unchanged fundamentals, as growth-SaaS valuations contracted across the board. The consortium is betting that Clearwater's sticky contracts and 106% net dollar retention justify higher leverage and longer hold periods than public markets allowed.
Operators should track three follow-on events. First, Clearwater's integration roadmap for its March acquisition of INFUSE, a European regulatory reporting vendor, which adds €48 million in recurring revenue and positions the combined entity for MiFID II and SFDR workflows. Second, Permira's typical playbook includes bolt-on M&A within 18-24 months of closing—likely targets include smaller trade-order management systems or ESG data aggregators that feed into Clearwater's existing rails. Third, the debt structure: with interest coverage ratios near 4.2x at close, refinancing windows open in mid-2026 if Clearwater sustains its 23% EBITDA margins and the leveraged loan market remains accommodative.
Clearwater's largest customer, Vanguard, renewed its contract through 2029 three weeks before the deal closed, locking in $112 million of annual recurring revenue and removing a key refinancing risk. That renewal did not trigger change-of-control provisions.