Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund has submitted a $55 billion takeover proposal for Electronic Arts, pushing shares to an all-time high of $204.89 and triggering European Commission antitrust review with a decision expected July 30. The bid values EA at a premium to its current $51.35 billion market capitalization, suggesting an offer price materially above recent trading ranges for the Battlefield and FIFA publisher.
The European Union opened formal review proceedings in mid-May, standard procedure for transactions of this scale involving pan-European commercial gaming operations. EA generates approximately 28 percent of annual revenue from EMEA markets, with FIFA Ultimate Team micro-transactions representing the primary regulatory sensitivity around consumer data and competitive dynamics in digital sports entertainment. The July 30 deadline is Phase I review, meaning the Commission could extend scrutiny into a six-month Phase II inquiry if initial findings raise material competitive concerns.
This marks the third multi-billion-dollar gaming M&A transaction since Microsoft's $69 billion Activision acquisition closed in October, and the first sovereign wealth fund attempt to acquire a top-tier Western game publisher outright. PIF has taken minority stakes in Nintendo, Capcom, and Nexon since 2022, but full ownership of EA would hand Saudi Arabia direct control over approximately 700 million monthly active players across console, PC, and mobile platforms. The bid structure remains undisclosed—whether all-cash, mixed consideration, or management rollover—but PIF's $925 billion in assets under management eliminates financing risk as a variable.
Operators should monitor three specific developments. First, any FTC or CFIUS filing in the United States, likely within ten business days if the deal contemplates structural governance that preserves US operating independence. Second, Tencent's response; the Shenzhen-based publisher holds dormant anti-dilution rights in certain EA publishing agreements and may seek to match or block on commercial grounds. Third, EA's quarterly earnings call on May 6, where management typically addresses strategic reviews if a transaction is formally on the table. If management stays silent, the deal is either already agreed in principle or facing internal board resistance.
The $204.89 share price represents a 19 percent gain year-to-date, but remains 7 percent below the intraday high from November 2021 when EA last fielded acquisition interest from a consortium including Apollo and KKR. That round collapsed on valuation disagreements around live-services revenue durability. This time, the buyer has near-infinite duration capital and no LP return hurdles.