Electronic Arts closed up 15% after unverified reports surfaced that the company is nearing a going-private transaction valued north of $50 billion. No bidder, banker, or timeline has been confirmed by the company or any named buyer. The stock moved on air.
The report landed during a period when large-cap software targets have drawn interest from private equity consortia and sovereign wealth vehicles seeking predictable cash flows. EA generates roughly $7.4 billion in annual revenue, with 60% coming from recurring live-service revenue in franchises including FIFA, Madden, and Apex Legends. Operating margins run in the mid-30s. The company carries $1.2 billion in net debt, meaning any take-private would require roughly $51 billion in equity and debt financing at current valuation.
The share reaction itself has already compressed the deal math. At the closing price, EA now trades at approximately 5.8x trailing revenue and 24x forward earnings. A standard 25-30% premium from pre-rumor levels would push total consideration past $54 billion, a size that would require either a multi-sponsor consortium or a hybrid structure involving a strategic buyer and financial co-investors. The financing market for leveraged buyouts above $40 billion remains narrow. Apollo Global Management, KKR, Blackstone, and Silver Lake have all deployed into software over the past eighteen months, but none has led a transaction of this magnitude since the rate cycle turned. Sovereign funds including PIF and Mubadala have participated in gaming infrastructure deals but have not taken majority control of a publicly traded gaming publisher.
EA's board has not announced a strategic review. The company last reported earnings in early February, reaffirming full-year guidance and announcing no material shift in capital allocation. Insider selling over the past six months has been routine, with no cluster sales in the weeks preceding the rumor. If the report reflects an active process, the timeline would likely extend into the third quarter given regulatory review in the U.S., EU, and China. If the report is speculative or premature, the stock will give back a portion of today's gain within the next ten trading days.
Allocators should monitor EA's disclosure schedule for an 8-K filing or a board statement within the next 72 hours. If neither appears, the move is noise. If a process is confirmed, watch for named bidders, proposed leverage ratios, and any indication that Tencent or Sony has entered the conversation. Both have appetite for Western studios and the balance sheets to anchor a bid. EA's next earnings call is scheduled for early May, which would serve as the company's first mandated public forum if this deal remains unannounced.
The company has not filed an 8-K as of market close. Until it does, this is a $7.5 billion market cap move built on a single sourced report with no corroboration.