By Joshua Franklin
NEW YORK (Reuters) – Shareholders of Far Point
The vote caps months of wrangling between Third Point and the private equity owners of Global Blue, which Far Point had agreed to acquire in January but has since seen its business suffer due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Holders of roughly 67.7% of Far Point shares voted in favor of the deal. Just over 50% support was required to green light the deal.
Investors with 48.7 million shares opted to redeem their stock to reclaim the initial $10 per share investment made at the time of the Far Point initial public offering in 2018.
Global Blue processes payments made by international travelers on luxury good purchases at airports and has been hit by the global decline in air travel.
The deal was thrown into doubt in May when Far Point changed its recommendation to shareholders and asked them to vote against the deal.
Then in July private equity firm Silver Lake, which owns Global Blue together with Partners Group Holding AG, offered a string of concessions to Far Point, including an offer not to issue a pre-transaction dividend of 154 million euros.
A compromise was announced on Aug. 16, with Silver Lake and Partners Group agreeing to take a smaller cash payout in the deal and instead receiving additional shares in the new Global Blue company.
Far Point is a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) which raised $550 million through an initial public offering (IPO) in 2018 to merge with an unspecified technology company.
Upon closing of the deal, Global Blue will become a publicly listed company on the New York Stock Exchange.
(Reporting by Joshua Franklin in New York; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)