WSJ News Exclusive | Dell Reaches Deal to Sell Boomi to TPG, Francisco Partners

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Dell Technologies Inc.

struck a deal to sell its Boomi cloud business to private-equity firms Francisco Partners and TPG, part of a larger reordering of the PC and data-storage giant.

The transaction, announced Sunday, values the Chesterbrook, Pa., cloud-based integration platform at $4 billion including debt.

The Wall Street Journal had earlier reported that Dell was nearing a deal to sell Boomi to the private-equity firms.

Boomi, which Dell acquired in 2010, makes software that helps applications communicate with each other by transferring data between them. It is a player in a fast-growing market known as iPaaS, which stands for integration platform as a service. When a business makes a sale, it might need aspects of that sale to be reflected in other applications such as those that keep tabs on financial forecasts or maintain customer databases. Most business applications aren’t currently able to share data with one another without the help of software like Boomi’s.

In 2016, Francisco Partners teamed up with Elliott Management Corp. to acquire Dell Software Group, which included Boomi as well as the Quest and SonicWall businesses. Dell wasn’t interested in parting with Boomi at the time but has decided to do so now after a broader strategic review that resulted in the announcement last month that it would spin off its 81% stake in

VMware Inc.,

according to people familiar with the matter.

VMware, a major player in the market for cloud software, has a market capitalization of nearly $70 billion, but investors have been frustrated, believing its value hasn’t been reflected in Dell’s share price. While Boomi is fast-growing, it doesn’t produce a lot of profit, the typical metric by which Dell’s shares are valued, the people said.

Investors have cheered Dell’s move to part with VMware, with the stock roughly tripling from its pandemic low in March of last year. The shares closed Friday at $98.33, giving the company a market value of about $75 billion.

Based in San Francisco, Francisco Partners focuses on partnering with technology companies. Founded over 20 years ago, it has made over 300 investments and manages more than $25 billion in assets.

TPG manages more than $91 billion in assets and has offices around the world. The firm is doing the Boomi investment out of its big buyout strategy, known as TPG Capital.

“Both of our firms have really distinguished ourselves in technology carve-outs,” DJ Deb, chief executive of Francisco Partners, said in an interview. “Dell was very focused on who was going to take care of their baby.”

In October, Francisco announced a deal to buy cybersecurity company Forcepoint from

Raytheon Technologies Corp.

and in November said it was buying the international business of automotive-software company

CDK Global Inc.

TPG bought Wind River and a majority stake in

McAfee

LLC from

Intel Corp.

, and it announced a deal in February to buy a stake in DirecTV from

AT&T Inc.

Together, the two firms hope to continue to accelerate Boomi’s growth by investing more in the business.

“Software is eating the world,” said Nehal Raj, a partner at TPG who leads its investments in software. “The average enterprise has about 850 applications, and today, less than 30% of them actually talk to each other.”

Write to Miriam Gottfried at Miriam.Gottfried@wsj.com

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