That's great insight. I did not know Advent was a major investor. Quick assumption made from the $8.3B selling price with thousands of dealers vs. $3.5B recent Tekion valuation with hundreds.I hope they feel it's a smart decision. Brian K came into CDK promising a lot of R&D around Fortellis but not much has really materialized there. Really, he carved up the company and sold the DMS business along with the Roadster acquisition. So rather than becoming something more of a Tekion, they've stuck to the monopoly "monolith" model. I think the Tekion model is better, but only as long as the partner software is really great.
FWIW, Advent is a major investor in Tekion, and they also purchased the Digital business from CDK, now known as Sincro Digital.
Wait for the cuts to start happening. If you read the Brookfield website (https://bbu.brookfield.com/ ) you will see in writing
that Brookfields stated objective is a return of 15 to 20 per cent annually on any investment "Brookfield Business Partners' investment objective is to generate long-term returns of 15%-20% on our investments." At 8 billion they need 1.2 to 1.6 bil annual return.
A group of automotive industry professionals speculate about potential acquirers of CDK Global, suggesting candidates like venture capital firms, Cox Automotive, Microsoft, Salesforce, and even Amazon before the actual deal is announced. The thread concludes when a member shares breaking news that Brookfield Business Partners acquired CDK in an $8.3 billion deal, with another member revealing that Cox Automotive had competed in the bidding war. The discussion also touches on how this acquisition might impact Tekion, a competing automotive software company.