
Some investors have made a career getting rich off of corporate buyouts. And some investors lose their shirts after a buyout offer is made but fails to close. The latter is now the case of TaskUs, Inc. (NASAQ: TASK). Investors just lost their shirts on the news that a management-led buyout was rejected by shareholders.
Now there is a complicated situation that tactical investors and long-term investors alike will have to figure out. There may be no simple answers here.
TaskUs shares fell about 12.5% to close at $14.96 on Wednesday after not receiving enough votes from its shareholder base to win merger approval. This merger was quite different than hostile takeovers. Now its investors are in a lurch as the stock was lower the next morning as well.
This particular merger was a buyout group that was being led by company executives and by an affiliate (private equity client) of Blackstone Inc. (NYSE: BX). What really leaves shareholders in a lurch is that the company’s response to the no-votes was that it now expects to terminate the proposed mergers and that it would not convene another special meeting to try again. That is a signal that no higher offer will be made, even if there are no assurances management or another group might not make another attempt in the future.
There may be good reason that shareholders were not lined up hand over fist to close this merger. The stock was trading at $14.38 on May 8, 2025 ahead of the go-private offer. The next day it closed at $16.85, with its 7.5 million shares representing more than 20-days of average trading volume. And that was a premium to the $16.50 per share in cash that the buyout group was offering shareholders to sell out and let the company go private. But wait, there is a lot more to chew over here…
It is generally considered that failed mergers, assuming the merger is at a premium to before the announcement, will see the shares fall back toward the pre-merger share price. This merger premium vanishing is generally tied to a loss of confidence and as merger-arbitrage investors unwind their positions. This can be followed by a perceived loss of management credibility and a post-merger distraction for management.
TaskUs Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer Bryce Maddock, and TaskUs Co-Founder and President Jaspar Weir were the executives making the offer with Blackstone. The formal end of the quote said:
“We have appreciated the feedback received from our stockholders since our transaction announcement. We share their confidence in TaskUs and remain committed to transforming our business for the AI era.”
TaskUs may be a harder company to evaluate for investors because the company’s services are spread out. On top of helping the digital customer experience, these are a list of the services provided from its website: AI & Data (AI Safety & Alignment; Data Feedback & Evaluations; Deployment & AI Operations); Autonomous Vehicle Operations; Sales as a Service; Customer Experience & Agentic AI; AI CX Transformation; Trust & Safety; Wellness & Resiliency; Financial Crime & Compliance; and Learning as a Service. In short, or in long, there is just a lot going on all at once.
One key issue which may have undervalued the merger from the start was that TaskUs announced the launch of its Agentic AI Consulting practice to help businesses accelerate into AI-powered automation earlier in 2025. While this was a new effort, stockholders know that anything tied to Agentic AI is a rapid-growth target that has helped many companies ramp revenues rapidly. Unlike Ai announcements from many other companies in 2025, TaskUs did not see its stock price ramp higher from its February 27 news announcement — the stock actually slid lower.
There may have been multiple “other” problems with this merger from the start. Some are circumstantial but other problems may be harder to overcome even if a company making an acquisition cannot predict what the overall stock market is going to perform in a given period. Here are some of those potential problems:
- First and foremost, the buyout offer was only about 15% from before the acquisition offer was made.
- Since that same day before the merger (May 8) the S&P 500 is up about 20% and NASDAQ-100 is up 25%.
- TaskUs shares had already traded as high as $19.60 in 2024.
- This was a $40 stock in part of 2022, and it was a $70 stock in part of 2021.
- A $1.5 billion merger versus a growing revenue stream of more than $1 billion seems low.
- The 2024 reported $1.29 EPS gave the merger value a 13 P/E ratio.
- The merger is valued at only 10-times 2025 estimated EPS, and only about 9.5-times for 2026.
- The proposed buyout price was substantially under its IPO price.
- This was considered a “re-buyout” as Blackstone was behind its 2021 IPO.
- A key shareholder had issued a “no vote” in August with a much higher fair value estimate (see below).
All in all, this takeover just did not seem very bold in comparison to other private buyouts. And as noted herein, the buyout price may have extremely undervalued the company versus what shareholders may be expecting in the years ahead.
One analyst report has been issued by Baird since the failed merger. The firm maintained its Neutral rating, but the firm raised its price target to $18.00 from $16.50 on Thursday. Morgan Stanley had taken its rating down to Equal-Weight with a $16.50 target price (based on the merger) a month earlier, but the firm had issued a “bullish case” valuation of $21.00 if the transaction closed at a higher price — with a bearish case scenario of $12 for the stock.
Multiple potential class action and “shareholder rights” rights firms had already been investigating this merger before the shareholder vote.
Think Investments LP is a long-term investor which holds about 23% ownership in the minority shares of TaskUs (representing 10.7% of the Class A shares and 22.8% of the unaffiliated vote), issued a presentation on August 26 outlining a detailed presentation why it was opposed to the proposed merger. At that time, they signaled a “no vote” was coming and that TaskUs’ fair value was $25.00 per share, that the deal metrics relied upon cherry-picked precedent transactions and public comparables, and other issues.
The press release of the special meeting’s resulted merger termination said: “TaskUs does not plan to convene another special meeting of stockholders and expects to terminate the proposed transaction.” That does not prohibit the buyout group or an outside group from coming back to the table in the future. Then again, there is no assurance another bid is coming either.
After a 12% loss on Wednesday after news of the merger termination, the reaction on Thursday morning was down about 3% more at $14.51. Now investors have to wonder if another merger is potentially viable — or they have to evaluate this company on a standalone basis and wonder what management’s efforts will result in ahead.
DISCLAIMER: The ratings and opinions mentioned above have been tied to each source listed. Please note that Tactical Bulls does not maintain any formal rating or price target on TaskUs, and Tactical Bulls maintains no long-term views of upside or downside ahead.
Categories: Investing