Eventbrite, Inc. (EB) is heading for the exit. The event ticketing and management platform announced Tuesday that it's being acquired by Bending Spoons in an all-cash deal valued at roughly $500 million. Shareholders are getting $4.50 per share, which sounds modest until you realize it's an 82% premium over where the stock had been trading recently.
The Deal Terms
The math is straightforward: every Eventbrite shareholder receives $4.50 in cash for each share they own. That per-share price reflects an 82% premium over Eventbrite's 60-day volume-weighted average share price as of market close on December 1, which gives you a sense of how beaten down the stock had been before this announcement.
The transaction is expected to close sometime in the first half of 2026, pending the usual regulatory approvals and shareholder vote. Once it's done, Eventbrite will go private and its stock will disappear from public exchanges. No more quarterly earnings calls, no more Wall Street scrutiny—just life as a privately held company under Bending Spoons' ownership.
What Management Is Saying
Luca Ferrari, CEO and co-founder of Bending Spoons, framed the acquisition as a way to accelerate innovation: "Joining forces with Bending Spoons will accelerate innovation and strengthen Eventbrite's tools and resources to bring even more people together through shared live experiences for many years to come."
Eventbrite co-founder, CEO, and executive chair Julia Hartz got a bit more philosophical about what the company has accomplished: "Eventbrite helped unlock something profoundly human: the need to gather, to connect, and to build community around the passions we share. What began as an unmet need – to empower local creators and community leaders to bring people together – has grown into a global movement that has shaped millions of meaningful experiences and helped event-goers find their people in moments that matter most."
Recent Financial Performance
For context, Eventbrite reported third-quarter results last month that were mixed. The company posted adjusted earnings per share of $0.00, which actually beat analyst estimates of a $0.04 loss. Revenue came in at $71.743 million, just slightly below the $71.852 million forecast. Not terrible, but not exactly lighting the world on fire either.
Market Reaction
The stock market loved the news. Eventbrite shares jumped 78.63% to $4.43 at the time of publication on Tuesday, hitting a new 52-week high. That's what an 82% premium will do—it gets investors pretty close to the buyout price immediately as the market prices in the deal's likelihood of closing.