OneStream Inc. (OS) is heading back to private life. The financial software company announced Tuesday that Hg Capital made an offer to acquire the business for $24 per share, and analysts are mostly shrugging their shoulders at the price.
The deal triggered a wave of analyst adjustments. Needham's Scott Berg downgraded OneStream from Buy to Hold and pulled his price target entirely. Rosenblatt Securities analyst Robert Simmons cut his rating from Buy to Neutral while lowering his target from $25 to $24. BTIG's Nick Altmann stood alone, maintaining his Buy rating with a $25 price target.
The Valuation Debate
Berg noted the buyout came after "months of chatter around a take-private transaction." He characterized the deal as offering "an acceptable valuation given the company's current growth rate." Translation: It's fair, not fantastic.
The bigger story here involves KKR & Co Inc. (KKR), OneStream's majority shareholder, which has been eyeing the exit door. Berg pointed out there are "uncertainties around revenue growth durability," and he doesn't expect OneStream to field a higher offer.
Simmons from Rosenblatt echoed that sentiment, calling the deal price "fair" despite modest upside potential heading into 2026. He emphasized that a higher bid seems unlikely and noted that "General Atlantic and Tidemark will be minority owners of the joint controlling entity."
Following the Money
Here's some context: KKR poured roughly $500 million into OneStream back in early 2019 at a valuation north of $1 billion. That investment was specifically meant to fund the company's transition to SaaS. Now, several years later, they're cashing out.
Interestingly, shares of OneStream's closest competitors jumped on the news. Both BlackLine Inc. (BL) and Workiva Inc. (WK) saw their stock prices rise following the takeover announcement, suggesting investors see validation in the software valuation environment.
The Broader Picture
Altmann at BTIG took a different angle, arguing the acquisition should boost confidence in current software valuations overall. He highlighted that this marks the third publicly traded software company to announce an acquisition in the past month.
What's notable is the diversity: these three deals span "entirely different areas of software (Office of CFO, Infrastructure, & Vertical SaaS)." According to Altmann, this signals a "broader appetite for software valuations across the board" rather than interest confined to one niche.
As for OneStream shares themselves? They declined 0.15% to $23.58 by Wednesday's publication time, hovering just below the $24 offer price.




