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Apollo Takes Emerald Holding Private at a 42% Premium to Build a B2B Events Empire — and the Timing Is No Accident

Consumer
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Apollo Global Management (NYSE: APO) announced Monday it has entered into separate definitive agreements to acquire Emerald Holding, Inc. (NYSE: EEX) and privately held Questex, LLC, with the explicit intention of combining the two businesses into a scaled North American B2B events and media platform. The Emerald deal is structured as an all-cash transaction at $5.03 per share, implying an estimated closing enterprise value of approximately $1.5 billion and representing a 42.1% premium to Emerald’s unaffected share price prior to deal speculation. Questex’s acquisition terms were not disclosed. Both transactions are expected to close in the second half of 2026, subject to customary regulatory approvals.

For Emerald shareholders — the vast majority of whom are represented by Onex, which controls more than 90% of the company’s outstanding shares and has already signed a support agreement — the premium is the headline. For investors trying to understand why Apollo, with over $1 trillion in assets under management, is paying up for a B2B trade show company, the more interesting question is the strategic logic.

Together, Emerald and Questex bring approximately 160 events across complementary industry verticals. Emerald has built one of the more recognized portfolios of category-leading trade exhibitions in the U.S., spanning industries from retail and licensing to safety and design. Questex operates a differentiated model built around a 365-day digital engagement layer that wraps its live events — providing year-round community access rather than the once-a-year interaction that defines most traditional trade show businesses. The combination is designed to produce a platform that generates recurring revenue and customer engagement well beyond the event floor.

The timing of this deal reflects something broader happening in the live events and B2B media space. The thesis that in-person events would be permanently diminished by digital alternatives never fully materialized post-pandemic. Instead, what has emerged is a more nuanced reality: the proliferation of digital tools and AI-driven communication has, paradoxically, elevated the perceived value of high-trust, face-to-face business interactions — particularly in industries where relationships, deals, and partnerships are made in person. Apollo’s bet is essentially that the B2B events market is structurally undervalued relative to the role these gatherings play in driving commerce, and that a consolidated, well-capitalized platform with a year-round digital backbone is worth considerably more than the sum of its parts.

Emerald had been running a strategic review process since last year, so this outcome isn’t a surprise — but the buyer and the structure are notable. Apollo is not a passive financial sponsor looking for a quick exit. The firm’s track record in media and experiential assets suggests this is a longer-horizon platform build, with Questex serving as a strategic complement that brings both digital infrastructure and a different set of industry relationships to the table.

For small-cap investors, EEX was exactly the kind of company that tends to be overlooked in public markets — a cash-generative events business with strong customer retention and a dominant position in its niches, trading at a discount to intrinsic value. The 42% premium Apollo paid is a reminder of how wide that gap can be, and why platform-building strategies in fragmented B2B markets continue to attract private equity capital.

Goldman Sachs advised Emerald. RBC Capital Markets, RAN Advisory, and PJT Partners advised Apollo.

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