Adobe and Figma, the cloud-based design tool, will terminate their planned $20 billion merger in light of regulatory hurdles, the companies said Monday.
In a statement, the two companies said, “there is no clear path to receive necessary regulatory approvals from the European Commission and the UK Competition and Markets Authority.”
Adobe shares rose around 1.8% on the news in premarket trading Monday.
“Adobe and Figma strongly disagree with the recent regulatory findings, but we believe it is in our respective best interests to move forward independently,” Shantanu Narayen, CEO of Adobe, wrote in a statement. “While Adobe and Figma shared a vision to jointly redefine the future of creativity and productivity, we continue to be well positioned to capitalize on our massive market opportunity and mission to change the world through personalized digital experiences.”
Adobe first announced it would acquire Figma in September 2020 in a cash-and-stock deal worth about $20 billion. The news sent Adobe shares plunging, but the company reiterated that the acquisition would be a natural complement to Adobe’s portfolio, writing in the original announcement that “the combination of Adobe and Figma will usher in a new era of collaborative creativity.”
Adobe will pay Figma a $1 billion breakup fee, Adobe said in a regulatory filing.
The news is a sudden pivot from Narayen’s latest talking points, as he told CNBC on Wednesday that the company believes in the acquisition and its benefits for consumers.
“We want to take the ability for what Figma has done with respect to creative collaborative software on the web, combine that with what Adobe has done in our creative and make it even more accessible for others,” Narayen told CNBC’s Jim Cramer. “We think it’s an adjacency, we really believe in our merits of the case, but the regulatory environment is challenging.”
Antitrust regulators have increasingly scrutinized numerous tech deals big and small. In May, after the U.K.’s competition watchdog cited potentially anticompetitive effects, Meta sold Giphy to photo marketplace Shutterstock for $53 million, three years after it first acquired it. The CMA has also been reviewing Microsoft’s investment in OpenAI.
In Monday’s joint statement, Figma CEO Dylan Field wrote that “going through this process with Shantanu, David and the Adobe team has only reinforced my belief in the merits of this deal, but it’s become increasingly clear over the past few months that regulators don’t see things the same way.”
“We will continue to look for ways to partner with Figma to delight our joint customers,” David Wadhwani, a senior vice president at Adobe, wrote in a separate blog post.
Bitcoin briefly dropped below the $90,000 mark on Monday, extending its slide as investors continue to dump growth oriented assets like crypto and tech stocks.
The price of the flagship cryptocurrency was last lower by 3% at $91,358.66 to start the week, according to Coin Metrics. Earlier, it fell as low as $89,259.00. Bitcoin is down 10% in the past week.
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Bitcoin extends its slide as growth-oriented assets continue to get hit
“The need for liquidity is caused by FX spikes because of strong end-of-year U.S. economy number, the stock market rallying strong, and there are other places money is needed in the short-term,” said James Davies, co-founder and CEO at crypto trading platform Crypto Valley Exchange. “If we want bitcoin to act like a currency, we need to accept when it does, and this is one of those times. The U.S. Dollar has gotten stronger ad everything else including bitcoin is weaker when measured in dollars.”
Investor sentiment was optimistic coming into 2025, with markets looking forward to having a pro-crypto Congress and White House. That hope had outweighed any concern about macroeconomic-related speedbumps, until last week.
Investors are now warning that the first quarter of this year could be more turbulent for crypto than previously anticipated.
Bitcoin’s price grew 120% in 2024 but is down 3% so far in the new year.
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Health-care payments company Waystar on Monday announced a new generative artificial intelligence tool that can help hospitals quickly tackle one of their most costly and tedious responsibilities: fighting insurance denials.
Hospitals and health systems spend nearly $20 billion a year trying to overturn denied claims, according to a March report from the group purchasing organization Premier.
“We think if we can develop software that makes people’s lives better in an otherwise stressful moment of time when they’re getting health-care, then we’re doing something good,” Waystar CEO Matt Hawkins told CNBC.
Waystar’s new solution, called AltitudeCreate, uses generative AI to automatically draft appeal letters. The company said the feature could help providers drive down costs and spare them the headache of digging through complex contracts and records to put the letters together manually.
Hawkins led Waystar through its initial public offering in June, where it raised around $1 billion. The company handled more than $1.2 trillion in gross claims volume in 2023, touching about 50% of patients in the U.S.
Claim denials have become a hot-button issue across the nation following the deadly shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in December. Americans flooded social media with posts about their frustrations and resentment toward the insurance industry, often sharing stories about their own negative experiences.
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When a patient receives medical care in the U.S., it kicks off a notoriously complex billing process. Providers like hospitals, health systems or ambulatory care facilities submit an invoice called a claim to an insurance company, and the insurer will approve or deny the claim based on whether or not it meets the company’s criteria for reimbursement.
If a claim is denied, patients are often responsible for covering the cost out-of-pocket. More than 450 million claims are denied each year, and denial rates are rising, Waystar said.
Providers can ask insurers to reevaluate claim denials by submitting an appeal letter, but drafting these letters is a time-consuming and expensive process that doesn’t guarantee a different outcome.
Hawkins said that while there’s been a lot of discussion around claims denials recently, AltitudeCreate has been in the works at Waystar for the last six to eight months. The company announced an AI-focused partnership with Google Cloud in May, and automating claims denials was one of the 12 use cases the companies planned to explore.
Waystar has also had a denial and appeal management software module available for several years, Hawkins added.
AltitudeCreate is one tool available within a broader suite of Waystar’s AI offerings called AltitudeAI, which the company also unveiled on Monday. AltitudeCreate rolled out to organizations that are already using Waystar’s denial and appeal management software modules earlier this month at no additional cost, the company said.
Waystar plans to make the feature more broadly available in the future.
“In the face of all of this administrative waste in health-care where provider organizations are understaffed and don’t have time to even follow up on a claim when it does get denied, we’re bringing software to bear that helps to automate that experience,” Hawkins said.
Through the collaboration, General Catalyst portfolio companies will use AWS’ services to build and roll out AI tools for health systems more quickly. Aidoc, which applies AI to medical imaging, and Commure, which automates provider workflows with AI, will be the first two companies to participate.
No financial terms were disclosed in the announcement.
“Without a strong partner like Amazon and AWS to stand alongside them, to co-develop and support these companies … it’s not going to move as fast as we hope,” Chris Bischoff, head of global health-care investing at General Catalyst, told CNBC in an interview.
Health systems are strained in the U.S., with staff burnout, growing labor shortages and razor-thin margins. These challenges often seem enticing for enterprising tech startups to tackle, especially as the multi-trillion dollar health-care industry dangles the prospect of large financial returns.
Hospitals operate in a complex, technology-weary and highly-regulated sector that can be difficult for startups to break into. General Catalyst is hoping to help its companies fast-track the development and go-to-market process by leveraging resources like computing power from AWS.
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General Catalyst is no stranger to taking big swings in health-care.
The firm has closed more than 60 digital health deals since 2020, behind only Gaingels and Alumni Ventures, according to a December report from PitchBook. Last January, General Catalyst shocked the industry by announcing that its new business, the Health Assurance Transformation Company, planned to acquire an Ohio-based health system – an unprecedented move in venture capital.
General Catalyst’s “deep understanding” of health systems’ financial and operating realities made it an attractive partner for AWS, Dan Sheeran, AWS’ general manager of Healthcare & Life Science, told CNBC. Sheeran and Bischoff began outlining the collaboration between the two groups after meeting in London around nine months ago.
AWS also has an established presence in the health-care sector. The company offers more health- and life-sciences-specific services than any other cloud provider, according to a release, and it inked other high-profile AI partnerships with GE HealthCare, Philips and others last year.
The partnership between General Catalyst and AWS will stretch over several years, but new tools from Aidoc and Commure are coming in 2025. Aidoc is exploring how it can use the cloud to tap data modalities across pathology, cardiology, genomics and other molecular information, for instance.
Aidoc and Commure were selected to kick off the collaboration because they have both established a product-market fit, are operational and are focused on issues that are a high priority for AWS customers.
“GC has spent a lot of time thinking about how health systems can transform themselves, and we recognize that it’s not going to be through 1,000 companies, and we need solutions that are really enterprise grade,” Bischoff said. “Amazon shares the same vision, so we are starting with these two.”
Though the partnership between General Catalyst and AWS is still in its early days, the organizations said they believe it will help serve as a way to meet the market’s growing demand for new solutions.
“Health system leaders who want to realize the benefits of AI now have an easier way to accomplish that,” Sheeran said.