Travelport

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Travelport
Public
Traded as NYSETVPT
Industry Travel technology
Founded 2001 (United States)
Headquarters Langley, Berkshire
(UK mailing address)
Key people
Gordon Wilson, President and CEO;
Douglas Steenland, Chairman - Board of Directors ;
Philip Emery, CFO;
Kurt Ekert, Chief Commercial Officer
Revenue US$ 2.1 billion
Number of employees
Approximately 3,400
Subsidiaries Travelport includes Travelport Apollo, Travelport Galileo and Travelport Worldspan
Website www.Travelport.com

Travelport is a Travel Commerce Platform providing distribution, technology, payment and other solutions for the $7 trillion global travel and tourism industry.

Company

With a presence in over 170 countries, approximately 3,400 employees, 2013 net revenue of $2.1 billion and $2.3 billion in debt in 2014, Travelport is composed of a Travel Commerce Platform through which it connects travel providers with travel buyers and Technology Services through which it provides IT services to airlines.

Travelport is headquartered in Langley, Berkshire. The company recently completed its initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange and trades under the symbol “TVPT”.

History

Travelport traces its origins back to 1971, but its most immediate predecessor, Travel Distribution Services (TDS), was founded in 2001 through the acquisition of Galileo International by TDS's parent, Cendant Corporation. Travelport was formed in August 2006, when Cendant sold Orbitz and Galileo to The Blackstone Group in a deal valued at $4.3 billion.[citation needed]

Shortly after the Blackstone-led buyout, in December 2006, Travelport struck a deal to buy one of its rivals, Worldspan, for $1.4 billion.[1]

In May 2007 the company filed a registration statement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to sell a portion of Orbitz Worldwide in an initial public offering (IPO). The IPO was priced on July 20, 2007, opening at $15.00 per share, and closed on July 25, 2007. A month later, Travelport completed the Worldspan deal, integrating Worldspan with Galileo.

By combining operations with Worldspan and streamlining overlapping functions that Travelport had inherited from a string of more than 20 earlier mergers under Cendant, Travelport cut its overhead by $390 million in three years and doubled its cash flow.[2]

On September 19, 2007, Travelport became the first travel company to receive a 100 percent rating on the sixth annual Corporate Equality Index awarded by the American Human Rights Campaign Foundation.[3] Worldspan achieved the 100 percent rating on HRC's Corporate Equality Index in 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2005.

On May 5, 2011, Travelport completed the $720m sale of its GTA (Gullivers Travel Associates) business to Kuoni.

References

  1. David Carey and John E. Morris, King of Capital: The Remarkable Rise, Fall and Rise Again of Steve Schwarzman and Blackstone (Crown 2010), pp. 314-18.
  2. Ibid., p. 317.
  3. Ferris, Bev. "Travelport gets human rights accolade", travelmole.com, September 19, 2007. Accessed September 27, 2007.

External links