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Mastercard buys Recorded Future for $2.65 billion

The financial giant expects the deal to close by the first quarter of 2025.
Muenster, Germany - April 9, 2011: A close up macro shot of a Mastercard credit card. Mastercard is one of the biggest credit card companies in the world. (Getty Images)

There are some things money can’t buy; for Mastercard, the cybersecurity firm Recorded Future wasn’t one of those things.

The financial payment behemoth announced Thursday that it reached an agreement to acquire the threat intelligence company for $2.65 billion, representing a major expansion of its cybersecurity services. 

“Recorded Future adds to how we deliver that greater peace of mind before, during and after the payment transaction,” Craig Vosburg, chief services officer at Mastercard, said in the announcement. “Together we will innovate faster, create smarter models and anticipate emerging threats before cyberattacks can take place — in payments and beyond.”

Recorded Future is a well-known intelligence firm that boasts more than 1,900 clients internationally, including 45 governments and over half of Fortune 500 companies, Mastercard noted. The acquisition would boost Mastercard’s current products, which include risk assessments and transaction protections like fraud, according to the press release, which also touted the cyber firm’s use of artificial intelligence.

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Christopher Ahlberg, CEO of Recorded Future, said in a statement that “by joining Mastercard, we see an opportunity to help more businesses and governments determine the steps to realize their full potential — and to enable everyone to feel safer in their daily lives.”

Ahlberg said on the X social media platform that the firm “will remain an independent & open intelligence platform, operating as an independent subsidiary.”

The transaction is expected to close by the first quarter of 2025, according to the press release.

Christian Vasquez

Written by Christian Vasquez

Christian covers industrial cybersecurity for CyberScoop News. He previously wrote for E&E News at POLITICO covering cybersecurity in the energy sector. Reach out:  christian.vasquez at cyberscoop dot com

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