Capillary Technologies Acquires SessionM for $20 Mn

Capillary Technologies Acquires SessionM from Mastercard for $20 Mn

Soumya Verma
14 Min Read

QUICK TAKE:

  1. Deal Value: $20 Mn (~Rs 181.8 Cr) — all-cash | 100% stake acquisition
  2. Buyer: Capillary Technologies India Ltd (NSE/BSE: CAPILLARY) — listed Nov 2025
  3. Target: SessionM Inc. (+ Czech subsidiary) — Mastercard-owned since 2019
  4. Deal Multiple: 0.40x CY2025 revenue ($20 Mn / $50.5 Mn revenue) — deep value acquisition
  5. Strategic Play: North America + LATAM expansion | Combined ARR: $115 Mn+ | 150+ customers incl. 25 Fortune 500
  6. Timeline: Signed Feb 24, 2026 | Expected close: within 180 days | Integration by CY2029

Capillary Technologies, India’s Bengaluru-based AI-native loyalty SaaS company that listed on the NSE and BSE in November 2025, has signed a definitive agreement to acquire SessionM Inc. — the customer loyalty and engagement platform owned by Mastercard since 2019 — in an all-cash deal worth $20 Mn (Rs 181.8 Cr). The acquisition, Capillary’s fifth since 2021, gives the Indian SaaS firm a direct foothold in the North American and Latin American enterprise loyalty market and pushes the combined entity’s annual recurring revenue to over $115 Mn, serving 150+ customers including 25 Fortune 500 companies across 47 countries.

The price makes this deal extraordinary in both directions. Capillary is buying a business that generated $50.5 Mn in CY2025 revenue for just $20 Mn — a 0.40x revenue multiple that would be considered fire-sale pricing in any SaaS transaction. The catch: SessionM’s revenue has declined for three consecutive years ($57 Mn → $54.5 Mn → $50.5 Mn). Mastercard is shedding a non-core asset. Capillary is betting it can re-ignite a decelerating platform using its AI-native loyalty stack, its existing enterprise relationships, and the distribution engine of the world’s second-largest card network it just bought from. The bet is asymmetric — but so is the risk.

 StartupFeed Insight

The non-obvious insight: Capillary is not buying SessionM’s revenue — it is buying SessionM’s customer contracts and 800 million consumer profiles. Enterprise loyalty contracts are typically 3–5 year deals with high switching costs. Even at SessionM’s declining revenue trajectory, Capillary inherits multi-year committed ARR from 40+ enterprise clients including names in food & beverage, consumer goods, and airlines — sectors where Capillary has limited current penetration. The $20 Mn cash outlay buys a client list that would cost Capillary 5–7 years of organic sales cycles to build natively in North America.

Why Mastercard is selling: 

SessionM was acquired by Mastercard in 2019 as a data and loyalty capability play — Mastercard wanted consumer engagement data to complement its payment network. As Mastercard’s focus has shifted to payment infrastructure and B2B2C services, a standalone loyalty SaaS business generating sub-$55 Mn ARR is a distraction, not a strategic asset

The $20 Mn exit price represents a significant write-down from Mastercard’s 2019 acquisition — SessionM had raised ~$120 Mn in venture funding before being acquired, suggesting Mastercard paid a substantial premium in 2019 and is now taking a loss to exit cleanly

The integration risk: 

Capillary is simultaneously integrating Kognitiv (previous acquisition) AND SessionM — with combined customer integration expected to take 24–36 months. Two parallel integrations at a newly public company with a Q3 FY26 net profit decline of 22% (Rs 8 Cr vs Rs 10.3 Cr YoY) is a significant execution burden

SessionM’s revenue decline of 6% in CY2025 and cumulative -11.4% since CY2023 suggests client churn or downsell — Capillary must identify and arrest the root cause within 12 months of acquisition or inherit the declining trend permanently

Profitability math: At $20 Mn purchase price and $50.5 Mn trailing revenue, Capillary needs to restore SessionM to even flat revenue to generate a 2.5-year payback period. Capillary’s track record across four previous acquisitions — consistent 4-year cash payback and 20%+ ROIC — gives some confidence. But those prior acquisitions (Persuade, Brierley, Digital Connect, Kognitiv) were all acquired when the targets were growing or stable. SessionM is the first declining-revenue acquisition in Capillary’s M&A history.

Our prediction: Capillary will demonstrate SessionM revenue stabilisation by Q2 CY2027, driven by cross-selling its Loyalty+/Engage+ stack into SessionM’s North American client base. The combined $115 Mn+ ARR target will be achieved by CY2028. Share price will remain under pressure through integration period (Rs 480–540 range) before re-rating once combined ARR clarity emerges in CY2028 results.

Deal Structure — Full Breakdown

Component Details
Deal Type 100% stake acquisition — Capillary Pte. Ltd. (wholly owned overseas arm) acquires SessionM Inc.
Entities Acquired SessionM Inc. (USA) + SessionM Czech subsidiary
Cash Consideration $20 Mn (Rs 181.8 Cr) — base cash consideration | All-cash deal
Revenue Multiple 0.40x CY2025 revenue ($20 Mn / $50.5 Mn) — deep value / distressed pricing
Team Transition Specialised SessionM team joins Capillary to ensure continuity and preservation of expertise
Expected Close Within 180 days of signing (Feb 24, 2026) — i.e., by ~August 2026
Integration Timeline 60 customers from Kognitiv + SessionM combined | Integration: 24–36 months | Complete: CY2028 | Stable: CY2029
Regulatory Approvals SEBI filing made (Reg 30 of SEBI LODR 2015) | US regulatory clearances required | No CCI concern expected
Acquisition Number 5th acquisition by Capillary since 2021 (after Persuade, Brierley+Partners, Digital Connect, Kognitiv)

Valuation Analysis — Is $20 Mn Fair?

Metric SessionM Peer Benchmark Assessment
Revenue (TTM) $50.5 Mn (CY2025) $30–150 Mn for loyalty SaaS M&A Mid-range
Price / Revenue 0.40x 2.0–5.0x (healthy SaaS) Deep discount
Revenue Trend -11.4% over 3 yrs Healthy: +10–20% YoY Risk factor
Prior Funding (pre-Mastercard) ~$120 Mn VC raised ~83% discount to peak funding
Customer Profiles 800 Mn consumer profiles Capillary: 1.8 Bn profiles Additive — 2.6 Bn combined
Enterprise Customers 40+ clients, 35+ countries Key strategic value
Capillary’s Track Record 4 prior acquisitions: all with 4-year cash payback periods and 20%+ ROIC — consistent M&A execution

Target Snapshot — SessionM

Parameter Details
Founded 2011 — Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Acquired by Mastercard 2019
Core Product Cloud-based loyalty and customer engagement platform — rewards, gamification, personalisation, analytics
Revenue CY2025 $50.5 Mn (CY2025) | $54.5 Mn (CY2024) | $57 Mn (CY2023) — 3 years of decline
Customers 40+ enterprise clients across 35+ countries — F&B, consumer goods, airlines, retail
Consumer Profiles 800 Mn+ consumer profiles
Geographies North America (primary), LATAM, Europe (Czech subsidiary)
Pre-acquisition Funding ~$120 Mn raised across multiple VC rounds before Mastercard acquisition
Why Mastercard is Selling Non-core asset divestiture — Mastercard refocusing on payment infrastructure; standalone loyalty SaaS not aligned with core B2B2C strategy

What Capillary’s CEO Says

“M&A has been a key growth strategy for Capillary over the years, and as a public company, we are delivering on that promise to our shareholders and the market. By bringing SessionM into our portfolio, we are not just expanding our footprint across the globe; we are further strengthening our loyalty capabilities to deliver one of the industry’s most comprehensive offerings. Our mission remains to provide enterprises across industries with specialized, AI-native loyalty technology solutions.”

Aneesh Reddy, Founder & CEO, Capillary Technologies

The phrase “delivering on that promise to shareholders” is a direct reference to Capillary’s November 2025 IPO narrative, in which M&A was explicitly positioned as a post-listing growth driver. With SessionM announced just three months after its muted listing, Reddy is moving quickly to validate the inorganic growth thesis — even as the stock sits at Rs 512, below its Rs 577 issue price.

Acquirer Snapshot — Capillary Technologies

Parameter Details
Founded 2008 — Bengaluru, Karnataka
Founder & CEO Aneesh Reddy
Listed November 2025 — NSE/BSE (CAPILLARY) | IPO price: Rs 577 | Listing price: Rs 560 (−2.9% discount)
Market Cap (Feb 24, 2026) Rs 4,067 Cr (~$447 Mn) | Share price: Rs 512 (−11% from issue price)
Q3 FY26 Revenue Rs 184 Cr (+16% YoY)
Q3 FY26 Net Profit Rs 8 Cr (−22% YoY vs Rs 10.3 Cr)
Pre-acquisition ARR ~$65–70 Mn (estimated pre-SessionM)
Post-acquisition ARR $115 Mn+ combined (target)
Products Loyalty+ (loyalty management), Engage+ (omnichannel engagement), predictive CDP
Key Clients IndiGo, Domino’s Pizza, Pantaloons, Malabar Gold & Diamonds, 410 brands across 115 customers in 47 countries
Industry Recognition Forrester Wave Leader — Loyalty Technology Solutions Q4 2025 (highest score in both Current Offering & Strategy)
M&A Track Record 5 acquisitions: Persuade (2021), Rewards+, Brierley+Partners, Digital Connect, Kognitiv → SessionM (2026) | Avg: 4-year payback, 20%+ ROIC

SessionM’s Revenue Trend — The Problem Capillary Is Buying

Year Revenue YoY Change Context
CY2023 $57.0 Mn Baseline Mastercard ownership, steady state
CY2024 $54.5 Mn −4.4% First visible decline
CY2025 $50.5 Mn −7.3% Decline accelerating
3-Year Cumulative −11.4% Acquisition price: $20 Mn

The accelerating decline — from -4.4% in CY2024 to -7.3% in CY2025 — is the central risk in this deal. It suggests the revenue erosion is not stabilising but worsening, possibly driven by client churn as SessionM’s roadmap stagnated under Mastercard’s ownership. Capillary will need to demonstrate a credible product investment thesis for SessionM’s North American clients within the first 6 months post-close to arrest the churn curve.

Why This Deal Reshapes the Loyalty SaaS Landscape

The global loyalty management platform market is growing at 15%+ CAGR, driven by enterprise brands doubling down on first-party data strategies in a post-cookie world. Capillary with $115 Mn+ ARR post-SessionM becomes one of the largest pure-play enterprise loyalty SaaS players globally — behind only Salesforce Marketing Cloud and Comarch in terms of specialised loyalty deployments, but ahead on AI-native capabilities as acknowledged by Forrester.

Player Positioning What Capillary Gains
Salesforce Marketing Cloud Dominant suite player — loyalty is one feature among many Differentiation: Capillary is purpose-built loyalty, not bundled
Comarch Loyalty Strong in Europe / retail — limited North American presence SessionM’s NA client base fills the gap Comarch can’t address
Loyalty Ventures / Cardfree F&B and QSR focus — fragmented, subscale SessionM’s QSR/F&B clients complement Capillary’s IndiGo/travel base
Mastercard Offers / Paze Payment-linked loyalty — not enterprise SaaS Mastercard exits loyalty SaaS — validates Capillary’s standalone play

What’s Next

The 180-day close window means Capillary will integrate SessionM’s specialised team into its operations by mid-August 2026 at the latest. The immediate priority will be account management — retaining SessionM’s 40+ enterprise clients while Capillary maps its Loyalty+/Engage+ stack onto their existing deployments. Any client churn in the first 12 months of Capillary ownership will be visible in quarterly results and will be interpreted by investors as integration failure.

The financial milestone to watch: SessionM revenue stabilisation at $50+ Mn in CY2026. If Capillary can arrest the decline and hold flat — even without growth — the acquisition returns to a 2.5-year payback period and validates the $20 Mn price. If CY2026 revenue falls below $47 Mn, the multiple expansion logic breaks down and integration costs will have diluted Capillary’s margin profile visibly.

The bigger picture: Capillary’s SessionM acquisition is the clearest signal yet that India’s B2B SaaS companies are entering a second stage of globalisation — not through organic sales expansion but through acqui-expansion: buying underperforming Western businesses at distressed multiples, applying Indian engineering cost efficiency and AI capabilities, and rebuilding them. If Capillary succeeds, it becomes the template for every Indian enterprise SaaS company looking to bypass 10 years of US market-entry friction.

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