The translation and interpreting division, known as Capita TI, contributes a small slice to the company’s total revenues of ca. USD 5bn. In 2019, Capita TI brought in around GBP 16m (USD 21m), slightly down on the year prior, and reported EBITDA of GBP 0.8m.
Slator 2021 Language Industry Market Report
80-pages. Market Size by Vertical, Geo, Intention. Expert-in-Loop Model. M&A. Frontier Tech. Hybrid Future. Outlook 2021-2025.
Capita TI’s revenues have remained roughly flat since 2017, after the LSP exited a large Ministry of Justice (MoJ) contract that was later awarded to local rival thebigword.
In its 2019 financial results, Capita described Specialist Services as regrouping “those businesses which are not within Capita’s growth markets and/or have little in common with our other divisions.” Specialist Services collectively contributed 21% to the Group’s top line in 2019.
The planned sale is designed to help Capita plc refocus its core business on higher-margin digital services, moving away from the UK’s blue-collar outsourcing sector that has faced mounting financial pressure in recent years.
Capita had hoped to off-load all nine Specialist Services businesses, which include print, legal services, and travel and events, to one bidder for a total price tag of at least GBP 200m (USD 270m).
As Slator observed previously, the Capita TI division could be an interesting target for rival LSPs looking to enter the UK market or expand their local presence should Capita opt for a breakup of the nine divisions if and when the sale process resumes.