Blackhawk Pays $175M for Maine-based E-Commerce Business CashStar

CashStar, a company that makes digital gift cards and commerce software, has sold to financial tech business Blackhawk Network for $175 million in cash.

Venture capital-backed CashStar will stay in New England, keeping offices in Waltham, MA and Portland, ME, where its headquarters are located. The company is becoming part of Blackhawk’s digital and incentives business, and CashStar CEO Ben Kaplan is staying with the company, according to a press statement.

Blackhawk (NASDAQ: [[ticker:HAWK]]) wanted CashStar because of its experience marketing, selling, and distributing digital and plastic gift cards for a client list that includes Sephora, Starbucks, Gap, The Home Depot, Uber, and Walmart, according to the statement. Pleasanton, CA-based Blackhawk was founded in 2001 as a division of grocery retailer Safeway, offering software that provides consumers gift cards, complimentary prepaid products, payment services, and other incentives to the grocery industry, according to regulatory filings. Soon, it expanded to other retail sectors.

Blackhawk entered the public markets in 2013 with a $230 million IPO. Safeway remained the majority shareholder. Blackhawk has been an active acquirer of companies that offer digital and physical gift products targeting consumers, including Spafinder, Samba, The Grass Roots Group, and the parent company of GiftCards.com—all of which it acquired in 2016, according to public filings.

CashStar raised a $15 million Series D round of funding two years ago led by FTV Capital, with Mosaik Partners and previous investors also participating. That brought the company’s total venture funding to about $50 million, Xconomy reported at the time.

Author: David Holley

David is the national correspondent at Xconomy. He has spent most of his career covering business of every kind, from breweries in Oregon to investment banks in New York. A native of the Pacific Northwest, David started his career reporting at weekly and daily newspapers, covering murder trials, city council meetings, the expanding startup tech industry in the region, and everything between. He left the West Coast to pursue business journalism in New York, first writing about biotech and then private equity at The Deal. After a stint at Bloomberg News writing about high-yield bonds and leveraged loans, David relocated from New York to Austin, TX. He graduated from Portland State University.