Allied Universal is set to win the bidding war for U.K. rival G4S PLC in a deal that would create a private security-services giant with global reach.

Closely held Allied, backed by private-equity firm Warburg Pincus LLC and Canadian pension fund Caisse de Depot et Placement du Quebec, moved into pole position after rival Garda World Security Corp., a Canada-headquartered security firm majority owned by asset-management firm BC Partners, decided not to raise its bid.

Allied would pay £3.8 billion, equivalent to $5.3 billion, to acquire G4S, whose half-a-million employees specialize in guarding events and infrastructure, among other businesses.

The two sides had been scheduled to settle the standoff this week in a rare bidding auction held by U.K. regulators. However, in a surprise move Monday, GardaWorld said it wouldn’t raise its current offer of £2.35 a share. That leaves Allied’s bid of £2.45 a share as the highest.

“There are better and less risky opportunities available to Gardworld,” the company said.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

You May Also Like

Elvira, ‘Mistress of the Dark,’ comes out in new memoir

Queen of Halloween, Elvira, also known as actor Cassandra Peterson, revealed in…

Shopify Says It Will Lay Off 10% of Workers, Sending Shares Lower

Shopify is cutting roughly 1,000 workers, or 10% of its global workforce,…

Auto plants start halting production following border protests

The anti-vaccination trucker protest that has paralyzed the Canadian capital, Ottawa, has…

Netflix’s Ad-Backed Plan to Launch in November at $6.99 a Month

Netflix will charge $6.99 a month for its new ad-supported tier of…