HiTech bids A$15Mn for Hudson’s UpperGround unit

NEW SOUTH WALES AND BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA — HiTech Group Australia has tabled a bid of up to A$15 million (US$10 million) for UpperGround, the contractor management arm of administration-bound Hudson Global Resources Australia.
According to a report from Stocks Down Under, the consideration comprises A$4 million (US$2 million) payable upfront into a creditor fund, A$6 million (US$4 million) on due diligence completion, and A$5 million (US$3 million) deferred against future operating cash flows.
The bid was announced and remains subject to creditor approval, due diligence, and financing. HiTech, founded in 1993, specializes in ICT staffing, consulting, and government placements in Australia — with more than 43 federal government department clients and security-cleared personnel capability.
UpperGround’s recurring MSP revenue draws HiTech’s distressed bid
UpperGround generates recurring, contracted revenue from managing ongoing contractor relationships and workplace programs — more akin to a managed services provider than a traditional staffing agency, and distinct from Hudson‘s placement-fee recruitment business.
HiTech said in its ASX filing that it expects acquired UpperGround revenue to fold into its existing infrastructure at materially better margins — the cost savings driven by eliminating duplication between UpperGround’s delivery overhead and HiTech’s existing contractor administration capabilities.
The administration structure — not a negotiated trade sale — is what makes the pricing work: HiTech acquires a recurring revenue book at creditor-fund valuation, not at a going-concern premium.
HiTech bets on Australian IT contractor market consolidation
HiTech’s government and ICT client base — spanning more than 43 federal departments and including security-cleared personnel placements under the Defence Industry Security Program — provides a natural integration pathway for UpperGround’s contractor book, with likely overlap with HiTech’s managed workforce programs.
The A$5 million (US$3 million) deferred consideration, tied to future operating cash flows, distributes risk appropriately — HiTech pays full price only if the acquired revenue base delivers on its retention and margin assumptions post-integration.
The largely non-refundable A$4 million (US$2 million) upfront payment signals HiTech’s confidence in UpperGround’s revenue quality — a firm commitment at a creditor meeting is not a tentative bid.
Hudson Global Resources Australia’s administration marks a significant contraction for one of Australia’s heritage staffing brands, which competed across professional, executive, and contractor staffing for decades before financial difficulties prompted the filing.
HiTech competes in the Australian ICT staffing market against Hays, Robert Half, and Finite Recruitment — with the UpperGround assets adding its first scaled contractor management capability as a recurring outsourced service.
The multiple conditions precedent carry execution risk — but distressed pricing of a recurring MSP revenue book at A$15 million (US$10 million) is precisely the kind of deal that rarely surfaces through a negotiated trade sale.

Independent




