Company Description
Global Blue Group Holding AG (historically traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker GB) was a specialty payments and technology platform focused on international shopping. According to company disclosures and transaction documents, Global Blue became a wholly owned subsidiary of Shift4 Payments, Inc. following a tender offer and subsequent squeeze-out merger completed on August 18, 2025. After this merger, Global Blue’s ordinary shares were delisted from the NYSE, and its U.S. reporting obligations were terminated.
Global Blue described itself as “the business partner for the shopping journey”, providing technology and services intended to enhance the shopping experience and support performance for merchants and partners. With over 40 years of expertise, the company reported that it connected thousands of retailers, acquirers, and hotels with tens of millions of consumers across more than 50 countries. Its activities were organized across three main areas: Tax Free Shopping, Payments, and Post-Purchase solutions.
In its public communications, Global Blue highlighted its role at the intersection of travel and luxury retail, particularly in cross-border and tax-free shopping. It reported that hundreds of thousands of premium retail and hospitality locations used its tax-refund and currency conversion technology, and that its network linked merchants with affluent international shoppers. The company also indicated that it operated a two-sided network that connected shoppers and merchants, and that it engaged directly with shoppers through its own application.
Global Blue’s Tax Free Shopping activities focused on enabling tax-free purchases for eligible international travelers. The company’s own materials emphasized that this service was important for retailers and other merchants that serve international shoppers. Over multiple disclosures, Global Blue stated that it had decades of experience in tax-free shopping and that this service was a core part of its offering.
The Payments area included technology and services related to currency conversion and other payment capabilities. In its news releases, Global Blue referred to dynamic currency conversion and other payments solutions that were integrated into the shopping journey. The company also reported that its payments activities included foreign exchange-related solutions and acquiring, as well as a hospitality-focused gateway business.
Global Blue’s Post-Purchase solutions formed a third area of activity. Company disclosures described this segment as contributing to revenue and being part of the broader set of services offered to merchants and shoppers after an initial transaction. Within this segment, Global Blue referenced the performance of its ZigZag business as a contributor to growth.
According to its own descriptions, Global Blue’s business model relied on connecting multiple parties in the shopping ecosystem. It reported that it linked retailers, acquirers, and hotels with nearly 80 million consumers in over 50 countries, and that its platform was designed to support tax-free shopping, payments, and post-purchase services. The company also stated that it operated with a high operating leverage profile and focused on variable cost optimization, as reflected in its financial communications.
Global Blue was incorporated under the laws of Switzerland and, prior to the merger, maintained its principal executive offices in Brüttisellen, Switzerland. The company filed annual reports with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission as a foreign private issuer and used IFRS Accounting Standards in its financial reporting. Its securities previously included ordinary shares and warrants, both of which were referenced in its SEC filings.
Following the transaction with Shift4, Global Blue’s corporate structure changed. A tender offer commenced on March 21, 2025, led to Shift4 and its merger subsidiary owning more than 97% of the outstanding Global Blue shares as of July 3, 2025. On August 18, 2025, Global Blue merged with and into GT Holding 1 GmbH under Swiss law, with the merger subsidiary continuing as the surviving entity and subsequently renamed Global Blue Group Holding GmbH. After the merger, the New York Stock Exchange filed a Form 25 to remove Global Blue’s ordinary shares from listing, and a Form 15 was filed to terminate registration and suspend reporting obligations.
For investors and researchers, the GB ticker now represents the historical listing of Global Blue prior to its acquisition by Shift4 and subsequent delisting. The business activities described in public materials—tax-free shopping, payments, and post-purchase solutions across a broad international network—are part of the company’s historical profile as a standalone public entity.
Business focus and activities
According to its own descriptions in news releases and investor communications, Global Blue’s activities centered on:
- Tax Free Shopping – enabling tax-free purchases for international travelers and supporting merchants that serve these shoppers.
- Payments – providing technology for dynamic currency conversion and other payment-related services connected to cross-border shopping.
- Post-Purchase solutions – offering services after the initial transaction, including activities reported under its ZigZag business.
These three areas were repeatedly identified by the company as its main industries of operation and as the basis for its revenue segmentation in financial disclosures.
Status of the GB listing
Global Blue’s ordinary shares, previously listed on the NYSE under the symbol GB, were the subject of a tender offer and subsequent squeeze-out merger. After completion of the merger on August 18, 2025, Global Blue became a wholly owned subsidiary of Shift4, its shares were removed from listing on the NYSE pursuant to a Form 25, and a Form 15 was filed to terminate registration under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. As a result, GB functions as a historical ticker for research into Global Blue’s period as an independent public company.