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Team Internet still in talks to sell off domains unit

Kevin Murphy, January 21, 2026, 13:26:55 (UTC), Domain Registries

Team Internet says negotiations to spin off its domains business are “progressing well” after a difficult 2025.

The company yesterday issued a trading update, saying that its 2025 revenue and profit will come in towards the top end of analysts’ expectations.

Those top-end estimates are for revenue of $541 million and adjusted EBITDA of $43 million. That’s compared to 2024 revenue of $802.8 million and adjusted EBITDA of $91.9 million.

Team Internet suffered last year, laying off hundreds, due to changes in Google’s advertising policies that made it harder for the company to monetize its domain portfolio.

It was already exploring exit options before the Google changes hit, but those efforts were resurrected in November. The company said yesterday that “discussions in relation to a disposal of DIS [Domains, Identity and Software] are progressing well”


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Comments (2)

  1. Will P says:

    This has nothing to do with Google. The underlying issue is prolonged governance failure at board level. Rather than holding an underperforming chief executive to account, the board has chosen to entrench and reward that failure. Markets tend to be unforgiving of such decisions, and rightly so.

    In practical terms, the business is not meaningfully divisible. Any attempt to sell it in fragments will create a complex and fragile carve-out, with disproportionate execution risk and limited upside for a buyer. The only credible transaction is a sale of the business in its entirety.

    This is particularly regrettable given that the company was, at points, genuinely well regarded within the industry. That goodwill has now been eroded. The sustained decline in the share price – from well above £1 to a level that has struggled to hold above 50p – alongside the loss of cornerstone clients such as Radix, speaks for itself.

    Any acquirer should approach with caution. Re-establishing operational coherence, restoring client confidence, and rebuilding market trust will be non-trivial undertakings. At present, the brand carries little credibility with the industry, and absent a material change in leadership and strategy, it is difficult to see how the business competes effectively over the next 18–24 months.

    It is, regrettably, a very poor outcome for a business that once had genuine standing.

  2. Gary says:

    the chief exec / ceo of Team Internet has burnt the business hard. He is now forcing a fire sale of assets. the problem is, the current head of the DIS division has limited knowledge of how to run a for profit business. All that has happened is a mass firing of the people that spent years building the business, then the ceo and the head of DIS used the google decision to cover their tracks.

    You are right Will – they have lost big ticket clients, their infrastructure teams are skeleton thin and they just lost another cto last week.

    the corporate world can be tough sometimes but lets be clear, this is simply down to extremely poor leadership from group ceo to DIS head. The business is salvageable but any investor or buyer should ask for the people that built the original business for their support or counsel.

    Man, its depressing to see what was such a good company driven into the ground by incompetence. I also agree with you that the Board are accountable – they brought the current ceo in and that’s the problem. they know kicking him would be admitting they made a mistake. plus it would lead to a share nose dive which would kill their investment value hard

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