×

QXO to buy commercial roofing firm TopBuild for $17 billion

By Thomson Reuters Apr 19, 2026 | 12:11 PM

April 19 (Reuters) – U.S. construction supplies distributor QXO said on Sunday it will acquire commercial roofing firm TopBuild for about $17 billion, adding to a wave of acquisitions by the company led by billionaire dealmaker ​Brad Jacobs.

As part of the deal, Connecticut-based QXO said Florida-based TopBuild’s ‌shareholders can elect to receive $505 in cash or 20.2 shares of QXO common stock for each TopBuild share held on the condition that the total transaction is paid as about 45% in cash and 55% in shares of QXO common stock.

The $505 cash consideration represents a premium ‌of ​23.1% over TopBuild’s last close of $410.31 on Friday, Reuters ⁠calculations showed.

QXO said that the ⁠deal, which has been unanimously approved by the boards of both companies, is expected to be immediately and substantially accretive to its earnings.

QXO has market capitalization of around $18.08 billion, while TopBuild has a market capitalization of around $11.54 ​billion.

“Over the past 11 months, we’ve built QXO into a market leader through more than $13 billion of acquisitions, closing on Beacon in 2025 and Kodiak ⁠earlier this month. TopBuild will be our ⁠most significant acquisition yet.” said Jacobs, the chairman and CEO ​of QXO.

Jacobs, who has built multibillion-dollar companies in logistics, waste management and equipment rentals, ​positioned QXO to pursue more deals.

QXO, a newcomer to the building ‌products sector, completed an $11 billion acquisition of Beacon Roofing Supply last year. It also made a bid for GMS and threatened a hostile takeover, but ultimately lost out to home improvement chain Home Depot.

The deal for TopBuild, which is expected ⁠to close in the third quarter of 2026, adds to the uptick in mergers and acquisitions in the U.S. building-products industry as companies seek scale and localize supply ⁠chains to mitigate tariffs, ‌with demand buoyed by new housing construction, repairs and ⁠renovations.

Following the deal, QXO said it will have around 28,000 ​employees, ‌1,150 locations across all 50 U.S. states and seven Canadian ​provinces, with ⁠a fleet size of more than 10,000 vehicles.

In February, QXO announced a $2.25 billion deal to buy U.S. distributor of building materials Kodiak Building Partners.

At the start of the year, QXO secured $1.8 billion in financing, led by Apollo Global Management and Singapore’s Temasek, after raising $1.2 billion previously.

(Reporting by Mihika Sharma and Gursimran Kaur in Bengaluru; ​Editing by Will Dunham)