Capella Education Co., the Minneapolis-based company that runs one of the nation's biggest online universities, is merging with Strayer Education Inc., bulking up to face greater demographic and competitive pressures.
The all-stock deal, announced Monday, valued Capella at $930 million and sent the shares of both for-profit education companies higher.
It brings under one corporate parent Capella's online university, which has about 37,000 students, and Strayer's physical campuses, which serve about 41,000 students.
"By putting the companies together, we can offer a wider and more diverse array of solutions to students as they look to gain skills," Kevin Gilligan, Capella's chief executive, said in an interview.
The combined company will take a new name, Strategic Education Co., and be based in Strayer's home of Herndon, Va. It will also continue to have a significant presence in downtown Minneapolis, where the Capella name is on one of the tallest skyscrapers.
The principal education operations — Capella University and Strayer University — will remain separate, but students will be able to transfer credits between them.
Strayer chiefly serves undergraduate students while Capella's students are in graduate-level programs. Strayer dates back 125 years, is chiefly known for its business education and offers MBAs through a graduate program called the Jack Welch Management Institute. Capella started in 1993 and, in recent years, acquired coding academies and other businesses that provide job-ready skills.
The deal comes as schools of all stripes in the next few years will face a declining number of students coming out of schools and the likelihood costs rise. State-owned universities also are being roiled by the slow reduction of public funds as legislators seek ways to pay for the rising cost of health care.