TORONTO (Reuters) - Thomson Reuters Corp TRI.TOTRI.N is looking to make "substantive" acquisitions to boost its legal and tax units after selling a majority stake in its financial terminal business, Chief Executive Jim Smith said on Tuesday.

The Thomson Reuters office in Singapore September 3, 2018. REUTERS/Thomas White

Smith’s comments, following better-than-expected third-quarter profit announced earlier in the day, sent Thomson Reuters shares up 4.5 percent to an 18-year high.

The news and information provider has set aside $2 billion for deals, Smith told Reuters in an interview, after raising $17 billion from selling 55 percent of its Financial & Risk (F&R) unit to private equity firm Blackstone Group LP BX.N.

“We are interested in bigger, more substantive deals,” Smith said. “I wouldn’t expect a string of small, bolt-on acquisitions. We’d rather spend that $2 billion on a handful of deals rather than spread across a couple of dozen.”

Thomson Reuters could spend more than $2 billion if it found the right purchase, Smith told analysts on a conference call after reporting quarterly earnings.

“If an absolute home-run deal presented itself, we would certainly consider it,” he said.

The company had previously indicated that it wanted to use the funds to bolster its Legal and Tax & Accounting businesses, which are its two biggest units after the F&R deal. Last month, it agreed to buy Integration Point, a trade management software business, for an undisclosed fee.

The F&R unit now operates as a standalone business named Refinitiv.

Shares in Thomson Reuters have risen 35 percent since May 11, helped by its plan to buy back $10 billion of its shares. The stock hit a high of C$62.99 in afternoon trading.

OUTLOOK REITERATED

Smith said the company was on track for a solid 2018 and a better performance in 2019. The company reiterated its forecast, originally given in May, for low single-digit revenue growth in 2018. On the conference call, Smith told analysts that the company’s longer-term goal was for mid-single digit growth.

Edward Jones analyst Brittany Weissman said she was encouraged by growth in the company’s core businesses but was cautious about the outlook.

“We believe there is some uncertainty around Thomson Reuters’ earnings growth over the next couple of years as the company transitions to its new operating structure,” she said.

The company said it now expects adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) of $1.3 billion for the year, having previously said it expected $1.2 billion to $1.3 billion. The year-ago figure was $1.6 billion. Smith said he expected underlying profit to improve next year.

For the third quarter, Thomson Reuters reported a smaller-than-expected fall in profit. Earnings per share were 11 cents, adjusted for one-time items, down from 27 cents a year ago, hurt by a higher tax expense. That beat analysts’ average estimate of 3 cents, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

Overall revenue rose 3 percent, excluding the effect of fluctuating exchange rates, to $1.29 billion. Analysts had expected revenue of $1.32 billion, on average.

Excluding exchange rate effects, Legal revenue rose 4 percent, Tax & Accounting revenue rose 3 percent and revenue from Reuters News fell 4 percent.

Adjusted EBITDA fell 21 percent, excluding the effect of exchange rates, to $302 million, due to the higher income tax expense from the company’s continuing operations, offsetting higher earnings from its discontinued operations.