Mobility Global Inc. (NYSE: MBGL) completed its separation from S&P Global Inc. on July 1, 2026, and began trading as a standalone public company on the New York Stock Exchange. The company, which describes itself as a global leader in automotive data and analytics, is now an independent publicly traded firm for the first time.
From Subsidiary to Standalone: What the Separation Means
A corporate separation — sometimes called a spinoff — occurs when a parent company breaks off a business unit into its own publicly traded entity. S&P Global Inc., one of the world's largest financial data, ratings, and analytics companies, has now divested its automotive data and analytics operations by establishing Mobility Global as a fully independent firm with its own NYSE listing under the ticker MBGL.
For the market, the key implication is structural. Investors in S&P Global who received shares in Mobility Global through the separation now hold a pure-play exposure to automotive data — a stake no longer bundled inside a broader financial intelligence conglomerate. That clean break allows analysts and portfolio managers to value the automotive data business on its own terms, without the noise of S&P Global's credit ratings, financial benchmarks, and commodity intelligence operations crowding the picture.
Mobility Global's Market Position
Mobility Global describes itself as a global leader in automotive data and analytics — a sector encompassing the information infrastructure underlying vehicle markets worldwide. Data and analytics of this kind serve dealers, lenders, manufacturers, and insurers making decisions across the vehicle lifecycle, from pricing to risk assessment.
The global framing in the company's self-description matters. It signals that Mobility Global's addressable market and competitive ambitions extend beyond any single geography, positioning it as a distinct standalone entity in the automotive information space.
First Day on the NYSE
Trading under MBGL begins today on the New York Stock Exchange. NYSE listing sets a high bar for disclosure and investor access, and the debut makes Mobility Global's performance immediately legible to public markets.
The separation from S&P Global closes one chapter and opens another: an automotive data company now fully exposed to market judgment, standing on its own for the first time.