by Brenon Daly
Summer is a time for blockbusters – both for Hollywood and, apparently, on Wall Street. In the just-completed month of July, tech acquirers announced seven deals valued at more than $1bn. That’s twice as many 10-digit transactions as typically get announced each month.
The mega-deals helped push last month’s overall spending on tech M&A to its highest level for the mid-summer month in seven years. The aggregate value for IT, telco and digital media transactions announced around the world in the just-completed month totaled $23.7bn, slightly above the total for July 2012 but nearly twice the monthly spending level we tallied during the recession.
Among the significant acquisitions announced last month: Schneider Electric’s $5bn consolidation of Invensys, Cisco Systems’ $2.7bn reach for network security vendor Sourcefire (the third-largest information security transaction) and AT&T’s $1.2bn play in the prepaid wireless segment with Leap Wireless. (Including the debt and cash carried by Leap, which is better known under its Cricket brand, AT&T is actually paying closer to $4bn.)
While there was an unusual amount of activity at the top end of the M&A market in July, deal flow dried up dramatically elsewhere. We tallied just 240 transactions in July – a decline of about one-quarter from the same month in the two previous years. In fact, we have to go back almost two years (November 2011) to find a month with as low a total number of deals as July 2013.
The light activity in July actually accelerated the already pronounced decline that we’ve registered in tech M&A. So far this year, tech buyers have done just shy of 1,800 transactions, a 20% falloff in activity compared with the roughly 2,200 deals announced during the comparable period in both 2012 and 2011. Another way to look at it: The number of transactions announced in 2013 almost exactly matches the comparable number from 2009, while this year’s spending is twice as high as the recession year.
Global tech M&A
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Source: The 451 M&A KnowledgeBase