Contact: Brenon Daly
The buyout barons are busier than ever. Already this year, private equity (PE) shops have announced more tech transactions than any year in history. The unprecedented flurry of deals comes as more financial acquirers are buying their way into the ever-maturing tech industry, with newly hatched fledgling funds joining well-established multibillion-dollar outfits. This ever-increasing pack of PE players is vastly outpacing their corporate rivals when it comes to putting up deals.
So far this year, PE buyers have announced a record 283 acquisitions, an increase of 11% from 2015 and 21% from 2014, according to 451 Research’s M&A KnowledgeBase. (We would also note that the deal flow covers virtually every strategy – carve-outs, bolt-ons, take-privates, secondaries – available to these firms.) If we assume the pace of buyout activity holds through December, PE shops will put up more than 300 prints in 2016, a 20% increase from last year. (For the record, M&A spending by buyout firms this year has set a post-recession record.)
As PE shops step up their activity, corporate acquirers are slowing down. Overall, the number of tech transactions is likely to decline about 10% this year, compared with 2015. (That’s assuming the pace in December continues at the rate of the preceding 11 months.) The drop-off in 2016 will be even sharper among US publicly traded buyers, which represent the most visible segment of the ‘corporate acquirers.’ Currently, tech vendors listed on the Nasdaq and NYSE are on pace to announce just 900 purchases in 2016, down from about 1,040 deals in each of the two previous years, according to the M&A KnowledgeBase.
Although PE is essentially the sole ‘growth market’ in tech M&A right now, it still represents only a small portion of the activity. In 2016, financial acquirers account for only one of every 12 transactions. Still, that’s a higher share of the market than either of the two previous years – and that looks likely to increase further in 2017. Even from the recent record level of activity, nearly half of respondents (45%) to the M&A Leaders’ Survey from 451 Research and Morrison & Foerster last October predicted that buyout shops would spend more in 2017 than they have in 2016, compared with just one-quarter (28%) who forecast lower spending.
PE activity
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Source: The 451 M&A KnowledgeBase
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