M&A market timing at CA

Contact: Brenon Daly

After a two-year hiatus that ended last fall, CA Inc has returned to the market with newfound enthusiasm. With the vendor’s purchase on Monday of network performance management provider NetQoS, CA has now inked six acquisitions over the past 12 months. That comes after an extended period (September 2006 to October 2008) when the normally acquisitive company stepped out of the market entirely.

During that time, CA’s four large rivals (BMC, Hewlett-Packard, IBM and Symantec) announced a total of 61 transactions between them. Collectively, the quartet of buyers paid roughly 5.7 times trailing 12-month (TTM) revenue in the deals they did. (That’s the median valuation from the more than 20 transactions that either had terms disclosed or where we estimated the numbers.)

So from CA’s perspective, sitting out a period marked by historically high valuations might not be a bad thing at all. Consider this: CA’s purchase of NetQoS cost it $200m in cash, which worked out to 3.6x TTM sales. If we slap the prevailing multiple from the period CA was out of the market (5.7x TTM sales) onto CA’s most-recent deal, the price for NetQoS swells to $320m. Obviously, there were vastly different assumptions about growth rates in late 2006 and early 2007 than there are now, which goes a long way toward explaining the nearly 40% ‘discount’ that CA got by inking the NetQoS purchase on Monday rather than when the market was hot.

NetQoS back in the market

Contact: Brenon Daly

When we caught up with NetQoS last June, the company had just inked its first purchase after a two-and-a-half-year hiatus, taking home trade-monitoring software startup Helium Systems. The Austin, Texas-based network performance management vendor is now ready to continue that shopping. Speaking at the Pacific Crest Securities Data Center Conference on Wednesday, Gordon Daugherty, the company’s head of corporate development, said NetQos is looking at a broad range of deals in a broad range of sizes.

Daugherty indicated that the company is eyeing companies in markets such as security and systems management, among others. Loosely, NetQoS is targeting a deal that could add about $10m in revenue to the $65m that it plans to record this year. However, Daugherty said the company is open to doing something larger than that placeholder. A larger purchase would require NetQoS to raise money for the first time in more than a half-decade. (The company has been profitable since 2005.) Daugherty added that the majority owner of NetQoS, New York City-based private equity firm Liberty Partners, has signed off on a fresh round to fund the right deal.

NetQoS acquisitions

Date Target Rationale
June 2008 Helium Systems Trade monitoring
December 2005 Pine Mountain Group Services
April 2005 RedPoint Network Systems Device management

Source: The 451 M&A KnowledgeBase

Interplay between M&A and IPO

Contact: Brenon Daly

With the IPO calendar essentially blank right now – and likely to stay that way as long as the Nasdaq keeps lurching downward – companies that are both of size and mind to go public are using the pause to do a little shopping of their own. These transactions tend to be smaller plays, typically rounding out the company’s existing portfolio. (We would contrast these tuck-in deals with the larger consolidation plays that companies make so they can get big enough to paper their S-1. Of course, those deals only work when the public market is receptive. For instance, Convio acquired a rival that was about half its size in hopes of bulking up and going public. It pulled its IPO paperwork last August.)

Last summer, we noted that NetQos inked a small buy on its way to what we expect will be a larger sale of its equity to the public, whenever the market returns (it was the first deal by the network performance management vendor in some two-and-a-half years). In a similar situation, Tangoe last week announced that it was picking up mobile device management startup InterNoded.

The deal, which was Tangoe’s third purchase in less than two years, certainly wasn’t done to boost revenue. InterNoded posted sales of about $4m in 2008; meanwhile, Tangoe is anticipating about $60m in 2009. Tangoe has raised some $20m in VC, along with an undisclosed slug of debt. But the company, which is running in the black, doesn’t appear to have any immediate plans to raise capital (even if that were possible right now). We understand that it hasn’t met with bankers, much less held a bake-off.

NetQoS: a small buy on the way to a sale

On its way to a probable public offering next year, NetQoS has acquired a startup that will boost the company’s offering to the financial services industry. On Tuesday, NetQoS said it’ll pay a small amount of cash for Helium Systems, which makes trade monitoring software. (Helium isn’t expected to add much revenue to NetQos, which has been tracking to $60m this year, up from $45m in 2007.)

Indeed, organic growth has been the story at NetQoS, since the Helium acquisition is the first by the company in nearly two-and-a-half years. But the pace may be about to pick up. The reason? As it gets ready to put together an underwriting ticket for an IPO down the road, NetQoS has found (surprise, surprise) that bankers are also pitching other deals. Meanwhile, for its part, the company has started to look at ways to fill up its corporate coffers if it finds a deal that’s too good to pass up.

Thus far, NetQoS has been remarkably conservative in its capitalization, raising just $21m total. (Liberty Partners, a New York PE firm that typically invests in midmarket companies, is the majority owner of NetQoS and the company’s only institutional investor.) NetQoS, which has been cash-flow positive since 2005, hasn’t taken any outside money in a half-decade. But with an IPO payday likely in 2009, we’re guessing NetQoS wouldn’t have any trouble lining up funds, either from its current backer or even a new partner. 

NetQoS acquisitions

Date Target Rationale
June 2008 Helium Systems Trade monitoring
Dec. 2005 Pine Mountain Group Services
April 2005 RedPoint Network Systems Device management

Source: The 451 M&A KnowledgeBase