Mid-Market:
North American M&A
2016 Outlook
Jerry Black
Partner, Akerman
T. Patrick Hurley, Jr
Managing Director,
MidMarket Capital
Advisors
Eric Zoller
Co-founder &
Partner, Sixpoint
Partners
David Horing
Managing Director,
American
Securities
December 2015
Mid-market in numbers
$132bn
value of North
American deals
YTD* 2015
TMT
most active sector in
North America YTD*
2015 with 353 deals
*YTD reflects as of 11/24/2015
Mid-Market: North American M&A 2016 Outlook
1
. Looking ahead: the mid-market in 2016
The North American mid-market has cooled somewhat
this year after a huge 2014. But with so many factors at
play, what do the next 12 months hold?
The image for North American mid-market M&A
in 2016 is clearer as we enter December. And
the numbers so far this year paint a picture of a
market segment bursting with opportunity, yet
also looking over its shoulder.
Much of our September panel’s discussion points
are taking fruition, as the impact of BDCs and
strategic acquirers takes hold. The emergence of
both cheaper financing and more competition is
consequently generating more interest in what
the mid-market has to offer.
Elsewhere, however, caution is taking hold of
the segment.
Low oil prices, while driving down
operating costs, are hurting energy firms as well
as creating uncertainty. Similarly, the unclear
outlook for interest rates and the US presidency
present concern and apprehension.
Overall, however, this edition’s panel remains
positive regarding the opportunities for North
America’s mid-market over the next year. But
players need to act with certainty and think about
what makes them stand out when it comes to
M&A.
Companies operating in the mid-market
must decide on which direction to turn in 2016.
Mergermarket (MM): As we head into the New Year,
what are the current factors defining M&A in North
America’s mid-market?
Jerry Black (JB): The market has been driven
by factors such as the low cost of financing
— principally as a result of low interest rates —
economic stability, positive economic growth
in the United States compared with most of the
rest of the world and the demographics resulting
in baby boomers reaching retirement age. With the
latter, they are wanting to sell their companies,
primarily to generate liquidity and to maximize
current market values.
In addition, many companies are now more
inclined than they were in the past to pursue
growth through acquisition. They recognize that
the purchase of an existing business that aligns or
expands upon current operations is a faster path to
growth, or that certain new or synergetic business
lines and support capabilities will complement
their business operations and growth.
Important limiting factors as a result of recent
acquisition activity in M&A generally, including
the mid-market, are a smaller supply of quality
acquisition targets and increased valuations.
Finding companies which do not have inflated
valuations and do not create excessive risk in terms
Jerry Black
Partner, Akerman
T.
Patrick Hurley, Jr
Managing Director,
MidMarket Capital
Advisors
of meeting the acquirer’s financial and business
objectives will be more of a challenge. In light of the
larger transactions consummated more recently,
competitive pressures are causing an increase in
mid-market transactions in order to accelerate
growth and result in higher valuations.
T. Patrick Hurley, Jr (PH): For the owner/operator,
family business or entrepreneurial group, it’s
been a question of whether it’s time for them to
do something.
If we’re talking about selling —
whether it’s based on age, health or having a good
record — they don’t want to go into poor market
conditions, but the market conditions are less of a
factor than whether it’s time for them to consider
something. In one recent case, it’s been because
there was a significant funding issue related to the
scale that they needed to be — this was a company
doing about $80m in revenues that decided that
rather than go out and possibly get stomped, they
needed to find a partner that had the strength and
Eric Zoller
Co-founder &
Partner, Sixpoint
Partners
David Horing
Managing Director,
American
Securities
motivation that would pay them a very nice value,
and were willing to do it on a combo of about 50%
current in the price and 50% in an earnout where
they really believed in it.
Elsewhere, we had an owner of a hospitality
operation who was being told by everyone he was
rich, but he didn’t feel like he had enough money in
the bank. After he talked with us we did a transaction
with his existing bank that got him nearly all of his
previously taxed capital out of the business, and no
sponsor, no dilution in equity and a reasonable debt
level.
It’s altogether a different environment from
the sponsor because they’ve paid a high price, and
it becomes very difficult for management teams to
ever meet their expectations.
Eric Zoller (EZ): For private equity (PE), the
overarching theme in the market is one of contrast.
From a seller’s perspective they are beginning to
view the market as potentially having peaked. We
“For the owner/operator, family business or
entrepreneurial group...the market conditions are less of a
factor than whether it’s time for them to do something.”
T. Patrick Hurley, Jr, MidMarket Capital Advisors
Mid-Market: North American M&A 2016 Outlook
2
.
“Buyers themselves are becoming more concerned about
valuations as we hit the peak of the market...they’re trying
to be more thoughtful about picking their spots.”
Jerry Black
Partner, Akerman
Eric Zoller, Managing Partner, Sixpoint Partners
Another driver of pricing has been the rise of direct
lending funds. Rather, it’s actually a symptom of
the market in many ways. Several years ago the
total capital raised for direct lending funds was
$7bn. Now, that is closer to $35bn over the last four
years.
This is being driven by the strong demand by
sponsors and others for lending, given the rise in
deal activity.
Despite the strong deal flow and heavy dry
powder, the contrast is that buyers themselves
are becoming more concerned about valuations
as we hit the peak of the market. They’re sitting on
David Horing (DH): Two factors I would highlight
would be interest rate sentiment and wider
issues facing the global economy. Interest rate
sentiment, and the uncertainty over the timing of
rate increases, has created increased volatility in
the debt and equity markets.
This in turn has the
potential to lower confidence amongst business
leaders and may also serve to dampen valuations.
Regarding the wider economy, the slowdown in China
is trickling through to US businesses. One significant
impact has been falling commodity prices, which
influences our economy in multiple ways. Secondly,
the strengthening of the US dollar has become a
noticeable drag on some US businesses, putting
pressure on earnings.
MM: What do you think will happen to commodity
prices in 2016, and how will that impact US and
Canadian M&A in the mid-market?
JB: In light of continued economic weakness in
much of the world, especially in countries such
as China and Brazil, there is likely to be reduced
Eric Zoller
Co-founder &
Partner, Sixpoint
Partners
David Horing
Managing Director,
American
Securities
North American mid-market value and volume, H1 2010- H2 2015*
1,500
120
100
1,200
80
900
60
600
Deal value (US$bn)
Dry powder still continues to be at a post-crisis
high, with about $400bn of dry powder.
On top of
this, there’s roughly 2,300 funds seeking $770bn
of new capital. That means the number of players
chasing deals and entering the market continues to
grow each quarter. And as more and more money
flows into the market, that should provide nearterm support.
this dry powder a little longer, trying to be more
thoughtful about picking their spots.
A few years
ago, 80% of the market was PE-backed. Now our
stats show that M&A activity for PE sponsors is
closer to 45%. That’s a big drop.
Deal volume
haven’t quite seen a softening of their demands for
prices necessarily, but I think maybe now there’s a
realization that it’s time to think about exiting if you
haven’t done so.
There’s increased volatility in the
market, and people aren’t sure for how much longer
the markets will hold up.
T. Patrick Hurley, Jr
Managing Director,
MidMarket Capital
Advisors
40
300
0
20
H1
H2
H1
H2
H1
H2
H1
H2
H1
H2
H1
H2
2010 2010 2011 2011 2012 2012 2013 2013 2014 2014 2015 2015
Deal volume
Deal value (US$bn)
0
Source: Mergermarket
*YTD reflects as of 11/24/2015
Mid-Market: North American M&A 2016 Outlook
3
. “The likelihood of a continued low interest rate
environment will result in financing costs for mid-market
acquisitions being attractive for acquirers.”
Jerry Black, Akerman
demand and continued weakness in the prices of
commodities, particularly oil. This should have
a positive impact for reduced operating costs of
mid-market companies, as well as businesses and
consumers generally, and should improve the
revenue and profitability of target companies.
As a result there should be attractive opportunities,
particularly in the energy sector with the valuation
of targets reduced and the need for consolidation
as a result of financial and business uncertainty.
More mid-market and even lower mid-market
companies are becoming targets, unlike in the past
when size disqualified smaller targets for PE funds,
as a result of down-market interest as acquirers
search for desirable acquisition targets.
PH: While the producers specifically are being hurt
so badly, there’s a real benefit to the people that
are, for instance, buying plastics, which depends so
much on the price of oil. Those businesses are really
benefiting from this swing.
On the other hand, there’s no question that we’re
going to see an upside in oil and metals. But we’ll
also see continued price rises in other commodities
such as food.
People are saying there is no inflation
— but depending on who you are, there’s been
material inflation at the wholesale level.
EZ: There are two schools of thoughts now around
commodities. The first is the idea that commodity
prices have hit a trough and now’s a great time to
enter the market. We’re already seeing examples
of this, with funds in the secondary market that are
mature and heavily invested trading at material
discounts.
Funds with established portfolios
are pricing at very low prices, and people are
concerned about this.
Investors that subscribe to the idea that the
commodities market has reached a trough and
that now is a good time to get in are spending their
time going after early secondary funds, which are
funds that have only invested a small amount of
their capital, with a lot of dry powder remaining.
People are very eager to get to those funds
because they feel like deploying the uninvested
portion of those funds in today’s environment will
be quite attractive.
In contrast, investors subscribing to the idea
that oil prices are going to be lower for longer
and that commodity prices will be depressed for
a longer period of time are holding off making
new investments. These people believe that
quantitative easing coming out of Europe and the
easing coming out of China, as well as US interest
rates, are really a sign of continued problems in
Jerry Black
Partner, Akerman
T. Patrick Hurley, Jr
Managing Director,
MidMarket Capital
Advisors
Eric Zoller
Co-founder &
Partner, Sixpoint
Partners
David Horing
Managing Director,
American
Securities
the world and that will continue to put downward
pressure on the demand side of commodities, and
they’re better off holding off new investments in
the market.
If you think oil prices have hit bottom
you’ll invest, if you think it’ll be lower for longer
you will wait.
“If you think oil prices have
hit bottom you’ll invest, if
you think it’ll be lower for
longer you will wait.”
MM: It was recently mentioned that the Fed may
look to postpone a rate rise until mid-2016. On top
of this, we also have a US Presidential election in
the same year. How will this uncertainty affect
mid-market M&A in the US?
JB: The likelihood of a continued low interest
rate environment will result in financing costs
for mid-market acquisitions being attractive for
acquirers.
Speculation that interest rates will
increase after the next presidential election should
result in acquirers being more likely to consummate
acquisitions prior to the next presidential election
to take advantage of the low financing costs.
Concerns about rising interest rates, the increased
national debt and the end of quantitative easing in
the federal bond purchase program may contribute
to a sense of urgency to take advantage of the
current low interest rate environment.
Eric Zoller, Sixpoint Partners
PH: For me, rates will rise which will impact price.
That means now there’s a bit of a rush for the
higher-quality companies that can be traded.
Mid-Market: North American M&A 2016 Outlook
4
. North America mid-market sector
breakdown YTD 2015*
Deal volume
353
Deal value
(US$bn)
Technology,
Media and
Telecommunications
Jerry Black
Partner, Akerman
28.9
These are being traded by professional owners, not
traditional mid-market players thinking about their
legacy and what happens in their community.
245
224
187
181
Energy, Mining
& Utilities
Industrials &
Chemicals
Pharma,
Medical
& Biotech
Business
Services
25.0
18.1
15.2
15.7
Source: Mergermarket *YTD reflects as of 11/24/2015
This is symptomatic of what’s happening to
banks. They are being increasingly marginalized,
and I don’t even think the sponsor community
thinks about the commercial banks anymore. If
you’re dealing with the BDCs today, you’re paying
6%-7% for the money you’re borrowing. And
many of those BDCs have gone out and raised
sub-debt at 10% to fund the deals that they’re
charging people 6%-7% for.
They make these
deals to be able to produce a handsome return
for, in many cases, public shareholders. There is
a creativity that is taking place in the commercial
finance and business development world which
commercial banks can’t compete with.
EZ: I think near-term, the continued easing should
give a bounce to the M&A market. It should at least
allow the current market activity to continue.
I
think everybody expects once rates go up — and
nobody knows when they will — for it to impact
the cost of capital. When that happens, that should
flow through the system, bringing down overall
prices. In the near-term we’ll see continued stability
and activity in the M&A market — a lot of capital is
chasing a limited number of deals — so that should
T.
Patrick Hurley, Jr
Managing Director,
MidMarket Capital
Advisors
portend well for the market. If you believe that
rates will rise in December or early 2016, we’ll start
to see entry multiples on new acquisitions come
down a bit.
We also talked about uncertainty in the market.
I think capital flows are beginning to move much
more into distressed and special situations or
deep value. There’s a concern right now that so
much of the buyout market is in that segment that
it’s overbought.
There’s a concern that as rates go
up, funds who end up buying right now at the high
point in the cycle will have a more difficult time
achieving the high historical returns we’ve seen
since 2009. Limited partners (LPs) and investors
are gravitating toward PE funds that have a true
deep-value orientation because of the belief that
funds with such strategies can buy assets at better
entry multiples. If not, at least they can orient
their focus toward something that is more of a
special situation where they can take a business,
buy it at an attractive multiple, repair it and be
better positioned for the exit.
DH: The Fed’s decision around interest rate policy
clearly impacts volatility in both equity and debt
markets.
It’s hard to see sustained rate increases
happening over the next 12-18 months. This is partly
because the environment is relatively fragile, but it’s
Eric Zoller
Co-founder &
Partner, Sixpoint
Partners
David Horing
Managing Director,
American
Securities
more the psychological role — the idea that interest
rates can add volatility to the market — which would
have the potential to slow down activity.
Loans in our market typically have a LIBOR floor
which effectively means that until interest rates
move a certain amount — 100 basis points, for
instance — it won’t directly affect borrowing rates.
The psychology of rate changes, however, could
certainly impact volatility and valuations, but it
would take time before we actually see an impact
on borrowing costs.
MM: Technology has obviously had a stellar
year in 2015 – but which sectors do you think
will really come under the M&A spotlight
regarding the North American mid-market
in 2016?
JB: North American mid-market M&A will probably
be characterized by continued interest in healthcare
transactions, driven in part by the restructuring of
the healthcare industry caused by the Affordable
Care Act. With this, big pharmaceutical companies
are pursuing growth as anchor drugs go generic,
and there is a search for life sciences and healthcare
IT innovation.
The larger and stronger companies
in this sector likely will continue to see the need
to increase size for regulatory reasons, and many
targets will have to seek consolidation for survival
Mid-Market: North American M&A 2016 Outlook
5
. “We’ll see a lot of activity in the energy sector because
so many companies are under pressure from lower oil
prices and will need to consolidate.”
David Horing , American Securities
resulting from business pressures such as declining
reimbursements in the healthcare business
and increased operating costs.
In addition, with reduced demand or excess supply
in the oil and commodities sector, this should
be another area of mid-market acquisitions.
Construction and building supply companies could
also face increasing demand after a number of years
of reduced activity. In the food and retail sectors,
there is a greater interest in PE investment without
requiring control.
PH: It’s really across the board. Recently there was
an announcement that Pep Boys is being acquired
by Bridgestone at the same price that they had a
deal three years ago fall apart with Gores Group —
and it has lower earnings today than it had then.
Elsewhere, businesses in specialty retail,
restaurants and software as a service have been
highly sought after. But our client base tends to be
more industrial, and there’s a will to sell because
in low-growth industries, the only way to grow is
to buy.
If you’ve got industrial controls and meters
and devices that are used in products that may
ultimately go to a consumer, those businesses are
attractive for M&A because of the industries they’re
in are not growing fast enough.
EZ: From where we sit, interest in tech, techenabled funds and tech buyouts continues to be
very strong, and that should continue through the
next year. If you look at the softening of the public
equity markets over the last quarter, the one
exception to this interest has been technology-led
buyouts. This segment has continued to perform
well and we’ll continue to see strong investor
demand for it.
Interestingly, we’ve seen a number
of funds that focus on heavy manufacturing
introduce a tech-enabled component to their
strategy. We’re seeing a demand for a fusion of
old-world companies with more technology
angles to them.
There’s also continued interest in consumer right
now because the market is orienting itself more
toward sector specialists. In an environment where
there’s high valuations, investors are looking at
more growth-oriented sectors to justify the higher
prices that they’re paying.
You can typically find
that in the consumer sector.
Finally, healthcare continues to benefit in this
market. This year has been a very strong year for
healthcare M&A, influenced a lot by the regulatory
environment and the need to consolidate and seek
efficiencies in the industry. This will continue and
also offers a defensive play.
Jerry Black
Partner, Akerman
T.
Patrick Hurley, Jr
Managing Director,
MidMarket Capital
Advisors
DH: I think we’ll also see a lot of activity in the
energy sector because so many companies are
under pressure from lower oil prices and will
need to consolidate. We also see a lot of activity
in healthcare as Eric mentioned. The evolution in
healthcare laws, including the Affordable Care Act,
is driving consolidation in this industry as well.
MM: What do you think the fundraising
environment will be like for mid-market buyers
in 2016?
JB: The availability of capital from lenders and
PE funds should not change much.
Interest rates
should stay low until after the 2016 presidential
election, since the Fed may not want to appear to
be responding to political considerations. In the
current investment environment with low-yielding
debt not providing an attractive investment return,
PE firms should be able to access additional capital
for their funds for investment and transactional
purposes. This is in part the result of the relative
outperformance of PE compared to alternative
investments and the increase in the number and
size of PE firms formed in the last 10 years.
PH: Capital’s always available.
There’s no shortage
of capital for people to do things, and they can do
it without having equity partners. The dramatic
expansion in the mezzanine business and lots of
Eric Zoller
Co-founder &
Partner, Sixpoint
Partners
David Horing
Managing Director,
American
Securities
18.8%
North American
mid-market deals that
were in Energy
1,603
volume of North
American deals
YTD 2015
Mid-Market: North American M&A 2016 Outlook
6
. Regional mid-market M&A volume, value and percentage of global, YTD 2015*
North America
Volume
1,615
Europe
Volume
1,615
Value (US$bn)
132.9
26%
Value (US$bn)
111.5
Jerry Black
Partner, Akerman
24%
26%
28%
T. Patrick Hurley, Jr
Managing Director,
MidMarket Capital
Advisors
sources for subordinated debt has enabled this.
While the initial reaction for needing to pay 10%
for that is negative, when it’s compared with the
alternatives of having a partner, it’s usually not bad
if things go well and it can be paid off early.
The mid-market buyers are going to succeed in
purchasing companies that are owned by nonprofessional owners. The mid-market company
generally is not accustomed to dealing with a seller
who chooses their buyer based on the prospective
buyers’ markup of their agreement and willingness
to buy rep and warranty insurance. They have
negotiated transactions which are loosely based on
having some kind of knowledge dating way back,
and a belief that they will be a good fit.
Middle East & Africa
Volume
207
3%
Value (US$bn)
13.5
3%
Central & South America
Volume
198
3%
Value (US$bn)
16.4
4%
Asia-Pacific
Volume
2,567
Value (US$bn)
192.9
41%
Source: Mergermarket
41%
*YTD reflects as of 11/24/2015
EZ: The fundraising environment for PE is still a
bifurcated market between restructured funds on
the one hand, one-and-done funds on the other hand,
and the wide middle of GPs who are taking usually
16 months to raise a fund.
It’s a crowded market in
the middle, and they need to do a much better job
of differentiating themselves to LPs. However, the
fundraising market is strong and the time it takes
to raise them should come down in the next year.
On the deal-by-deal capital raising side as opposed
to the fund level, there’s a lot of interesting dynamics
Eric Zoller
Co-founder &
Partner, Sixpoint
Partners
David Horing
Managing Director,
American
Securities
happening here, particularly around co-investment.
Over the last two years, a lot of money has been
raised for discreet, co-invest capital vehicles. A lot
of LPs and traditional investors that historically only
invest in PE funds are now getting into the deal-bydeal business.
This has contributed to the growth in
the amount of dry powder going after deals, and it
has also contributed to creating a tipping point in
the market, where investors are now willing to pay
fee/carry for access to direct deals.
This ability of the GP to earn fee and carry on
co-invest deals is different to anything we’ve seen
in the last couple of years. It’s been a big focus for
our firm.
DH: The fundraising market is pretty strong,
especially for the top funds with long-established
track records and stable teams. I expect that that
will still be the case next year.
PE has outperformed other asset classes for a
sustained period of time.
This performance has
generated interest from a deep well of capital,
including large international pools of capital, and
this interest is still growing. For funds that have
struggled in terms of performance, however, it will
remain much more challenging to raise funds. But
overall, PE returns have been good and the market
Mid-Market: North American M&A 2016 Outlook
7
.
“Distinguishing themselves and being able to be
viewed as having real value is a challenge private
equity must meet.”
T. Patrick Hurley, Jr, MidMarket Capital Advisors
is fairly healthy, so the fundraising environment
should be favorable.
98%
respondents who
expected rise in PE
activity in North
American mid market1
28.4%
share of global
mid-market M&A
for North America
in YTD 2015
MM: What are the opportunities and challenges
for mid-market PE in 2016?
JB: PE firms are reaching out to smaller companies
at the lower end of the mid-market as part of the
search for potential targets. The challenge on
the acquisition side will be to find targets with
reasonable valuations in light of a potentially
diminishing supply of targets, as well as
competition among PE for suitable acquisitions and
increased competition from strategic purchasers.
PH: Even the $500-600m under management funds
would say there’s good deal flow, but that prices
are an issue. However, mid-market owners today
are unlikely to be impressed by a PE fund.
They’re
just the next one. So distinguishing themselves and
being able to be viewed as having real value is a
challenge PE must meet.
The benefits that sponsors have is that they
make things move-in ready. It’s got professional
management with a growth plan, it’s got strong
controls, be they financial development, IP and
understanding of regulations.
This is frustrating for
somebody that has a business that maybe needs more
work but can’t get the same multiple — even though it
Mid-Market: The Crux of North American M&A, Firmex, Feb 2015
1
Jerry Black
Partner, Akerman
T. Patrick Hurley, Jr
Managing Director,
MidMarket Capital
Advisors
would be well worth the work for a buyer to do that.
There’s disappointment out there in the owner/
operator community because they have a different
level of discipline about managing the value of their
businesses, and PE could look to tap into that.
EZ: I think there will be a lot of spin outs in the
market going forward. We saw in the early wave
of spin outs right after the crisis, a lot of teams
came out of the banks who got out of the
business.
Now we’re seeing a new dynamic where
new fund creation is driven by funds who raised
a lot of capital pre-crisis but are unable to raise a
fund today. This means you have teams spinning
out of those legacy funds. Garnering interest from
investors for spin outs is a big opportunity for
PE in 2016.
The second big opportunity is to
develop relationships with LPs through the
co-investment process.
Eric Zoller
Co-founder &
Partner, Sixpoint
Partners
David Horing
Managing Director,
American
Securities
700 funds raising close to $800bn, how do you
differentiate yourself in the eyes of the investor?
DH: The recent choppiness in the debt markets
should create good opportunities in 2016. We
see some banks are hung with loans and/or are
unwilling to finance certain new deals. We have
seen in prior credit cycles that these dislocations
can create great buying opportunities for PE firms
that are able to take advantage at potentially more
reasonable valuations.
Despite this, the biggest challenge in our market
continues to be valuations, which are at an all-time
high, making it hard for buyers.
And it’s a market
that continues to remain pretty competitive. PE
funds tend to have quite a bit of capital to deploy
and corporate buyers with liquid balance sheets
have been active as well, so we see a competitive
market and expect that trend to continue.
One challenge is fee compression. Managers are
under pressure from investors in terms of the fees
that they can charge portfolio companies.
There are
lots of regulatory challenges for PE funds in terms
of greater scrutiny and a greater need to focus on
transparency and reporting to LPs.
The overarching challenge, in the fundraising
market, is differentiating yourself. With over
Mid-Market: North American M&A 2016 Outlook
8
. Center of excellence
Tom Stewart of the National Center for the Middle Market
explains why companies in the middle ground are crucial
to the US economy.
Mid-market companies have been a pillar of strength
for the North American economy in the last decade,
standing tall when others have floundered. Now, they
are using the optimal market conditions as well as their
own initiative to make waves in dealmaking.
Pillar of strength
The mid-market’s strength has been seen in the past.
In the aftermath of the Great Recession, 8.8 million
US jobs were lost, according to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics. By contrast, between 2008 and 2010, midmarket companies actually added jobs. During this
period, surviving mid-market businesses added more
than two million jobs, while surviving large businesses
shed nearly four million.
They continue to grow
strongly. Top-line growth for middle market firms in
the last four quarters has been, on average, 7.2%.
Mid-market companies have also been prudent and play
a long game. Instead of overburdening themselves with
debt or outside capital to grow, many mid-market firms
prefer to pay down debt and self-fund.
Indeed, according
to our research, almost a third of small and mid-market
firms have not raised capital in the last three years, while
roughly 40% do not think they will raise outside capital
in the coming three years.
Desire to deal
While the mid-market has been growing strongly
organically, companies in the segment also realize
that acquisitions are useful. Low interest rates are,
“Instead of overburdening themselves with debt or outside
capital to grow, many mid-market firms prefer to pay down debt
and self fund.”
Tom Stewart
Executive Director,
National Center for
the Middle Market
Tom Stewart, National Center for the Middle Market
of course, certainly incentivizing companies who
want to acquire. However, the fact that mid-market
companies are well positioned already means they are
not as prone to macroeconomic factors as other firms.
Perhaps because they prefer to fund investments from
retained earnings, mid-market firms are in the main not
too concerned about potential rising interest rates, at
least when it comes to funding acquisitions.
There is a general attitude of buying as and when you
must, and not just necessarily reacting to outside
events.
This is seen in our research. In Q3 2015, 15% of
companies with revenues between $10m and $1bn said
they expected to make an acquisition in the year ahead.
And 27% of companies between $100m and $1bn said
that they expect to do a deal over the next 12 months.
to companies, improve their management and update
technology and so forth, and bring mid-market
businesses into the 21st century.
Sector-specific factors are also playing a role in midmarket dealmaking. Healthcare, for instance, has been
very active, much of this coming from consolidation and
opportunity as the impact of the Affordable Care Act
continues to take hold.
The mid-market’s role as the most powerful engine of
growth in the US economy is not as widely recognized
as it should be.
Alongside this, dealmaking can provide
these companies with a platform to accelerate the
growth further. As the mid-market’s success continues,
it’s important to recognize that, enable it, and
acknowledge that this is the hotspot for the economy.
PE interest
Private equity (PE) firms are also keen on investing
more into mid-market North American companies.
And rather than investing in order to strip assets and
reduce costs, PE firms in this segment are looking to
help the mid-market grow further. They want to buy in
Mid-Market: North American M&A 2016 Outlook
9
.
About Firmex
Firmex is a global provider of virtual data rooms and a secure document sharing
platform. From its Toronto, Canada office, the company helps run over 10,000 new data
rooms a year with more than 75,000 companies worldwide trusting Firmex as their
virtual data room provider. Millions of documents are exchanged each year using Firmex,
supporting processes that include financial transactions, mergers and acquisitions,
corporate governance, regulatory compliance, litigation, and procurement.
For more information, go to: http://www.firmex.com/get-started/.
Contact Firmex
Joel Lessem, CEO & Co-Founder
jlessem@firmex.com
LinkedIn Profile
Aaron Booth, VP Sales
abooth@firmex.com
LinkedIn Profile
Sales:
North America: 1 888 688 4042
Europe: 44(0) 20 3371 8476
International: +1 416 840 4241
E-mail: sales@firmex.com
Website: www.firmex.com
Twitter: @firmex
LinkedIn
Mark Wright, VP Marketing
mwright@firmex.com
LinkedIn Profile
Mid-Market: North American M&A 2016 Outlook
10
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. About Mergermarket
Mergermarket is an unparalleled, independent mergers & acquisitions (M&A) proprietary
intelligence tool. Unlike any other service of its kind, Mergermarket provides a complete overview
of the M&A market by offering both a forward-looking intelligence database and a historical deals
database, achieving real revenues for Mergermarket clients.
For more information, please contact:
Katy Cara
Sales Director, Remark
Tel: (646) 412-5368
Remark, the events and publications arm of The Mergermarket Group, offers a range of publishing,
research and events services that enable clients to enhance their own profile, and to develop new
business opportunities with their target audience.
To find out more, please visit:
www.mergermarketgroup.com/events-publications
Mid-Market: North American M&A 2016 Outlook
12
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