How M&A Will Respond to Next Recession

The takeaway for business owners: Get back to basics. Don’t worry about hyper growth. De-risk your company as much as possible.

The M&A world isn’t quite sure what to expect in the next recession. Private equity players weren’t nearly as dominant through the last market downturns. But today those firms have $1.8 trillion in uncommitted capital they need to put to work. With money to spend, and a timeline to do it, private equity may help keep valuations healthy.

Businesses have been earning some of the healthiest valuations we’ve seen in decades. If we can see that kind of activity in times of economic uncertainty, dealmakers are optimistic we won’t see a painful drop in the months and years ahead.

Even with tons of “dry powder”, private equity is expected to be selective in making deals. Similarly, strategic and synergistic buyers – the types we at BTS primarily deal with – will be careful in finding the right fit.

Here’s some things likely to show up in the months ahead:

Is it a good fit: Strategic buyers want to find companies that fit their long term strategy. This can be to expand to a new region or to flesh out capacity. This will continue even in uncertain times when the right opportunity emerges. Presenting things effectively helps bring the potential fit to the forefront. Many times, private equity funding is behind business expansion efforts. Good sales processes organized by experienced M&A advisors help to make the case to the market.

Flight to quality: An investment phenomenon, “flight to quality” occurs when investors start shifting out of risky assets during financial downturns. While the M&A market itself is certainly not in a downturn, we will likely see buyers be more selective – focusing on the consistent performers to the exclusion of “big opportunity” entities with unproven potential.

With a maybe-recession ahead, buyers are looking for companies with predictable performance, solid margins, and low customer concentrations. Unicorns are out. Work horses are in. Or, to use another analogy, buyers will be looking to hit singles and doubles rather than taking the chance on a home run.

The takeaway for business owners: Get back to basics. Don’t worry about hyper growth. De-risk your company as much as possible.

Market efficiency: With private equity at the table, we continue to have more buyers than desirable sellers in the market. It’s easier to buy and sell businesses right now, so timelines are shrinking.

Traditionally, it takes 9 to11 months to sell a lower middle market business, but there’s a general sense of urgency and competition that’s speeding things up. Motivated buyers are at the table.

Resiliency in M&A: The market will slow down. But good companies sell in any market. Private equity and strategic buyers have money – or can find it fairly quickly – to deploy in an acquisition. Meanwhile, strategic buyers will need alternative avenues for growth as long as the tight talent market constrains organic expansion.

We could see a recession in the future, but it likely won’t have as big an impact on M&A as the past.

What our clients are saying...

“BTS quickly located prospective buyers, obtained an excellent sales price, provided expert guidance and delivered it with a personal touch. Early on John Howe checked that I was prepared for life after the sale and that legal and financial council was lined up and ready to go when required. As necessary Ken Schaefer personally coached all players in the technicalities of the process, a team effort. I investigated several brokers before selecting BTS who exceeded my expectations in every regard.”

- Leander Nichols

Comptus