M&A 2016: Deal makers catch their breath
In a
year marked by smaller acquisitions and higher prices, cash deals came out on
top.
Deal activity slowed in 2016, after four years of rapid growth, as companies
retreated to smaller deals. At the same time, excess cash and pressure for
growth pushed deal prices higher, even as economic and political uncertainty grew. The contribution
of megadeals—which had pushed the market to new highs in recent years—declined by 40 percent.
Those are the highlights of deal making in
2016, according to our analysis of 8,057 deals announced1globally and valued at more than $25 million.
Specifically, the absolute number of deals fell in 2016, by around 5 percent
below the year before. But the total value of deals fell by more than 17
percent from the year before—falling below the 20-year average as a percent of
global market capitalization. Much of that decline can be attributed to a sharp
reversal in the combined value of megadeals—those valued at more than $10
billion. Their share of global M&A activity fell by 40 percent, from around
a third in 2015 to less than a quarter in 2016. It is important to note,
however, that despite this drop, deal making in 2016 remained at one of its
highest levels of the past ten years.
One bright spot of deal activity was
cross-regional M&A, which went up by nearly 20 percent even as cross-border
and domestic activity fell by 28 percent and 24 percent, respectively. Most of
the increase in cross-regional M&A came from investors in Asia acquiring
companies in Europe, up 111 percent when measured by deal value, and in the
United States, up nearly 80 percent . By industry, the largest two
sectors—industrials and telecom, media, and technology—represented a third of
activity for the year. Healthcare dropped from the second-busiest sector in
2015 to the sixtieth busiest in 2016, with a 60 percent decline in combined
deal value. The only two sectors that grew in absolute terms were
transportation and logistics, up from $285 billion in 2015 to $368 billion in
2016, and energy and utilities, up from $217 billion to $272 billion.
Finally, investors
appear to be losing the enthusiasm that had pushed deal value into the double digits in the early years of the decade. After hovering above 12 percent
from 2010 to 2014, our deal-value-added (DVA) index dropped below 10 percent in 2015, and again
to around 8 percent in 2016. That’s still well above the long-term average
(Exhibit 3), and consistent with a second year of increased deal premiums. Pure
stock deals were especially affected, with the average DVA dropping from 3.6
percent in 2015 to –0.9 percent in 2016. The DVA for all-cash deals remained
strong, falling only slightly during 2015, from 18.3 percent to 17.4 percent.
By Cristina Ferrer and Andy West
http://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/strategy-and-corporate-finance/our-insights/m-and-a-2016-deal-makers-catch-their-breath?cid=other-eml-alt-mip-mck-oth-1703
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