Recent figures from investment bank
Regent
Associates reveal technology sector merger and acquisition (M&A)
activity shows no sign of abating.
Despite fears that the credit crunch would dampen the hunger for deals, the
total number of transactions involving European technology firms rebounded in
the fourth quarter. Some 799 deals were chalked up, compared with 772 in Q3, 802
in Q2 and 842 in Q1.
After falling from $114bn (£58.5bn) to $79bn between Q2 and Q3, the value of
tech M&A deals also shot back up to $86bn in the final quarter of the year.
Unwavering interest from private equity backers who bankrolled 15 per cent of
the transactions ensured the value of M&A technology deals for the whole
year leapt four per cent to $349bn. The number of deals dropped by two per cent
to 3,215.
Consolidation among UK channel players also got off to a flying start in 2008,
with several big names already snapped up and a handful more rumoured to be up
for sale.
Microsoft large account reseller Teksys was one of the first to announce a sale
to two private equity investors, including former Cisco UK managing director
Alan Watkins. Elsewhere, VAR Dynax has sold up to
Impera
and Cisco Gold partner s2s was acquired by
Bailey
Teswaine.
According to Peter Rowell, executive director at Regent, the UK remained the
region’s M&A hotspot, although he noted that the number of deals is
beginning to slow.
“The UK is the busiest in terms of companies selling, accounting for 25 per cent
of the European total,” he said. “Some 789 UK firms were sold in 2007, down 11
per cent on 2006. What we are seeing is a slight tailing off in the UK.
“The US leads the world in economic cycles and the UK follows. France lags
behind, which is why
the number of deals happening there is going up while the rest is going down.”
Some 187 UK technology firms sold up in the fourth quarter, compared with about
200 in each of the three preceding quarters.
John Lindley, director of IBM reseller
Portal
Partnership, predicted an intense year of consolidation ahead for the
software channel.
“It is my strong feeling that the IBM partner community is ripe for further
consolidation,” he said.
“There are more firms in that space than in hardware and it is smaller than the
hardware market. If the market hits a further slowdown, the way to succeed is
through careful M&A or by properly managing alliances.”
Lindley added: “I am aware there are some Dutch and German firms looking to
expand into the managed services space in the UK and I would not be surprised if
US companies are thinking the same way.
“Managed services is an attractive market at the moment because of long-term
revenue contracts in that space, which makes margins easier to forecast,” he
said.
Onlookers have cited a number of factors behind the unexpectedly active market.
Firstly, business owners that sell before the Chancellor’s planned capital gains
tax shake-up in April will avoid paying an extra 80 per cent charge when they
sell their business. Arguably a bigger factor is the recent drop in valuations
that business owners are placing on their heads.
Martin Balaam, chief executive of VAR
Redstone,
now says the company is ready to embark on the next stage of acquisitive growth
as prices begin to fall.
“M&A was not up in the fourth quarter in my experience,” he said. “If you
look at all the usual suspects, such as us, 2e2, Calyx and Azzurri, none of us
have done anything for months. In my UK small cap technology environment, the
credit crunch has had an impact on M&A.
“Over the next three to six months we will start to see some activity coming
back as vendors’ price expectations are realigned. I believe the finance sector
will work itself out their bonuses are based on deals, they have to make it
work.”
Balaam added: “We are certainly coming up to a buyers’ market. If you have the
funds and are inclined to consolidate, now is a good time. The only note of
caution is to select businesses with good recurring revenues and customer bases.
If the downturn in economic activity that people are talking about comes about,
you will want to be looking at firms that are defensive in nature.”
The caution the private equity industry was expected to show to tech M&A has
also failed to materialise.
Jason Rabbetts, managing director at storage VAR
Storpoint,
said venture capitalists’ appetite for big IT deals remains as large as ever.
“There is still plenty of cash there,” he said. “The credit crunch has not hit
investors in real terms. If you look at European M&A it is generally the
people with good track records that are doing them as they are VC-backed. We are
talking about long-in-the-tooth entrepreneurs that the City knows will be able
to buy a few firms, squeeze them and make them more profitable.”
Rabbetts added that the expected cut in interest rates also has the potential to
fuel activity.
Credit
crunch fails to slow IT consolidation

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