New After lying low at the start of the outbreak, well-stocked firms … · 2020. 7. 7. · start...

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/ 12 / / 13 / After lying low at the start of the outbreak, well-stocked firms are hunting for merger deals. Could that speed up any recovery? It was going to be another robust year for mergers and acquisitions, with the busi- ness pages full of rumors of multibillion- dollar deals, spurred on by big firms looking for small, struggling fish that would be relatively inexpensive to buy and combine. One analyst report, in fact, predicted a strong year of activity “driven by companies looking to strengthen their business.” Which is exactly what appears to be happening. Only… The big “only” here, of course, is the global pandemic. At first, with industries coming to a virtual halt in the spring, nearly every megafirm and private-equity outfit had no choice but to pull back from all the dealmaking they planned and take stock of their cash. But M&A headlines are returning briskly these days, with firms like Gold- man Sachs, Uber, and (no surprise) Amazon announc- ing or rumored to be considering some opportunistic plays to bulk up. “There’s activity happening,” says David King, Higdon Associate Professor of Management at Florida State University’s College of Business. “Companies that are capitalized are out looking to pick off assets.” M&A activity has always been a major lifeblood of business. So its disappearing act earlier this year was one of many indicators of how stunned busi- ness leaders were in COVID-19’s path of financial entirely different cultures. Experts say that requires getting everyone to agree on what a good outcome looks like, then establishing common norms and val- ues. It’s a unique challenge for leaders even in normal times. During a pandemic, it could be even harder. Or, as Bainbridge says, “Successful mergers depend on the ability to build a new team and integrate cultures in a way that gets buy-in from everyone as quickly as possible, and that’s going to be incredibly hard to do over Zoom.” 1 says Rory Singleton, a senior client partner in Korn Ferry’s Global Industrial Markets practice. But finalizing the deals—which hasn’t happened for many of the bigger ones so far—and making them work are two different challenges, especially in a pandemic. Stephen Bainbridge, a UCLA law profes- sor who specializes in M&A, says leaders are often overly optimistic about their ability to turn around businesses in deep trouble—and end up creating more financial problems than solving them. “Merg- ing a failing company into a healthy one could get the healthy company in trouble,” says Bainbridge. “It could end up being dragged down.” Apart from financial concerns, joining any two companies together often requires merging two By Peter Lauria VOICES ON... Stra tegy destruction. In the first quarter, deal volume sank to $690 billion, a 35 percent drop from the same period last year and the lowest first quarter in more than five years. To put that in perspective, the value of global M&A deals has surpassed $3 trillion annually for the last six years, with 2019 ranking as the fourth largest year on record for global M&A activity. Now, as many experts see it, the business world has little choice but to consider dealmaking. So many have tried layoffs, salary cuts, and closing factories without any bottom-line improvement. That leaves needing stronger part- ners, in some cases for survival. Meanwhile, a host of megafirms, particularly in tech, stored billions of dollars in cash and were already looking for oppor- tunities before the pandemic struck. “Mergers may be a way out of the financial stress for some,” The Takeaway Big firms thinking they can buy outfits weakened by COVID-19 should still move cautiously. LET’S MAKE A DEAL With mergers starting to return in force, here are the sectors that are typically the most active. *Excludes spin-offs. Source: Dealogic, Wall Street Journal Playing Offense Against COVID 2020 Technology 2019 2020 Finance 2019 2020 Real Estate 2019 2020 Healthcare 2019 2020 Telecom $0 Billions $100 $200 $300 2019

Transcript of New After lying low at the start of the outbreak, well-stocked firms … · 2020. 7. 7. · start...

Page 1: New After lying low at the start of the outbreak, well-stocked firms … · 2020. 7. 7. · start of the outbreak, well-stocked firms are hunting for merger deals. Could that speed

/ 12 / / 13 /

After lying low at the start of the outbreak, well-stocked firms are hunting for merger deals. Could that speed up any recovery?

It was going to be another robust year for mergers and acquisitions, with the busi-ness pages full of rumors of multibillion-dollar deals, spurred on by big firms looking

for small, struggling fish that would be relatively inexpensive to buy and combine. One analyst report, in fact, predicted a strong year of activity “driven by companies looking to strengthen their business.”

Which is exactly what appears to be happening. Only…

The big “only” here, of course, is the global pandemic. At first, with industries coming to a virtual halt in the spring, nearly every megafirm and private-equity outfit had no choice but to pull back from all the dealmaking they planned and take stock of their cash. But M&A headlines are returning briskly these days, with firms like Gold-man Sachs, Uber, and (no surprise) Amazon announc-ing or rumored to be considering some opportunistic plays to bulk up. “There’s activity happening,” says David King, Higdon Associate Professor of Management at Florida State University’s College of Business. “Companies that are capitalized are out looking to pick off assets.”

M&A activity has always been a major lifeblood of business. So its disappearing act earlier this year was one of many indicators of how stunned busi-ness leaders were in COVID-19’s path of financial

entirely different cultures. Experts say that requires getting everyone to agree on what a good outcome looks like, then establishing common norms and val-ues. It’s a unique challenge for leaders even in normal times. During a pandemic, it could be even harder.

Or, as Bainbridge says, “Successful mergers depend on the ability to build a new team and integrate cultures in a way that gets buy-in from everyone as quickly as possible, and that’s going to be incredibly hard to do over Zoom.” 1

says Rory Singleton, a senior client partner in Korn Ferry’s Global Industrial Markets practice.

But finalizing the deals—which hasn’t happened for many of the bigger ones so far—and making them work are two different challenges, especially in a pandemic. Stephen Bainbridge, a UCLA law profes-sor who specializes in M&A, says leaders are often overly optimistic about their ability to turn around businesses in deep trouble—and end up creating more financial problems than solving them. “Merg-ing a failing company into a healthy one could get the healthy company in trouble,” says Bainbridge. “It could end up being dragged down.”

Apart from financial concerns, joining any two companies together often requires merging two

By Peter Lauria

VOICES ON...

Strategy

destruction. In the first quarter, deal volume sank to $690 billion, a 35 percent drop from the same period last year and the lowest first quarter in more than five years. To put that in perspective, the value of global M&A deals has surpassed $3 trillion annually for the last six years, with 2019 ranking as

the fourth largest year on record for global M&A activity.

Now, as many experts see it, the business world has little choice but to consider

dealmaking. So many have tried layoffs, salary cuts, and closing factories without any bottom-line improvement. That leaves needing stronger part-ners, in some cases for survival. Meanwhile, a host of megafirms, particularly in tech, stored billions of dollars in cash and were already looking for oppor-tunities before the pandemic struck. “Mergers may be a way out of the financial stress for some,”

The Takeaway

Big firms thinking they can buy outfits weakened by COVID-19 should still move cautiously.

LET’S MAKE A DEAL

With mergers starting to return in force, here are the

sectors that are typically the most active.

*Excludes spin-offs. Source: Dealogic, Wall Street Journal

Playing Offense Against COVID

2020Technology

2019

2020Finance

2019

2020Real Estate

2019

2020Healthcare

2019

2020Telecom

$0Billions $100 $200 $300

2019