In a recent column, we observed that median enterprise value/EBITDA buyout multiples for businesses with EVs of under $25 million were quite high, at 6.13x in 2Q. Coupling that with yearly deal flow figures for the US lower middle market—defined herein as transactions between $25 million and $100 million—it’s clear that continued competition for deals and sustained high prices for quality companies is helping elevate transaction multiples and, consequently, overall deal value even at the lowest ends of the middle market.
US PE lower-middle-market deal flow
Through 3Q, the US LMM has seen nearly $28 billion in total deal value in 2016, compared to $30.5 billion last year. Should the volume of dealmaking continue at a pace similar to 3Q, which saw a multiyear low of 117 closed investments, 2016 may well end up with a tally similar to 2012’s $33.8 billion. The typical year-end surge may help pick things up a bit, with 2016 potentially being the third-highest year of the decade for total LMM value.
There are further implications beyond the simple observation that the lower reaches of the middle market are quite popular nowadays. Since private equity buyout shops are sourcing so widely, and, moreover, are still firmly staying away from the mega-buyouts of old, it’s more likely than not that a shrunken supply of worthwhile targets is contributing to the slowing of the buyout cycle. The question then is how much the buyout cycle may slow by, and how long that will take.
As long as the cost of borrowing remains low and PE capital overhang so bulky, it really does come down to a matter of supply. Accordingly, the slowing of the cycle still has some ways to go, as a fair degree of consolidation among small-to-medium businesses in certain sectors, either due to generational wealth transfers or industry cycles, is still ongoing—generating opportunities for financial sponsors—in which the quality of the company in question becomes the primary obstacle.
Note: This column was previously published in The Lead Left.
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