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This year could set another record for US PE add-on activity

Add-ons now account for 68% of all US PE buyouts, and a variety of factors have helped boost that ratio to today’s level.

Add-ons now account for 68% of all US PE buyouts. If that pace holds, 2019 will notch another high-water mark for the add-on/LBO ratio, which has been trending up for the past decade, according to PitchBook’s recently released 3Q 2019 US PE Breakdown Report.

Two crosswinds have helped boost that ratio to today’s level—a heightened focus on the buy-and-build model, and ever-increasing buyout multiples, which have reached a median of 12.9x so far this year. Higher price tags aren’t the sole cause of more add-on activity, but it’s probably not a coincidence either. Add-ons are popular in rich environments because they help blend down the aggregate acquisition multiple over time and spur growth for the original platform.


We covered add-ons in more detail last year in our analyst note on additive dealmaking, plus a follow-up note, but it’s worth reiterating the potential impact trends like these will have on the broader PE market over time.

For one thing, we found that most add-ons are done by a relatively sparse number of investors; not every platform buyout undergoes the buy-and-build treatment, while other platforms are much more prolific than average.

For platforms that make those acquisitions, however, it takes them more time to exit from their private equity sponsors—about a year longer compared to non-acquisitive platforms. Elongated hold times weigh down the platform investment’s ultimate return, so the value-add of each add-on needs to be carefully considered on the part of the sponsor. With that in mind, sponsors also need to act quickly on add-on targets.

Another tidbit we found was that the first add-ons made by a given platform were completed within a year of the platform itself being acquired. Given the time it takes for any acquisition to close, we can round that down closer to zero, or at least to the frantic “first 100 days” mark.

Taken together, add-on data paints a picture of PE investors navigating an expensive market through acquisitive growth plans—among other efforts—and doing so very early in the process. And considering how long the trend has sustained itself, we can assume investors are getting better and better at buy-and-build over time.

This column originally appeared in The Lead Left.

Featured image via Memitina/iStock/Getty Images Plus

Read more about PE exits, fundraising and deal activity in our latest US PE Breakdown.

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    About Alex Lykken
    Alex Lykken is a senior analyst at PitchBook, covering custom research projects and white papers across the PE, VC and M&A markets. He worked on PitchBook’s editorial team from 2012 to 2015 and re-joined in 2017 after a two-year stint at Goldman Sachs. He attended Central Washington University and studied history and political science.

    Outside of work, he spends his time fishing, golfing, writing, losing at fantasy football, and trying to keep up with his two-year-old lab.
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