August 10, 2010

Chemical Industry Merger and Acquisition (M&A) Activity Gaining Momentum

In the first half of 2010, there has been a noticeable pickup in the level of M&A activity in the core chemicals industry. In fact, in the first half of 2010, there were more deals than there were in all of 2009; to date, there have been 23 closed deals in 2010 whereas 2009 saw only 20 deals for the whole year (and only 7 for the first half). In terms of actual value, the 23 deals in 2010 represent $29 billion whereas 2009 saw $25 billion in deals for the whole year. Median valuations multiples (i.e. EV/EBITDA multiple) are on the rise for deals within the industry this year, that is significantly higher than the 2009, 2008; however, actual transaction value remains lower than 2007. It seems that sellers are more focused in achieving their strategic objectives and buyer are more focused on the value (instead of multiples or price)....Everyone wins!!

Semiconductor industry (early in the supply chain) seems to experience a further gain along with the global manufacturing and chemical sectors’ continued advancement (at a slower pace). Housing and job growth was disappointing and employment recovery may take a very long time. On the other hand, inventory rebuilding of manufactured product is moving into a moderate growth phase. All of these data coincide with the major upswing in reported second quarter revenues and profits across the industry.

Not only has there been an increase in the number of deals, but they have been more focused towards smaller-scale transactions as opposed to large, transformative deals. This can be attributed to several factors, among which include the European Union’s Reach legislation, an expected increase in the US capital gains tax, as well as banks’ predilection to favor smaller deals that focus on add-on acquisitions as opposed to massive transformations. Furthermore, a good deal of M&A activity has been conducted by financial buyers as opposed to major industry players; in the first quarter of 2010, financial buyers accounted for only 6% of the M&A dollar value, which has since risen to 48% in the second quarter.

So, what does all this information mean for the industry as a whole and how can investors capitalize on these conditions? In terms of the chemicals industry, these figures convey a strong underlying value and demonstrate the beginnings of a vibrant recovery for the industry. Furthermore, in terms of capitalizing on investments, the data indicates that the market is leaning towards smaller, operational value-adding deals for numerous reasons, and it is an ideal time for investors to take advantage of this new, and probably lasting, development in a recovering market.

1H-2010 M&A Update Slide Link: http://www.slideshare.net/ennovance

2 comments:

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Chemical Industry

Unknown said...

hi, its very informative, Merger And Acquisition , thanks