No one expected 2021’s breakneck pace of distribution mergers & acquisitions to last forever. Largely fueled by private equity that had substantial capital to spend that was built up during the market’s holding pattern from 2Q 2020-1Q 2021 amid all the shutdowns. That led to a spending spree throughout 2021 once distributors returned to growth/recovery mode. You can read much more about the factors involved in my “Why Private Investment is Driving So Much of Distribution M&A” MDM Premium series.
As for the January-March 2022 period, while the pace of M&A was noticeably cooler, it was very strong by recent historical standards. As you’ll see in transaction data provided to MDM by investment bank Houlihan Lokey in MDM’s 2022 1st Quarter Distribution M&A Report, domestic M&A activity across all industries was close behind that of 1Q-3Q 2021 and outpaced all of 2019. A record 4Q makes anything else look slow by comparison, but 1Q was still quite healthy.
Besides total deal activity, the Houlihan Lokey (HL) data in our 1Q M&A Report also provides a look at average deal value, and it shows the value for the 12 months trailing March 31 right on par with that of 2019. Likewise, HL’s data for 1Q distribution median EBITDA Trading Multiples shows that the January-March period considerably outpaced anything from 2019, though was a sizable step down the record-setting 4Q 2021.
The final piece of data from HL is a chart of distributor’s financial metrics and trading multiples, which provides a March 31 snapshot of 26 publicly-traded distributors’ historical median EBITDA multples using their trailing 12 months. It highlights key financial metrics for many of the biggest market movers in this sector across diverse end markets.
Beyond data, our 1Q report highlights MDM blogs that covered key M&A developments that happened in the quarter and shortly thereafter. Those blogs focus on activity out of OEM parts distributor Parts Town, automation distributor Kele and energy products distributor DXP Enterprises.
Of course, our report also recaps all the deals MDM covered during 2022’s first quarter. While activity was lighter, it included a handful of major deals that included Motion completing its $1.3 billion buy of Kaman Distribution Group; Builders FirstSource adding National Lumber; Owens & Minor buying Apria for $1.6 billion; and Sonepar selling its Vallen Distribution subsidiary. You can find monthly recaps of each 1Q month in the report.
Deal activity has continued at a strong pace now into the second half of May, so 2Q 2020 is already shaping up to be another robust period. Several of the investment banks I spoke with for the aforementioned “Why Private Investment…” series mentioned how they’ve seen the “quality” of late 1Q and 2Q deals less than that of 2021, but they largely attribute that to a smaller pool of distributors left to acquire and the most attractive ones already being spoken for.
In the meantime, it’s always worthwhile to take a look back at the most recent quarter.
Check out our 1Q M&A Report here.
Related Posts
-
An annualized growth rate of 10.6% accelerated across industrial and construction distributors during the first…
-
We look back at the blogs, articles and news items that attracted the most attention…
-
The automation company reported $1.857 billion in sales for its fiscal 2022 first quarter, 18.7%…