2016 BPS Study
Brokerage Industry Perspectives How Best Practices agencies are leading the way
Private Equity's Rise to Dominance: Share of Deal Activity
46%
44% 43%
31%
28%
22%
12% 14% 15%
4%
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Source: SNL Financial
Most agency shareholders face a dilemma created by this frothy market. Their internal “going concern” value is solid, but it still represents only a fraction of what they believe they could get from a third‐party buyer. Older shareholders want to sell and capture a higher value. Younger shareholders want to remain independent, rather than working for someone else. Thus, both sides agree that the firm must do whatever it can to close the gap between the lower internal value and the higher “street value.” But how can this be accomplished? The higher values delivered by third‐party buyers are typically driven in large part by expense reductions (producer compensation, owner compensation, staffing reductions, etc.) that the seller must agree to implement after the deal is closed. Today’s agency owners are increasingly recognizing that they can narrow the difference between internal and external value by getting more serious about making these changes on their own, without selling the business. If a third‐party buyer can justify a higher value by tightening the agency’s belt, there is no reason why this cannot be accomplished internally, too. Another strategy that the active M&A marketplace has produced is an offensive one. If you don’t want to join them, beat them! After years of believing they were priced out of the acquisition market, today’s BPS firms are jumping into the acquisition fray. They are recognizing that in this hyper‐competitive market, although they will likely have to pay top dollar for an acquisition, acquisitions can still be worth doing. They typically focus on smaller, local agencies owned by friends or respected competitors. We noted earlier that acquisition activity in 2015 was dominated by private equity buyers. But it was also a record year for privately‐held buyers, that did a total of 115 deals nationally, besting the previous high of 90 set in 2012. The BPS Study indicates that larger BPS firms were active acquirers in 2015, while only roughly 1 in 10 BPS firms under $10 million made an acquisition. Generally, larger firms have easier access to cheaper capital, which makes deals easier. Further, it is often the larger firms that are best positioned to achieve the synergies required to ensure that deals are accretive to shareholders.
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