We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.
Blackstone's successful acquisition strategy focused on buying smaller, sub-scale businesses they could grow significantly. They avoided paying for fully built-out franchises, ensuring the value created by future growth accrued to their own shareholders, not the seller's.
A unique "Double and Keep It" model helps business owners double their company's value by using external capital from family offices to acquire other companies. This creates a larger, more attractive group for a future sale, increasing the owner's payout without them taking equity dilution or adding debt to their original business.
A powerful filter for any potential acquisition is asking: 'If this were the last business we could ever buy, would we still want to own it?' This simple question forces a long-term, operational mindset and helps avoid deals that rely on future exits or financial engineering.
Fairfax employs a clever M&A strategy called the "cannibal buy-up." When an asset is too large to acquire outright, they partner with another firm. Later, when financially stronger, they use their capital to buy out the partner's stake, allowing them to gain 100% control of a valuable asset over time.
Acquiring smaller companies at a 5-6x EBITDA multiple and integrating them to reach a larger scale allows you to sell the combined entity at a 10-12x multiple. This multiple expansion is a powerful, often overlooked financial driver of M&A strategies, creating value almost overnight.
Bending Spoons' M&A strategy came from realizing that creating a startup from scratch (zero-to-one) is heavily luck-dependent. In contrast, scaling an existing business (one-to-N) relies on functional skills like engineering and marketing that can be systematically mastered and applied across acquisitions.
Many M&A teams focus solely on closing the deal, a critical execution task. The best acquirers succeed by designing a parallel process where integration planning and value creation strategies are developed simultaneously with due diligence, ensuring post-close success.
When acquiring a business, don't rely on a single outcome like achieving a growth target. Instead, seek assets that offer multiple ways to win. Even if the primary goal is missed, the acquired data, technology, or talent could create significant value for other business units, providing built-in insurance for the deal.
The current M&A landscape is defined by a valuation disparity where smaller companies trade at a discount to larger ones. This creates a clear strategic incentive for large corporations to drive growth by acquiring smaller, more affordable competitors.
Viewing acquisitions as "consolidations" rather than "roll-ups" shifts focus from simply aggregating EBITDA to strategically integrating culture and operations. This builds a cohesive company that drives incremental organic growth—the true source of value—rather than just relying on multiple arbitrage from increased scale.
Counterintuitively, making a business hyper-efficient before a sale is not always optimal. Roughly half of buyers prefer acquiring companies with identifiable inefficiencies because improving them is a key part of their own value-creation thesis and justification for the acquisition.