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.
Public serial acquirers like Constellation Software exploit a valuation arbitrage. They buy private niche businesses at low multiples (e.g., 5x EBITDA) which are then automatically revalued at the parent company's much higher public market multiple (e.g., 28x EBITDA), creating significant shareholder value on day one.
The best consolidation returns come from identifying a fragmented industry before it becomes a popular PE theme. Entering in the "first inning" avoids competing with dozens of other platforms, which inevitably drives up acquisition multiples for both platforms and add-ons, eroding returns.
A specific arbitrage opportunity exists with serial acquirers. When they announce a deal that will significantly increase future earnings per share, the market often under-reacts. An investor can buy shares at a compressed forward multiple before the full impact of the acquisition is priced in.
When scaling a local service business like a chiropractic office, acquiring existing practices is a more efficient growth path than building new ones from scratch. It's often possible to find owners willing to sell for very little, making it easier to retrofit them into your model.
Investors and acquirers pay premiums for predictable revenue, which comes from retaining and upselling existing customers. This "expansion revenue" is a far greater value multiplier than simply acquiring new customers, a metric most founders wrongly prioritize.
Serial acquirer Brad Jacobs boils down his complex business strategy to two core objectives: growing organic revenue faster than the market and continuously expanding profit margins. Every decision is evaluated against its ability to move one of these two levers, providing a clear and powerful framework for creating shareholder value.
Failing to integrate acquired businesses onto a unified set of systems (ERP, CRM, accounting) will directly reduce your company's valuation at sale. Acquirers price in the future cost and risk of integration. The speaker estimates his unintegrated portfolio cost him an additional 1-2x EBITDA multiple on his exit.
Standard metrics like revenue growth are misleading after an acquisition. Metropolis focused on a single variable: the gross profit uplift on a location-by-location basis after deploying their technology. This precisely measured the value created by their tech and proved the M&A thesis.
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.
In high-growth phases, M&A should accelerate product development, not find new growth engines. Start with small team/IP acquisitions to build the internal capacity for integration. This de-risks larger, more strategic deals later as the company matures and its organic growth slows.