Instead of keeping its M&A strategy in-house, Composecure, under Dave Cote, spun out its capital allocation arm into a separate public company, Resolute Holdings. This allows the market to apply a high-growth 'asset manager' multiple to the M&A potential, separate from the core operating business.
Amphenol runs as a federation of autonomous business units. This structure is key to its M&A success, as acquired companies retain their brand, culture, and customer intimacy. Sellers prefer Amphenol because they know their business won't be suffocated by a monolithic corporate hierarchy.
The massive 100x return on investment for card issuers like Amex and Chase makes them insensitive to the card's cost. This dynamic protects Composecure's high margins and discourages issuers from switching to cheaper, lower-quality suppliers for their most valuable customers.
Vercel created a separate business unit for its AI tool, V0, because it targets a different audience (PMs, designers) and needed to operate with extreme speed, unburdened by the decision-making processes of the larger 700-person parent company.
To source proprietary hybrid capital deals, avoid the capital markets teams at PE firms, as their job is to minimize cost of capital. Instead, build relationships directly with individual deal partners in specific industries. This allows you to become a trusted, go-to provider for complex, time-sensitive situations where speed and certainty are valued over price.
The most lucrative exit for a startup is often not an IPO, but an M&A deal within an oligopolistic industry. When 3-4 major players exist, they can be forced into an irrational bidding war driven by the fear of a competitor acquiring the asset, leading to outcomes that are even better than going public.
The company's digital wallet, Arculus, was overhyped during its 2021 SPAC merger. When Arculus failed to deliver immediately and the SPAC market cooled, the entire company was mispriced, allowing investors to acquire the high-quality core metal card business for a fraction of its value.
Amadeus was formed by major airlines to create a neutral distribution system. This origin story provided immediate scale, credibility, and deep industry integration, creating a powerful competitive moat from day one that would be nearly impossible for a startup to replicate.
Beyond financial incentives or strategic differences, a primary driver for a successful partner to spin out from an established firm can be pure ego. The desire to build something independently and prove one's own success is a powerful, albeit rarely admitted, motivation for starting a new venture.
Recent acquisitions of slow-growth public SaaS companies are not just value grabs but turnaround plays. Acquirers believe these companies' distribution can be revitalized by injecting AI-native products, creating a path back to high growth and higher multiples.
Major competitors in the broader card manufacturing space, Idemia and Thalys, lack Composecure's specialized technology. As a result, they act as resellers, leveraging their larger sales forces to distribute Composecure's products internationally, turning potential threats into a sales channel.