The mergers and acquisitions market was one sector in 2023 that was not as eventful as the rest of the market, squaring off against slowdowns and a tougher regulatory environment. While signs of economic recovery are on the horizon, future M&A activity may still be dampened by looming economic headwinds.
Headline Venture Partner Kamran Ansari joins Yahoo Finance to discuss what M&A activity could look like going forward into 2024.
"As a venture investor, and if you're on the board of one of these companies... you have multiple paths to exit: you can do an IPO, M&A, you could do a recap of a private equity firm," Ansari explains. "At this point, the corporate M&A route is probably one of the least desirable, just because of the fact... it could take forever. There's a lot of risk, lack of predictability and the time and cost, you might be stuck in a process for 12, 18, 24 months and not have it work out."
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Editor's note: This article was written by Nicholas Jacobino.
Video Transcript
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- There is some optimism around a comeback year for deal making. According to a recent KPMG survey, 2/3 of M&A decision makers expect more deals this year, compared with 2023. But our next guest says there are some wrinkles still left to iron out. Joining us now is Kamran Ansari, venture partner at Headline.
Kamran, it's good to see you again. So when we talk about M&A here, we've talked a lot here about some of the regulatory obstacles. But maybe there are some others as well to the floodgates opening this year. What's tops on your list?
KAMRAN ANSARI: Sure. I mean, look, it's been a tough year for M&A in '23. It was down about 17% globally to 2.9 trillion from the year 2022. And M&A stands for Mergers and Acquisitions, it might as well stood for meager and absent because there are very few deals, and particularly in the tech sector, smaller deals notwithstanding the largest deal that was announced at the end of the year that was Cisco attempting to buy Splunk which hasn't closed yet.
But regulatory is the biggest issue. I think it lacks, it creates a lack of predictability. And the regulatory scheme has gotten even more complicated now that you have four, five, six bodies you have to go through not just the US. In the US, you have both DOJ and FTC, and then you have the UK with Brexit, EU, in some cases China. I saw a deal where they had to go through the Saudi Arabia antitrust group.
So depending on how many countries you are operating in, and for most tech companies it's going to be probably 50 or 100 countries that they're in, you're going to have to go through a lot of regulatory hurdles to have a deal go through. Which is why you're seeing mainly private equity buyers in the market in the tech space.