Merger and acquisition activity in Ireland expected to rise in 2018

Opinion split on Brexit impact on deal volumes, KPMG Ireland study finds

Fewer respondents to KPMG’s survey said they believed deal activity would be negatively impacted by Brexit compared with a year ago, the accountancy firm said.
Fewer respondents to KPMG’s survey said they believed deal activity would be negatively impacted by Brexit compared with a year ago, the accountancy firm said.

Merger and acquisition (M&A) deals in Ireland are expected to be higher in 2018 compared with last year, a new survey of corporate executives and advisers by KPMG has found.

Some 57 per cent of respondents to the accountancy firm’s survey said they expected deal volumes would top those recorded last year, while only 8 per cent said they would fall.

The number of domestic deals in 2017 was in turn higher than it was the previous year, totalling 210 compared with 181 in 2016.

"The current environment continues to be favourable for deal-making," said KPMG Ireland partner and head of transaction services Mark Collins.

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“This is underpinned by more robust corporate profits, access to capital and lower stock market volatility, all of which contribute to enhanced confidence levels.”

Irish companies active in international M&A deals in 2017 included CRH, Kingspan, DCC, Kerry Group, Icon, UDG and One51.

Brexit impact

Fewer respondents to KPMG’s survey said they believed deal activity would be negatively impacted by Brexit compared with a year ago, the accountancy firm said, with 34 per cent saying they expected it would pose a drag on M&A volumes compared with almost half in a similar survey last year. Meanwhile, some 36 per cent said they expected Brexit would prompt an increase in deal activity.

Although “a high degree of uncertainty remains” around Brexit, concerns have “lessened somewhat”, said KPMG Ireland partner David O’Kelly.

The increase in M&A activity forecast for 2018 reflects the strong performance of Irish companies in a growing economy, he added.

The failure of deals to reach completion is largely due to avoidable reasons, the survey found, with 55 per cent of respondents citing unexpected diligence, lack of readiness and the quality of the deal team as the reason for a deal failure. A valuation gap was cited by 31 per cent.

Laura Slattery

Laura Slattery

Laura Slattery is an Irish Times journalist writing about media, advertising and other business topics