Home Knowledge Irish M&A Market records 300 deals worth €14.8bn in 2022

Irish M&A Market records 300 deals worth €14.8bn in 2022

A total of 300 qualifying deals were recorded within the Irish M&A Market in 2022, a drop of 2% since 2021 which was considered an outlier year.

The total deal value came to €14.8bn, which is 38% lower from the figure recorded in 2021 but excludes the US$28bn offer by Amgen for Horizon Therapeutics, announced in December.

Key findings for Ireland in 2022 include:

  • 216 inbound cross-border transactions, worth a total of €12.5bn
  • Seven deals worth €500m or more
  • Total value of M&A activity in 2022 came to €14.8bn, with 86% of deals worth between €5m and €250m
  • A total of 300 transactions represented a 2% decrease from 2021 levels, a remarkable achievement considering 2021 saw the most deals on record
  • The financial services sector featured prominently in deals across 2022, accounting for 51% of Irish M&A by value
  • Ireland’s tech sector continued to be an important focus for M&A with technology, media and telecoms (TMT) accounting for 22% of all deals by volume during 2022
  • Set against pre-pandemic levels of activity, 2022 private equity (PE) activity was strong with a total of 62 transactions.

Stephen Keogh, Head of Corporate/M&A at William Fry, noted: “Ireland is not immune to the headwinds buffeting the global economy. Rising interest rates, persistently high inflation, slower growth in Western markets, war in Ukraine and global supply chain disruption all present significant challenges.  Ireland appears, however, to be weathering the storm more comfortably than many other countries and the economy continues to outperform. While the bumper M&A year of 2021 was always going to be difficult to match, the data for 2022 is strong despite something of a slowdown in the second half of the year.”

Megadeals

Mid-market transactions dominated M&A activity in Ireland in 2022. Almost nine in 10 Irish M&A deals fell into the mid-market segment, with transaction values of between €250m and €500m. The larger end of the market was also active, with seven transactions worth more than €500m in 2022 having a total aggregate deal value of €11.5bn. Only 2021, with 9 large deals worth €16.2bn (the most on Mergermarket record), exceeded these 2022 totals.

Sector Watch

The financial services sector accounted for more than half of Irish M&A by value. The sector accounted for four of the 15 largest deals in Ireland in 2022. In terms of deal volume, the technology, media, and telecoms (TMT) sector was the dominant sector within the market. With significant transactions such as Partners Group’s acquisition of Version 1 and JP Morgan’s acquisition of Global Shares, the TMT sector accounted for 22% of all M&A deals by volume in Ireland during 2022. The real estate and infrastructure sector saw an uptick in activity from investors, accounting for 15% of Irish M&A by deal value last year, up from just 2% in 2021. Another sector worth singling out was pharmaceuticals, medical and biotechnology, which accounted for 12% of deals by volume in 2022, with the year ending on the “mega-deal” announcement of Amgen’s recommended takeover of Horizon Therapeutics plc for US$28bn.

Inbound Activity

Overseas acquirers conducted 216 inbound transactions in the country in 2022, one more than in 2021, but the total deal value for inbound transactions fell by almost a third to €12.5bn. All but three of the 20 largest deals of the year were inbound cross-border transactions. Interest in Irish business is truly global. Close to home, the country represents an obvious opportunity for UK acquirers, accounting for 72 deals last year, more than any other country. But buyers also came from across the Atlantic as well as across the Irish channel, with US acquirers pursuing 60 transactions. In value terms, Japanese buyers led the way, driving €7bn worth of M&A deals, with the US in second place, with €2.2bn.

Last year saw 84 deals that involved domestic players only, down marginally from a total of 92 in 2021. Those included the €1.1bn Hibernia REIT acquisition by Benedict Real Estate.

Private Equity

Although 2022 PE activity failed to maintain the anomalous levels of 2021 (year on year deal volumes and values fell by 19% and 76%), it remained strong when set against pre-pandemic levels of activity with PE buyers leading on a total of 62 deals worth €2.6bn. PE activity in Ireland, which includes activity involving both international funds and a small but growing number of Irish firms, continued to be a growth feature of the Irish M&A landscape in 2022. PE accounted for a fifth of all deals by volume in 2022. While many of these were smaller mid-market transactions, contributing to the fall in deal value, seven of the 20 largest deals of the year were PE-related, with five buyouts and two exits. The biggest PE transaction of the year in Ireland were both exits: Partners Group’s acquisition of Version 1 Holdings for €800m, and Motive Partners’ sale of Global Shares to JP Morgan for €665m.
While PE investors took a more restrained approach in Ireland in 2022, there was still much appetite for companies with a sound business model. With this in mind, an optimism for Ireland continuing to attract its fair and increasing share of PE interest and activity remains.

Outlook

Looking ahead to 2023, Stephen Keogh concluded: “Irish M&A has proven itself to be extremely resilient over the past few years, seen through the impressive levels of deal activity throughout the global pandemic. The remarkably strong market for dealmaking witnessed in 2021 continued during the first and second quarters of 2022, before easing in the second half. The question is whether that slowdown continues or even accelerates in 2023 – the current global economic picture suggests that a cautious approach would be wise. Nevertheless, there are reasons to be positive about the outlook for M&A activity in Ireland with many advisers reporting strong pipelines of work“.

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