But Wong suggests the end of the M&A boom may not be as dire as some believe. For one, the number of all-cash deals is down from previous years. In 2007, 70 percent of the deals were all-cash, while year-to-date it’s about 40 percent.
Another thing that’s different about this M&A environment is the composition of the buyers.
“The preponderance of transactions this year and 2014 as well has been lead by strategic buyers, rather than financial buyers,” Wong said. “These are companies looking either to defend their existing market positions; they’re looking at consolidating their area of the market; they’re trying to drive greater margin enhancement by taking out one of their competitors.”
In 2007, private equity was responsible for about half of the M&A volumes; today’s it’s less than 20 percent, Wong said. One reason we don’t see financial sponsors as active is because of the bank capital rules that came out Dodd-Frank, Wong said. There is much greater regulatory scrutiny and oversight around highly levered deals.
But Rubino believes M&A is looking more like it did in 2007—and not in a good way.
“The fact that they’re being funded one way or another, or the companies say they’re strategic rather than financial—that’s completely meaningless,” he said. “The fact is, corporations are taking on huge amounts of debt to do share buy backs and to pay dividends.”
As of the second quarter of 2014, global corporate debt levels were up 5.9 percent since 2007 to $56 trillion, according to McKinsey.
“These deals look so good on paper, and there are all these potential synergies. But when the market turns down, it turns out they overpaid by 50 percent. So synergies didn’t really matter because they overpaid so dramatically.”
Wong believes we could see more transactions this year in the telecomm, media and technology space, in the healthcare sector and in energy and commodities.
But trying to play the M&A market by buying companies believed to be prime takeover targets is a dangerous game.
“Rather than trying to participate in it, now would be the time to consider selling (the) stocks (of firms) participating in it,” Rubino said. “When you see lots of different things hitting records, it’s time to get defensive.”