M&A in a changing world: Opportunities amidst disruption
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The shifting landscape of global wealth: Future-proofing prosperity in a ti...
In some instances the impact of this shift will be shaped by local factors, such as demographic changes. In other instances this shift will reflect shared characteristics, as demonstrated by the greater popularity of overseas investing among younger high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) brought up in an era of globalisation. Whatever the drivers, the landscape of wealth is changing—from local to global, and from one focused on returns to one founded on personal values.
Despite rising economic concerns and a tradition of investor home bias in large parts of the world, the new landscape of wealth appears less interested in borders. According to a survey commissioned by RBC Wealth Management and conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), younger HNWIs are substantially more enthusiastic about foreign investing. The U.S. is a particularly high-profile example of a country where a long-standing preference for investments in local markets appears set to be transformed.
Click the thumbnail below to download the global executive summary.
Read additional articles from The EIU with detail on the shifting landscape of global wealth in Asia, Canada, the U.S. and UK on RBC's website.
Fintech in ASEAN
To better understand the opportunities and challenges in developing a fintech business in seven ASEAN markets, The Economist Intelligence Unit conducted wide-ranging desk research supplemented by seven in-depth interviews with executives in Australia and ASEAN.
Download report and watch video interview to learn more.
Risks and opportunities in a changing world
Read our Taxing digital services, U.S. tax reform: The global dimension, & Planning for life after NAFTA articles by clicking the thumbnails below.
M&A in a changing world: Opportunities amidst disruption
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M&A in a changing world: Opportunities amidst disruption
Confidence Restored The annual value of deals in Asia-Pacific has increased significantly since 2008,
Related content
The shifting landscape of global wealth: Future-proofing prosperity in a ti...
In some instances the impact of this shift will be shaped by local factors, such as demographic changes. In other instances this shift will reflect shared characteristics, as demonstrated by the greater popularity of overseas investing among younger high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) brought up in an era of globalisation. Whatever the drivers, the landscape of wealth is changing—from local to global, and from one focused on returns to one founded on personal values.
Despite rising economic concerns and a tradition of investor home bias in large parts of the world, the new landscape of wealth appears less interested in borders. According to a survey commissioned by RBC Wealth Management and conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), younger HNWIs are substantially more enthusiastic about foreign investing. The U.S. is a particularly high-profile example of a country where a long-standing preference for investments in local markets appears set to be transformed.
Click the thumbnail below to download the global executive summary.
Read additional articles from The EIU with detail on the shifting landscape of global wealth in Asia, Canada, the U.S. and UK on RBC's website.
Fintech in ASEAN
To better understand the opportunities and challenges in developing a fintech business in seven ASEAN markets, The Economist Intelligence Unit conducted wide-ranging desk research supplemented by seven in-depth interviews with executives in Australia and ASEAN.
Download report and watch video interview to learn more.
Risks and opportunities in a changing world
Read our Taxing digital services, U.S. tax reform: The global dimension, & Planning for life after NAFTA articles by clicking the thumbnails below.
Innovation through acquisition: Can businesses buy their way into innovation?
Big firms are hungry for more innovation than they can generate themselves, and acquisition offers them the opportunity to promote good ideas with corporate scale.
Related content
Culture clash - the challenge of innovation through acquisition
Despite political turbulence and currency volatility, UK companies are ready to do deals—especially if merger and acquisition (M&A) activity allows them to get their hands on valuable innovations. In uncertain times acquisitions offer routes to innovation that internal resources alone cannot provide.
In a recent survey of 200 business leaders in the UK, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) and sponsored by Rackspace, two-thirds of respondents agree that acquisition is a good strategy for enhancing innovation, while the same proportion believes that the acquisition of innovative start-ups is a critical success factor in their industry.
Those beliefs translate into action: 59% of respondents say their company has acquired at least one smaller, innovative firm during the past five years, and just over half (51%) are now actively searching for new acquisitions. A further 40% say that their company will consider an acquisition over the next three years, should the right opportunity present itself.
Indeed, M&A activity is increasingly driven by a thirst for innovation, according to a recent report from professional services firm Deloitte. Globally, companies spent US$300bn on “disruptive, innovation-related” M&A deals in 2016, four times more than in 2012, its study found. For large companies with deep pockets acquisition offers the opportunity to find winning ideas and amplify them to corporate scale. According to our survey, over half of UK respondents (57%) believe that the resources of a large company, together with the agility of a smaller firm, “create a strong combination”.
But acquisitions are difficult to get right. According to a study by US management consultancy AT Kearney, as many as 60% of M&A deals fail to deliver value.2 Acquiring for innovation may be especially challenging, as the ability to innovate is a facet of an organisation’s culture that can all too easily be snuffed out. Business leaders who wish to innovate successfully through acquisition must be adept at integrating organisational cultures and keeping talented staff on side.
Integrating culturesThere are many attributes companies look for in an acquisition, including access to a wider market of customers and innovative technology. For 22% of UK respondents, a corporate culture similar to their own is a key trait in a potential target.
“There have been examples of companies where we think the technology’s good,” Mr MacLeod explains, “but there’s a lack of cultural ‘fit’, and that’s as important to us as having a technology fit. If y you don’t have the culture aspects, then the integration will almost certainly fail.”
Company culture, Mr McLeod points out, defines how people work together to achieve business goals. This has particular relevance when it comes to innovation: it can be hard to launch a new product, for example, or arrive at a new scientific breakthrough against a backdrop of misunderstanding or even mistrust. A poor cultural fit can be highly disruptive, throwing projects off the track and delaying crucial decisions.
Successfully integrating a company post-merger is a critical success factor for any deal. Handled badly, it can undermine the value that the acquired company brings to its new owner. With innovative firms the challenge is especially complex: how can the buyer integrate the acquired firm without snuffing out its innovative spark?
There is little agreement among survey respondents: 30% believe the acquired companies should operate as a separate entity, with the exception of common functions such as finance; 28% believe it should do so only until it reaches a certain level of maturity and should then be gradually integrated; and 27% believe that once that maturity is reached, it should be quickly integrated.
Johnson Matthey sees value in closely integrating acquisitions into the main firm. “That’s how you create the necessary synergies,” says Mr MacLeod. “Products can maintain their own brand identity under a new owner, but with people and processes we need unity, so that both internally and externally there’s an understanding of what our opportunity is and what we bring to the market.”
The challenge of integrating two companies while preserving the culture that makes the acquired firm valuable calls for considered and deliberate management. The authors of the 2017 M&A Integration Survey Report by professional services company PwC say that change, or at least compromise, is necessary. Managers, they argue, must define their desired behaviours, highlight internal role models who demonstrate those behaviours, and provide meaningful incentives for employees to make the necessary changes.
The ability to manage cultural integration explicitly is often undermined by a shallow understanding of what organisational culture really is, a report from strategy firm McKinsey & Company argues. “Culture is much deeper than a good first impression, a sense that you share the same values or the more trivial practices, say, of wearing (or not wearing) jeans on Fridays.” But too often, the authors say, managers focus on the wrong things, “addressing the most visible expressions of culture, rather than the underlying management practices and working norms”.
As an example of how things should be done, the authors point to the integration of two European industrial companies, where managers from both sides identified ten potential cultural goals as joint areas for improvement, joint areas of strength, or areas of difference. “Quickly achieving the benefits of their similarities created the momentum and trust required for addressing many of the thornier issues the managers faced,” they write.
Talent mattersThe co-operation of senior executives at the acquired firm can make or break an acquisition. In our survey, 27% of respondents say that the willingness of senior executives from the acquired firm to stay at the company had a significant bearing on the success of their acquisitions.
Hikma Pharmaceuticals, a UK-headquartered drug manufacturer, has acquired a number of firms to access innovative technologies and international markets. According to Bassam Kanaan, the company’s chief strategy and corporate development officer, securing the commitment of the executives at the company being acquired is just as important. “If you get that right and you have their consensus and commitment, then by the time the acquisition is finalised, they will do much of the work of driving the integration on the business’s behalf.”
But for innovation to continue, talented employees at all levels—especially those responsible for advancing products, process or strategy—must see the value the acquisition offers them personally.
“We put a great deal of effort into communicating to acquired employees about the new opportunities we can offer them,” says Mr McLeod. “We explain that we bought their company because of their technology, but now we want to do more. We want to invest in their technology, we want to add to it. It’s important they see how their technology benefits from being part of [us]. It’s their chance to take their science and ideas even further and do even more with it.”
James Fillingham, head of transaction services at PwC, describes how the firm handles its own integrations: “We take what they [acquired employees] are good at, we put them in a place with people who think in a like-minded way, and then we put in place a framework to help us industrialise and commercialise that more effectively.”
“We love to hit the revenue targets, but actually, retaining those people and retaining what made them special is more important, because if you do that well, it enables them to continue to grow, to continue to develop the next idea, and then to take it to the next level. If we can make that work, on a big, PwC-sized playing field, at that point we’ve developed real value.”
UK business leaders clearly see acquisition as a valid innovation strategy. To make it work, they must position their company as a platform for good ideas and an amplifier for the ambitions of talented employees.
How PWC innovates through acquisitions
James Fillingham, head of transaction services, on the role that acquisition plays in the global advisory firm's innovation strategy:
“We take what they [acquired employees] are good at, we put them in a place with people who think in a like-minded way, and then we put in place a framework to help us industrialise and commercialise that more effectively.”
“We love to hit the revenue targets, but actually, retaining those people and retaining what made them special is more important, because if you do that well, it enables them to continue to grow, to continue to develop the next idea, and then to take it to the next level. If we can make that work, on a big, PwC-sized playing field, at that point we’ve developed real value.”
How PWC innovates through acquisitions
James Fillingham, head of transaction services, on the role that acquisition plays in the global advisory firm's innovation strategy:
“We take what they [acquired employees] are good at, we put them in a place with people who think in a like-minded way, and then we put in place a framework to help us industrialise and commercialise that more effectively.”
Related content
Culture clash - the challenge of innovation through acquisition
Despite political turbulence and currency volatility, UK companies are ready to do deals—especially if merger and acquisition (M&A) activity allows them to get their hands on valuable innovations. In uncertain times acquisitions offer routes to innovation that internal resources alone cannot provide.
In a recent survey of 200 business leaders in the UK, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) and sponsored by Rackspace, two-thirds of respondents agree that acquisition is a good strategy for enhancing innovation, while the same proportion believes that the acquisition of innovative start-ups is a critical success factor in their industry.
Those beliefs translate into action: 59% of respondents say their company has acquired at least one smaller, innovative firm during the past five years, and just over half (51%) are now actively searching for new acquisitions. A further 40% say that their company will consider an acquisition over the next three years, should the right opportunity present itself.
Indeed, M&A activity is increasingly driven by a thirst for innovation, according to a recent report from professional services firm Deloitte. Globally, companies spent US$300bn on “disruptive, innovation-related” M&A deals in 2016, four times more than in 2012, its study found. For large companies with deep pockets acquisition offers the opportunity to find winning ideas and amplify them to corporate scale. According to our survey, over half of UK respondents (57%) believe that the resources of a large company, together with the agility of a smaller firm, “create a strong combination”.
But acquisitions are difficult to get right. According to a study by US management consultancy AT Kearney, as many as 60% of M&A deals fail to deliver value.2 Acquiring for innovation may be especially challenging, as the ability to innovate is a facet of an organisation’s culture that can all too easily be snuffed out. Business leaders who wish to innovate successfully through acquisition must be adept at integrating organisational cultures and keeping talented staff on side.
Integrating culturesThere are many attributes companies look for in an acquisition, including access to a wider market of customers and innovative technology. For 22% of UK respondents, a corporate culture similar to their own is a key trait in a potential target.
“There have been examples of companies where we think the technology’s good,” Mr MacLeod explains, “but there’s a lack of cultural ‘fit’, and that’s as important to us as having a technology fit. If y you don’t have the culture aspects, then the integration will almost certainly fail.”
Company culture, Mr McLeod points out, defines how people work together to achieve business goals. This has particular relevance when it comes to innovation: it can be hard to launch a new product, for example, or arrive at a new scientific breakthrough against a backdrop of misunderstanding or even mistrust. A poor cultural fit can be highly disruptive, throwing projects off the track and delaying crucial decisions.
Successfully integrating a company post-merger is a critical success factor for any deal. Handled badly, it can undermine the value that the acquired company brings to its new owner. With innovative firms the challenge is especially complex: how can the buyer integrate the acquired firm without snuffing out its innovative spark?
There is little agreement among survey respondents: 30% believe the acquired companies should operate as a separate entity, with the exception of common functions such as finance; 28% believe it should do so only until it reaches a certain level of maturity and should then be gradually integrated; and 27% believe that once that maturity is reached, it should be quickly integrated.
Johnson Matthey sees value in closely integrating acquisitions into the main firm. “That’s how you create the necessary synergies,” says Mr MacLeod. “Products can maintain their own brand identity under a new owner, but with people and processes we need unity, so that both internally and externally there’s an understanding of what our opportunity is and what we bring to the market.”
The challenge of integrating two companies while preserving the culture that makes the acquired firm valuable calls for considered and deliberate management. The authors of the 2017 M&A Integration Survey Report by professional services company PwC say that change, or at least compromise, is necessary. Managers, they argue, must define their desired behaviours, highlight internal role models who demonstrate those behaviours, and provide meaningful incentives for employees to make the necessary changes.
The ability to manage cultural integration explicitly is often undermined by a shallow understanding of what organisational culture really is, a report from strategy firm McKinsey & Company argues. “Culture is much deeper than a good first impression, a sense that you share the same values or the more trivial practices, say, of wearing (or not wearing) jeans on Fridays.” But too often, the authors say, managers focus on the wrong things, “addressing the most visible expressions of culture, rather than the underlying management practices and working norms”.
As an example of how things should be done, the authors point to the integration of two European industrial companies, where managers from both sides identified ten potential cultural goals as joint areas for improvement, joint areas of strength, or areas of difference. “Quickly achieving the benefits of their similarities created the momentum and trust required for addressing many of the thornier issues the managers faced,” they write.
Talent mattersThe co-operation of senior executives at the acquired firm can make or break an acquisition. In our survey, 27% of respondents say that the willingness of senior executives from the acquired firm to stay at the company had a significant bearing on the success of their acquisitions.
Hikma Pharmaceuticals, a UK-headquartered drug manufacturer, has acquired a number of firms to access innovative technologies and international markets. According to Bassam Kanaan, the company’s chief strategy and corporate development officer, securing the commitment of the executives at the company being acquired is just as important. “If you get that right and you have their consensus and commitment, then by the time the acquisition is finalised, they will do much of the work of driving the integration on the business’s behalf.”
But for innovation to continue, talented employees at all levels—especially those responsible for advancing products, process or strategy—must see the value the acquisition offers them personally.
“We put a great deal of effort into communicating to acquired employees about the new opportunities we can offer them,” says Mr McLeod. “We explain that we bought their company because of their technology, but now we want to do more. We want to invest in their technology, we want to add to it. It’s important they see how their technology benefits from being part of [us]. It’s their chance to take their science and ideas even further and do even more with it.”
James Fillingham, head of transaction services at PwC, describes how the firm handles its own integrations: “We take what they [acquired employees] are good at, we put them in a place with people who think in a like-minded way, and then we put in place a framework to help us industrialise and commercialise that more effectively.”
“We love to hit the revenue targets, but actually, retaining those people and retaining what made them special is more important, because if you do that well, it enables them to continue to grow, to continue to develop the next idea, and then to take it to the next level. If we can make that work, on a big, PwC-sized playing field, at that point we’ve developed real value.”
UK business leaders clearly see acquisition as a valid innovation strategy. To make it work, they must position their company as a platform for good ideas and an amplifier for the ambitions of talented employees.
Culture clash - the challenge of innovation through acquisition
Despite political turbulence and currency volatility, UK companies are ready to do deals—especially if merger and acquisition (M&A) activity allows them to get their hands on valuable innovations. In uncertain times acquisitions offer routes to innovation that internal resources alone cannot provide.
16672
Related content
How PWC innovates through acquisitions
James Fillingham, head of transaction services, on the role that acquisition plays in the global advisory firm's innovation strategy:
“We take what they [acquired employees] are good at, we put them in a place with people who think in a like-minded way, and then we put in place a framework to help us industrialise and commercialise that more effectively.”
“We love to hit the revenue targets, but actually, retaining those people and retaining what made them special is more important, because if you do that well, it enables them to continue to grow, to continue to develop the next idea, and then to take it to the next level. If we can make that work, on a big, PwC-sized playing field, at that point we’ve developed real value.”
Innovation through acquisition: Can businesses buy their way into innovatio...
Big firms are hungry for more innovation than they can generate themselves, and acquisition offers them the opportunity to promote good ideas with corporate scale.
The race to acquire German innovation
Large German companies, particularly those in the country’s innovative engineering and manufacturing sectors, have recently been making headlines as acquisition targets for foreign suitors. In 2016 the €4.5bn (US$5.4bn) acquisition of pioneering robot maker KUKA by Chinese appliance manufacturer Midea exemplified growing Chinese interest in German investments.
16671
Related content
Innovation through acquisition: Can businesses buy their way into innovatio...
Big firms are hungry for more innovation than they can generate themselves, and acquisition offers them the opportunity to promote good ideas with corporate scale.
How PWC innovates through acquisitions
James Fillingham, head of transaction services, on the role that acquisition plays in the global advisory firm's innovation strategy:
“We take what they [acquired employees] are good at, we put them in a place with people who think in a like-minded way, and then we put in place a framework to help us industrialise and commercialise that more effectively.”
“We love to hit the revenue targets, but actually, retaining those people and retaining what made them special is more important, because if you do that well, it enables them to continue to grow, to continue to develop the next idea, and then to take it to the next level. If we can make that work, on a big, PwC-sized playing field, at that point we’ve developed real value.”
Related content
The race to acquire German innovation
Large German companies, particularly those in the country’s innovative engineering and manufacturing sectors, have recently been making headlines as acquisition targets for foreign suitors. In 2016 the €4.5bn (US$5.4bn) acquisition of pioneering robot maker KUKA by Chinese appliance manufacturer Midea exemplified growing Chinese interest in German investments. This is driven by China’s “strategic plan to be much more focused on innovation … to enable them to shift to a more advanced industrial society”, Martin Reitz, chief executive of investment bank Rothschild Germany, told the Financial Times.
But acquisition is also a source of innovation for German companies themselves. A recent survey of business leaders in Germany, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) and sponsored by Rackspace, shows that the country’s large firms are hungry to buy companies that can help them innovate. Of the 200 German respondents to the our survey, all drawn from companies with US$1bn or more in annual revenue, seven out of ten agree that acquisition is a good strategy for innovation. And one-half say they have acquired at least one smaller, innovative firm in the past five years.
However, our survey also reveals that there is strong competition for acquisitions in Germany, and merging corporate cultures while maintaining the creative spark continues to challenge firms eager to buy their way into innovation. “If you don’t achieve a common corporate culture, it will fail in the long run,” says Eike Böhm, chief technology officer at the Wiesbaden-headquartered warehouse equipment manufacturer KION, which has made two big acquisitions in the past 18 months.
Challenging decisionsAmong survey respondents who have made acquisitions in pursuit of innovation, the most common reasons are “making products and services more innovative” (44%) and “making internal processes more innovative” (43%), although German respondents are more likely to have conducted an acquisition to adopt a more innovative business model than their peers from the UK (33% vs 26%). German companies are also twice as likely to have bought a company to neutralise an emerging competitive threat than those from the UK (16% vs 8%).
However, the clearest distinction between German and UK firms with respect to their approach to innovation through acquisition is their primary reason not to acquire through innovation. German firms which have failed to acquire a smaller, innovative firm in the past five years cite as their chief reason—with 42% of respondents—that other companies outbid them or moved faster on their acquisition targets (see chart 1). In the UK, only 29% of respondents chose this option.
So why do German companies get outbid and overtaken? As a recent report by German law firm Heuking Kühn Lüer Wojtek observes, most mergers and acquisitions (M&As) in the country involve private rather than listed firms. This makes it harder to establish the appropriate price for the target while also making extended auctions more likely, thus driving up the price. “I think there is huge competition [in the German M&A market],” notes Dr Böhm.
Financing acquisitions is the most common challenge to innovation through acquisition, our survey reveals, cited by 45% of respondents. But this is not for lack of funding sources, according to Heuking Kühn Lüer Wojtek, whose report notes that “money is available in the market at all ends, and does not appear to make deals complicated”. Dr Böhm concurs, saying he does not see a “lack of money” around. The challenge of securing that finance, therefore, may lie in making the business case for an innovative investment. By its nature, investing in an innovative product or business model is a gamble, and it would appear that German firms are struggling to justify their bets.
Cultural resistanceThe second most commonly cited challenge (44% of respondents) is integrating acquired firms into their corporate culture and organisational structure.
KION, whose roots lie in manufacturing forklift trucks, made two significant acquisitions in recent years—Egemin and Dematic—both of which brought expertise and innovation in the field of warehouse automation. This has allowed the company to present a broader, more integrated suite of offerings to its customers. “An acquisition must create additional value,” Dr Böhm explains. “If you just acquire to be larger, this doesn’t make sense.”
According to Dr Böhm, the key to the successful integration of corporate cultures is to avoid “imperialistic behaviour”, as he puts it. “This is what causes massive resistance, because the employees aren’t stupid. They’ve done a good job and had a very good performance and good profitability, and then they have to listen how to do their business. They will ignore this. It will not work. Then you cause resistance.”
Instead, Dr Böhm suggests, the best approach is to “cherry-pick” the strengths of the acquired company that best complement those of the acquirer. Dematic’s engineers were experts in agile engineering while KION had a culture of value engineering, so the combined operation married the two approaches.
A common mistake is to assume that the obligation to change rests solely with the acquired firm. In fact, the acquirer must itself adapt to ensure that the innovative qualities of the acquisition target are preserved and fully exploited. “To build a new capability through acquisition, at least half of the effort must be channelled into transforming the existing culture of the acquirer, so that established metrics foster rather than exterminate the new ideas and technologies coming in,” consultancy PwC warns.
There is little agreement among respondents on the best way to manage an acquired business once the deal is complete. Over one-third of German respondents say that apart from common functions such as finance, the best way is to allow the acquired firm to operate as a separate entity, indefinitely. But more believe the acquisition target should be integrated into the larger company once it reaches a certain level of maturity, either quickly (29%) or gradually (24%).
The pace of integrationIn KION’s case, though, the Dematic integration happened within the space of a few weeks. Dr Böhm puts this down to preparation, while also noting that the staff of Dematic—which had two private equity owners—were “very happy” to have found a home in a company that was trying to create sustainable growth, rather than sell them on. “They were also interested in a fast integration,” he adds.
In Dr Böhm’s view, rapid integration helps employees to stay focused on the task at hand. “In my career, I experienced [various] integrations that failed, because they [took] too long,” he explains. “People lost focus and momentum.”
It is also vital that personnel from the acquired firm, particularly senior staff, can see that the acquisition broadens their horizons. This means ensuring that they are successfully integrated into teams across the group, rather than being segmented off with other employees who joined through the acquisition. “You have to give the people a career path [where] they can contribute and feel that they are important—that they have responsibility over [people representing] the entire company, not just the acquired guys,” says Dr Böhm. “All over the company, we created mixed teams.”
It is most important, however, to have a clear integration strategy before you choose your acquisition targets. “You have to think how to integrate, and then find the company to acquire.”
These are lessons that will prove strategically crucial, and increasingly so. Almost half (49%) of the survey’s German respondents say their companies are actively pursuing acquisitions of innovative firms, and 40% would consider such an acquisition if an opportunity arose. If competition is already fierce, it’s only going to heat up even more. Those who succeed are likely to be the ones who know what they want and are ready to make the most of the innovation they have acquired.
Innovation through acquisition: Can businesses buy their way into innovatio...
Big firms are hungry for more innovation than they can generate themselves, and acquisition offers them the opportunity to promote good ideas with corporate scale.
Related content
Culture clash - the challenge of innovation through acquisition
Despite political turbulence and currency volatility, UK companies are ready to do deals—especially if merger and acquisition (M&A) activity allows them to get their hands on valuable innovations. In uncertain times acquisitions offer routes to innovation that internal resources alone cannot provide.
In a recent survey of 200 business leaders in the UK, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) and sponsored by Rackspace, two-thirds of respondents agree that acquisition is a good strategy for enhancing innovation, while the same proportion believes that the acquisition of innovative start-ups is a critical success factor in their industry.
Those beliefs translate into action: 59% of respondents say their company has acquired at least one smaller, innovative firm during the past five years, and just over half (51%) are now actively searching for new acquisitions. A further 40% say that their company will consider an acquisition over the next three years, should the right opportunity present itself.
Indeed, M&A activity is increasingly driven by a thirst for innovation, according to a recent report from professional services firm Deloitte. Globally, companies spent US$300bn on “disruptive, innovation-related” M&A deals in 2016, four times more than in 2012, its study found. For large companies with deep pockets acquisition offers the opportunity to find winning ideas and amplify them to corporate scale. According to our survey, over half of UK respondents (57%) believe that the resources of a large company, together with the agility of a smaller firm, “create a strong combination”.
But acquisitions are difficult to get right. According to a study by US management consultancy AT Kearney, as many as 60% of M&A deals fail to deliver value.2 Acquiring for innovation may be especially challenging, as the ability to innovate is a facet of an organisation’s culture that can all too easily be snuffed out. Business leaders who wish to innovate successfully through acquisition must be adept at integrating organisational cultures and keeping talented staff on side.
Integrating culturesThere are many attributes companies look for in an acquisition, including access to a wider market of customers and innovative technology. For 22% of UK respondents, a corporate culture similar to their own is a key trait in a potential target.
“There have been examples of companies where we think the technology’s good,” Mr MacLeod explains, “but there’s a lack of cultural ‘fit’, and that’s as important to us as having a technology fit. If y you don’t have the culture aspects, then the integration will almost certainly fail.”
Company culture, Mr McLeod points out, defines how people work together to achieve business goals. This has particular relevance when it comes to innovation: it can be hard to launch a new product, for example, or arrive at a new scientific breakthrough against a backdrop of misunderstanding or even mistrust. A poor cultural fit can be highly disruptive, throwing projects off the track and delaying crucial decisions.
Successfully integrating a company post-merger is a critical success factor for any deal. Handled badly, it can undermine the value that the acquired company brings to its new owner. With innovative firms the challenge is especially complex: how can the buyer integrate the acquired firm without snuffing out its innovative spark?
There is little agreement among survey respondents: 30% believe the acquired companies should operate as a separate entity, with the exception of common functions such as finance; 28% believe it should do so only until it reaches a certain level of maturity and should then be gradually integrated; and 27% believe that once that maturity is reached, it should be quickly integrated.
Johnson Matthey sees value in closely integrating acquisitions into the main firm. “That’s how you create the necessary synergies,” says Mr MacLeod. “Products can maintain their own brand identity under a new owner, but with people and processes we need unity, so that both internally and externally there’s an understanding of what our opportunity is and what we bring to the market.”
The challenge of integrating two companies while preserving the culture that makes the acquired firm valuable calls for considered and deliberate management. The authors of the 2017 M&A Integration Survey Report by professional services company PwC say that change, or at least compromise, is necessary. Managers, they argue, must define their desired behaviours, highlight internal role models who demonstrate those behaviours, and provide meaningful incentives for employees to make the necessary changes.
The ability to manage cultural integration explicitly is often undermined by a shallow understanding of what organisational culture really is, a report from strategy firm McKinsey & Company argues. “Culture is much deeper than a good first impression, a sense that you share the same values or the more trivial practices, say, of wearing (or not wearing) jeans on Fridays.” But too often, the authors say, managers focus on the wrong things, “addressing the most visible expressions of culture, rather than the underlying management practices and working norms”.
As an example of how things should be done, the authors point to the integration of two European industrial companies, where managers from both sides identified ten potential cultural goals as joint areas for improvement, joint areas of strength, or areas of difference. “Quickly achieving the benefits of their similarities created the momentum and trust required for addressing many of the thornier issues the managers faced,” they write.
Talent mattersThe co-operation of senior executives at the acquired firm can make or break an acquisition. In our survey, 27% of respondents say that the willingness of senior executives from the acquired firm to stay at the company had a significant bearing on the success of their acquisitions.
Hikma Pharmaceuticals, a UK-headquartered drug manufacturer, has acquired a number of firms to access innovative technologies and international markets. According to Bassam Kanaan, the company’s chief strategy and corporate development officer, securing the commitment of the executives at the company being acquired is just as important. “If you get that right and you have their consensus and commitment, then by the time the acquisition is finalised, they will do much of the work of driving the integration on the business’s behalf.”
But for innovation to continue, talented employees at all levels—especially those responsible for advancing products, process or strategy—must see the value the acquisition offers them personally.
“We put a great deal of effort into communicating to acquired employees about the new opportunities we can offer them,” says Mr McLeod. “We explain that we bought their company because of their technology, but now we want to do more. We want to invest in their technology, we want to add to it. It’s important they see how their technology benefits from being part of [us]. It’s their chance to take their science and ideas even further and do even more with it.”
James Fillingham, head of transaction services at PwC, describes how the firm handles its own integrations: “We take what they [acquired employees] are good at, we put them in a place with people who think in a like-minded way, and then we put in place a framework to help us industrialise and commercialise that more effectively.”
“We love to hit the revenue targets, but actually, retaining those people and retaining what made them special is more important, because if you do that well, it enables them to continue to grow, to continue to develop the next idea, and then to take it to the next level. If we can make that work, on a big, PwC-sized playing field, at that point we’ve developed real value.”
UK business leaders clearly see acquisition as a valid innovation strategy. To make it work, they must position their company as a platform for good ideas and an amplifier for the ambitions of talented employees.
Innovation through acquisition: Can businesses buy their way into innovatio...
Big firms are hungry for more innovation than they can generate themselves, and acquisition offers them the opportunity to promote good ideas with corporate scale.
A brave new world - Chinese
诸多迹象显示中国经济实力呈持续增长态势,其中一个现象就是寻求在海外收购资产的中国公司数量急剧增长。2009年,当发达经济体仍然在全球金融危机的泥沼中举步维艰时,中国公司进行跨国收购的数量却创下了新的历史记录,总数约298宗。许多中国投资都深受资金短缺的西方企业欢迎,因为如果没有中国的投资,它们将面临严峻的生存危机。然而,中国的大肆收购却引发了诸多忧虑,尤其当有中国国有企业参与海外竞购时,这种担忧便愈发强烈。与此前的西方同行一样,中国企业逐渐意识到要顺利完成并购绝非易事,进行跨过并购尤为如此。
在《勇闯新天地:纵观中国的海外并购》(A brave new world: The climate for Chinese M&A abroad)报告中,我们试图了解这些计划进行海外资产收购的中国企业的担忧与期望,并试图为这些企业提供一个视角,让它们能够了解潜在并购对象和国外监管机构所存在的关切。
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The Hinrich Foundation Sustainable Trade Index 2018
Yet the enthusiasm in Asia for trade does not appear to have waned. This broad societal consensus behind international trade has enabled Asian countries to continue broadening and deepening existing trading relationships, for example, by quickly hammering out a deal for the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) in early 2018 following the US’s withdrawal from its predecessor in 2017.
Asia, then, finds itself in the unique position of helping lead and sustain the global economy’s commitment to free and fair trade. It is in this context that the need for sustainability in trade is ever more crucial.
The Hinrich Foundation Sustainable Trade Index was created for the purpose of stimulating meaningful discussion of the full range of considerations that policymakers, business executives, and civil society leaders must take into account when managing and advancing international trade.
The index was commissioned by the Hinrich Foundation, a non-profit organisation focused on promoting sustainable trade. This, the second edition of the study, seeks to measure the capacity of 20 economies—19 in Asia along with the US—to participate in the international trading system in a manner that supports the long-term domestic and global goals of economic growth, environmental protection, and strengthened social capital. The index’s key findings include:
Countries in Asia, especially the richer ones, have broadly regressed in terms of trade sustainability. Hong Kong is developed Asia’s bright spot, recording a slight increase in its score and topping the 2018 index. Several middle-income countries perform admirably, led by Sri Lanka. For the economic pillar, countries generally performed well in terms of growing their labour forces as well as their per-head GDPs. For the social pillar, sharp drops for some countries in certain social pillar indicators contribute to an overall decline. For the environmental pillar, with deteriorating environmental sustainability in many rich countries, China, Laos and Pakistan are the only countries to record increases in scores. Sustainability is an ever more important determinant of FDI and vendor selection in choosing supply-chain partners. Companies are improving the sustainability of their supply chains by restructuring and broadening relationships with competitors and vendors.The Global Illicit Trade Environment Index 2018
To measure how nations are addressing the issue of illicit trade, the Transnational Alliance to Combat Illicit Trade (TRACIT) has commissioned The Economist Intelligence Unit to produce the Global Illicit Trade Environment Index, which evaluates 84 economies around the world on their structural capability to protect against illicit trade. The global index expands upon an Asia-specific version originally created by The Economist Intelligence Unit in 2016 to score 17 economies in Asia.
View the Interactive Index >> Download workbook
Breaking Barriers: Agricultural trade between GCC and Latin America
The GCC-LAC agricultural trading relationship has thus far been dominated by the GCC’s reliance on food imports, specifically meat, sugar, and cereals. Over the past two years, however, there has been a notable decline in the share of sugar imported from LAC, and 2017 saw the biggest importers in the GCC—Saudi Arabia and the UAE—impose a ban on Brazilian meat.
Market players on both sides of the aisle are keen to grow the relationship further, but there are hurdles to overcome. In this report, we explore in greater depth the challenges that agricultural exporters and importers in LAC and the GCC face. We consider both tariff and non-tariff barriers and assess key facets of the trading relationship including transport links, customs and certification, market information, and trade finance.
Key findings of the report:
GCC will need to continue to build partnerships to ensure a secure supply of food. Concerns over food security have meant that the GCC countries are exploring ways to produce more food locally. However, given the region’s climate and geology, food imports will remain an important component of the food supply. Strengthening partnerships with key partners such as those in LAC, from which it sourced 9% of its total agricultural imports in 2016, will be vital to food security in the region.
There is a wider range of products that the LAC countries can offer the GCC beyond meat, sugar and cereals. Providing more direct air links and driving efficiencies in shipping can reduce the time and cost of transporting food products. This will, in turn, create opportunities for LAC exporters to supply agricultural goods with a shorter shelf life or those that are currently too expensive to transport. Exporters cite examples such as berries and avocados.
The GCC can engage small and medium-sized producers that dominate the LAC agricultural sector by offering better trade financing options and connectivity. More direct air and sea links can reduce the cost of transporting food products, making it viable for smaller players to participate in agricultural trade. The existing trade financing options make it prohibitive for small and medium-sized players too. Exporters in LAC suggest that local governments and private companies in the GCC can offer distribution services with immediate payments to smaller suppliers at a discount.
Blockchain technology is poised to address key challenges market players face in agricultural trade. Through a combination of smart contracts and data captured through devices, blockchain technology can help to reduce paperwork, processing times and human error in import and export processes. It can improve transparency, as stakeholders can receive information on the state of goods and status of shipments in real time. Finally, it can help with food safety and quality management—monitoring humidity and temperature, for instance, along the supply chain can help to pinpoint batches that may be contaminated, minimising the need for a blanket ban on a product.
M&A appetite continues to grow
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In some instances the impact of this shift will be shaped by local factors, such as demographic changes. In other instances this shift will reflect shared characteristics, as demonstrated by the greater popularity of overseas investing among younger high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) brought up in an era of globalisation. Whatever the drivers, the landscape of wealth is changing—from local to global, and from one focused on returns to one founded on personal values.
Despite rising economic concerns and a tradition of investor home bias in large parts of the world, the new landscape of wealth appears less interested in borders. According to a survey commissioned by RBC Wealth Management and conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), younger HNWIs are substantially more enthusiastic about foreign investing. The U.S. is a particularly high-profile example of a country where a long-standing preference for investments in local markets appears set to be transformed.
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Read additional articles from The EIU with detail on the shifting landscape of global wealth in Asia, Canada, the U.S. and UK on RBC's website.
Fintech in ASEAN
To better understand the opportunities and challenges in developing a fintech business in seven ASEAN markets, The Economist Intelligence Unit conducted wide-ranging desk research supplemented by seven in-depth interviews with executives in Australia and ASEAN.
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Risks and opportunities in a changing world
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