Cross-border carve-out deals are a mainstay of the global M&A market, offering new international opportunities for corporates, and an attractive platform for private equity (PE) firms to generate value. Our exclusive survey reveals that appetite for this type of transaction is set to grow, and outlines the key opportunities and pitfalls on the road to carve-out success.


TIME REALLY IS MONEY

Why does an average 16% of deal value drain away when overruns last more than four months?

Carve-outs have become increasingly popular among global dealmakers – with a threefold increase in volume since 2016. And, post COVID-19, this impetus should continue as a mixture of pent-up demand, distressed and non-core assets and lower valuations lure cash-rich private equity firms and corporates back to the deal table.

However, Cross-border carve-outs, a new independent market research study commissioned by TMF Group, suggests that dealmakers could be losing substantial amounts of money due to avoidable delays and a disregard for the three fundamentals of successful carve-outs.

The survey reveals that a significant number of deals still take too much time: 19% of corporate respondents and 24% of PE firms say their most recent deal took longer than expected.

Those delays can push up costs – by an average 16% of deal value for overruns longer than four months, according to our study.

The report identifies three keys to cross-border carve-out success:

  1. Local presence: 76% with a moderate to well-established presence have mostly successful outcomes.
  2. Realistic timetable: 84% of deals completed within four months were mostly successful.
  3. Robust preparation: 78% of corporates and 64% of PE firms say delays in completion could have been avoided with more preparation.

To find out more, download the report

About our M&A deal completion services

TMF Group works with alongside global transaction advisors to ensure deal fatigue doesn't set in when it comes to the final hard yards of full entity activation and operational readiness – that's wherever a complex, cross-border carve-out needs to do business, no matter how fragmented the footprint.

Download the report

Cross-border carve-outs: Why one third fail and how to get them right

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