OREANDA-NEWS. March 18, 2010. The fast descent of deal values in aerospace and defence (A&D) spurred by recession and the banking crisis of 2008 continued into 2009 with the first quarter of the year seeing a near-stalling of deal value. Since that time, deal values have revived but small deals continue to dominate the sector’s activity, according to ‘Mission Control’, PwC’s annual review of merger and acquisition activity in the global A&D industry, reported the press-centre of PwC.

However, deal activity, as measured by the total number of deals, has stayed buoyant at near record levels as companies limit their acquisition budgets but continue to take advantage of opportunities to make small but strategic purchases.

While deal activity stayed high, values plummeted. The average value of larger deals (USD50 million or above) fell 27% to USD 379 million in 2009 from USD 519 million in 2008. The total value of these larger deals dropped 62% from USD 20.8 billion in 2008 to just USD 7.9 billion in 2009. Indeed total A&D deal value in 2009 fell 54% year-on-year to USD 10 billion, its lowest level of the decade, and a 76% fall from the USD 41.6 billion high of 2007. The considerable moderation in deal ambition reflects continuing concern about programme cost delays and overruns, lower orders for large military platforms and reduced passenger and freight travel.

The overall reduction in M&A investment reflected these concerns. At the same time, the market continued to see a flow of deals reflecting the growth in the security and surveillance sector.  If credit markets continue to ease alongside rising stock markets, strategic acquirers will have greater financial flexibility to consider larger targets in 2010. Much will depend on the direction of key economic indicators in the first half of the year.

The two largest 2009 deals – General Atlantic’s USD 1.65 billion move for TASC and Boeing’s USD 1 billion takeover of the Vought production facility - compared to the USD 5.6 billion and USD 2.2 billion values delivered by the largest 2008 deals.

The proportion of deals announced by financial investors continues to remain low relative to strategic investors. Financial investors accounted for approximately 14.3% of deals with values greater than USD 50 million in 2009, in line with that experienced in 2008. Of the 21 deals greater than USD 50 million in 2009, only three involved financial investors. With the capital markets still in a ‘repair and heal’ mode, financial investors continue to focus a large portion of their efforts on providing improvement, support, and guidance to existing portfolio companies rather than seeking new acquisitions.

Neil Hampson, global aerospace and defence leader, PricewaterhouseCoopers, said:
“US companies continued to dominate the vast majority of overall deal value in 2009. Deals with US targets and/or acquirers accounted for 84.4% of deal value, an increase over the 72.6% achieved in 2008. In the fourth quarter of 2009 all three deals involved US acquirers and US targets. The US dominance continues the trend away from years such as 2004 and 2006 when there was a much more balanced profile between Europe and North America. However, by 2008, the UK and eurozone represented only 28% of deals and fell further to just 9.5% in 2009.”

Targets in North America and Asia and Oceania represented 90% of total deal value for deals greater than US\\\\\\$50 million. The percentage of deal value for targets in Asia and Oceania rose from 6% in 2008 to 15.7% in 2009. The largest of these was General Electric’s US\\\\\\$300 million purchase of the remaining 51% interest, which it did not already own, in Singapore’s Airfoil Technologies International, a turbine repair services provider.

John Campbell, industrial products leader, PricewaterhouseCoopers in Russia, commented:
“As we look ahead into the new decade, small and strategic is likely to remain the name of the game in the short term but major restructuring forces are likely to be felt increasingly strongly in the long term with consequent implications for deal strategies and values.

“On the defence front, for example, the security requirements that come from the need to respond to non-state threats, including at home, has become as important as the need to defend against state threats. The focus on critical infrastructure defence, including IT systems, cyber networks, energy installations and transport, will intensify.

“In the longer term, the role of China in the civil aerospace market will become more strongly felt. As the first decade of the new millennium drew to a close, Airbus delivered its first Chinese-made aircraft.

“With cash-rich balance sheets and improved fundamentals, businesses are  likely to continue using the M&A market as a means to fill gaps in existing portfolios, expand and maintain market share and address the shift in defence priorities.”