Conversations with Thought Leaders from the M&A Community

Tom Turner – Deutsche Bank Principal Finance – Credit Market Update

Posted on July 23, 2008

 
 Tom Turner – Deutsche Bank Principal Finance – Credit Market Update: Play Now | Play in Popup

Disclaimer: The opinions or recommendations expressed are those of the author and are not representative of Deutsche Bank AG as a whole.

Tom TurnerTom Turner is a Vice President in the Principal Finance Group of Deutsche Bank, the world’s sixteenth largest bank ranked by shareholder equity. Principal Finance delivers global expertise across a wide range of markets, industries and asset classes. The Principal Finance group provides leveraged financing solutions to middle market and larger borrowers. It can provide liquidity for both performing and non-performing assets in transactions ranging from $20 million to $2 billion. Acting on a principal basis, DB can execute transactions that otherwise may not be possible in traditional capital markets. Investments take the form of senior, subordinated or mezzanine debt, customized credit derivatives and selected equity.

Focus areas include:
Illiquid Asset Financing
Acquisition financing
Contract monetization
Project/Infrastructure finance in developed and emerging markets
Renewable energy financing

In this interview Tom talks about the current state of the credit markets and gives his insight as to the future course of the liquidity crisis currently underway. Prior to joining Deutsche Bank, Tom was employed on the agency side of the street where he was responsible for managing debt financings in aggregate principal amount exceeding $50 billion.
Length: This audio interview is about 23 minutes long.

Deborah Douglas – Breaking Down Glass Walls

Posted on June 25, 2008

 
 Deborah Douglas - Breaking Down Glass Walls: Play Now | Play in Popup

Deborah DouglasLike NFL football and (until recently) NASCAR racing, M&A has traditionally been a bastion of male domination. For many years now our guest Deborah L. Douglas has been proving that, as with most other human activities, women can compete and can compete well.

Deborah began her M&A career in the late 1970’s with Touche Ross & Co. (a Big 8 accounting firm now part of Deloitte & Touche) and eventually rose to become that firm’s Director of Merger & Acquisition Activities. In 1989 the Deloitte and Touche merger provided Deborah with the opportunity to leave public accounting unfettered by a non-compete. She formed the Douglas Group in St. Louis, an intermediary firm which represents middle market companies as advisor and intermediary in merger and acquisition transactions.

Deborah is the author of an intriguing book called “Cashing In!”, a very down to earth guide to the perils and potential of business sales aimed at business owners, but very relevant to advisors and buyers as well. I really enjoyed reading this book and would recommend that you click on the link above and purchase a copy.

In this interview, Deborah talks about her experience as an M&A intermediary and the obstacles she has encountered as a woman in a man’s world (simple answer – none). She also provides some good insight for any business owner contemplating the sale of her or his company.

Click here to purchase “Cashing In!” by Deborah Douglas on Amazon.

Length: This audio interview is about 16 minutes long.

Geoff Alexander - Where to go When the Bank Says No

Posted on April 26, 2008

 
 Geoff Alexander - Where to go When the Bank Says No: Play Now | Play in Popup

Geoff AlexanderIt’s no secret that banks have tightened their credit standards in recent months. As you can see from the chart below, we are in the midst of the third such period of tightening since 1990 and there doesn’t appear to be an end in sight. The shaded area indicates periods of recession that followed the earlier credit crunches.

Graph

This week’s interview is the first in a series covering financing alternatives for middle market businesses trapped in the credit squeeze. Our guest, Geoff Alexander, is Director - New Business Development for The Comvest Group, a private equity firm that has created a fund called Comvest Capital, to meet the financing needs of growing middle market companies with revenues from $15 million to $500 million. Comvest Capital provides a diverse range of financing alternatives, including mezzanine debt and growth equity as well as unitranche or one stop shop solutions. In recent months Comvest has been quite busy working with companies that have been pushed out by existing lenders that are tightening their credit standards.

Geoff is responsible for sourcing new deal flow and analyzing prospective investments for Comvest. Prior to joining Comvest, he worked as a Senior Associate at hedge fund PDP Capital Investments. Mr. Alexander graduated from Berea College with high academic honors and a degree in Business Administration with a Finance Concentration.

Length: This audio interview is about 19 minutes long.

James O. Futterknecht, Jr - A Pioneer of Private Equity

Posted on April 16, 2008

 
 James O. Futterknecht, Jr - A Pioneer of Private Equity: Play Now | Play in Popup

James O. FutterknechtOur guest today, Jim Futterknecht, has witnessed the private equity industry almost from its beginning. Jim has been involved in the automotive OEM supply industry since joining Excel Industries, Inc. as a line foreman in 1970. He served in a variety of sales and sales management roles at Excel in the 70’s and was elected Vice President of Sales and a member of the Board of Directors of Excel in 1976.

In 1983 Jim was part of a senior management group that purchased Excel in a highly leveraged buyout engineered by Hammond, Kennedy and Whitney Co. Back then there were no “private equity” firms. They were called LBO shops. Excel was the sort of buyout that most investors can only dream of, growing from $40 million in revenues at the time of the acquisition to a public company with over a billion dollars in revenue at the time of its sale.

Over time Jim’s role expanded into operational responsibly as well as sales. In 1986 he led a strategic project resulting in Ford Motor Company becoming Excel’s largest shareholder, largest customer, and largest supplier. In 1990, he was elected Executive Vice President and in 1992 promoted to the position of President and Chief Operating Officer. He became Chairman, Present and CEO in 1995. In 1999 Jim led the merger of Excel into Dura Automotive Systems, Inc and joined the Dura Board.

Jim is currently a partner in Hammond, Kennedy and Whitney Co., a small cap private equity firm (www.hkwinc.com). Jim is a graduate of the University of Texas at Austin (1969), happily married for 37 years, and the proud father of 2 adult daughters.

Length: This audio interview is about 27 minutes long.

Doug Rodgers - The World Takes Center Stage

Posted on February 4, 2008

 
 Doug Rodgers - The World Takes Center Stage: Play Now | Play in Popup

Doug Rodgers

Like many of you in our industry, I have spent the last month trying to understand the impact of the credit squeeze and the equity and debt market declines on the M&A market.  I don’t purport to have the answer to where the stock market will be next month or even whether we are going to really have a recession (though my personal guess is that we’ve been in a mild contraction over the last ninety days and if we’re lucky we may already be nearing the end of the slide). 

What I do see clearly is that the current events are part of a much larger picture in which the U. S. economy has become a major player in a multipolar world and no longer the dominant economic factor in the world scene.  For an interesting perspective on this subject, read Parag Khanna’s article in the January 27, 2008 New York Times entitled Waiving Goodbye to Hegemony. 

Even more important to our industry is the coming emergence of the transnational corporation as a dominant force in world economics.  I purposely use the term transnational rather than multinational, because these future behemoths will no longer be tied through ownership or political control to any specific nation or even any specific regional bloc.  Their operations will be spread around the globe reflecting customer markets and the comparative economic advantages of specific regions such as the relative price and availability of various inputs, including labor, capital and raw materials and the relative friendliness of various political regimes.  Headquarters can be anywhere or everywhere and the country of incorporation will depend on factors such as local tax policy and the availability of a supportive legal system.  What all of this means to our political and social institutions is best left to others to decipher.  What it means to us is that over the next fifteen years we will witness a pervasive wave of cross-border M&A.  In industry after industry it will no longer be sufficient to be the leader in a local market, country or even region.  Success will require global presence and global presence requires consolidation.

At Focus LLC we are witnessing the early stirrings of this trend today in our own practice.  Over the past year and a half approximately half of our closed transactions involved a non-U. S. buyer from countries as diverse as India, Germany, Portugal, Sweden, the UK and Canada.  Doug Rodgers, Focus’s CEO, recently published an opinion piece in the Washington Business Journal entitled “Fear not the Foreign Investor” in which he makes the case that overseas investment in the U. S. economy is not only a reality of the current world, but is good for our economy.  In this week’s interview Doug expounds on his ideas in this regard and provides an overview of the new world of transnational M&A.

 Length: This interview is about 21 minutes.

Phil Leigh - Trends in Online Technology are Shifting Company Values

Posted on December 16, 2007

 
 Phil Leigh - Trends in Online Technology are Shifting Company Values: Play Now | Play in Popup

Phil LeighM&A doesn’t exist in a vacuum.  Companies succeed and fail and fortunes are made and lost based on how well their leaders pick the waves.  Choose right and you ride the pipeline all the way to the beach; choose wrong and they’re picking up the pieces off the rocks.  Acquirers must be aware of the larger trends taking place in the industries in which they invest and elsewhere in the economy that can impact the fortunes of their portfolio companies and equally important the market’s perception of their value.

Phil Leigh is one of the most insightful observers of an industry that is radically transforming the ways we work and play.  Phil’s initial training was in electrical engineering at the Florida Institute of Technology and he subsequently received an MBA from the Kellogg School.  As a respected securities analyst with First Boston and Raymond James in the 1990’s, Phil was one of the first analysts to focus on the then emerging world of the Internet.  He chronicled its growth from an obscure technology to one of the prime drivers of an increasingly globalized economy; he witnessed firsthand the Bubble and the rubble that followed. 

In 1998 Phil began to conduct online interviews of industry leaders via the nascent medium of Internet Radio.  Over time these efforts migrated into a full time endeavor called Inside Digital Media (www.insidedigitalmedia.com).  Several times a week Phil interviews leading companies in and observers of the Digital Media Industry, covering all aspects of Internet based entertainment and communication and the technologies that support them.

The rise of Web 2.0 - the migration of applications, processing and data storage from the desktop and local network to the Internet - has led Phil to conclude that we are now in another period of major realignment within the technology industry.  As with the transformations that occurred when computing moved from mainframes to desktop PC’s and when the rise of the Internet connected all of us to the worldwide digital communications web, there will be big winners and big losers this time as well. 

Phil has developed a very compelling theory that the winners in this era will center on several emerging Web 2.0 platforms.  He focuses on Facebook, SalesForce.com’s Force.com development platform and Webex’s Media Tone network, but is quick to say that the jury is still out - some of these may falter and other platforms will almost certainly be developed, with Google and Microsoft likely candidates to try.  All of this is outlined in much more detail in Phil’s article, Gravitation Attraction in the Internet Cloud, which can be downloaded by clicking here.

Length: This interview is about 25 minutes.