Although the COVID-19 outbreak may have slowed M&A activity across many industries earlier this year, there is evidence that this trend has reversed itself. This is true for the scientific tool industry as well.
There were no multi-billion dollar plus acquisitions involving life science assets in 2020, although Thermo Fisher Scientific tried, before abandoning its plan to buy QIAGEN for $11.5 billion (see IBO 8/15/20). In fact, the industry’s most dominant companies largely stayed on the sidelines, except for PerkinElmer with its planned purchase of Horizon Discovery (see IBO 11/15/20).
However, in two other sectors of the analytical tool business, deals topped $1 billion. Sensor firm and industry outsider Amphenol announced this month its intention to purchase MTS Systems, a provider of physical testing instrumentation for materials characterization, for $1.7 billion (see Executive Briefing). Even so, the deal’s price-to-sales ratio of 1.9 was not among the top five this year. Another multi-billion deal was struck when chemicals firm Royal DSM acquired food testing firm Romer Labs (see IBO 6/15/20) as part of its $1.1 billion takeover of Erber, an animal health and nutrition company. In both deals, the laboratory tools were a segment of the acquired company’s assets and not the primary driving factor behind the purchases, but nonetheless brought new competitors in the respective markets.
In IBO's annual review of M&A activity (purchase of a majority stake in the company or the entire company), we examine the acquisition activity reported in IBO between December 31, 2019, and December 15, 2020. Our analysis includes only pure-play deals, excluding acquisitions of dedicated diagnostic or process (analyses conducted inline and online during manufacturing) companies, even if made by a lab product company. The financial figures presented are drawn from available sources. Sales and purchase prices were not available for all announced acquisitions and thus these purchases are not listed in the article’s tables.