It turns out that it's not so easy to pull off a big-ticket buyout in Corporate Japan. So far this year the flow of fresh deals has slowed -- just 39, vs. 52 a year ago, says Thomson Financial. And the value of private-equity buyouts is at $1.4 billion, vs. $2.1 billion this time last year. At that rate, the market will be hard-pressed to top the $7.5 billion rung up last year, or even the $6 billion in 2003. "All the signs are that there's too much money chasing too few deals," says C.J. Wilson, founder of Global Alliance Ltd., an M&A investment advisory firm.
Tellingly, there hasn't been a single $1 billion-plus transaction since Nikko Principal Investments Ltd. completed a protracted $2.2 billion buyout of call-center operator BellSystems24 Inc. last October. What's more, market watchers say the pipeline, for the time being, is down to a trickle. That's a problem for those 69-plus investors with money to burn.
Anyone in private equity with thoughts on this topic?
Japan: Let's Not Make A Deal [businessweek.com]