There were a record 261 major investment deals in Israel in 2019 compared with 252 in 2018, reports Grant Thornton Israel (Fahn Kanne). Foreign investment transactions in 2019 stood at about $20 billion, on par with recent years.
Grant Thornton Israel (Fahn Kanne) Advisory Department CEO Shlomi Bartov said, "More than 80% of the transactions are in the technology space. The consistent growth in financial acquisitions represents a vote of confidence by global funds in the Israeli transactions market."
Grant Thornton Israel (Fahn Kanne) Advisory Department, conducted an analysis based on Bloomberg data, addressing the development of the Israeli market up until the end of 2019, including M&A transactions and substantial investments (over 20% share/stake) that range between $5 million to $1 billion. The findings show that the number of transactions conducted in 2019 continued to grow to reach a total of 261, despite a slowdown in the transactions market in many OECD countries.
The level of medium sized transactions (between $5 million to $100 million) continues to account for a large volume of activity, representing approx. 88% in 2019. The number of large transactions (between $100 million to $1 billion) in 2019 hit an all-time high of 32 transactions. A total of six mega transactions (above $1 billion) occurred in 2019 such transactions are excluded from the analysis). The mega transactions include, the acquisition of Habana Labs by Intel for $2 billion, and the acquisition of Click Software by Salesforce for $1.35 billion.
An additional index examined is the relationship between the number of deals in relation to the country's GDP. This index establishes a basis for comparison of the deal activity in various countries. Israel and the UK are in the lead in the - Deals to GDP ratio- at 0.65.
The survey also found that American investors continue to play a dominant role in the acquisitions of Israeli companies, accounting for 32% of total transactions in 2019 (over 90% of all investments from North America stem directly from the U.S.). The dominant investors from Europe in 2019, were mainly from the UK, Germany, Luxemburg, Switzerland and France, representing 93% of total European investments. The investments from Asia were dominated by Japan, China, Singapore, South Korea and Hong Kong, amounting to approx. 90% of total investments from Asia.
An analysis of transactions by industry demonstrates that the tech sector is the primary target for investment in the Israeli market. The results show that over 80% of transactions are technologically- oriented.
The value of FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) stood at $20 billion in 2019, on par with recent years but is substantially lower than the value of foreign transactions in selected OECD countries. This is the result of market developments whereby financial funds are characterized by the conducting of a relatively large number of investment rounds rather than a once-off (one-time) purchase of the companies' stocks.
The data from the survey shows that more than 20 funds were involved in over 6 transactions over the previous year. Venture capital transactions are usually conducted over several rounds as part of a company's value-building process.
Bartov said, "The continuous increase in financial acquisitions (Private Equity and Venture Capital) represents a vote of confidence by global funds in the Israeli transactions market."
The world of digital economics and global transactions creates many multinational transactions in which various challenges exist, Grant Thornton Israel (Fahn Kanne) observed. These include:, the identification of specific risks relating to the country of the target company, a detailed analysis of the Quality of Earning (QoE), business potential (Due Diligence challenges), quantifying synergy, the risks of their use, valuing intangible assets and their influence within the framework of a transaction (challenges of determining value), determination of the type of transaction (activity vs. shares), and an understanding of the perspective of the Israel Tax Authority (the FAR and, BEPS reform) (tax challenges). In addition, other challenges such as bridging cultural differences between various countries and the retention of key employees in the target company also exist.
Published by Globes, Israel business news - en.globes.co.il - on February 17, 2020
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