The Indian software industry
has seen relatively few big deals recently, although
several small ones have been inked, indicating consolidation at the lower end. This is attributable to the current
market dynamics. While the bigger companies showed
resilience, it is the smaller companies that have
borne the brunt of the slowdown. Going forward, we are likely to see sporadic large deals and many more smaller deals.
Notwithstanding the positives, M&As face
many challenges like consuming an incredible amount
of resources, legal and tax complications, history of improper
execution, and most importantly, problems with merging
corporate cultures. Success of mergers has been
measured using different metrics and the success
rate varies anywhere from 30% to 70% depending on
the metrics used, says a recent Gartner report.
For instance, using increasing shareholder value
as a metric, about 30% created shareholder value
and about 31% of M&As reduced it.
Extrapolating from this, the Indian IT industry
is not very mature. Hence valuations, due diligence
and so on have still not been honed to a fine art.
Satyam, for instance, has spent a lot of resources in buying companies but is yet to see any tangible results. Given
the skepticism, success rate, or lack of it, and
difficult integration issues, we believe that companies
would be well-served to adopt a dual strategy of
pursuing organic growth vigorously even while contemplating
exponential growth through acquisitions.