BACK
  • Series
    • CEO on the Spot
    • Three-minute explainer
    • Corporate Comebacks
    • CEO Index
    • Skills for tomorrowSponsored by AWS
    • Influencer success hubSponsored by Klear
  • Topics
    • HR
      • Talent
      • Culture
      • Diversity & Inclusion
      • CHRO
    • Business Tech
      • AI / Mastering AI
      • Digital Transformation
      • Cloud
      • Data
      • Cybersecurity
      • CTO
    • Finance
      • Growth
      • Risk
      • Fintech
      • CFO
    • Marketing
      • Brand
      • Advertising
      • CX
      • CMO
    • Leadership
      • C‑Suite
      • CEO
  • Opinion
  • Newsletter
  • Reports
    • The C‑Suite Agenda
    • Special Reports
    • Insights Reports
  • Infographics
  • Services
  • Advertising
  • Careers
  • Contact
Twitter Linkedin Instagram Facebook
Raconteur
NEWSLETTER My account Sign In
  • Human Resources
  • Business Tech
  • Finance
  • Marketing
  • Leadership
Mergers, Acquisitions & Exit Strategies 2017

Global security

Share on X
Share on LinkedIn
Share by email
✖
Save in your account
Francesca Cassidy
18 Oct 2017

It is six years ago that Ger­man com­pa­ny Gro­he bought a Chi­nese rival, Joy­ou, in a bid to grow mar­ket share and cut pla­gia­rism in Asia. But it was Japan­ese con­glom­er­ate Lix­il, which sub­se­quent­ly bought Gro­he, that suf­fered the fall­out from Joyou’s 2015 scan­dal-rid­den col­lapse, push­ing Lix­il into mul­ti-mil­lion-dol­lar loss­es.

This sor­ry tale exem­pli­fies the cor­po­rate world’s need for merg­ers and acqui­si­tions (M&A) insur­ance, a sec­tor that has devel­oped a new lev­el of sophis­ti­ca­tion since the 2011 Gro­he-Joy­ou deal. Today, where cross-bor­der M&A activ­i­ty is grow­ing – deal val­ue at the end of the sec­ond quar­ter of 2017 was up year on year by 49 per cent, accord­ing to the Bak­er McKen­zie Cross-bor­der M&A Index – an increas­ing num­ber of both buy­ers and sell­ers are real­is­ing the ben­e­fits.

“It’s effec­tive­ly a deal facil­i­ta­tion tool,” says Rowan Bam­ford, glob­al head of M&A and tax at Iron­shore, one of the world’s lead­ing providers of M&A insur­ance. “Whether it’s secur­ing finance from a lender requir­ing secu­ri­ty, sweet­en­ing an auc­tion bid or pro­vid­ing a buy­er with the con­fi­dence to pro­ceed know­ing there won’t be shocks in the future, M&A insur­ance can help bring deals to a suc­cess­ful con­clu­sion.”

Iron­shore is able to offer secu­ri­ty in an inse­cure world

Ironshore’s M&A and tax team has glob­al reach; with ded­i­cat­ed under­writ­ers in nine coun­tries, it has unri­valled lev­els of tech­ni­cal and com­mer­cial exper­tise. With the back­ing of own­er Lib­er­ty Mutu­al, one of the largest insur­ance com­pa­nies, Iron­shore is able to offer secu­ri­ty in an inse­cure world.

“We can offer an inte­grat­ed approach because of our cross-bor­der exper­tise,” says Mr Bam­ford. “So, if a Japan­ese com­pa­ny want­ed to buy a Scot­tish dis­tillery, but on US terms, Iron­shore would be able to oblige.”

Equal­ly, Ironshore’s exper­tise can be use­ful in domes­tic deals, where dif­fer­ing legal and reg­u­la­to­ry regimes vary and can cre­ate lev­els of com­plex­i­ty. The use of insur­ance can help elim­i­nate these con­cerns through the trans­fer of risk from the deal par­ties to the insur­er.

M&A insur­ance is a tool for both buy­ers and sell­ers. Take the exam­ple of an Asian state sov­er­eign wealth fund look­ing to buy a com­mer­cial prop­er­ty in Lon­don from a fund that was about to be wound up.

“The buy­er was con­cerned with the tax res­i­den­cy of the tar­get and wor­ried they would not be able to recov­er under an indem­ni­ty after the fund wind up. The fund was also con­cerned that should it give an indem­ni­ty to the buy­er, it would not be able to wind up and return funds to investors imme­di­ate­ly,” says Mr Bam­ford.

It could have result­ed in an impasse or at least pro­tract­ed nego­ti­a­tions while both sides sought to sat­is­fy their con­cerns. Instead Iron­shore was able to pro­vide insur­ance, aid­ed by their spe­cial­ist tax team and Man­darin lan­guage capa­bil­i­ty, giv­ing both sides the con­fi­dence to pro­ceed.

M&A insur­ance is also use­ful in a sell­ers’ mar­ket; if bid­ding for a com­pa­ny, it can help sweet­en a deal. “If a buy­er can sort out insur­ance in the back­ground, it can make a bid much more attrac­tive,” says Mr Bam­ford. “It allows the sell­er to walk away with the pro­ceeds imme­di­ate­ly, with­out hav­ing to estab­lish an escrow account or retain a con­tin­gent lia­bil­i­ty on its bal­ance sheet and poten­tial­ly hav­ing to wait sev­er­al years before final­ly releas­ing sale pro­ceeds.”

That kind of offer cre­ates a seri­ous com­pet­i­tive advan­tage, par­tic­u­lar­ly in deals where an indi­vid­ual entre­pre­neur may be look­ing to retire or a pri­vate equi­ty firm wants to return funds to its investors in line with inter­nal rate of return tar­gets.

“Not all insur­ers can issue poli­cies in all coun­tries,” Mr Bam­ford points out. “If you are oper­at­ing in an inter­na­tion­al mar­ket­place, you want to part­ner with some­one deliv­er­ing a prod­uct that can go any­where. Ironshore’s flex­i­bil­i­ty means we can ser­vice any­one from Japan to Mex­i­co; with up to $150-mil­lion capac­i­ty on any one risk, we can han­dle most lim­it require­ments with­out clients hav­ing the com­pli­ca­tions asso­ci­at­ed with syn­di­ca­tion.”

Tax indem­ni­ty is a grow­ing ele­ment of Ironshore’s work, insur­ing a deal against tax lia­bil­i­ties that, in a glob­al mar­ket­place, could come from any­where in the world.

“We are often called in when an issue has already been iden­ti­fied,” says Mr Bam­ford. “Our abil­i­ty to quick­ly under­stand the risk in-house and in many cas­es cov­er the lia­bil­i­ty, means deal nego­tia­tors need not engage in lengthy tech­ni­cal nego­ti­a­tions impact­ing pric­ing that may derail a deal.”

Peo­ple who used this prod­uct five to ten years ago still may need con­vinc­ing. But Mr Bam­ford believes the increas­ing sophis­ti­ca­tion of the sec­tor will prove attrac­tive in the future; much has changed since the incar­na­tions of M&A insur­ance back in the 1990s, when price and ease of use were bar­ri­ers.

Top three countries with significant growth chart

“Our glob­al team of 40 under­writ­ers is com­posed of expe­ri­enced lawyers, accoun­tants, tax spe­cial­ists – it makes deci­sion-mak­ing quick­er and as a result pro­vides greater cer­tain­ty for clients at an ear­ly stage,” says Mr Bam­ford. “In Nordic coun­tries and Aus­tralia, most pri­vate equi­ty deals use M&A insur­ance.”

But it can even pro­vide attrac­tions beyond the deal itself. “We recent­ly insured a provider of tech soft­ware for use in the auto­mo­tive indus­try,” he says. “The buy­er intend­ed to inte­grate the man­age­ment team of its new pur­chase into the wider group, but did not want to be in a posi­tion where it had to sue its own employ­ees to recov­er monies under an indem­ni­ty.”

Instead Iron­shore pro­vid­ed a pol­i­cy to cov­er poten­tial lia­bil­i­ties, which pro­tect­ed the buyer’s rela­tion­ship with its new man­age­ment team. “It ensured they were 100 per cent focused on run­ning the busi­ness going for­ward,” adds Mr Bam­ford.

As the mar­ket has devel­oped, pric­ing has dropped, mak­ing it some­thing of a no-brain­er for many deals. “The cost of the prod­uct is almost cheap­er than the cost of hold­ing funds in an escrow account pay­ing lit­tle or no inter­est,” says Mr Bam­ford. “The oppor­tu­ni­ty cost of being able to dis­trib­ute funds ear­li­er is attrac­tive in itself and when you over­lay the risk trans­fer ele­ment and the covenant strength of Lloyd’s secu­ri­ty, more often than not the use of insur­ance makes sense.”

The infor­ma­tion con­tained here­in is for gen­er­al infor­ma­tion­al pur­pos­es only and does not con­sti­tute an offer to sell or a solic­i­ta­tion of an offer to buy any prod­uct or ser­vice.

Please vis­it www.ironshore.com for all dis­claimers

Top three countries with significant growth chart
Mergers, Acquisitions & Exit Strategies 2017

Read this next

Want to read on?

Simply sign in or register to continue.
Registration is free and takes seconds.
Register

Subscribe to our newsletter

Gain access to our extended article trial, and receive the latest insights direct to your inbox.
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Write for us
  • Work for us
  • Advertise with us
  • Partner with us
  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
B Corp Logo

Subscribe

Raconteur

© Copyright 2025 Raconteur. All rights reserved.