Financial buyers, which include real estate investment trusts and private equity firms, are not the dominant players in the health care M&A market. Their participation depends on many factors, with valuations being an important determinant, (see chart below).

Middle-market private equity firms, in particular, have had a hard time getting into and then winning auctions for health care entities in the past few years, as strategic buyers have outspent or even pre-empted auctions.

In the first quarter, financial buyers accounted for 15% of the deal volume, with 59 deals, which is slightly lower than the previous four quarters. The first quarter featured eight deals that topped the $1.0 billion mark, one of which was announced by a private equity firm.
Of the 59 deals announced by financial buyers in Q1:17, 37 were made by private equity firms and 22 were made by real estate investment trusts. REITs announced 20 deals in the Long-Term Care sector and two deals in the Hospital sector.

As usual, the targets were more varied for the private equity buyers. They included eHealth (eight deals), Long-Term Care (seven), Other Services (seven), and Physician Medical Groups (seven). The Home Health & Hospice sector had three deals. The Hospital and Laboratories/MRI & Dialysis sectors had two deals each. Behavioral Health Care and Pharmaceuticals each had one deal announced by a private equity firm.

Financial Buyers

  Q1:16  Q2:16  Q3:16  Q4:16  Q1:17 
Deals announced  69 94 67 60 59
Share of deal volume  18% 22% 18% 16% 15%
Dollars committed
(in millions) 
 $2,371 $6,710 $7,728 $11,653  $4,316
Share of dollars spent  3% 8% 16% 31% 7%

 Source: HealthCareMandA.com, April 2017