Among the most sought after assets are software firms, which account for $49 billion of companies acquired by private equity groups in the tech sector this year, the Bloomberg data show. Those like Calypso that offer a so-called subscription-as-a-service model are proving particularly popular, said Nandan Shinkre, managing director and European head of technology at Jefferies Financial Group.
“It makes it easy to predict what the year is going to look like for these companies, hence buyers being comfortable paying forward multiples,” said Mr. Shinkre, whose bank worked on the Calypso, Dotmatics and ITRS transactions.
Elsewhere, growth capital continues to flow into tech startups, driving valuations. In March, the payments processing group Stripe became the most valuable U.S. startup at $95 billion, following fresh funding from the likes of Sequoia Capital. Cybersecurity platform Snyk has seen its valuation quadruple to $4.7 billion since the start of 2020.
“What’s becoming clear is that the returns from that investment opportunity is looking really attractive as a lot of tech companies are going public and creating a lot of value,” J.P. Morgan’s Mr. Namburi said.
Dizzying prices of tech companies in the public markets, meanwhile, have made take-privates harder to pull off and led to fears of a new sector bubble two decades after the dot-com crash. But Mr. Shinkre doesn’t see an immediate shift in momentum.
“I don’t anticipate a correction in equity valuation for good quality assets,” he said. “We now have more international interest than ever before in European tech companies, which shows how global the pool is. I believe this trend is here to stay.”
Jefferies is the top adviser to private equity firms on tech acquisitions by value this year, according to Bloomberg data, followed by Evercore and Barclays.