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By Megabuyte
The podcast currently has 59 episodes available.
In addition to the usual analysis of corporate activity and valuations, this month’s ‘spotlight’ is on growth trends, providing an overview of current market growth rates, some context on where we are relative to recent highs and lows, and our view on the outlook.
In particular, we analyse why, as Software sector growth remains robust, parts of the ICT Services sector still have some way to go. M&A activity received the expected pre-budget boost, though this impact has yet to be fully reflected in the numbers, and private equity activity remained strong across both MBOs and SBOs. In contrast, capital markets saw another weak month, with share prices, corporate activity, and valuations all underwhelming. Venture capital investment remains subdued, though select deals hint at a potential medium-term recovery. With the budget behind us, modest growth should resume as decision-making picks up.
About this podcast
The CEOBarometer podcast is a monthly publication hosted by Ian Spence, Founder and Chairman of Megabuyte. In each episode, Ian provides expert analysis of key trends in UK tech M&A, capital markets, private equity, and venture capital, and explores their implications for the boards of UK tech companies.
Megabuyte supports UK scale-up and mid-market Software and ICT Services companies to develop robust growth strategies, understand their competitive landscape and customer sentiment, benchmark their financial performance and valuation, and identify and track M&A targets.
Learn how at www.megabuyte.com or search ‘Megabuyte for CxOs’.
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News Analysis 00m 48s
Capital Markets 11m 26s
Private Equity 14m 11s
Venture & Growth Capital 21m 49s
M&A 27m 34s
In addition to our customary monthly updates, this month’s show has an AI flavour as we analyse the latest product announcements from key players, revealing what they signal about AI adoption trends and spotlighting three critical takeaways.
Meanwhile, in our monthly analysis of share prices, valuations and corporate activity:
After a positive summer for share prices in the UK tech sector, September was disappointing with flat prices, in line with the UK market but underperforming a resurgent US market. Deal activity was also muted, with a 25% year-on-year drop across all categories. Private equity was particularly quiet after a very busy August; venture capital remained depressed, especially at either end of the size spectrum; and M&A numbers were soft, although we anticipate a tsunami of pre-budget deals in October and November.
About this podcast
The CEOBarometer podcast is a monthly publication hosted by Ian Spence, Founder and Chairman of Megabuyte. In each episode, Ian provides expert analysis of key trends in UK tech M&A, capital markets, private equity, and venture capital, and explores their implications for the boards of UK tech companies.
Megabuyte supports UK scale-up and mid-market Software and ICT Services companies to develop robust growth strategies, understand their competitive landscape and customer sentiment, benchmark their financial performance and valuation, and identify and track M&A targets.
Learn how at www.megabuyte.com or search ‘Megabuyte for CxOs’.
Skip to:
News Analysis 00m 48s
Capital Markets 10m 23s
Private Equity 13m 02s
Venture & Growth Capital 18m 59s
M&A 22m 48s
While it feels like most tech CEOs are getting on with the new norm, the statistics over the summer tell a different story. While UK tech sector share prices were solid across July and August, and valuations are generally stable, corporate activity in all categories was down, even in the otherwise resilient private equity sector, where weak MBO numbers mean that year-to-date deal volumes are now flat. M&A activity also remains muted with increased polarisation between ICT Services and Software, with the latter enjoying decent deal volumes and some chunky transactions over the summer. The same goes for venture and growth capital, where activity is stubbornly refusing to recover. Some of this weakness is likely to result from the decision to delay liquidity events made after the snap election was called. But now, many will be waiting to see the details of inevitable tax changes coming in the budget.
About this podcast
The CEOBarometer podcast is a monthly publication hosted by Ian Spence, Founder and Chairman of Megabuyte. In each episode, Ian provides expert analysis of key trends in UK tech M&A, capital markets, private equity, and venture capital, and explores their implications for the boards of UK tech companies.
Megabuyte supports UK scale-up and mid-market Software and ICT Services companies to develop robust growth strategies, understand their competitive landscape and customer sentiment, benchmark their financial performance and valuation, and identify and track M&A targets.
Learn how at www.megabuyte.com or search ‘Megabuyte for CxOs’.
Skip to:
News Analysis 01m 00s
Capital Markets 10m 37s
Private Equity 18m 18s
Venture & Growth Capital 25m 44s
M&A 31m 38s
As we head into the summer lull, June was relatively quiet on the corporate activity front, although the massive valuation on Preqin’s sale to Blackrock certainly caught the eye. Trends observed this year have persisted, with strong private equity volumes contrasting with ongoing, though moderating, weaknesses in M&A, venture capital, and capital markets activities. Meanwhile, notwithstanding the undoubted success of the Raspberry Pi IPO, UK tech sector share prices and quoted valuations remain at near 10-year lows after another soggy month, especially for software. However, the outlook for the second half of the year looks increasingly bright, with improving sentiment, greater political stability – in the UK at least – and the likely start of a period of downward movement in interest rates.
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News Analysis 04m 41s
Capital Markets 08m 27s
Private Equity 12m 18s
Venture & Growth Capital 16m 06s
M&A 19m 26s
The patchy recovery continued in May, marked by a notable pop in UK share prices. Trading conditions continue to be mixed but are improving overall, while evidence of the gap between the AI haves and have-nots is growing. Regarding corporate activity, private equity continues to be the bright spot; fundraising numbers clearly suggest that VC has turned a corner, but it was another flat month for M&A. Meanwhile, there’s good and bad news on the IPO front. The good news is that Raspberry Pi has pulled the trigger on its IPO, and it seems to be going well, which may precipitate others in the sector to follow suit. The bad news is that the founder and former CEO of WANdisco is trying to make a return to public company life just months after he presided over the near-collapse of that company. You really couldn’t make it up!
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News Analysis 05m 39s
Capital Markets 12m 56s
Private Equity 19m 44s
Venture & Growth Capital 22m 53s
M&A 25m 27s
Over the last year, I've been working on a major research project on AI strategy. The genesis of this research programme was an AI-focused panel session at the 2023 Megabuyte CEOStrategy Offsite. The depth of audience engagement in that panel session, but also what appeared to be a lack of clear thinking around strategy on AI, left me in little doubt that there was more research needed in this critical area.
So I set about sense checking that interpretation with multiple CEOs. And the consensus was clear - there is a strong desire, or perhaps imperative is a better word, to advance AI strategies despite prevailing uncertainties. The question, of course, is how? So, leveraging Megabuyte's expertise in transforming evidence-based analysis into actionable insights for CEOs, we set out to provide a contextualised AI strategy framework for the boards of UK scale-up and mid-market tech companies.
The objective for tech companies in applying this framework is to optimise shareholder value by leveraging AI in the most effective and appropriate way, focusing on its integration into product strategy, operations, and also into corporate strategy. Our research at Megabuyte indicates that the UK tech sector is entering a phase of disruption as seismic as that of the early 2000s.
In this context, strategic decisions made in the next two to three years will have undoubtedly have a disproportionate impact on shareholder value over the medium to long term. The future certainly presents both vast opportunities but also significant threats to growth and valuations. The key question is how we can determine what good looks like in terms of AI strategy.
At Megabuyte we're privileged to have unique access to some 500 tech company boards here in the UK, and over the past year we solicited the views from many of the CEOs and CTOs in that network, and we triangulated them with our own research in order to answer this vitally important question. Our Strategy Framework Report synthesises insights from these interviews along with our own research and is now available to download free of charge from our website.
In this special episode of the Megabuyte CEOBarometer, I will talk you through key takeaways from that report. But there's more in store. This report serves really as just Phase One of our research. The next step is to apply our framework to key technology sub sectors and delve deeper into the themes and get some more detailed insights within those parts of the market. And that will be for the benefit of our subscribers.
If you're already a Megabuyte subscriber and you're interested in participating in this element of the research, please just do drop me a line or contact the person you speak to most frequently at Megabuyte. I fundamentally believe that this is the single most important strategic decision that every tech company, and indeed every company full stop, will face over the next decade.
In April, some familiar trends became more pronounced in the UK tech sector - the most striking of which was the increasing juxtaposition of confidence levels between private equity and the capital markets. There were no fewer than four billion-dollar private equity deals announced - the Darktrace P2P and SBOs from Focus, Rimes, and Zellis – with only three small follow-on offerings in reply from the stock market. Soggy share prices once again only served to underline the stock market gloom, even if we did outperform NASDAQ for a change. Venture capital continues to bump along the bottom with another very quiet month for deals, as does M&A with another sub-50 transaction month, although both of those areas are actually showing underlying improvement if you look hard enough. Meanwhile, trading news from UK tech companies continued to be mixed, but, here again, the trend is gradually improving.
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Spotlight
Get involved in our AI Research Project 04m 18s
Your Monthly CEOBarometer
News Analysis 06m 06s
Capital Markets 14m 42s
Private Equity 18m 08s
Venture & Growth Capital 23m 08s
M&A 25m 26s
March was a busy month for public company results, painting a solid picture overall. Nonetheless, there were notable exceptions as share prices and public company valuations remained stagnant. Looking at deal flow, a superficial analysis of the data suggests that activity levels in March mirrored those of January and February – and were notably lower than the levels achieved in Q1 2023. While this observation holds true, it overlooks some crucial underlying trends, the most striking of which is the significant surge in private equity activity, with deals up 2.5 times from March 2023. Similarly, although M&A deal statistics were generally lacklustre, this masks some really interesting M&A activity in the software sector, particularly in fintech. Venture capital fundraising rebounded after an exceptionally poor February, with fintech deals also playing a significant role.
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News Analysis 04m 55s
Capital Markets 12m 47s
Private Equity 15m 07s
Venture & Growth Capital 20m 25s
M&A 23m 59s
February in the UK tech sector continued to prove the notion that downturns are sudden and universal whereas recoveries are slow and patchy.
While some companies report improved trading, others are still finding it hard going, especially those focused on the financial services sector. Share prices were weak in the UK but much stronger in the US, evidencing an emerging (and worrying) trend that the UK is not benefiting from the AI bounce. Deal volumes remain subdued, with similar trends to the previous month with solid private equity numbers, ongoing weakness in M&A volumes, especially in ICT services, and essentially no fundraising activity in the capital markets. Meanwhile, February was a record low month for VC fundraising as later-stage deals completely evaporated but there is increasing evidence of an underlying recovery giving confidence for improved deal flow as we move through the year.
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News Analysis 05m 05s
Capital Markets 11m 44s
Private Equity 17m 49s
Venture & Growth Capital 21m 56s
M&A 24m 26s
It has been a rather subdued start to the year in most parts of the UK tech sector, but the overall picture does seem to be improving.
Trading news, of which there has been plenty, is broadly positive with the emphasis very much on utilising operational leverage to build back to the Rule of 40. Share prices on both sides of the Atlantic consolidated recent gains, but UK stock market corporate activity is still at rock-bottom. Once again, private equity activity was robust with SBOs leading the way, while VC and M&A activity continued the stable trends established in the last few months of 2023.
While it remains a bumpy ride, the recovery does seem slowly to be gathering momentum.
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News Analysis 04m 54s
Capital Markets 09m 47s
Private Equity 13m 41s
Venture & Growth Capital 19m 41s
M&A 23m 56s
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