Report

Healthcare Exits: Corporate Buyers Step Up
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At a Glance
  • Global exits reached another record in 2021 at 244 deals, while disclosed deal value more than doubled to $179.3 billion. The provider and biopharma sectors had a banner year.
  • The fastest-growing type of transaction was private equity sponsor to corporate buyer, composing well over half of exits.
  • The median holding period held steady at 4.5 years.
  • Although special-purpose acquisition companies continued to appeal to investors, concerns about regulatory changes and public market valuations could dampen SPAC activity.

This article is part of Bain's 2022 Global Healthcare Private Equity and M&A Report

Strong market conditions, and perhaps a backlog of delayed exits due to the gyrations caused by Covid-19, made for a record level of private equity-backed healthcare exits in 2021. Whether through sale of a portfolio company to another sponsor or a strategic corporate buyer, or an initial public offering, or some other means, exits globally increased to 244 in 2021 from 146 in 2020. Disclosed deal value, meanwhile, surged to $179.3 billion from $73 billion. Corporate acquirers were especially active, in line with the prior year, so that sponsor-to-sponsor exits made up a smaller share of transactions (see Figure 1).

Figure 1

Exit activity has transformed over the past three years, particularly in the Asia-Pacific region, provider sector, and for corporate acquirers

A global phenomenon 

Sponsor-backed exits grew in every region. North America continues to account for the majority of exits globally, though its share dropped from 58% in 2020 to 53% in 2021. North American deal volume rose from 84 exits to 129 exits in 2021, with most of the growth resulting from sponsor-to-strategic exits, doubling from 27 deals in 2020 to 54 in 2021 (see Figure 2). 

Asia-Pacific was the fastest-growing region, with 33 deals in 2021, up from 16. This was driven almost exclusively by sponsor-to-strategic exits, from 6 in 2020 to 22 in 2021. Asia-Pacific private equity markets clearly are coming on strong.

Europe also saw significant growth, increasing from 42 exits to 77 in 2021, here again spurred by sponsor-to-strategic exits, which grew from 23 to 45.

Figure 2

Sponsor-to-corporate transactions accounted for the largest share of exits in each region

Healthcare providers: sponsor-to-corporate deals ascend

Providers accounted for the largest share of exits, logging 120 in 2021, more than twice the 58 in 2020. Disclosed deal value also rose sharply to $44.5 billion from $29.5 billion in 2020. Continuing a trend started in 2019, sponsor-to-corporate deals became the largest share of provider exits.

The largest exit was the electronic health record vendor Athenahealth, acquired by Bain Capital and Hellman & Friedman from Veritas Capital and Evergreen Coast Capital for $17 billion. Veritas and Evergreen took Athenahealth private in 2019 in a deal valued at $5.7 billion, implying a hefty return within a holding period of less than three years.

Two large provider exits went to payers looking to expand vertically: Hapvida’s purchase of Notre Dame Intermedica from Bain Capital for $9 billion, creating Brazil’s largest hospital network, and Humana’s purchase of the remaining stake of Kindred at Home, provider of home-based clinical solutions, for $5.7 billion, from Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe. 

Biopharma: big deals in pharma services 

With a raft of large deals, biopharma had a banner year for exits. Deal count rose to 60 in 2021, up from 42 in 2020, and disclosed value more than tripled, to $56 billion from $17.3 billion. Three biopharma deals exceeded $5 billion each, 2 of which were pharma services assets that yielded strong returns. 

PPD, a clinical research organization that Thermo Fisher purchased from Carlyle and Hellman & Friedman for $17.4 billion (excluding debt), was the largest biopharma exit of the year. H&F and Carlyle made large returns through a long holding period; both firms invested in PPD’s 2011 take-private and again in a 2017 recapitalization, and now they’ll receive a 5.5-fold and 3-fold return, respectively, on their investments. For Thermo Fisher, the acquisition advances its drug development capabilities and value proposition.

The second-largest biopharma exit was the sponsor-to-sponsor trade of Parexel from Pamplona Capital to EQT and Goldman Sachs for $8.5 billion. 

Medtech: a surge in surgical devices

Medtech deal volume rose 67% in 2021, jumping to 40 exits from 24 in 2020. Disclosed deal value rose 24%, from $6.2 billion to $7.7 billion.

Corporate buyers expanded their product portfolios to include specialty surgical devices, as seen by the two largest medtech exits. Altaris sold BK Medical Holding, an active imaging system manufacturer for surgical guidance, to GE Healthcare for $1.5 billion. And Baring Private Equity Asia sold Lumenis, a laser business focused on urology procedures, to Boston Scientific for $1.1 billion.

Sponsor-to-corporate exits in medtech more than doubled from the previous year to 11 trades. The largest was Bain Capital’s purchase of PartsSource from Great Hill Partners.

Life sciences: brisk trade in clinical labs 

Many more exits and one huge deal distinguished the life sciences tools and diagnostics sector in 2021. Deal volume more than doubled from 7 in 2020 to 16, while disclosed deal value multiplied more than eight times, from $4.7 billion to $39.1 billion. The rise in value occurred largely because of the special-purpose acquisition company (SPAC) Gingko Bioworks, a synthetic biology company that builds organisms for customers in nutrition and health; it merged with Soaring Eagle Acquisition Group and went public at a $15 billion valuation, providing an exit for a consortium of investors. With so much capital at a steep valuation, Gingko Bioworks has a tough task to meet shareholder expectations.

The second-largest life sciences exit was Danaher’s purchase of Aldeveron, a manufacturer of plasmid and other reagents for the life sciences industry, from EQT for $9.6 billion. The deal will expand Danaher’s development capabilities and help it bring products to market faster.

Sponsor-to-sponsor clinical laboratory trades also flourished during the year, including EQT and PSP acquiring Cerba HealthCare, a French medical biology laboratory, from Partners Group Holding for $5.3 billion. Goldman Sachs, OMERS Infrastructure, and AXA bought Amedes Holding, an operator of medical laboratories, from Antin Infrastructure for $1.9 billion. And Apax sold Unilabs, a European laboratory and imaging diagnostics company, to A.P. Moller Holding.

Healthcare payers: technology and data dominate deals

Payer exit transactions declined from 15 in 2020 to 8 in 2021. Disclosed deal value rose sharply from $15.3 billion to $31.9 billion, but this stemmed mostly from UnitedHealth’s Optum agreeing to acquire Change Healthcare for $13 billion, an exit strategy for Blackstone, which owned 20%.

As in 2020, many of the large assets that exited are focused on payer technology and data. This includes the Change Healthcare platform, which manages revenue, payment, and clinical data. With the deal scheduled to close in 2022, the new entity will combine that platform with Optum’s data analytics to create more informed insights from claims data.

Looking at initial public offerings (IPOs) of payers, the largest was Signify Health, a tech-enabled value-based care platform, which went public with a valuation of more than $5.3 billion, an exit for New Mountain Capital, followed by the $200 million IPO of Convey Health Solutions, an IT infrastructure company for payers, providing an exit for TPG.

The second-largest payer exit was the acquisition of DentaQuest, a dental insurance provider, by Canadian insurer Sun Life for $2.5 billion from Centerbridge. The deal strengthens Sun Life in dental benefits and US employee benefits. 

Quick flips remain attractive

The median holding period for healthcare assets held steady at 4.5 years in 2021, but the first quartile of deals shortened slightly, possibly indicating that opportunistic investors are selling into a strong market (see Figure 3).

Figure 3

Holding periods for healthcare private equity have held steady for the past few years

High valuations and large pools of capital waiting to be put to work continue to foster a favorable exit environment for private equity sponsors. Many sponsors selling inside a two-year holding period sensed a window to seize rising valuations and ample strategic exit channels, even if that occurred early in the investment horizon. The few notable quick flips, or assets held for less than two years, include both corporate and sponsor-to-sponsor opportunities, such as EQT’s exit of Aldeveron to Danaher and Atlantic Street Capital’s exit of United Veterinary Care to Nordic Capital.

SPACs: more popular, but under more scrutiny

Sales to SPACs, an exit strategy that flourished in 2020, continued in 2021 through large transactions such as ATI Physical Therapy, an owner-operator of therapy clinics and an exit opportunity for Advent International. 

During 2021, the number of healthcare-related SPAC IPOs grew 100%, lagging the broader SPAC market, which rose 150%, and also lagging their growth in 2020. 

There are still almost 80 healthcare-related SPACs searching for targets, with about half expiring by the first quarter of 2023 (see Figure 4). However, given increasing regulatory scrutiny around SPACs and competitive intensity from corporates and sponsors, some of these SPACs could struggle to find a deal before their expiration.

Figure 4

Special-purpose acquisition companies have taken off as an exit vehicle in healthcare

Outlook: strong investor demand, though IPOs and SPACs may taper 

In the next few years, we expect many large assets will come to market due to continual roll-up activity, especially in diagnostics, specialty providers, and pharma and medtech services. Competition for assets is bound to increase as sponsors and corporate investors look to broaden their portfolios, especially in the life sciences, biopharma, and provider sectors. 

On the heels of the successful exit of Carlyle and H&F from PPD, where a long holding period and continued investment produced a great return for both sponsors, we may see other firms double down in their investments and hold assets for longer periods. 

However, if regulation tightens and the competition for SPAC targets increases further, we expect a number of healthcare SPACs to fail to make a transaction, which could impact this exit vehicle's opportunities in 2022 and beyond. Moreover, while IPOs were up this year, they were the exit strategy with the slowest growth. Combined with the fact that many expensive healthcare assets that went public in 2021 continue to trade below par value, this may dampen the attractiveness of exiting via public markets in the future.

Read our 2022 Global Healthcare Private Equity and M&A Report

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