Exhibition News June 2019 | Page 10

M&A The Dealmaker Steve Monnington of Mayfield Media Strategies runs the rule over the latest global exhibition deals T arsus Group took a further step in the business information arena with the acquisition of several media properties from North American Journeys Inc (NAJ). The assets include three RTO (Receptive Tour Operator) Summits, which are based on one-to-one scheduled appointments rather than traditional exhibitions, and Active America China, which focuses on building inbound Chinese tourism into North America. The assets acquired also include the Inbound Report and TourOperatorLand.com. The acquisition was made by Connect Travel, one of the US divisions of Tarsus, and follows the acquisition of eTourism Summit (also purchased from NAJ) in March last year. Tarsus originally acquired 80 per cent of Connect Meetings in December 2016 and bought out the remaining shareholding in earlier this year. Centaur has completed its non- core exhibition disposal program. Having sold the travel division to Northstar and the HR division to DVV Media, the engineering division, which comprises of The Engineer magazine and the Subcon exhibition, has been acquired by Mark Allen Group 10 — June for £2.5m, which represents a multiple of 2.75x operating profit. Overall, the multiples achieved (5.4x for Travel and just over four times for HR) are below markets rates but this is often the way with non-core disposals and, having announced its intention to re-focus the group, Centaur was in a must-sell situation. Mark Allen Group has been acquiring both exhibitions and publications, over the last few years. Although primarily known as a publisher, it has tripled the revenue derived from exhibitions and conferences over the last four years and they have become a significant part of its overall revenue. As one of the few remaining family-owned publishing/exhibition groups we might expect it to follow Mack Brooks to market. It did strengthen its board a couple of years ago by appointing ex- Informa CEO Peter Rigby as a non-executive director. In India, Reed Exhibitions has acquired PackPlus from Next Events. As well as the main show in Delhi, the portfolio includes packaging exhibitions in Mumbai and Hyderabad. This follows hot on the heels of its acquisition in March of India BIG7, the gifts, stationery and housewares exhibition and brings the total portfolio of exhibitions in India to over 20. After a period of relative inactivity in M&A, this is Reed’s fourth deal this year following the acquisition of Mack Brooks and Shanghai Forever. Another month, another home show acquisition by Sentinel Capital Partners-owned US organiser Marketplace Events. This time it’s nine home shows acquired from Show Technology Productions of San Antonio and puts them in three new markets - Austin and San Antonio, Texas and Lexington, Kentucky. This is the 11th acquisition completed by Marketplace Events since being purchased by Sentinel in 2016, bringing its portfolio to 75 shows. I’ve been watching the surge in the share price of Future plc with interest – it has more than doubled from 375p to 840p in just nine months. The company IPO’d in 1999 and seems to have successfully created a global e-commerce and publishing business strengthened by last year’s acquisition of Purch for $132m, which gave it the number one position in US consumer tech publishing, and the more recent acquisition in the US of Mobile Nations, a digital publisher focused on consumer electronics, for up to $120m. What is particularly interesting is that almost 20 per cent of its revenue now comes from commissions on products purchased by its readers. The one area where it is underweight is exhibitions and it’s surprising that it hasn’t been more active in making acquisitions in this area given the nature of the specialist audiences that it engages with through its other media products.