Skip to main content

Editor's comment: 'M&A activity is good for us'

2021 has kicked off with some serious spending - ITS can look forward with confidence
By Adam Hill February 18, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Adam Hill: 'There's an appealing dynamism to the ITS world'

You will have noticed some serious money being spread about recently: among the most eye-catching, Teledyne has paid out $8bn for Flir, while Verra Mobility is buying Redflex for $113m. Private equity firms are also snapping up Cubic Corporation for $2.8bn. 

These are big numbers and mean that, in financial terms, 2021 has started with a bang for the ITS sector. But what do companies want out of such transactions? How do they decide what to buy? And how much more M&A can we expect? 

In the January / February 2021 edition of ITS International, I talk to the bosses of two other companies which have made their own recent acquisitions: Iteris and IRD. Their answers – about the nuts and bolts of the decision-making process and the philosophy behind it – are instructive. 

For instance, often another established company does something that you want to do too; far easier to absorb that expertise into your set-up rather than start from scratch or bet your shirt on an untried start-up.

Potential earning power and synergy are also important, as is management culture and technology. It is a rich mix of reasons. Not that it’s easy: there are many frogs to kiss before you find your prince – or, as one of our interviewees puts it: “You’ve got to dance with a lot of people before you get engaged.”

But the dance is worth the effort. The ITS industry is fragmented – but that makes it ripe for consolidation. It is technologically diverse – but that makes it an attractive target for investors, including institutional ones with deep pockets.

Venture capital and private equity players are also in the game, perhaps, because they recognise that ITS has not yet reached its full potential in terms of IT investment and data use. It all adds up to a sector in rude health, with potential for growth which is attracting real interest. 

There is a dynamism to ITS which is appealing, too, and governments worldwide are going to be looking at infrastructure spending to help drive recovery in the post-Covid world.

Consolidation can bring positives and negatives, of course, but the current M&A activity points to an industry that, in uncertain times, can have confidence about the future.

Related Content

  • July 27, 2023
    Kapsch: We need to move quicker towards connectivity
    Connectivity requires a lot of different parties to work together – but it’s the only way to get coverage. Alfredo Escribá, chief technology officer of Kapsch, talks to Adam Hill about the value of ‘orchestrated corridors’
  • February 28, 2013
    Flir takeover of Traficon and the role of thermal imaging
    Andy Teich, president of commercial systems at Flir, discusses the growing role of thermal technology in ITS and his company’s latest high-profile acquisition with Jason Barnes. Andy Teich, Flir’s president of commercial systems, doesn’t want to talk about infrared (IR). Instead, he’d prefer, he says, to discuss ‘thermal technology’. It is, he explains, to differentiate between the imaging technologies which his company specialises in and the LED illumination of IR cameras, an altogether different beast. Fl
  • May 19, 2020
    Smart cities - better world, says A-to-Be
    Smart city adoption in the US has been sluggish, thinks Jason Wall of A-to-Be USA. But there is still time to learn lessons from the European experience...
  • January 29, 2021
    Opinion: MaaSive fail
    Are we in danger of losing our way on Mobility as a Service? Johan Herrlin of Ito World wonders if there is too much focus on the system and not enough on problem-solving...