The art of structuring M&A transactions has evolved significantly over the past decade. Beyond the traditional binary choice between stock and asset deals, today’s most successful transactions often incorporate innovative structural elements that address specific objectives, mitigate particular risks, and align incentives among various stakeholders. These creative approaches can transform seemingly intractable negotiation positions into viable paths forward.
The Evolution of Deal Structures
Traditional M&A transactions typically fell into clear categories – asset purchases, stock purchases, or mergers – with relatively standardized terms. While these fundamental structures remain important, the most effective dealmakers now approach transaction design with greater flexibility, often incorporating hybrid elements to address specific circumstances.
Rather than imposing standardized terms, they develop bespoke structures that reflect the unique characteristics of each situation – the target’s industry dynamics, the parties’ tax considerations, risk allocation preferences, post-closing operational plans, and financing constraints.
Key Structural Innovations
Several structural innovations have gained prominence in middle-market transactions:
Installment Sales with Performance Adjustments
Beyond simple earnouts, sophisticated installment structures now incorporate nuanced performance adjustments that reflect business realities:
Multiple Metric Frameworks: Combining financial metrics (revenue, EBITDA) with operational KPIs (customer retention, product development milestones)
Counterbalancing Metrics: Pairing growth metrics with efficiency/profitability measures to prevent incentivizing growth at all costs
Adjusted Basis Calculations: Methods for normalizing performance during transitional periods
Collaborative Governance: Joint oversight mechanisms for decisions that significantly impact earnout achievement
These approaches provide sellers with meaningful upside participation while giving buyers appropriate protection against overpayment.
Structured Equity Rollovers
Equity rollovers – where selling shareholders reinvest a portion of their proceeds into the post-transaction entity – have evolved beyond simple percentage stakes to include:
Tiered Equity Structures: Different classes of equity with varied rights based on performance outcomes
Performance-Based Vesting: Equity that vests based on achieving specific operational or financial targets
Option Collars: Mechanisms that provide downside protection while preserving upside participation
Staged Liquidity Rights: Scheduled opportunities for rolled equity holders to achieve liquidity over time
These structures align incentives between buyers and continuing management while providing sellers meaningful participation in future value creation.
Strategic Joint Ventures
Rather than full acquisitions, some transactions now employ joint venture structures that allow parties to combine specific capabilities while maintaining independence in other areas:
Capability-Focused Combinations: JVs targeting specific product lines, technologies, or market segments
Geographic Expansion Vehicles: Structures facilitating entry into new territories while preserving existing operations
R&D Collaborations: Ventures focused on joint development while maintaining separate commercialization rights
Phased Integration Models: Structures that begin as collaborations with pathways to fuller integration
These approaches can be particularly valuable when cultural integration risks are high or when regulatory considerations complicate full combinations.
Contingent Consideration Beyond Financial Metrics
Modern contingent consideration structures have expanded beyond financial metrics to address specific transaction risks:
Regulatory Milestone Payments: Consideration tied to achieving specific regulatory approvals
Customer Retention Bonuses: Payments triggered by maintaining key customer relationships
Litigation Outcome Adjustments: Price adjustments linked to the resolution of pending legal matters
Technology Performance Thresholds: Consideration contingent on technology meeting specified performance criteria
These approaches allow parties to address specific risk factors without requiring excessive discounts to the base purchase price.
Tax-Driven Structuring Innovations
Tax considerations frequently drive structural innovation, with several approaches gaining prominence:
Forward and Reverse Triangular Mergers with Variations
These structures, while not new, have seen creative adaptations to address specific tax situations:
Multi-Step Mergers: Sequential transactions designed to achieve specific tax outcomes
Hybrid Mergers: Structures treated differently for tax purposes in different jurisdictions
Qualified Stock Purchases with 338(h)(10) Elections: Achieving asset sale tax treatment while maintaining stock sale legal form
Up-C Structures
The Umbrella Partnership C-Corporation structure has gained popularity for transactions involving pass-through entities. It preserves tax advantages for selling owners of pass-through entities, creates potential for tax receivable agreements providing additional value, and facilitates access to public markets while maintaining tax benefits.
Tax-Deferred Reorganizations with Creative Features
Section 368 reorganizations now frequently incorporate innovative features:
Contingent Stock Rights: Additional shares issued upon achievement of specified milestones
Special Distribution Rights: Distributions of specific assets or proceeds prior to combination
Dual-Class Stock Structures: Different voting and economic rights to address governance concerns
Financing-Driven Structural Innovations
The financing landscape has also driven structural innovation:
Seller Financing Variations
Beyond traditional seller notes, creative approaches include:
Revenue-Based Financing: Repayment tied to the target’s future revenue streams
Convertible Structures: Notes convertible to equity under specified circumstances
Participating Debt: Instruments that provide debt-like security with equity-like upside
Private Credit Solutions
The expanded private credit market has enabled structures featuring:
Unitranche Facilities: Simplified debt structures combining senior and subordinated characteristics
NAV-Based Lending: Loans secured by diversified pools of assets rather than individual companies
Structured Preferred Equity: Instruments with both debt and equity characteristics
Special Purpose Acquisition Vehicles
Beyond traditional SPACs, customized acquisition vehicles include:
Continuation Funds: Vehicles allowing existing investors liquidity while maintaining exposure
Strategic JV Funding Vehicles: Entities jointly capitalized by strategic and financial partners
Industry Consolidation Platforms: Vehicles designed specifically for roll-up strategies
Regulatory-Influenced Structures
Regulatory considerations increasingly shape transaction structures:
Mitigation of Antitrust Concerns
Innovative approaches to addressing competition concerns include:
Upfront Buyer Structures: Pre-identified divestiture buyers incorporated into main transaction
Fix-It-First Remedies: Proactive structural changes implemented before regulatory review
Conditional Approval Structures: Transactions that automatically adjust based on regulatory outcomes
Foreign Investment Review Strategies
CFIUS and similar foreign investment reviews have spurred innovations:
Governance Firewalls: Structures limiting foreign investor involvement in sensitive operations
Dual Entity Structures: Separate entities for sensitive and non-sensitive operations
Staged Investment Approaches: Initial investments structured below review thresholds
Conclusion: The Strategic Advantage of Structural Creativity
The most successful M&A practitioners now approach transaction structuring as a creative problem-solving exercise rather than the selection of standardized templates. By drawing from an expanded toolkit of structural innovations, they can craft arrangements that address specific concerns, allocate risks appropriately, and align incentives among all stakeholders.
The development of these bespoke structures requires deep expertise across multiple disciplines – tax, securities law, financing, corporate governance, and industry-specific regulatory frameworks. When this multidisciplinary approach is combined with a clear understanding of each party’s fundamental objectives, the result can be transactions that truly create win-win outcomes – deals that not only close successfully but establish the foundation for sustainable value creation post-closing.
Rochelle Walk is a partner at AEGIS Law with over 35 years of experience guiding clients through complex M&A transactions. She brings both legal expertise and practical business acumen to middle-market transactions, with particular focus on the technology, manufacturing, and professional services sectors. Rochelle’s approach emphasizes thorough preparation, creative problem-solving, and alignment with her clients’ strategic objectives.
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