The Home Depot, Atlanta, GA, has agreed to sell HD Supply to a team of private equity firms -Bain Capital LLC, Carlyle
Group and Clayton Dubilier & Rice Inc. -for $10.3 billion, or roughly 10X-12X EBITDA.
  ;
The sale has been expected
for weeks now, with a number of private equity firms rumored to have bid for the unit and several to have bowed out due to
the down housing market -one of HD Supply's key customer bases. HD Supply reported a decrease in organic sales in the recent
quarter.
  ;
For that reason, the firms likely paid closer to 12X EBITDA, according to Jim Miller, principal and
a managing director at investment banking firm Vetus Partners, Cleveland, OH. When they started this process, I believe they
were touting approximately $1 billion of EBITDA from HD Supply. With the recent softening of some of their end markets, particularly
the residential end market, I'm guessing that HD Supply's most recent trailing 12 months' EBITDA was closer to $800 million
than it was to $1 billion.
  ;
"That's a full purchase price, but I still believe that CD & R (and the other firms)
are getting a good collection of assets and the investment will be a good one over time."
  ;
Little more than
a month after former CEO Robert Nardelli retired, HD announced in February it would consider a potential HD Supply spin-off.
Nardelli had pushed the wholesale division as a way to diversify HD's offering and spark growth  ; to balance out a slowing
retail division.
Though HD had reported that some investors wanted it to stick with its HD Supply strategy, other
investors were quite vocal on their dissatisfaction with the wholesale business, calling it a diversion from the retailer's
core business. This included Ralph Whitworth, an activist investor whose firm, Relational Investors,
recently
won a seat on HD's board of directors.
HistoryHome Depot has spent the past few years building
up its wholesale unit. It bought $5 billion diversified distributor Hughes Supply for 12X EBITDA in early 2006, and National
Waterworks, at the time with $1.5 billion in annual sales, for $1.35 billion in mid-2005.
  ;
HD Supply made almost
$4 billion in acquisitions in 2006.
"Home Depot has finally faced the inevitable truth they could not run the collection
of companies they acquired over the past five years," said Adam Fein, president of Pembroke Consulting.
  ;
"The
private equity firms taking over have the opportunity to build a unified common platform. But to do that, they will probably
divest some of the companies that are a part of HD Supply."
Impact on M & A MarketIn
a
recent MDM audio conference, Miller, who heads the distribution practice at Vetus, said
that even talk of a potential HD Supply spin-off had a slight impact on valuations in the distribution M & A marketplace.
The effect of talk of a divestment came from two areas: "One, the position of Home Depot as a competitive
buyer against another bidder, or at least the perceived threat of Home Depot as a competitive buyer," Miller said. "And two,
Home Depot Supply as a potential exit opportunity. There were several private equity funds that were chasing distribution
investments with the intent of buying them, holding them for a period of time and potentially flipping them to HD Supply."
Miller said that the final  ; sale price of $10.3 billion  ; is a "good sign" for distributors contemplating
selling part or all of their businesses. He says that deals of this magnitude typically "set the bar" for valuations in the
sector -valuations for smaller companies are then discounted from that bar. "Even with a significant discount to this bar,
valuations for smaller distributors in this sector
should hold fairly well in the near term," he says.
Tom Lange, leader of the distribution and supply chain
technology team in Robert W. Baird & Co.'s investment banking group, speaking during the recent audio conference, agreed
that the deal would have an impact. "I think the absence of HD Supply as a buyer for distribution businesses could have a
valuation impact. & hellip; They were aggressive, often paying a compelling price when they thought there was a strong fit."
Private Equity Experience in Distribution
More than 100 private equity firms are targeting distribution right
now, Miller says.
Fein agreed. "As I point out in
'Facing
the Forces of Change: Lead the Way in the Supply Chain,' wholesale distribution remains one of the top targets for buyout
investments by private equity firms," he says. "They are being attracted by the ongoing need for wholesale distribution to
end markets insulated from global competition, such as facilities maintenance, construction, or health care services."
The firms buying HD Supply are no strangers to the distribution world. Clayton Dubilier & Rice invested in global
electrical distributor
Rexel Inc., and recently
sold
its investment lab supplier VWR International Inc. Also, the former CEO of building materials and plumbing distributor
Wolseley plc (parent of Stock Building Supply and Ferguson), Charles Banks,  ; is an operating partner at CD & R. However,
CD & R told MDM that Banks is not likely to be involved with the HD Supply investment.
Carlyle has recently made
industrial and construction investments, as well, including
Goodyear Tire
and Rubber Company's Engineered Products Division. It previously owned PT manufacturer Rexnord before
selling
it recently to Apollo Management.
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Beyond the HD Supply Factor:
Order the CD and transcript from MDM's recent audio conference to gain more perspective
on how HD and other big players' moves have affected  ; the market and the impact of outside investment on the channel.
Also learn practical tips from industry experts such as what it's like to work for a private equity firm and median valuations
for big, medium and small businesses.  ;
Also available,
order
the CD from MDM's audio conference on Succession Planning.
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