Addleshaw Goddard tops law firms’ Scotland M&A H1 deals table
Addleshaw Goddard remained the top legal adviser for mergers and acquisitions (M&A) in Scotland in the first half of this year, according to the latest Experian United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland M&A Review.
The firm advised on 11 deals, ahead of CMS, which took second place with eight. Shoosmiths and Bellwether Green followed with seven each. Pinsent Masons and Harper Macleod each advised on six deals and Freeths, Aberdein Considine and Morton Fraser MacRoberts on five. BTO LLP rounded off the top 10 with four deals.
The largest transaction was the £1.27 billion acquisition by France-based Vinci Airports of a 50.01 per cent stake in Edinburgh Airport, from Global Infrastructure Partners (GIP), which has owned the airport since 2012.
The next largest inbound transaction involved the acquisition of Coretrax Technology, an Aberdeen-based provider of tools for the oil and gas sector, by Expro Group Holdings, a provider of well construction, well flow management and production, subsea well access, well intervention and integrity services.
The company was purchased for approximately £166 million from exiting investor Buckthorn Partners for a combination of cash and newly issued Expro shares. In June, another high-profile banking consolidation deal was announced, with Edinburgh registered NatWest’s plan to purchase the Core Banking Business of supermarket giant Sainsbury’s for £125m.
The report states: “Professional services was the most active sector in terms of M&A activity in Scotland, despite a 15 per cent decline in total volume. The value of this sector’s transactions soared to over £1.4bn in H1 2024 from only £724m last year.
“Interestingly, the manufacturing sector experienced robust growth in M&A deals, with a 19 per cent uplift to a total of 57 deals. Wholesale and retail followed the overall Scottish M&A market and remained consistent compared to last year with 39 transactions valued at £250m. Scottish companies were of particular interest to one active Yorkshire-based bidder, Bond International, a wholesaler of tyres, which acquired five similar companies across four transactions in H1.
“Infocomms followed the pattern seen in professional services, reporting a small five per cent reduction in volume, yet a substantial growth in value up by 68 per cent, which could be a sign that business valuations are on a rising course with both private equity and strategic buyers willing to pay higher multiples for the right business in these sectors.”