Only 2 subjects this week… the proposed EFCO acquisition and
AIA recap…
For the last few months I have been hinting towards a “big
deal” in our industry and at the start of the week, one of the deals I have
been tracking- the sale of EFCO- appears to have finally came together. Way back in 2007, this blog broke the
EFCO-Pella deal and I’ve always paid close attention to what was happening at
that company. When I heard more than a
year ago that Pella was selling EFCO I was not surprised, the fit never seemed
to take the way people envisioned. As
this latest deal started to come together the info and mis-information was
flying at record speed. I knew several
months ago who the players were and all had good reason to try and acquire EFCO
and add them to their operations. In the
end Apogee, which has been aggressive on the buying front won out and adds
another interesting piece to a very well put together puzzle. An already strong company got stronger. Out of the gate I don’t see much changing-
especially as the market is very busy right now- but I have to assume as things
settle down the product lines that repeat within the overall Apogee world will
get a long look to reach more efficiency.
And I think this will force other competitors to raise their games
meaning the acquisitions are not over…
Another angle her is if you follow Apogee’s stock, you know it’s
been a little bit of a roller coaster ride as of late. Things carrying along very nicely for a while
and then a very rough day on April 13th when the stock dropped from
$58 to $50. Evidently some investors
expected a better outlook for next year.
Slowly but surely in the last month the stock has been climbing back but
there’s no question that the analysts and markets are paying attention and a
deal like this can only help in that process.
For many in our industry this is a process (a publicly traded company)
that many have no concept of because it’s not a common setup in our world. So every move made here is watched a lot more
than the typical private company.
I have to note that unlike 2007 when I was younger,
immature, and considered myself bulletproof- I simply don’t break news like a
pending acquisition on here anymore. But
because of my connection to the past deal and knowing what I knew, people
inside of the deal started to contact me to tell me wrong info to throw me off
the trail. I took it as an honor that a transaction
worth a couple hundred million had people worried about an industry consultant
with a blog. Pretty cool right? Obviously I was saddened that people I would
respect would go out of their way to outright lie to me for the purpose of
throwing me off, but hey it is what it is.
They had to do what they thought was best.
In the end a major acquisition is basically done and there
are more in the pipeline that can rival this one. Plus get ready for some new greenfields that are
in the works too. Bottom line- there is a
lot of action in the market right now.
As for AIA…
So the feedback came in waves last week and the majority of
the responses were the same… the architects are simply not walking the floor or
visiting the exhibits. And that is not new. This has been the case for years. Yet exhibitors are always there and one
reason is because AIA has a great way of always having a “carrot” of a great
location for the future. In previous
years people looked past terrible shows because Washington DC, or Philly were
coming up. And this year is no different
with New York being the 2018 site. It is
a shame that so much money and so many resources get wasted this way but for
many that dream of hitting it big with an architect on the show floor
overshadows all else. Don’t get me wrong I love trade events- love
shows. And AIA serves a purpose for
networking and growth- just not for reaching architects (that exhibit portion
of that show will never show up on a list of “what an architect wants.”) I can only imagine taking a show budget and
using it on direct appeal approaches instead of 3 days of waiting around…
Overall the attitude of the vendors on the floor and the rare
decision makers that visited were that the positive trends we keep reporting
are real. I love to hear that… As we
know everything can change quickly, especially in a world filled with turmoil,
but so far so good.
Last- if you feel different about the AIA show- I’d love to
hear about it. I enjoy the opinions of
others and always want to learn!
Next week I’m back with the normal format blog, including a
show in Canada that is worth the effort to visit, a technical meeting that blew
me away, and much more!
LINKS of the WEEK
If you are in college be careful what you are searching for
during class…. The teachers are watching!
Not sure why this guy was arrested but I have had the same
idea of hiring people to attend events…. A wedding though is surely
interesting.
Is this new utensil from McDonald’s real?
VIDEO of the WEEK
I have really gotten into these “honest movie trailers”
where some insanely creative people with a TON of time to blow re-create
trailers into a different reality. This
one on Beauty in the Beast is great.
1 comment:
Apogee announced to EFCO employees that Cameron McGinley had resigned as president of EFCO on July 25th.
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