My post praising the value of investment bankers led to a number of e-mails asking for the parameters for investment banking fees for M&A. Here is the retail M&A price list from a first tier investment bank:
Aggregate value of transaction – Aggregate fee as a % of the transaction
- $20 billion – 0.150%
$15 billion – 0.180%
$12.5 billion – 0.200%
$10 billion – 0.230%
$9 billion – 0.240%
$8 billion – 0.250%
$7.5 billion – 0.265%
$7 billion – 0.275%
$6 billion – 0.300%
$5 billion – 0.320%
$4 billion – 0.360%
$3 billion – 0.400%
$2 billion – 0.450%
$1 billion – 0.600%
$900 million – 0.625%
$800 million – 0.650%
$700 million – 0.700%
$600 million – 0.700%
$500 million – 0.800%
$400 million – 0.900%
$300 million – 1.000%
$200 million – 1.200%
$100 million – 1.500%
$50 million – 2.000%
As I mentioned before, those are retail prices so you might be able to shave a bit from those. Also, at lower price points and/or in deals that are less likely to happen you likely to have a retainer (say $50k) and a minimum transaction fee (say $750k).
Sometimes, if I have a good understanding of the value of the company, I also structure deals giving bankers an upside for selling the company at a premium to my expected value. For instance if I think the company is worth $100 million, I might pay 1.5% on the first $100 million, but 2% on the next $50 million and 2.5% after that. You need to realize that the marginal value of the extra million is worth a lot more to the shareholders than to the bankers who would rather get the deal done.
I hope this provides good guidance!
Side note: IPO fees are very different. For IPOs where the market cap is below $400 million the bankers take 7% of the proceeds split between the book runner and the co-managers.
As a former M&A banker I’d thought I’d just comment that I never saw an engagement agreement where there was not an upfront retainer and a minimum transaction fee.
I love how you posted all this info – it’s great for the entrepreneurs to have this in their backpocket when negotiating fees with bankers.
looks low to me
Actually, nowadays, i-banks very often agree to no retainers. On minimum transaction fees I side with you however.
Great info — also, great organic listing.
Curious to know:
[1] what is % from $10-$50 million?
[2] what is a typical retainer? Does it go toward the deal fee?
[3] is capital raise [v. M&A] on a different pricing structure?
Great site.
Just add to the debate, I have been involved in three sub US$200m raises and we never paid a retainer. Don’t let the bank push you, further you can often get the lawyers to drop the retainer.
Just push hard, it is your market I-banks know days are a dime a dozen and all offer similar skills. Shop around.
This list is VERY low. I’m not sure where Fabrice is “shopping” for investment banking talent but these prices are easily 30% discounted at the sub $5Bn breakpoints. I am a M&A banker here in NYC and I and our MDs have never quoted fees anywhere near these. I guess if you are looking at lower tier firms maybe but not top talent.
Ethan
Ethan:
This came from a Lazard “cheat sheet”. I agree it feels low, especially at the low end of the price range. For sub-$50 million deals, I have often seen $50k retainers + 3-4% with a $500k minimum.