Must Read Blog Higher Ed K-12 Private Equity August 23, 2022

Reading the Tea Leaves: Investors Make Bets in the Face of Uncertainty

Experts are stumped. Even as GDP declines and some companies announce layoffs, the U.S. continues to add jobs, with many more positions left unfilled. Though edtech venture investing has visibly cooled, related M&A activity continues to be robust. This continues to hold true even as it begins to lean more heavily toward consolidation than the establishment of new platforms. K-12 remains the darling of the sector, but we continue to see bold tactical bets being made in higher education and corporate and continuing education.

Below, we look at recent deal activity in the education market through the lens of different potential macroeconomic scenarios. If uncertainty has introduced some hesitation, the good news is that whichever way the economy breaks, there is an education model that is likely to thrive.

 


 

We think about the education sector in three large buckets: K-12, Higher Education, and Corporate and Continuing Education. Each of these market groups has different histories under varying macroeconomic conditions and different secular drivers that could challenge how well those past experiences predict the future. As the sector navigates macroeconomic uncertainty, we see investors focusing their bets.

 

K-12: An Unlikely Darling

 

Twenty years ago, K-12 was anathema to private investors. Long sales cycles, difficult buyers, cyclical budgets, and political uncertainty put most investors off. Today, the picture is altered. The advent of the SaaS business model, a generational change in buyers, and the influx of new federal spending has made K-12 edtech a more popular and investible sector. At the same time, the scale of available funding, the urgency of the challenges created by the pandemic, and the current appetite for digital solutions makes K-12 nearly impervious to near-term recession threats. And recent deal activity reflects that enthusiasm.

 

July Highlights

A great example of a high stakes bet in K-12 edtech made irrespective of near-term economic conditions was Texas-based Sterling Group’s $650 million purchase of Ergotron—the maker of digital display mounting and mobility products for K-12 and college classrooms. Like Levi Strauss outfitting prospectors during the Gold Rush, Ergotron will benefit from school edtech purchases regardless of specific content or platform choices.

July was also a big month for early childhood investments, which remain a keen area of focus for investors. Historically, Early Childhood has been a modestly cyclical sector that performs best during periods of full employment.

  • Endeavor Schools (Leeds Equity) purchased two more pre-schools in North Carolina that will be repositioned under their existing Cranfield Academy brand.
  • Bright Horizons paid $320 million for Australia-based Only About Children (OAC). OAC operates 75 early childhood centers across Australia and generated ~$140M in 2021.
  • Busy Bees acquired Australian Childcare Career Options.
  • In the U.K., Little Angels Childcare acquired Rainbow House Kindergarten and Kids Planet acquired Choice Childcare and Southfield Day Nursery.

Regardless of the direction of the macroeconomy, the trend toward consolidation should continue to strengthen the ECE sector.

 

Higher Education: Waiting for the Turn

 

The Higher Education sector has historically been viewed favorably by investors. It’s size, relative buyer concentration, generous federal funding regime, and counter-cyclical nature made it popular for many of the reasons investors often avoided K-12. However, investor enthusiasm has recently cooled due to regulatory uncertainty, growing consumer indifference to the price and merits of the product, and an expanding supply of degree alternatives. While recession talk would, in past cycles, have begun to attract new investment, the continued tight labor market (which makes students more difficult and expensive to acquire) has recently frozen much of the investment activity in the sector.

 

July Highlights

Despite the cooling note above, we noted several bold bets among last month’s deals.

  • UK-based Westford Education Group, owner of Westford University College, purchased U.S.-based Acacia University in a bid to enter the U.S. market. For-profit Acacia is DEAC-accredited and offers pay-as-you-go online degree programs and does not participate in the federal Title IV financial aid programs, thus side-stepping the regulatory threats facing for-profit schools from the current administration.
  • In a similar move, Perdoceo Education Corp. announced the acquisition of California Southern University for $40 million. Regionally accredited Cal Southern is also a non-Title IV provider of online degrees that offers monthly pay-as-you-go plans for students. (Tyton Partners represented Cal Southern in the sale.)

Aside from the benefit of avoiding the regulations associated with Title IV, these low-cost alternatives offer their acquirers a new pathway toward a more affordable and potentially more competitive approach to degree offerings.

Also notable last month was Carnegie Dartlet’s acquisition of Maguire Associates, moving the enrollment management company into the financial aid optimization market. Consolidation among higher education services companies is likely to continue following the large private equity bets made in Ellucian and Anthology last year.

 

Corporate and Continuing Education: Optimized for the Current Moment

 

The corporate and continuing education sector has historically been even more strongly cyclical than K-12, and during the white-hot labor market of the last several years has expanded considerably. Individual spending on skills development has expanded. And corporate spending has grown to include employee reskilling as companies have been reluctant to allow even redundant workers to leave their payrolls. If unemployment starts to rise, this sector may have the furthest to fall. But as long as critical roles remain unfilled, companies engaged in skills-oriented training should continue to thrive.

 

July Highlights

In July, we saw multiple examples of consolidation:

  • Cross-border consolidation with the acquisition of coding bootcamp provider Holberton by African Leadership Group (ALG), a technology training and staffing company;
  • Product consolidation with the acquisition of continuing medical education provider Rockpointe Corporation by Clinical Healthcare Alliance. Rockpointe will expand CHA’s offering into primary care education;
  • Horizontal consolidation through the tuck-in of Strafford into BARBRI Global as the dominant bar exam prep company extends into continuing legal education in what it describes as a “backpack to briefcase” strategy.

And two new platform bets:

  • Renovus Capital Partners acquired Curtis Learning, an outsourced scientific education and training provider.
  • Gridiron Capital, owners of professional learning holding company Colibri Group, acquired Vistage Worldwide from Providence Equity Partners. Vistage is a coaching company that supports CEOs of small and medium-sized businesses. Gridiron intends to continue to grow the company’s global footprint and is betting that the current macroeconomic turmoil will only increase demand for its services.