M&A Activity in Benefits Administration: Round 2
Following the benefits administration merger and acquisition (M&A) frenzy of 2010 that resulted in some major consolidations including Aon Hewitt, Towers Watson, Xerox/ACS and ExcellerateHRO, to name a few, are we poised to see round 2?
The second wave actually began in early 2011 and tends to consist of the more established providers, in their own right, acquiring Tier 2 health and welfare (H&W) administration companies in the U.S. Examples include:
- Towers Watson acquiring Aliquant in January 2011
- Sedgwick, a leader in the leave of absence administration market with ~20% market share, acquiring the productivity solutions unit of Nationwide Better Health in May 2011
- Morneau Shepell, the leading total benefits outsourcing (TBO) provider in Canada, acquiring SBC Systems Company in January 2012.
As of last week, we can now add ADP to this list since it signed a definitive agreement to acquire SHPS Human Resource Solutions—a subsidiary of SHPS, Inc. ADP has actually been making key acquisitions to strengthen components within its benefits administration offering for the last 18 months. It started with Workscape, which added compensation management services, and was followed by Asparity Decision Solutions for decision support tools and analytic capabilities.
Now, the SHPS acquisition strengthens ADP’s leave administration and reimbursement account administration offerings. The HSA and HRA components will be especially important considering the rising cost of health-care and the transition toward high-deductible health plans paired with these health savings accounts.
The H&W acquisition trend is also expanding beyond the U.S. It started in September 2010, when Capita – a U.K.-based HRO vendor providing total retirement outsourcing (TRO) exclusively in the U.K. – acquired FirstAssist Services Holdings for £12.5m. Then it continued when Mercer acquired REPCA – a brokering and advising firm for health and benefits (H&B) plans – to strengthen its H&B administration offering and advisory services in France.
The remaining question on my mind is whether U.S.-based TRO providers such as ING, Great-West, T. Rowe Price, etc. plan to jump on the H&W acquisition bandwagon to provide a one-stop shop for benefits administration like Fidelity Investments.
I’m eager to see who will make the next M&A move in benefits administration. In the meantime, it’s always fun to hear about cross-selling opportunities that resulted in contract scope expansions. Stay tuned.
Amy L. Gurchensky, Research Analyst, HRO, NelsonHall
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Explore posts in the same categories: BAO, benefits administration, benefits administration outsourcing, Health and Benefit, health and welfare administration, hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, hro, HRO providers, hro research, Merger & Acquisition, nelsonhall, Total Benefits Outsourcing, Total Retirement OutsourcingTags: ACS/Xerox, ADP, Aon Hewitt, benefits administration, benefits administration outsourcing, Capita, ExcellerateHRO, Fidelity, FirstAssist Services, Great-west, health and benefits outsourcing, health and welfare, HR, hr outsourcing, HRA, hro, HRO providers, hro research, HSA, ING, Mercer, mergers and acquisitions, Morneau Shepell, Nationwide Better Health, nelsonhall, REPCA, SBC Systems Company, sedgwick, SHPS Human Resource Solutions, T. Rowe Price, total benefits outsourcing, total retirement outsourcing, Towers Watson, Workscape
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March 12, 2012 at 8:25 pm
I have 2 comments:
1. I question the due diligence that ADP has done if they are really buying SHPS for the HRA/HSA/FSA/TAM technology and/or the client base. Both are shaky. My guess is there is something else going on here than what has been stated.
2. ING spun down the H&W unit they acquired through Citistreet a few years ago. Tried to sell it off, the deal died, and everyone who knew anything left. At first I was skeptical of your claim, but the more I consider it, the more I think ING’s appetite may still be wet.
Either way, interesting times indeed. Would be curious to hear some other viewpoints on my points above.