Comprehensive Analysis
The broader capital markets and institutional advisory industry is on the verge of a massive uncoiling of pent-up demand over the next three to five years. Since the interest rate shock of 2022 and 2023, dealmaking volumes have been artificially suppressed, creating a historic backlog of aging private equity assets that must eventually be sold to return capital to limited partners. Looking ahead, we expect a major shift in the industry where transaction volumes will aggressively rebound, transitioning from a stagnant waiting game to a highly active deployment cycle. Several key reasons are driving this anticipated change. First, the demographic wave of baby boomer founders reaching retirement age is forcing thousands of privately held businesses to seek liquidity events regardless of perfect market conditions. Second, private equity funds are sitting on an unprecedented pile of uncalled capital that has strict contractual time limits for deployment. Third, we are seeing a structural shift where public equity markets are shrinking in company count, driving more capital formation and trading into the private markets where advisory firms make their highest fees. Finally, increasing global regulatory scrutiny is forcing investment funds to outsource their compliance and valuation workflows to independent third parties to avoid conflicts of interest. The most significant catalysts that could accelerate this demand in the immediate future include a sustained cycle of central bank interest rate cuts, which would dramatically lower the cost of acquisition debt, and the narrowing of the current valuation bid-ask spread between stubborn sellers and cautious buyers. To anchor this view, global middle-market M&A volume is expected to grow at an estimated 6% to 8% CAGR through 2030, supported by an estimated $2.6 trillion in global private equity dry powder currently waiting on the sidelines.
Competitive intensity in the middle-market advisory space will undoubtedly become harder over the next five years, heavily favoring established global incumbents over small regional boutiques. While the absolute barrier to entry for starting a two-person advisory shop remains low, the barrier to scale into a legitimate, cross-border advisor is becoming insurmountable for new entrants. Private equity sponsors are aggressively consolidating their vendor lists, choosing to work only with a handful of trusted advisors who can offer integrated global reach, deep sector expertise, and simultaneous debt placement capabilities. Consequently, small firms will struggle to win lucrative mandates from top-tier sponsors. The expected spend growth on premium independent advisory services is modeled to rise 10% annually as transactions become more complex and require heavier data-driven diligence. Furthermore, as bulge-bracket banks like Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley continue to retreat from the sub-$1 billion deal space due to heavy capital requirements and restructuring efforts, specialized independent firms are left with a massive open runway to capture market share and solidify their dominance.
Sell-Side M&A Advisory Currently, sell-side M&A advisory represents the highest usage intensity for Lincoln, utilized heavily by private equity sponsors and founders looking to exit their investments. Consumption is currently being constrained by elevated base interest rates, which make leveraged buyouts mathematically harder to pencil out, alongside a persistent psychological pricing gap where sellers still expect 2021-era multiples while buyers demand discounts. Over the next three to five years, the volume of sponsor-to-sponsor transactions will sharply increase as private equity firms trade mature portfolio companies among themselves to generate liquidity. We will also see a marked increase in tech-enabled and healthcare services deals. Conversely, low-end, undifferentiated legacy manufacturing deals will likely decrease as capital flows toward higher-margin software and services sectors. The channel mix will shift heavily toward global, cross-border auctions rather than localized sales. Consumption will rise primarily because aging private equity funds (many of which are now extending past their traditional 10-year lifespans) are legally obligated to sell assets to return cash to their investors. Secondary reasons include stabilizing debt markets, normalized pricing expectations, and corporate buyers seeking inorganic growth to combat slowing organic revenue. A major catalyst would be a sudden return of mega-cap private equity funds stepping down into the middle market to acquire platform companies, which would instantly spike deal volumes. The total addressable market for middle-market M&A advisory is estimated at ~$15 billion annually, with expected growth hitting a 7% CAGR over the next five years. Consumption metrics to track include average deal value per transaction (targeted at $200 million to $500 million) and average completed deals per Managing Director (an optimal proxy is 5 to 7 closed deals per year). Customers choose advisors based on deep sub-sector expertise, global buyer network access, and previous execution track records. Lincoln will outperform here because its dedicated private equity coverage model ensures higher win rates and repeat mandates from the exact sponsors driving the volume. If Lincoln stumbles, competitors like Houlihan Lokey or William Blair will immediately win share due to their similar scale and aggressive hiring of specialist bankers. The vertical structure of this industry is consolidating; the number of viable mid-tier firms will decrease over the next five years due to the platform effects of global buyer networks and the sheer cost of maintaining top-tier banking talent. A key future risk is a prolonged environment of "higher for longer" interest rates (Medium probability). Because leveraged buyouts require cheap debt, sustained high rates could delay the PE exit cycle further, potentially causing a 15% to 20% reduction in expected M&A advisory volume for Lincoln. Another risk is an increase in aggressive antitrust scrutiny cascading down to middle-market roll-ups (Low probability), which would extend deal timelines and delay fee realization, though this is mostly isolated to mega-cap deals.
Valuations and Opinions The usage intensity for Valuations and Opinions is currently massive and highly recurring, driven by private credit funds, business development companies (BDCs), and private equity firms that require independent quarterly pricing for their illiquid holdings. Today, consumption is only slightly limited by the integration effort required to onboard a new valuation provider and the internal friction of switching away from legacy, in-house spreadsheet models. Looking three to five years out, consumption by private credit funds will increase exponentially. We will see a structural shift away from annual, check-the-box valuations toward high-frequency, quarterly, or even monthly data-driven portfolio marks. The legacy practice of funds valuing their own books internally will heavily decrease as limited partners explicitly demand third-party objectivity. This rise is fueled by the explosive growth of the private credit asset class, heightened SEC disclosure regulations, the need to avoid conflicts of interest, and the demand from institutional LPs for total transparency. The primary catalyst to accelerate this growth would be new, strict regulatory mandates from global financial authorities requiring external marks for all alternative investment vehicles. The independent valuation market size is estimated at ~$3 billion, compounding at a highly visible 9% to 11% CAGR. Important consumption metrics include total number of quarterly portfolio assets valued and the average recurring revenue per client fund (estimated to average $150,000 to $250,000 annually depending on portfolio size). Customers choose a provider almost entirely based on brand defensibility, audit-firm acceptance, and regulatory compliance comfort; price is a secondary concern because a failed audit costs infinitely more than the valuation fee. Lincoln will outperform in this segment by leveraging its unique crossover knowledge—using real-time pricing data from its M&A arm to inform its valuation models, offering superior accuracy. If Lincoln fails to maintain its pristine reputation, Kroll or the valuation arms of the Big Four accounting firms will rapidly take market share due to their ubiquitous global compliance footprints. The company count in this specific vertical is strictly decreasing; the immense reputational and regulatory barriers to entry mean almost no new firms will successfully enter the space over the next five years. The main forward-looking risk is a severe reputational failure or a highly publicized misvaluation scandal (Low probability). If Lincoln's valuation models are aggressively challenged by the SEC or rejected by a Big Four auditor, it could trigger an immediate crisis of confidence, resulting in a potential 30% spike in client churn as funds rush to replace them. Another risk is the stagnation of private credit fundraising (Medium probability), which would cap the creation of new portfolios and slow the segment's revenue growth from double digits down to a 4% to 5% baseline.
Capital Advisory (Debt and Equity Placement) Capital Advisory is currently heavily utilized by financial sponsors who need to source complex, bespoke financing to fund their acquisitions. Present consumption is tightly constrained by a risk-off environment among traditional commercial banks, tighter lending covenants, and macro-economic uncertainty. Over the next five years, the volume of private credit placements will dramatically increase as direct lenders replace traditional syndicated bank loans. We will see a sharp decrease in standard, unsecured bank lending for middle-market buyouts. The workflow will shift heavily toward bilateral, customized private credit negotiations rather than broad public syndications. Consumption will rise due to the speed and certainty of execution that private credit offers over public markets, the sheer volume of aging debt that must be refinanced before the 2027-2028 maturity walls, and the rising complexity of capital structures requiring expert advisors. A major catalyst would be a sudden spike in corporate default rates, which would drive immense demand for liability management and restructuring-oriented capital raises. The middle-market debt advisory TAM is estimated at ~$4 billion, expanding at an aggressive 10% to 12% CAGR. Consumption metrics include the total dollar volume of debt placed and the average placement fee percentage (typically holding steady at 1.0% to 2.0% of the capital raised). Customers select debt advisors based on their real-time knowledge of lender behavior, their ability to secure loose covenants, and their speed to market. Lincoln is positioned to outperform because of its profound, everyday connectivity with hundreds of private credit funds, allowing them to instantly map borrower needs to the exact lender mandate. If Lincoln loses its edge in lender connectivity, specialized firms like Lazard or Macquarie will win share due to their dedicated debt restructuring expertise. The vertical structure is seeing a slight temporary increase in boutique debt shops as former bankers strike out on their own, but over a five-year horizon, it will consolidate as only firms with holistic M&A and valuation data can provide truly differentiated pricing advice. The key risk here is a sudden liquidity crunch in the private credit markets (Medium probability). If limited partners pause their allocations to direct lending funds due to rising loan defaults, the available capital pool would shrink, making it harder to place debt and potentially slicing Lincoln's capital advisory revenues by 20% to 25%.
Cross-Border / International M&A Advisory Cross-Border M&A Advisory is heavily consumed by domestic companies seeking international expansion and foreign sellers looking to access deep US capital pools. Currently, consumption is somewhat constrained by fragmented European regulations, local market sluggishness (particularly in Germany and the UK), and geopolitical friction. In the next three to five years, transatlantic deal volume (specifically US buyers acquiring European assets) will significantly increase. Purely localized, single-country domestic deals in Europe will decrease as a percentage of total volume. The geographic mix will shift as buyers prioritize supply-chain nearshoring and software businesses with global, rather than regional, client bases. Deal consumption will rise due to the historical strength of the US dollar making foreign assets cheaper, European business founders facing the same demographic retirement pressures as the US, and massive US private equity funds hunting for lower valuation multiples abroad. A core catalyst would be a decisive end to the conflict in Eastern Europe, which would immediately unfreeze paralyzed European corporate budgets and restore buyer confidence. The European mid-market fee pool is estimated at ~$5 billion to ~$7 billion. Relevant proxies to track are the percentage of total revenue derived outside the Americas and the ratio of cross-border deals to total transactions (expected to cross 30%). Clients base their buying decisions on an advisor's authentic local presence combined with their direct access to foreign buyers; they will not hire a firm that simply "flies in" for a meeting. Lincoln will outperform because it has spent the last decade building genuine, on-the-ground native teams across major European financial hubs while seamlessly linking them to their US sponsor coverage group. If Lincoln fails to integrate these teams, established European players like Rothschild & Co. or Clearwater International will completely dominate due to their legacy regional entrenchment. The vertical structure in cross-border advisory is rapidly decreasing as mid-sized local European boutiques are acquired by larger US platforms looking to buy market share rather than build it from scratch. A notable future risk is a deep, prolonged recession in the Eurozone (Medium probability). If the European economy contracts severely, cross-border M&A appetite would plummet, which could abruptly halt Lincoln's impressive European revenue growth trajectory, dragging it down from its recent high double-digit expansion to near zero.
Beyond the specific product lines, a critical future growth lever for Lincoln International over the next five years will be its capacity to recruit and retain elite human capital. As bulge-bracket banks face mounting regulatory capital constraints under the Basel III endgame, they are structurally forced to focus on massive, multi-billion-dollar deals to generate sufficient return on equity. This dynamic is systematically alienating top-performing middle-market Managing Directors at these large banks, creating an unprecedented recruiting window for nimble, independent platforms like Lincoln. By offering higher cash payouts and fewer bureaucratic hurdles, Lincoln can organically expand its footprint simply by poaching top-tier talent. Additionally, the integration of artificial intelligence into the deal-sourcing workflow—specifically using AI to map complex buyer universes and automate early-stage financial modeling—will drastically improve banker productivity. We anticipate that within five years, these workflow enhancements will allow individual dealmakers to manage wider pipelines with fewer junior resources, potentially expanding overall firm operating margins.