Axial's Lessons From 10,000 Lower-Middle Market Deals

Peter Lehrman of Axial shares tactical insights on how independent sponsors source, win, and fund deals in the lower-middle-market M&A space.

Peter Lehrman

Peter Lehrman founded Axial in 2009, the leading deal origination platform for lower-middle-market M&A. Today, roughly 10,000 attempted transactions are launched on Axial each year, with approximately 25% closing, making it one of the most active M&A marketplaces in the U.S. lower middle market, and independent sponsors are the single most active buyer type by closed-deal volume. In this episode, Peter shares unmatched market intelligence and highly tactical insights on how independent sponsors source, win, and fund deals.

Axial operates a two-sided marketplace connecting business owners and sell-side intermediaries with qualified buyers through private, invitation-only sale processes. Axial employs roughly 60 people, is headquartered in New York, and supports 10,000–11,000 attempted M&A transactions per year.

Peter estimates 20,000–40,000 attempted lower-middle-market transactions annually, with roughly 25% closing. Axial alone touches about 10,000 of those attempts, suggesting deep penetration into the intermediated portion of the market and underscoring how fragmented, relationship-driven, and opaque deal flow remains at this end of the size spectrum.

Independent sponsors have emerged as one of Axial's most important buyer cohorts. They are repeat acquirers with limited internal sourcing resources and highly concentrated decision-making authority. Compared to traditional private equity funds, independent sponsors tend to move faster, respond more quickly to intermediaries, and compete effectively on relationship building and sometimes certainty of close rather than headline price. Axial's performance-based pricing model aligns especially well with their model.

The latest Axial Independent Sponsor Report shows strong pricing discipline, with the vast majority of deals completed below 7x EBITDA, and a preference for B2B services and industrials. The segment is also scaling rapidly, with the number of active independent sponsors on Axial growing at roughly 29% CAGR, highlighting their rising influence in lower-middle-market M&A.

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