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GovCon M&A · Market Intelligence

GovCon M&A Is Back — With a Higher Bar

Buyers are active, capital is deploying, and valuations are up for differentiated assets. Here is what the market looks like from the advisors and investors who are living in it.
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Scott EnglerSync Executive Partners · 2026-05-15

M&A is back. Not at full certainty — but at enough clarity to deploy capital. That was the consistent read from a private roundtable of GovCon M&A advisors, investors, and CEOs convened by Sync-Exec Partners in May 2026.

The panel included Kate Troendle (Managing Director, KippsDeSanto), Morgan Higgins (Partner, Blue Delta Capital), Adam Strach (Managing Director, Prosperity Partners), and Mark Lee (CEO, Entarian). Here is what they said about the current state of the market.

Buyers are back — but selective

The freeze of 2024 has thawed. Capital is being deployed, and buyer intent is real. But the bar has moved. This is not a rising-tide market where average assets get rewarded. Differentiation, growth, and a clear "why we win" story are now the price of entry — not the premium.

Kate Troendle, KippsDeSanto"It's a seller's market — there's more buyer demand than there are quality sellers. Buyers aren't walking around with pockets full of money to buy anything — they're buying with intention and strategy."

Valuations are up — for the right assets

Valuations in 2025 and 2026 are up versus 2023 and 2024 — but only for differentiated, growing DoD and space assets. The recovery is not broad. Companies with prime, unrestricted contract portfolios, mission-focused work, and demonstrable growth are being rewarded. Companies without those attributes are not seeing the same lift.

Kate Troendle, KippsDeSanto"Valuations are actually up in '25 and '26 over '23 and '24 — if you have differentiation, proprietary solutions, and growth. What drives maximum value are growing companies with prime, unrestricted contract portfolios in mission-focused and high-tech areas supporting in-demand, well-funded customers."

The procurement environment is still a constraint

Traditional procurement has been broken for years — and recent disruption made it harder. Companies that rely solely on conventional procurement channels are finding growth more difficult. Companies using non-FAR paths — SBIR Phase 3s, OTAs, AppFit, and other non-traditional mechanisms — are better positioned to grow through the disruption.

Kate Troendle, KippsDeSanto"The procurement system has been broken 10-plus years, and recent disruption made it worse — the most detrimental dynamic of 2025."

The structural shift: services to solutions

The move from services to solutions is not a theme — it is a structural and permanent shift. Buyers are repricing services-heavy models and rewarding companies with proprietary capability, IP, automation, and outcome-based delivery. The "butts in seats" era is ending. Companies that are still selling labor hours are under valuation pressure.

Mark Lee, Entarian"Services implies butts in seats, and that's not what the market wants — I think that change is permanent. At the end of the day, it's all about solutions."

What this means for GovCon CFOs

The market environment described by the panel has direct implications for how GovCon companies build and present their financial story. Revenue timing, forecast credibility, contract quality, and the ability to articulate a differentiated growth narrative are now diligence battlegrounds — not afterthoughts. A GovCon fractional CFO who has been through this environment brings pattern recognition that a generalist cannot replicate.

Companies preparing for a transaction in the next 18 to 36 months should be building the financial infrastructure now — not after a banker is engaged. The GovCon CFO Readiness Diagnostic maps exactly where the finance function is exposed before a buyer finds it first.

GovCon M&ADefense M&AValuationMarket Intelligence2026

Related

Fractional CFO for GovCon → GovCon CFO Readiness Diagnostic → Sync-to-Sale: Exit-Ready Financials → Meet Steve Radanovic →

Frequently asked questions

What should a GovCon company prioritize before a sale process?

In the 2026 GovCon M&A market, preparation means something specific: the finance function needs to be ready before the banker is engaged, not before the process closes. Quality sellers in the current market are distinguished by clean QoE outcomes — their numbers hold up because they were prepared, not because the market is forgiving. Companies that arrive at LOI with open ICS years or undocumented indirect rates are discovering that today's buyers have less patience for cleanup than buyers in prior cycles.

How does DCAA compliance affect enterprise value in a GovCon transaction?

DCAA compliance affects enterprise value in the 2026 market because buyer sophistication has increased. Mid-market PE firms that would have overlooked compliance gaps in prior cycles are now running GovCon-specific QoE teams that model DCAA exposure systematically. The market is rewarding prepared sellers with premium multiples and penalizing unprepared ones with re-trades that were uncommon three years ago.