Finnish Serial Acquirers: Only 4 of 10 Earn Above Cost of Capital
[Part of our Global Serial Acquirer Scorecard]
Key Finding: 4 of 10 Finnish serial acquirers earn above 12% ROIC — a 40% Tier A rate, above the 14-market average. But the winners are established industrials earning returns through operational excellence, not acquisition prowess. Finland’s one explicit serial acquirer — Boreo — earned 1.3% ROIC and suffered a -91.8% drawdown, second only to Canada’s Dye & Durham (-94.5%) across all 14 markets.
We screened 10 Finnish serial acquirers listed on HEX by return on invested capital. Four earn above a 12% cost of equity. Zero sit at the borderline. Four earn between 5% and 10%. Two destroy value outright. The polarization mirrors Australia and Spain — zero Tier B, no borderline cases.
The Finnish Serial Acquirer Scorecard
| # | Company | Ticker | ROIC | GW/TA | Op Margin | Drawdown | Tier | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kone | KNEBV | 27.7% | 17% | 11.6% | -45.6% | A | Best ROIC in Finland. Elevator service moat. |
| 2 | Vaisala | VAIAS | 16.7% | 17% | 14.7% | -41.6% | A | Measurement niche. ROIC stable 13-17% for a decade. |
| 3 | Wartsila | WRT1V | 15.9% | 17% | 10.5% | -50.5% | A | Recovery play. ROIC returned from negative. |
| 4 | Revenio | REG1V | 15.7% | 45% | 24.2% | -73.2% | A | Elite margins save high GW/TA. iCare moat. |
| 5 | Metso | METSO | 7.9% | 16% | 15.6% | -37.5% | C | Great margins but ROIC volatile. Mining cyclicality. |
| 6 | Relais Group | RELAIS | 7.3% | 36% | 10.0% | -70.3% | C | Vehicle aftermarket rollup. ROIC improving. |
| 7 | Terveystalo | TTALO | 6.6% | 59% | 8.9% | -49.7% | C | 200+ acquisitions. GW/TA highest in Finland. |
| 8 | Etteplan | ETTE | 5.3% | 39% | 5.1% | -50.0% | C | Engineering services rollup. Margins too thin. |
| 9 | Boreo | BOREO | 1.3% | 37% | 2.5% | -91.8% | D | Swedish model in Finland — hasn’t worked. -92%. |
| 10 | Neste | NESTE | -0.8% | 3% | 0.0% | -85.8% | D | Renewable fuel bet collapsed. Low GW but no ROIC. |
Tier A: 4 companies (40%). Tier B: 0 (0%). Tier C: 4 (40%). Tier D: 2 (20%).
The Four That Work
All four Finnish Tier A companies share a trait: they earn returns through market positioning, not acquisition velocity. Their goodwill is a byproduct of scale, not a strategy.
Kone — 27.7% ROIC with 17% GW/TA. The best compounder in Finland. Elevator service is the moat — an installed base generates recurring maintenance revenue at far higher ROIC than new equipment. At -45.6% drawdown, the market is pricing in China construction slowdown fears. Operating margins of 11.6% look modest, but capital efficiency is extreme.
Vaisala — 16.7% ROIC with 17% GW/TA. Measurement instruments for weather, environment, and industrial processes. ROIC has been stable at 13-17% for a decade. Operating margins of 14.7%. Down 41.6%. A niche industrial with the consistency that most serial acquirers promise but never deliver.
Wartsila — 15.9% ROIC with 17% GW/TA. The turnaround story. ROIC collapsed to negative and recovered to 16%. Operating margins of 10.5%. Down 50.5%. Energy and marine technology with a diversified service base. The recovery is real — the question is whether the marine cycle sustains it.
Revenio — 15.7% ROIC with 45% GW/TA. The outlier. Highest goodwill in Tier A, highest operating margins in the Finnish universe at 24.2%. iCare tonometer has near-monopoly status in handheld eye pressure measurement — medical device-grade margins absorb the goodwill burden. The same pattern we see with Wolters Kluwer (24.6% margins at 50% GW/TA) and Geberit (24.7% margins at 30% GW/TA). At -73.2% drawdown, this is the most extreme quality-drawdown dislocation in Finland.
The Goodwill Cliff
Five Finnish companies carry GW/TA above 30%. One earns above cost of capital.
| GW/TA > 30% | ROIC | Op Margin | Above CoC? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Terveystalo (59%) | 6.6% | 8.9% | No |
| Revenio (45%) | 15.7% | 24.2% | Yes |
| Etteplan (39%) | 5.3% | 5.1% | No |
| Boreo (37%) | 1.3% | 2.5% | No |
| Relais Group (36%) | 7.3% | 10.0% | No |
One of five earns above cost of capital. Revenio survives because 24.2% operating margins service the goodwill. The other four cannot generate enough margin to clear the denominator. The pattern holds across every market we screen: above 30% GW/TA, you need elite margins or you destroy value.
How the Rest Fail
The four Tier C companies and two Tier D names fail in distinct ways.
The Healthcare Rollup: Terveystalo
Terveystalo — 6.6% ROIC with 59% GW/TA, the highest in Finland. Over 200 acquisitions built Finland’s largest private healthcare provider with EUR 1.3B revenue. ROIC has never exceeded 8%. Healthcare services have regulated pricing, union labor costs, and structurally thin margins. Operating margins of 8.9% cannot service a balance sheet that is 59% goodwill. Scale without value.
Engineering Services Trap: Etteplan
Etteplan — 5.3% ROIC with 39% GW/TA. Revenue grew from EUR 37M to EUR 361M over two decades through persistent acquisition. GW/TA expanded from 0% to 39%. Engineering services is a people business — margins structurally capped at 5-8%. Operating margins of 5.1% confirm the ceiling. ROIC declined from 23% peaks to 5.3%. Down 50.0%.
Mining Cyclicality: Metso
Metso — 7.9% ROIC with 16% GW/TA. Operating margins of 15.6% are strong — the second highest in the Finnish screen. But ROIC is volatile, driven by mining industry cyclicality. The Metso-Neles merger in 2020 doubled total assets from EUR 3.5B to EUR 5.6B. ROIC dropped from 16% to 5% post-merger, recovering to 8%. Down 37.5%.
The Improving Rollup: Relais Group
Relais Group — 7.3% ROIC with 36% GW/TA. Vehicle aftermarket parts and accessories. Operating margins of 10.0%. ROIC is improving — from 0.5% to 7.3% over five years. Down 70.3%. The trajectory is right, but 7.3% is still below cost of capital. The question is whether the improvement continues or stalls at the GW/TA wall.
The Cautionary Tale: Boreo’s Swedish Transplant
Boreo is Finland’s most explicit attempt to replicate the Swedish serial acquirer model — the Lifco, Addtech playbook of decentralized buy-and-build.
The numbers tell the story. Since 2020: 13+ acquisitions, approximately EUR 60M deployed. GW/TA went from 3% to 37%. Revenue tripled, then declined. ROIC collapsed from 17% to 1.3%. Operating margins of 2.5% versus Lifco’s 18.7%.
The problem: Finnish SME targets do not generate the margins Swedish niche industrials do. Boreo’s 2.5% operating margin is the lowest in the Finnish universe. The -91.8% drawdown is the second-deepest in the 14-market dataset, behind only Canada’s Dye & Durham at -94.5% and deeper than France’s Worldline at -83.9%.
Boreo proves that the serial acquirer model is not a strategy you can transplant. The Swedish model works in Sweden because decades of industrial culture produced niche companies with 15-20% margins. Finnish SME targets lack that margin structure. Buy a 3% margin business at 8x EBIT and the math cannot work.
The Green Bet: Neste
Neste — negative 0.8% ROIC with 3% GW/TA. Not a serial acquirer in the traditional sense — included because the capital allocation bet is comparable in scale. Aggressive capacity expansion into renewable diesel. ROIC peaked at 28% in 2017, collapsed to -0.8% as renewable fuel margins evaporated. Operating margins of 0.0%. Down 85.8%. Low goodwill does not matter when the core business generates no return.
Cross-Market Context
| Metric | Finland (10) | Sweden (24) | Germany (10) | Australia (14) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Above 12% ROIC | 4 (40%) | 6 (25%) | 3 (30%) | 4 (29%) |
| Below 5% ROIC | 2 (20%) | 9 (38%) | 6 (60%) | 4 (29%) |
| Avg GW/TA | 29% | 34% | 27% | 25% |
| Avg Op Margin | 10.3% | 8.8% | 10.2% | 15.5% |
| Worst drawdown | -91.8% BOREO | -61.8% VIT-B | -63.3% BKHT | -64.8% REH |
Finland’s 40% Tier A rate ranks among the best of any market screened — behind Switzerland at 62% and Japan at 50%. But Finland’s Tier A is a different species. Swiss and Japanese compounders include genuine serial acquirers. Finland’s four winners are industrials that happen to have done some acquisitions, not companies built on the buy-and-build model.
Finland’s 20% Tier D rate is low — Germany at 60% and Sweden at 38% are far worse. Denmark’s 23% Tier A rate, with zero proven compounders among its top three, is the weakest Nordic showing. But Finland’s two Tier D names include the worst single drawdown in the 14-market dataset (Boreo at -91.8%) and a -85.8% collapse in Neste.
Average GW/TA of 29% sits in the middle of the pack. Average operating margins of 10.3% match Germany and Sweden almost exactly. The differentiator is not aggregate metrics — it is that Finland’s high-ROIC names earned their returns organically rather than through acquisitions.
What to Look For in Finnish Serial Acquirers
Four filters for this market:
- Distinguish industrials from acquirers. Kone, Vaisala, and Wartsila earn above cost of capital through operational moats, not acquisition playbooks. Their GW/TA of 17% each reflects modest acquisition history. Treat them as industrials with some M&A, not as serial acquirers.
- Demand 20%+ operating margins above 30% GW/TA. Revenio at 24.2% margins clears the goodwill burden at 45% GW/TA. Terveystalo at 8.9% cannot clear it at 59%. Etteplan at 5.1% cannot clear it at 39%. The margin threshold for survival is higher in Finland than in markets with more acquisition targets.
- Do not assume the Swedish model transfers. Boreo’s collapse from 17% ROIC to 1.3% after transplanting the Lifco playbook is the clearest evidence that serial acquisition requires a specific target market. Finnish SME margins of 2-5% cannot support the buy-and-build math.
- Watch ROIC direction, not level. Wartsila went from negative to 15.9% — a genuine recovery. Relais went from 0.5% to 7.3% — improving but not yet earning cost of capital. Etteplan went from 23% to 5.3% — a two-decade decline. The direction tells you where the next tier reclassification happens.
Methodology
We screened 10 Finnish serial acquirers listed on HEX. All financial data in EUR.
- ROIC: Net operating profit after tax / invested capital (equity + debt - cash), with goodwill included in the denominator. Source: QuickFS (latest fiscal year, exchange code: HEX).
- GW/TA: Goodwill / total assets (most recent quarter). Source: QuickFS.
- Operating margin: Operating income / revenue (latest fiscal year). Source: QuickFS.
- Drawdown: Maximum decline from 5-year peak. Source: Yahoo Finance (.HE suffix).
- Tier classification: A (>12%), B (10-12%), C (5-10%), D (<5%).
- Data as of: February 2026.
Neste is included despite low GW/TA (3%) because its capital allocation bet is comparable in scale to serial acquisition. Excluded: Caverion (taken private by Bain/Assemblin 2024), Qt Group (occasional acquirer, not serial), Sitowise (not covered by QuickFS).
Research basis. Mauboussin & Callahan (2023) found that companies moving from the bottom to the top ROIC quintile delivered 33% compound annual TSR over three years, while top-to-bottom transitions produced -11%. Finland’s ROIC trends confirm this asymmetry: Wartsila’s recovery from negative ROIC to 15.9% and Boreo’s collapse from 17% to 1.3% represent the extreme ends of this dynamic. The persistence data — 48% of top-quintile companies remain there after three years, 41% of bottom-quintile stay stuck — suggests Kone and Vaisala’s decade-long stability is the exception, not the rule.