Swedish Serial Acquirers: Only 6 of 24 Earn Above Cost of Capital
[Part of our Global Serial Acquirer Scorecard]
Key Finding: Only 6 of 24 Swedish serial acquirers earn above a 12% cost of equity. OEM International leads at 26.4% ROIC with just 8% goodwill intensity. The Bergman & Beving spinoffs — AddTech (14.9%), Lagercrantz (14.3%), and Momentum Group (14.6%) — account for half the winners. Nine companies earn below 5% ROIC. The Swedish serial acquirer model breaks more often than it works.
We screened 24 Swedish serial acquirers for return on invested capital. Six earn above a 12% cost of equity. Two more sit borderline at 10-12%. The remaining 16 destroy value.
Sweden invented the Nordic serial acquirer playbook — 24 public companies competing for targets in a country of 10 million people. That competition drove acquisition multiples up and ROIC down. For three-quarters of these companies, the market selloff is the market finally doing its job.
The Scorecard
| # | Company | Ticker | ROIC | GW/TA | (GW+Int)/TA | Op Margin | Drawdown | Tier | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | OEM International | OEM-B | 26.4% | 8% | 11% | 14.5% | -20.7% | A | Barely acquires. Organic grower. |
| 2 | AddTech | ADDT-B | 14.9% | 30% | 45% | 12.6% | -12.3% | A | Bergman compounder. |
| 3 | Momentum Group | MMGR-B | 14.6% | 28% | 43% | 9.5% | -33.8% | A | Bergman spinoff. Declining fast. |
| 4 | Lagercrantz | LAGR-B | 14.3% | 32% | 55% | 15.0% | -16.1% | A | Bergman compounder. |
| 5 | Lifco | LIFCO-B | 12.4% | 39% | 61% | 18.7% | -23.6% | A | Best margins. ROIC trending down. |
| 6 | Roko | ROKO-B | 12.0% | 43% | N/A | 16.0% | -50.0% | A | Unproven. IPO March 2025. |
| 7 | VBG Group | VBG-B | 11.9% | 20% | 31% | 13.8% | -11.9% | B | Improving trend. Krefting family. |
| 8 | Indutrade | INDT | 10.7% | 28% | 63% | 11.9% | -30.9% | B | Declining from 14%. |
| 9 | ASSA ABLOY | ASSA-B | 9.4% | 48% | 65% | 16.3% | -4.1% | C | Too big. Scale dilutes. |
| 10 | Teqnion | TEQ | 8.2% | 42% | 44% | 7.0% | -0.9% | C | Declining from 19%. |
| 11 | Bufab | BUFAB | 7.8% | 36% | 41% | 10.8% | -7.9% | C | Middling. |
| 12 | Vitec Software | VIT-B | 6.3% | 50% | 88% | 20.9% | -61.8% | C | Overpayer. 3-4x revenue multiples. |
| 13 | Bravida | BRAV | 6.0% | 48% | 48% | 5.2% | -2.7% | C | Low margins, high goodwill. |
| 14 | Sdiptech | SDIP-B | 4.9% | 20% | 66% | 13.8% | -21.8% | C | Collapsed from 9%. |
| 15 | Instalco | INSTAL | 4.9% | 51% | 56% | 16.8% | -15.6% | C | Collapsed from 17%. |
| 16 | Volati | VOLO | 4.0% | 32% | 44% | 3.6% | -34.1% | D | Deteriorating. |
| 17 | Xano Industri | XANO-B | 3.6% | 32% | 51% | 3.6% | -30.8% | D | Collapsed from 16%. Krefting family. |
| 18 | Coor Service Mgmt | COOR | 3.1% | 54% | 61% | 3.0% | -1.6% | D | Structural low-ROIC. |
| 19 | NIBE Industrier | NIBE-B | 2.2% | 36% | 47% | 4.5% | -22.0% | D | Heat pump bust. |
| 20 | Medicover | MCOV-B | 1.1% | 25% | 31% | 4.1% | -29.2% | D | 23% rev growth, zero value. |
| 21 | Nordisk Bergteknik | NORB-B | 0.4% | 30% | 30% | 2.0% | -12.4% | D | Never earned CoC. |
| 22 | Storskogen | STOR-B | -0.2% | 43% | 55% | 4.9% | -37.8% | D | Bonfire. |
| 23 | Bergman & Beving | BERG-B | neg | 31% | 45% | 1.9% | -21.5% | D | Collapsing. |
| 24 | Vestum | VESTUM | neg | 40% | 66% | 4.0% | -17.6% | D | Never profitable at scale. |
Tier A (ROIC > 12%): 6 companies (25%). Tier B (ROIC 10-12%): 2 companies (8%). Tier C (ROIC 5-10%): 7 companies (29%). Tier D (ROIC < 5%): 9 companies (38%).
75% earn below a 12% cost of equity. The model breaks more often than it works.
The Goodwill Cliff
Goodwill-to-total-assets measures how much of the balance sheet is acquisition premiums. Above 40%, the math turns hostile — you need increasingly high operating margins just to earn a baseline return on the goodwill sitting in the denominator.
Nine Swedish serial acquirers carry GW/TA at or above 40%. Eight earn below cost of capital.
| Company | GW/TA | (GW+Int)/TA | ROIC | Above CoC? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| COOR | 54% | 61% | 3.1% | No |
| INSTAL | 51% | 56% | 4.9% | No |
| VIT-B | 50% | 88% | 6.3% | No |
| ASSA-B | 48% | 65% | 9.4% | No |
| BRAV | 48% | 48% | 6.0% | No |
| ROKO-B | 43% | N/A | 12.0% | Yes (unproven) |
| STOR-B | 43% | 55% | -0.2% | No |
| TEQ | 42% | 44% | 8.2% | No |
| VESTUM | 40% | 66% | neg | No |
The one exception — Roko — IPO’d in March 2025 and hasn’t been tested through a downturn. Lifco sits at 39% GW/TA, just below the cliff edge, earning 12.4% on the highest operating margins in the group (18.7%). It survives because those margins carry the goodwill load. One acquisition-heavy year pushes it past 40%.
This isn’t coincidence. Goodwill in the denominator is the acquisition premium you paid. If you paid too much, ROIC tells you. If you paid 14x EBIT for a 4% organic grower, you mathematically cannot earn 12% on that capital. The goodwill ratio is a scoreboard.
The Hidden Intangibles
GW/TA understates acquisition intensity for companies that buy intangible-heavy targets. Under IFRS 3, purchase price allocation classifies customer relationships and technology as identifiable intangible assets — not goodwill. The combined (GW+Intangibles)/TA ratio reveals the full picture.
| Company | GW/TA | (GW+Int)/TA | ROIC | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OEM-B | 8% | 11% | 26.4% | Minimal — genuine capital discipline |
| ADDT-B | 30% | 45% | 14.9% | Moderate — industrial targets |
| LAGR-B | 32% | 55% | 14.3% | Larger — more intangible-heavy targets |
| INDT | 28% | 63% | 10.7% | Massive — 63% is not a 28% balance sheet |
| LIFCO-B | 39% | 61% | 12.4% | Significant — already past the cliff |
| VIT-B | 50% | 88% | 6.3% | Only 12% of assets are tangible |
| SDIP-B | 20% | 66% | 4.9% | GW/TA hides the real leverage |
OEM International’s advantage is real at every level of measurement. Vitec Software’s problem is worse than it looks. Indutrade’s 28% GW/TA masks a 63% combined ratio — the balance sheet carries far more acquisition risk than the headline suggests. Sdiptech at 20% GW/TA appears conservatively run until you see the 66% combined ratio.
All companies in this screen report under IFRS. IFRS 3 Business Combinations governs the intangible asset classification and requires purchase price allocation to identifiable intangibles. The GW/TA distortion applies to any serial acquirer under either IFRS or US GAAP.
What Works: The Six Above Cost of Capital
OEM International (OEM-B) — 26.4% ROIC with 8% goodwill intensity. This is barely a serial acquirer. OEM grows organically within industrial distribution niches and does small tuck-in deals. Operating margins of 14.5% on a nearly goodwill-free balance sheet. The stock is down 20.7% in a broad Swedish selloff that punished quality and junk alike. OEM is the cleanest capital compounder in the group.
AddTech (ADDT-B) and Lagercrantz (LAGR-B) — The Bergman & Beving family companies. Both at 14-15% ROIC with 30-32% goodwill intensity. They’ve compounded for decades using the same playbook: buy niche industrial distributors, keep management, don’t overpay. ADDT-B runs 12.6% operating margins. LAGR-B runs 15.0%. Neither is exciting. Both work.
Momentum Group (MMGR-B) — Another Bergman spinoff. 14.6% ROIC, 28% goodwill intensity. But the trajectory is wrong: ROIC has fallen from 32% as acquisition pace increased. At -33.8% drawdown, the market prices in continued deterioration. MMGR-B belongs in Tier A today. Whether it stays there depends on whether the declining trend stabilizes.
Lifco (LIFCO-B) — Carl Bennet’s creation. 12.4% ROIC, 39% goodwill intensity, and the highest operating margins in the group at 18.7%. Diversified across dental equipment, demolition tools, and systems solutions. Down 23.6%. ROIC has been declining as the goodwill base grows. At 39% GW/TA, Lifco is one acquisition-heavy year from crossing the 40% cliff.
Roko (ROKO-B) — The newcomer. IPO’d March 2025, already down 50.0% from peak. 12.0% ROIC, 43% goodwill intensity, 16.0% operating margins. Acquisition pricing targets 6-8x EBIT — disciplined by Swedish standards. ROIC trend is improving. But 43% GW/TA is high for a company this young. Roko hasn’t navigated a recession, a credit crunch, or a dry pipeline. Every serial acquirer looks disciplined during the first five years. Tier A with an asterisk.
The Borderline: VBG Group and Indutrade
VBG Group (VBG-B) — Truck couplings and industrial equipment. 11.9% ROIC, 20% GW/TA, 13.8% operating margins. Controlled by the Krefting family. The ROIC trend is improving — the opposite of most Swedish serial acquirers. Low profile, modest goodwill intensity, and only -11.9% drawdown. VBG is the closest to crossing into Tier A from below.
Indutrade (INDT) — Large-cap serial acquirer. 10.7% ROIC, declining from 14%. The most beaten-down quality name at -30.9% drawdown. At 28% GW/TA, the headline balance sheet looks manageable, but the 63% (GW+Int)/TA ratio tells a different story. Scale is the headwind — at a certain size, the deal pipeline thins and pricing discipline erodes. If ROIC stabilizes at 10-11%, the stock is cheap. If it keeps falling, the drawdown was prescient.
What Fails: The 16 Below Cost of Capital
The 16 companies earning below 10% ROIC fail in predictable ways. Group them by disease, not by name.
The Overpayer: Vitec Software
Vitec Software (VIT-B) — Operating margins of 20.9%, the best in the entire screen. ROIC of 6.3%, below cost of capital. How? Vitec pays 3-4x revenue for vertical market software acquisitions. At those multiples, goodwill grows faster than profits. The business performs. The allocation doesn’t.
The combined (GW+Intangibles)/TA of 88% tells the full story: only 12% of Vitec’s balance sheet is tangible assets. At -61.8% drawdown, the stock market finally noticed.
Growth Without Value: Medicover
Medicover (MCOV-B) grew revenue 23% and earned a 1.1% ROIC. Operating margins of 4.1% on a balance sheet with 25% GW/TA. Revenue growth is not value creation. MCOV-B proves it.
The Bonfires: Storskogen, Vestum, Bergman & Beving
Storskogen (STOR-B) and Vestum (VESTUM) have negative ROIC. They acquired at speed without price discipline. Storskogen’s premise was “acquire across sectors, apply operating playbook.” The operating playbook didn’t materialize. At -37.8% drawdown and -0.2% ROIC, the stock reflects the economics. Vestum never achieved profitability at scale — negative ROIC, 40% GW/TA, 66% (GW+Int)/TA.
Bergman & Beving (BERG-B) is the original entity — ironic, given that its spinoffs (ADDT-B, LAGR-B, MMGR-B) all outperform it. Negative ROIC, 1.9% operating margins, down 21.5%. The parent company kept the worst assets and spun off the best.
The Collapsed: Instalco, Sdiptech, Xano
Instalco (INSTAL) fell from 17% ROIC to 4.9%. Something structural broke — the acquisition integration model stopped working. At 51% GW/TA and 56% (GW+Int)/TA, the balance sheet is loaded with acquisition premiums that aren’t earning their keep. Operating margins of 16.8% should generate adequate ROIC, but not when goodwill exceeds half of total assets.
Sdiptech (SDIP-B) went from 9% to 4.9%. The acquisition spree diluted returns. At 20% GW/TA this looks manageable, but the 66% (GW+Int)/TA reveals the true picture — intangible-rich targets with classified intangible assets masking the real goodwill load.
Xano Industri (XANO-B), controlled by the Krefting family, collapsed from 16% to 3.6% as operating margins halved to 3.6%. The Krefting family also controls VBG Group at 11.9% ROIC — same family, opposite trajectories. Reputation is not a moat. The numbers changed and the narrative should change with them.
Too Big: ASSA ABLOY
ASSA ABLOY (ASSA-B) earns 9.4% ROIC at 48% GW/TA and 65% (GW+Int)/TA. It’s too large to find acquisitions small enough to generate outsized returns. The lock and access control business is good. The serial acquisition model at this scale doesn’t beat cost of capital. The stock is down only 4.1% because the market prices ASSA-B as a conglomerate, not a compounder.
The Rest
Bufab (BUFAB) — 7.8% ROIC, 36% GW/TA, middling industrial fasteners. Bravida (BRAV) — 6.0%, 48% GW/TA, low margins for construction services. Teqnion (TEQ) — 8.2%, 42% GW/TA, declining from 19% ROIC. Volati (VOLO) — 4.0%, 32% GW/TA, deteriorating. Coor Service Mgmt (COOR) — 3.1%, 54% GW/TA, facility management is structurally low-ROIC. NIBE Industrier (NIBE-B) — 2.2%, 36% GW/TA, heat pump cycle bust plus acquisition hangover. Nordisk Bergteknik (NORB-B) — 0.4%, 30% GW/TA, never earned cost of capital.
The Standout: OEM International
OEM International at 26.4% ROIC with 8% GW/TA is the gold standard for Swedish capital allocation. It earns more than three times the cost of capital while keeping goodwill intensity at one-third the peer median. The combined (GW+Intangibles)/TA of 11% confirms this isn’t an accounting artifact — OEM genuinely builds value through organic growth within industrial distribution niches.
Every other Tier A name carries at least 28% goodwill intensity. OEM’s advantage is structural: it doesn’t need acquisitions to compound, so it never faces the multiple creep that erodes returns for the rest of the group. The -20.7% drawdown is collateral damage from a broad Swedish selloff, not a signal of deterioration. 14.5% operating margins on a clean balance sheet. This is what capital discipline looks like.
The Cautionary Tale: Vitec Software
Everyone calls Vitec Software “the Swedish Constellation Software.” The comparison is wrong. Constellation historically paid 0.7-1.5x revenue. Vitec pays 3-4x. That 2-3x gap in acquisition multiples is the entire difference between 25% ROIC and 6% ROIC. See our Canadian serial acquirers analysis for the full Constellation benchmark.
Vitec proves that operational quality cannot overcome allocation failure. You can run the best software business in Sweden — 20.9% operating margins, sticky vertical market software, high recurring revenue — and still destroy shareholder value if you pay 3-4x revenue for every acquisition. The acquisition multiple is the moat, and Vitec doesn’t have one.
At 88% (GW+Int)/TA, only 12% of Vitec’s assets are tangible. The -61.8% drawdown — the worst in the screen — is the market repricing 15 years of overpayment.
The Bergman & Beving Family Tree
Bergman & Beving, founded in 1906, spawned AddTech, Lagercrantz, and Momentum Group through successive spinoffs. The spinoffs all outperform the parent.
| Company | Relationship | ROIC | GW/TA | (GW+Int)/TA | Op Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADDT-B | Spinoff | 14.9% | 30% | 45% | 12.6% |
| MMGR-B | Spinoff | 14.6% | 28% | 43% | 9.5% |
| LAGR-B | Spinoff | 14.3% | 32% | 55% | 15.0% |
| BERG-B | Parent (original) | neg | 31% | 45% | 1.9% |
Each spinoff took a focused industrial niche and applied disciplined acquisition strategy. The parent retained the residual businesses. Three Tier A compounders emerged from a Tier D parent. The Bergman family tree is the clearest proof in Sweden that focus and discipline create value — and that the original conglomerate structure destroys it.
The Krefting family tells the same story in miniature: VBG Group at 11.9% ROIC (improving) alongside Xano Industri at 3.6% (collapsed from 16%). Same family, same approach, different execution. Capital allocation is not heritable.
The Acquisition Multiple Trap
Why do most Swedish serial acquirers fail? The math is unforgiving. If your cost of equity is 12%, every acquisition must earn at least 12% ROIC on every krona deployed — including goodwill.
| Acquisition Multiple | Required Return | Achievable? |
|---|---|---|
| 4-6x EBIT | 17-25% on invested capital | Yes — Constellation territory |
| 6-8x EBIT | 12-17% | Yes — with discipline |
| 8-12x EBIT | 8-12% | Borderline |
| 12-16x EBIT | 6-8% | Below cost of capital |
| 16-20x EBIT | 5-6% | Destroys value |
The Bergman companies buy at 6-8x EBIT. Roko targets 6-8x. Vitec pays the equivalent of 15-20x implicit multiples. Storskogen and Vestum competed on deal flow, not deal price.
Twenty-four public serial acquirers competing for targets in a country of 10 million people. Acquisition multiples run 3-4x revenue for software and 8-14x EBIT for industrials. The competitive dynamics push prices up. This is why 16 of 24 fail.
Cross-Market Context
Sweden has the densest concentration of listed serial acquirers per capita of any market we screen. That density drives competition — and competition drives acquisition multiples up.
Compare to Switzerland, where 62% of serial acquirers earn above cost of capital. The Swiss model is built on organic growth and operational excellence, not acquisition volume. Schindler, Geberit, and Belimo compound through pricing power and market position, not deal flow. Sweden’s 25% Tier A rate is less than half the Swiss rate. The difference is acquisition intensity: Swedish serial acquirers buy more often, pay more, and accumulate more goodwill.
The Constellation Software comparison every Swedish pitch deck invokes is wrong. CSU built its empire buying vertical market software at 0.7-1.5x revenue in a market where nobody competed for small, boring software businesses. That arbitrage was global, deep, and uncontested for 15 years. In Sweden, 24 companies compete for the same target universe. The CSU pricing edge doesn’t exist here. See our Canadian serial acquirers analysis for the full CSU benchmark.
The Swedish serial acquirers that work — OEM-B, the Bergman companies — work because of organic growth discipline and acquisition restraint. Not because of a CSU-like pricing advantage.
Where the Market Is Wrong
Most drawdowns are justified. Four names stand out where the punishment exceeds the crime.
OEM-B (-20.7%) — 26.4% ROIC, 8% GW/TA, no acquisition dependency. Down because Swedish industrials are down. The business hasn’t deteriorated. The highest-quality name in the group at the widest discount in years.
Lifco (LIFCO-B, -23.6%) — 12.4% ROIC with the best margins in the group at 18.7%. The declining ROIC trend is a legitimate concern, but the drawdown prices in a collapse that hasn’t happened. Lifco’s dental and demolition niches have pricing power.
Indutrade (INDT, -30.9%) — 10.7% ROIC, declining from 14%. A 31% decline for a company still earning borderline cost of capital is aggressive. Trend direction matters more than level here.
Momentum Group (MMGR-B, -33.8%) — 14.6% ROIC, still well above cost of capital, Bergman DNA. The ROIC decline from 32% is steep and explains the fear. But the market prices in continuation to sub-10%. If MMGR-B stabilizes at 12-15%, this is a quality compounder at a distressed price.
What to Look For in Swedish Serial Acquirers
Five filters separate the compounders from the destroyers:
- ROIC above 12%. Non-negotiable. Below this, the acquisition model doesn’t earn its cost of capital.
- GW/TA below 40%. Above this threshold, 8 of 9 companies in our screen earn below cost of capital.
- Acquisition multiples below 8x EBIT. Higher multiples require exceptional organic growth to generate adequate ROIC.
- Stable or improving ROIC trend. A declining trend means each new deal is worse than the last.
- Positive organic growth. Acquisitions should add to a growing base, not mask a declining one.
Apply all five to the Swedish universe. OEM-B passes all. The Bergman pair pass four of five (GW/TA at 30-32% and climbing). Lifco passes three — the ROIC decline is the concern. Everyone else fails at least two.
Methodology
We screened 24 Swedish serial acquirers listed on the Stockholm exchange (STO). All financial data in SEK.
ROIC = NOPAT / Invested Capital (equity + debt - cash). Sourced from QuickFS, latest fiscal year data. ROIC includes goodwill in the denominator — this is the critical distinction. Removing goodwill from invested capital flatters acquirers by excluding the premiums they paid. We include it because those premiums are real capital deployed.
GW/TA = Goodwill / Total Assets. Measures acquisition intensity.
(GW+Int)/TA = (Goodwill + Intangible Assets) / Total Assets. Corrects for IFRS 3 purchase price allocation, which classifies customer relationships and technology as identifiable intangible assets rather than goodwill. Software acquirers (Vitec) and intangible-heavy industrials (Sdiptech, Indutrade) show the largest gaps between GW/TA and the combined ratio.
Drawdown = 52-week decline from peak. Sourced from Yahoo Finance.
Tier classification: A (>12%), B (10-12%), C (5-10%), D (<5%). The 12% threshold reflects approximate cost of equity for Nordic industrials.
All data as of February 2026. BERG-B and VESTUM ROIC estimated from ROE and leverage where QuickFS returned negative/zero values.