Industry Trends
Largest Transactions Closed
- Target
- Buyer
- Value($mm)
M&A activity in the Building Products and Construction sector accelerated in Q1 2026 with 833 closed transactions (LTM) compared to 707 in the prior year. Strategic buyers dominated by completing 86.6% of deals while financial buyers focused on platform creation in fragmented specialty subsectors, with multiple sponsors targeting door services and fenestration as roll-up opportunities. Valuations expanded as median TEV/EBITDA rose to 10.93x from 9.65x and TEV/Revenue strengthened to 1.62x from 1.42x. Rising volume alongside multiple expansion signals growing buyer conviction as infrastructure backlogs, data center demand, and domestic capacity needs continue to support deal activity across the sector.1
"Building products and construction M&A is hitting its stride as buyers compete for assets tied to data center buildouts, grid modernization, and essential infrastructure," said Nicole Kiriakopoulos, Director at PCE. "Rising deal volume and expanding multiples tell a clear story: even with tariff and labor headwinds, the strategic imperative to consolidate in high-demand end markets is outweighing caution."
In Q1 2026, sector volume climbed to 833 deals from 707 a year prior as buyers pursued consolidation amid persistent tariff and input cost pressures. Both multiples expanded, with TEV/EBITDA rising to 10.93x from 9.65x and TEV/Revenue strengthening to 1.62x from 1.42x, reflecting heightened competition for targets with durable backlogs and exposure to high-demand end markets.1


Strategic Acquirers: Strategic buyers continued to lead the sector at 86.6% of transactions. Activity was driven by acquisitions targeting grid modernization, utility infrastructure, and residential building products scale as firms used M&A to strengthen positioning in high-demand end markets.1
Financial Buyers: Financial buyers accounted for 10.1% of deal volume, concentrating on platform creation in fragmented specialty segments. Sponsor activity was particularly visible in door services, fenestration, and specialty contracting, where roll-up strategies and add-on acquisition pipelines support value creation at current multiples.1
Building Products and Construction dealmaking maintained strong momentum through Q1 2026, building on a 2025 that saw North American deal value rise 33% year-over-year as buyers pursued scale and strategic repositioning. Sector fundamentals continue to stabilize as public infrastructure programs and energy-transition investment provide greater visibility into backlogs and support deal confidence.3 4
Top U.S. States: Texas led with 101 transactions followed by Florida with 82 and California with 73, reflecting sustained deal concentration in states with significant infrastructure investment, data center development, and population-driven construction demand.1
Cross-Border Trends: Deal flow in Q1 2026 remained overwhelmingly domestic as buyers prioritized U.S.-based assets aligned with domestic infrastructure spending, energy-transition investment, and reshoring-driven capacity expansion amid ongoing tariff and trade policy uncertainty.1
Residential vs Commercial: Although large residential deals such as Gibraltar Industries' acquisition of OmniMax International and Invitation Homes' purchase of Resibuilt Homes remained active, the broader residential sector faced headwinds from elevated mortgage rates, tariff-driven cost increases, and weak builder sentiment. Commercial and infrastructure deals dominated Q1 2026, driven by data center buildouts, grid modernization, and industrial expansion.5

| Target | Buyer | Value ($mm) |
| ENTRUST Solutions Group, LLC | Leidos, Inc. | $2,400 |
| OmniMax International, Inc. | Gibraltar Industries, Inc. | $1,335 |
| United Utility Services, LLC | Sandbrook Capital Management LP; Blackstone Credit & Insurance | $1,000 |
| National Diversified Sales, Inc. | Advanced Drainage Systems, Inc. | $1,000 |
| The Bowers Group, Inc. | Legence Corp. | $420 |
| TechPro Power Group Inc. | Integrated Power Services, LLC | $350 |
| Mckee Utility Contractors, Inc. | MasTec, Inc. | $276 |
| A.L. Grading Contractors, LLC | Cardinal Infrastructure Group Inc. | $246 |
| LSI Group, LLC | Worthington Enterprises, Inc. | $205 |
| Resibuilt Homes, LLC | Invitation Homes Inc. | $97 |
| Target | Buyer | Value ($mm) |
| RS Boes, LLC | RF Investment Partners, LLC; Burlington Capital Partners LLC | n/a |
| Five Star Sales & Service Inc | Galaxy Service Partners LLC | n/a |
| Specialty Fenestration Group | Victor Capital Partners LLC | n/a |
| AM/PM Door Inc. | Galaxy Service Partners LLC | n/a |
| CPL Architects, Engineers and Landscape Architect, D.P.C. | GHK Capital Partners LP | n/a |
| Target | Buyer | Value ($mm) |
| J.E. Mcamis, Inc. | Orion Group Holdings, Inc. | $70 |
| GMJ Paving Company LLC | Construction Partners, Inc. | $40 |
| Cobalt Power Systems Inc | SunPower Inc. | $10 |
| Sustainable Properties, LLC | Global Asset Management Group, Inc. | $10 |
| Invocon Inc. | Cemtrex, Inc. | $7 |
Source S&P Capital IQ as of 4/1/2026 and PCE Proprietary Data
Opportunities: Stabilizing sector fundamentals and improving deal confidence, combined with durable demand from public infrastructure and energy-transition investment, should sustain elevated M&A activity heading into mid-2026.5
Risks: Tariffs on steel, aluminum, and imported building materials are expected to persist through 2026, adding cost pressure and procurement complexity, while labor shortages and residual inflation continue to pressure margins.2 4
Predicted Activity: Near-term deal activity is expected to remain supported by stabilizing cost conditions and improving deal confidence, with buyers continuing to recalibrate strategies around assets aligned with secular demand from infrastructure and energy-transition investment.5
Served as advisor to A-1 Global as they transferred an interest to A-1 Global ESOP Trust
Served as advisor to The Beam Team on their sale to BDS Solutions Group
Served as advisor to Modern Plumbing Industries as they became 100% ESOP owned
Served as advisor to the trustee of the Dellinger ESOP
Served as advisor to the trustee of the Argent ESOP
Served as advisor to Simpson Air on their sale to Del-Air
Served as advisor to Ally Building Solutions on their sale to Astara Capital Partners
Served as advisor to Clune Construction Company on their sale to the Clune Construction Company ESOP Trust
Served as advisor to Midwest Drywall Co., Inc. as they became 100% ESOP Owned
Served as advisor to Del-Air on their $45 million debt financing
Served as advisor to Consolidated Minerals, Inc. on their sale to the CMI ESOP Trust
Served as advisor to MMC Corp on their acquisition of Building Central Services, Inc.
Served as advisor to Williams Electric Co., Inc. on their sale to Parsons
Served as advisor to Energy Air, Inc. on their sale to the Energy Air, Inc. ESOP Trust
Served as advisor to Tri-City Electrical Contractors as they transferred an interest to Tri-City ESOP Trust
Nicole Kiriakopoulos |
Michael Poole |
Will Stewart |
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Data Assumptions This report represents transaction activity as mergers & acquisitions, consolidations, restructurings and spin-offs. Targets are defined as U.S. Based companies with either foreign or U.S. based buyers. Transaction information provided is based on closed dates only. Glossary EBIT - Earnings Before Interest and Taxes Sources:
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Source S&P Capital IQ as of 1/17/2025 and PCE Proprietary Data
Advised Western Milling in their sale to the Western Milling ESOP Trust
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Data Assumptions This report represents transaction activity as mergers & acquisitions, consolidations, restructurings and spin-offs. Targets are defined as U.S. Based companies with either foreign or U.S. based buyers. Transaction information provided is based on closed dates only. Glossary EBIT - Earnings Before Interest and Taxes Sources:
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