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THE BARATELLI INSTITUTE · SERIAL COMPOUNDER READS · A LIVING REFERENCE

Every Danaher Acquisition, 1984 to Today

Forty years of the Danaher Business System, on one filterable page.

Steven and Mitchell Rales bought a small industrial holding company called DMG Corporation in 1984, renamed it Danaher after a Montana river where they had fished as boys, and proceeded to execute what has become the archetypal record of disciplined serial acquisition compounding — roughly 400 acquisitions over four decades, integrated through the Danaher Business System (DBS), the operating rhythm that practitioners describe as "Toyota Production System meets M&A discipline." Three transformative spinoffs — Fortive in 2016, Envista in 2019, and Veralto in 2023 — each carried out a self-contained platform that has itself become a serial acquirer running DBS. This page catalogs the material transactions on the record: whole-company acquisitions, corporate carve-outs, public-company mergers, and the three spinoff exit events. It is intentionally a living reference: as new deals close, the row is added, the roll-ups reflow, and the sitemap timestamp bumps. Nothing here is investment advice. Everything here is a fact-checkable practitioner reference for a very specific question — what does forty years of DBS-driven capital deployment actually look like in list form?

1984–TodayCoverage period
85+Material transactions cataloged
3Spinoff platforms (FTV, NVST, VLTO)
LivingUpdated as deals close
FreeNo paywall, ever
Jul 6, 2026Published
A Baratelli Institute Overview · NEW · JULY 7, 2026
Danaher Corporation — The Operating-System Compounder →
The 11-section practitioner primer — Danaher today, the Rales origin, the Rales philosophy, DBS with seven printable practitioner checklists (VVC, PIT, Kaizen, Gemba, 5 Whys, X-matrix, GM readiness), DBS vs Six Sigma vs Toyota Production System, Larry Culp at Danaher, Culp at GE (the three-way split), the three Danaher spinoffs, the Rales family-office estate architecture, and the four-archetype compounder taxonomy alongside Berkshire, Constellation, and LVMH. Free case memo, 20-tab model, 8-tab DBS toolkit, deck, combined edition. Not a valuation call — an informational primer.
Open the overview →
Companion reference · NEW
Danaher Subsidiaries Ledger — organized by operating company →
Every material Danaher operating company alphabetically — Cepheid, Cytiva, Beckman Coulter, Leica, Pall, Aldevron, Abcam, Radiometer — plus the Fortive (2016), Envista (2019), and Veralto (2023) spinoff cohorts. The operating-company companion to this chronological deal record.
Open the ledger →
Companion reference · NEW · THE CULP TIE
General Electric Acquisition & Divestiture Record — the Culp tie →
Larry Culp left Danaher's CEO seat in 2014 and became the first outsider chairman/CEO in GE's 126-year history in October 2018. The 2019-2020 sale of GE BioPharma to Danaher for ~$21.4B (which became Cytiva) is the direct expression of the tie. The GE record is the reference for how DBS-influenced discipline was applied to the sickest patient in industrial America.
Open the GE record →

How to use this page

Nine columns. Year of announcement or close. Target name. Danaher operating platform at time of acquisition (Life Sciences, Diagnostics, Biotechnology, Water Quality, Product Identification, Industrial Technology, Dental, Motion, Environmental, or Corporate). Approximate consideration in USD (illustrative where deal size was not publicly disclosed — marked "n/d" for not-disclosed or "approx"). Deal structure. Counterparty type. The DBS-platform integration flag — the defining Danaher acquisition pattern: was the target folded into the Danaher Business System operating rhythm, becoming a permanent piece of a platform, or was it a portfolio holding that was later divested or spun off? Distinctive notes. Current status — held, divested, spun off to Fortive/Envista/Veralto, or merged into another Danaher subsidiary.

Sort and filter. Click any column header to sort. Use the decade, platform, structure, counterparty, and DBS-integration filters to isolate a slice. The search box matches target names and notes.

What counts as an acquisition. This record focuses on material transactions — deals over roughly $100 million, or strategically significant platform-defining bolt-ons. Danaher has executed something on the order of 400 acquisitions since 1984; enumerating every small tuck-in would obscure the pattern. What appears here is the list a practitioner needs to see to understand how Danaher built its earnings power — from an industrial roll-up in the 1990s, through the diversification and healthcare pivot of the 2000s, into the life-sciences and biotech transformation of the 2010s and 2020s. The three spinoff events (Fortive 2016, Envista 2019, Veralto 2023) are included as structural entries with "Spinoff" as the deal structure.

DBS-platform integration marker. A YES flag means the target was folded into the Danaher Business System operating rhythm and became a permanent part of a Danaher (or successor Fortive/Envista/Veralto) platform. A NO flag means the transaction was a financing, a minority stake, a distressed rescue, or an acquisition that Danaher later divested rather than integrated. The overwhelming majority of Danaher acquisitions carry the DBS integration marker — that is the whole point of the model, and it is why Danaher's compounding record is best understood as an operating compounder rather than a portfolio compounder.

of deals shown

The complete Danaher Corporation acquisition history · 1984–2026

Every material Danaher acquisition since Steven and Mitchell Rales formed the company in 1984, on one page — plus the three transformative spinoffs (Fortive 2016, Envista 2019, Veralto 2023) that themselves inherited and extended the Danaher Business System. Sortable by year, platform, deal size, structure, and counterparty type — with the DBS-platform integration pattern flagged across four decades. Search by target name (Beckman Coulter, Pall, Cepheid, Cytiva, Radiometer, Leica Microsystems, Aldevron, Abcam, Videojet, Fluke, Tektronix, Trojan, Hach, Nobel Biocare, KaVo, Ormco), by platform (Life Sciences, Diagnostics, Biotechnology, Water Quality, Product Identification, Industrial Technology, Dental), or by structure (whole-company, carve-out, public-company merger, spinoff). Every row is a fact-checkable reference. This is a living dataset — updated whenever Danaher, Fortive, Envista, or Veralto closes a new material deal.

Year Target Platform Consideration Structure Counterparty DBS? Notes Status

Analytical roll-ups

Roll-ups reflect the material acquisitions cataloged in the table above. Where consideration is undisclosed, the deal is included in count-based roll-ups but excluded from dollar-based totals. Dollar figures are illustrative aggregates — the point is directional, not audit-grade.

Approximate capital deployed by decade

Whole-company and carve-out purchases only; spinoffs and minority stakes excluded from the dollar totals. The 2010s dollar figure is dominated by Pall ($13.8B), Beckman Coulter ($6.8B), and Cepheid ($4B). The 2020s are dominated by Cytiva ($21.4B) and Aldevron ($9.6B). Bar length is proportional within this table only.

Structure mix

Whole-company acquisitions dominate the deal count. Carve-outs — Danaher buying a business line out of a larger parent, then rebuilding it under DBS — are the second-most common structure, and are the Cytiva-Aldevron-Videojet signature move.

Distribution by platform (at time of acquisition)

Platform is captured at time of the transaction — a Water Quality target from 1998 stayed classified as Water Quality even after it was later spun off with Veralto in 2023. Life Sciences, Diagnostics, and Biotechnology together dominate the modern (post-2015) count.

The DBS-integration pattern

The signature Danaher acquisition pattern. Nearly every whole-company and carve-out acquisition Danaher has executed has been folded into DBS operating rhythm — this is not a portfolio compounder, it is an operating compounder, and DBS is the compounding engine.

SPINOFF PLATFORMS & ACTIVE M&A PIPELINE

The three spinoffs, and what Danaher is buying next

An acquisition record is a lagging indicator. The leading indicator for Danaher is twofold: (1) the three independent spinoff platforms — Fortive, Envista, and Veralto — that each carry DBS forward as autonomous serial acquirers, and (2) the active bolt-on pipeline inside Danaher's Life Sciences, Diagnostics, and Biotechnology platforms, which continues to consolidate the fragmented tools, reagents, and instrumentation vendors that support the biopharma industry.

Fortive Corporation · FTV

Spun off July 2016. The industrial technology and instrumentation platform — Fluke, Tektronix, Gilbarco Veeder-Root, Matco Tools, Kollmorgen, and later add-ons. Fortive itself has since spun off Vontier (2020) and continues serial acquisitions in industrial software and specialty test-and-measurement.

Envista Holdings · NVST

Spun off September 2019. The dental platform — KaVo Kerr, Nobel Biocare, Ormco, Metrex, DEXIS, and companion consumable and orthodontic assets. Envista runs a lighter-touch DBS on a narrower vertical.

Veralto Corporation · VLTO

Spun off October 2023. Water Quality (Hach, Trojan Technologies, ChemTreat, McCrometer) plus Product Identification (Videojet, X-Rite, Pantone, Esko, Linx). The most recent carve-out; Veralto has continued small-to-medium bolt-ons since separation.

Life Sciences / Biotech M&A pipeline

Post-Cytiva and post-Aldevron, Danaher continues to consolidate biopharma-adjacent tools and reagents. Abcam (2023, $5.7B) added antibody and research-reagents scale. Expect continued tuck-ins across bioprocessing, gene therapy manufacturing, and molecular biology reagents — the durable secular growth areas Danaher has explicitly targeted.

Related reading in the Institute library

Danaher belongs to the small handful of records that define the modern compounding era. These are the companion practitioner references and case memos already published on the Institute site.

COMPANION REFERENCE Every Berkshire Hathaway Acquisition, 1965 to Today The American compounder — sixty years of Buffett-Munger capital allocation on one filterable page. Read the Berkshire and Danaher records side by side to see the difference between a portfolio compounder and an operating compounder. COMPANION REFERENCE Every LVMH Acquisition, Boussac to Today The continental-European family-controlled global champion — forty years of maison-by-maison compounding under Bernard Arnault. The third companion record in the trilogy. COMPANION REFERENCE Every AB InBev Acquisition, Brahma to Today The fourth companion living reference. Four decades of Brazilian-led global beer consolidation. Read alongside Danaher to see two distinct operating-compounder philosophies — DBS (Toyota Production System discipline) versus 3G (zero-based budgeting and radical cost discipline). COMPANION REFERENCE Every Constellation Software Acquisition, 1995 to Today Mark Leonard’s vertical-market software compounder. Read alongside Danaher to see two operating-compounder philosophies applied to different asset classes: DBS (physical products, Toyota Production System discipline) versus Constellation (software, permanent hold, portfolio-CEO discipline). COMPANION REFERENCE Every Carlos Slim Acquisition, 1981 to Today The 1990 Telmex privatization and the Latin American compounder. Read alongside Danaher to see two distinct operating-compounder philosophies — DBS (Toyota Production System discipline plus serial life-sciences bolt-ons) versus the Slim negotiated-acquisition-plus-family-hold approach. COMPANION REFERENCE Every Prosus / Naspers Acquisition, 1915 to Today The 2001 Tencent investment and the emerging-market portfolio compounder. Read alongside Danaher to see two opposite ends of the compounding spectrum: DBS operational-integration acquirer versus Prosus long-hold minority-stake portfolio investor. COMPANION REFERENCE Every Reliance Industries Acquisition, 1966 to Today Mukesh Ambani’s petrochemicals-to-Jio transformation. Read alongside Danaher to see two very different compounding models: DBS-driven operational-integration bolt-on acquirer versus a family-controlled Indian conglomerate transforming three whole industries within a single national market. COMPANION REFERENCE Every SoftBank Acquisition and Vision Fund Investment, 1981 to Today Masayoshi Son’s ARM + Alibaba + Vision Fund record. Read alongside Danaher to see two opposite ends of the compounding spectrum: DBS operational-integration acquirer versus SoftBank late-stage minority-stake portfolio investor. COMPANION REFERENCE Every Nestle Acquisition, 1866 to Today 160 years of Swiss consumer-brand compounding. Read alongside Danaher for two disciplined operational-integration acquirers — DBS applied to healthcare and life sciences on one side, Nestle’s decentralized brand-management method applied to global consumer staples on the other. Both prize post-acquisition operating-margin expansion. COMPANION REFERENCE Every JAB Holding Acquisition, 2012 to Today The Reimann family’s permanent-capital consumer platform — Peet’s, Keurig, Krispy Kreme, Panera, Pret and JDE Peet’s. Read alongside Danaher for two operator-first serial acquirers, one industrial-DBS and one Reimann-family-permanent-capital. Both compress large-scale post-close integration into a repeatable playbook. CASE MEMO LVMH · the Arnault architecture The multi-generational family-controlled global champion. Read after LVMH acquisition record. HUB Berkshire Read — the main franchise The Institute's flagship serial-acquirer franchise. Cash rollforward, look-through earnings, and every published Berkshire Read case in one place. TOOL DBS-Lite Scorecard A practitioner tool that adapts Danaher Business System operating discipline to small- and mid-cap operating companies. The DBS reference on the Institute site. TOOL M&A Integration 100-Day Planner The integration-planning tool that translates the DBS post-close operating rhythm into a workable 100-day plan for operators without a Danaher-scale integration team. HUB Case Studies — index Every published Baratelli practitioner case memo, in one indexable list. HUB Guides — index The Institute's published guides for CFOs, controllers, family offices, and the Power-of-the-Pack advisor coordination series.

Educational reference. Not investment advice. Not a solicitation. Not affiliated with Danaher Corporation, Fortive Corporation, Envista Holdings, Veralto Corporation, or any of their subsidiaries. The Baratelli Institute publishes under the Lowe v. SEC publisher exception; neutral positioning maintained throughout. Deal figures cited in this catalog are sourced primarily to Danaher (and successor Fortive, Envista, Veralto) annual reports and 10-K filings, S&P and Moody's rating actions, contemporaneous press coverage (Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, Bloomberg, Reuters, industry press including STAT News and BioProcess International), and standard reference works on Danaher's history including practitioner writeups of the Danaher Business System. Dollar amounts are approximate. Where a specific transaction date or dollar figure is not publicly disclosed — a common condition for small bolt-ons and non-U.S. private-target acquisitions — the row is flagged with "approx" or "n/d" (not disclosed) in the notes column rather than fabricating precision. The full record of 400+ Danaher acquisitions cannot be enumerated publicly; this catalog focuses on the material transactions (roughly $100M+ or strategically platform-defining) that shape the compounding record.

“We do not buy companies. We buy platforms — and then we operate them.”