Right. So thanks, Bryce. And by the way, I'm happy you're able to get on or we're going to miss you. I would say, look, you know from the investment banking side and we definitely are, I think, companies that were being put on the holding near the end of last year are now starting to flow back into the backlog. And there's this -- I feel like a fair number of new deals that are coming and we are seeing them.
And obviously, we have to be very selective and where we spend our time as we look at new deals. So the ones that we spend our time on are generally companies that we believe we're going to be able to, frankly, buy for around anywhere from 6x to maybe 7x, 7.5x EBITDA. And while we have been clearly in some processes when we feel like that's a good value, we're not even getting to go to a management meeting because there are other people out there that are 8x to 9x. And so that's part of my comment, frankly.
And honestly, while those companies look good on the surface, I'm sure they are, we don't understand how one, so to speak, really pays that kind of multiple. So it's really more around a bit of our -- how our model works, with what we're seeing. And as you use the word, it's kind of spotty the quality. It's a little bit some and their companies have look on the surface, but they're smaller. The EBITDA are less consistent, the general positions in the marketplace is not clear, they have much of a differentiator, so to speak, but they're fundamentally decent businesses, but not something that we feel we could get our arms around.
And as you know, if we're doing 3 or 4, even 5 new dealers a year, that's pretty good for us. So we have to be really, really selective. But the activity level, the main part if the activity level is up, and we are able to actually make some conscientious decisions on how we spend our time to try to get new deals on the books over the next, say, 9 months or so.