Indian companies have been involved in deals worth a record $97.6 billion this year and JP Morgan Chase is predicting more offshore interest in the nation, particularly in technology, media and telecom.
Walmart’s $16bn acquisition of a majority stake in Indian e-commerce company Flipkart - a deal JP Morgan advised on - has been the biggest so far, pushing the total past a previous annual peak of $92.3bn, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. India’s bankruptcy process has also spurred activity with more than $26bn in distressed steel assets coming on the block, while a price war in telecom forced consolidation.
“This year, if there is one stand-out product it is really M&A,” said Kalpana Morparia, the chief executive for South and South East Asia at JP Morgan. “We are seeing some great examples of inbound M&A and a fair amount of domestic consolidation, largely spurred by the bankruptcy process.”
Overseas buyers from Walmart to France’s Schneider Electric have made multibillion-dollar bets in India to tap into the promise of rising consumption by an increasingly interconnected middle class. The nation’s focus on improving infrastructure and cleaning up $210bn of soured loans in the banking system has also helped investors brush aside concerns about the economic fall out of a global trade war and rising crude-oil prices.
Already there are more billion-dollar deals being weighed, as UK pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline examines selling its stake in its local consumer health subsidiary, worth about $3.1bn, and Kraft Heinz considers the sale of its children’s milk drink brand Complan in India, which may fetch about $1bn.
Technology, media and telecom along with financial services will probably remain the most active sectors for inbound deal-making this year and next, Ms Morparia said.
“Both play on the core macro and micro themes around consumption and digitization of India and we are still at early stages of evolution of these themes,” she said. “The power of data will play a critical role for India in the next two-to-five years.”
JP Morgan headed the league table with a 42 per cent share of deals struck, climbing from 10th place in 2017. It was followed by Goldman Sachs and Citigroup, while Arpwood Capital was the highest-ranked local banker in 10th position.
The role played by financial sponsors such as private equity firms and pension funds in the Indian deal space is increasing - both in terms of selling some investments as well as tying up with local companies to bid for assets on sale through the bankruptcy process. These are not just traditional private-equity funds, which have been in India for the last 20 years, but include longer-term pension funds, said Ms Morparia, who is the senior-most woman banker in South Asia with more than 43 years of experience in the sector.
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Investments by private equity and venture capital funds rose by nearly 50 per cent to $15.2bn in the first half of this year, compared to $10.4bn in the same period last year, according to an EY report. The number of higher-value deals is also rising with 36 transactions above $100 million, against 20 deals in the year-ago period, the report showed.
The two largest overseas acquisitions by Indian companies for the year were announced earlier this month. India’s UPL has said it will acquire Arysta LifeScience from Platform Specialty Products for about $4.2bn in an all-cash deal, making it the largest outbound deal for the year so far. Hindalco Industries, controlled by billionaire owner Kumar Mangalam Birla, agreed last week to acquire US aluminium producer Aleris for about $2.6bn.
Ms Morparia also shared her views on bond sales and the impact of a trade war:
Advice to clients looking at overseas bond sales?
We are telling clients looking at debt issuance to keep on watching the market in case we find a sudden window. One should be in a constant state of readiness.
Going by my experience, I have not seen the markets being illiquid or not open for a period of time. I am sure it will open up and, if not, people will make a call on whether it is wise to go ahead with 20-30 basis point wider margins.
How will trade tensions impact Asia?
We are reacting to the trade war based on some announcements made by the US, while the rest of the world has extreme and great interest in trying to sign unilateral or multilateral deals among themselves. For instance, Europe is not saying that they don’t want to deal with Asia. I don’t see this impacting our business.
I see business picking up due to intra-Asia trade. With a relative cooling off of tensions in North Korea, if you look at Apac countries - whether it is Japan, Korea, Indonesia, China, India, Vietnam - there are plenty of opportunities for a two-way flow of trade.