Business Standard

M&As hit a high in 2017, value down

- T E NARASIMHAN

The year 2017 proved contrastin­g for Indian companies’ merger and acquisitio­n (M&A) activities: even as the number of M&A deals increased 14 per cent from a year earlier to the highest since 2010, the overall value declined 12 per cent to $46.8 billion from $53.2 billion in 2016.

According to consultanc­y firm EY's latest ‘Transactio­ns Annual’ report, the number of deals during the year stood at 1,022, compared with 895 the previous year. Market expansion and entry into new markets, digital disruption and sector convergenc­e were seen as the primary drivers.

Domestic deals continued to dominate overall M&As, accounting for 67 per cent of the total, as home-grown companies preferred the inorganic route for growth. In value terms, domestic deals stood at $37.9 billion, or more than threefourt­hs of the total disclosed value, a first for India's M&A deal market. Interestin­gly, 127 deals (worth $10 billion) were related to restructur­ing. These accounted for 19 per cent of all domestic deals in volume terms and 27 per cent in value terms. The local M&A market saw three deals in 2017 that were worth more than $1 billion; these totalled $5.3 billion in value.

The year also saw 340 cross-border deals, with a cumulative disclosed deal value of $8.9 billion - these were 7 per cent fewer than a year earlier, and cumulative­ly 71 per cent lower in terms of deal value. A total of 203 inbound deals took place during the year, with a cumulative disclosed deal value of $6.5 billion. While the volume of such deals remained nearly flat, the value saw a decline of 69 per cent from $21 billion the previous year, partially due to a high base effect.

On the outbound front, the year saw 137 deals with a cumulative disclosed deal value of $2.4 billion, a fall of 16 per cent y-o-y in volume terms from 163 last year, and 76 per cent in value terms from $9.6 billion. The US continued to be the most active cross-border partner.

Among sectors, telecom saw the highest yearly deal value in 10 years — at $14.7 billion, it was an over five-fold jump from that in 2016. On the volume front, however, the number of deals at 19 was the same as in 2016. The bulk of the transactio­ns was domestic, accounting for 92 per cent of the sector's total deal value and 58 per cent of the deal count. This was followed by retail and consumer products, technology, financial services and others.

Amit Khandelwal, partner and national leader, Transactio­n Advisory Services, EY, says, India recorded a healthy M&A activities in calendar year 2017. While there was an increase in the number of deals, they were concentrat­ed around $20 million.

The big-ticket deals in 2017 were fewer than those in 2016, as companies held back from venturing into big-ticket acquisitio­ns. The timeline of some of the big-ticket deals got stretched due to increased scrutiny by the regulators and complex deal structures.

Outlookfor­2018

The M&A outlook for 2018 looks promising, especially with a stable macroecono­mic environmen­t, positive deal fundamenta­ls, and buoyant business confidence. In addition to traditiona­l M&A drivers, such as consolidat­ion and market penetratio­n, deal activities will be increasing­ly triggered by disruptive pressures like technologi­cal innovation and digitisati­on, which will continue to redefine growth priorities.

The domestic market is expected to be at the forefront of the deal activity, as bigger players will adopt the inorganic route to expand consolidat­e their market positions to better cater for a recovering local consumptio­n.

 ??  ?? Number of M&A deals increased 14% from a year earlier
Number of M&A deals increased 14% from a year earlier

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