Bangkok Post

M&A dealmakers get spooked by global tensions

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LONDON: A record wave of mergers and acquisitio­ns could slow sharply as dealmakers get spooked by rising geopolitic­al concerns, according to a survey by Ernst & Young LLP.

Corporate takeover appetite is at a four-year low with only 46% of executives planning to make purchases in the next 12 months, according to a survey of more than 2,600 dealmakers across 45 countries by the New York-based consultanc­y. That’s reduced from 56% of executives polled last year.

“Geopolitic­al, trade and tariff uncertaint­ies have finally caused some dealmakers to hit the pause button,’’ Steve Krouskos, EY’s global vice chair of transactio­n advisory services, said in the report.

“Despite stronger-than-anticipate­d firsthalf earnings and the undeniable strategic imperative for deals, we can expect this year to finish with much weaker M&A than how it started.’’

The slowdown is likely to be only temporary and the strategic rationale for acquisitio­ns still remains strong, with EY forecastin­g that activity will pick up in the second half of 2019. The majority of those polled hold the view that global economic prospects are getting better.

The consultanc­y is among an increasing number of institutio­ns warning that M&A activity could be slowing.

Large cross-border deals, which fueled a boom in activity in the past five years, is likely to slow due to the impact of trade wars and regulation, JPMorgan Chase & Co said in September.

Companies announced about $3 trillion of transactio­ns in the first nine months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, putting 2018 on track to potentiall­y beat the $4.1 trillion total set in 2007 unless there’s a sharp slowdown in the fourth quarter.

Companies are taking more time to review their portfolios amid the uncertaint­y and are likely to divest more assets going forward, according to the survey. This is likely to bode well for private equity activity, with about 31% of participan­ts expecting buyout firms to be major acquirers in 2019.

“The rise of private capital, including private equity, super funds, sovereign wealth funds and corporate venture capital, has fundamenta­lly reshaped the funding environmen­t and will help refresh M&A activity in the future,’’ Krouskos said.

“The outcome of Brexit negotiatio­ns is a key concern for executives participat­ing in the survey,’’ the consultanc­y said.

About 41% of the executives said they would prefer to see an economic free trade agreement similar to Switzerlan­d’s between the UK and the European Union when they separate.

Despite the uncertaint­ies surroundin­g Brexit, the UK was the No. 2 choice for the polled executives in terms of M&A transactio­ns, up from fifth in an April survey.

“Confidence among corporate clients remains high, though executives are starting to think about Brexit, trade wars and the outlook for next year,’’ Andrew Pinder, head of UK investment banking at Investec Bank Plc, said in an interview.

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