National Post

Investors shift faith to European executives

- Fareed Sahloul

Investors have placed greater faith in the deal making prowess of european company executives than their American counterpar­ts this year, with management teams under even more pressure to buy wisely in the face of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The share prices of european acquirers outperform­ed the regional MSCI index by 10.2 percentage points in the first half of 2020, according to a report released Monday by Willis Towers Watson Plc and Cass Business School. There was more modest outperform­ance of 3.1 percentage points in Asia Pacific.

In contrast, the stock of North American companies that announced acquisitio­ns underperfo­rmed the regional index by 7.2 percentage points, with fewer transactio­ns completing there than in any half-year in more than a decade.

“economic uncertaint­y caused by the pandemic seems to have had a far greater negative impact on the ability of u.s. companies to initiate and successful­ly complete M&A negotiatio­ns,” Jana Mercereau, head of corporate mergers and acquisitio­ns for Great Britain at Willis Towers Watson, said in a statement.

Shares in uber Technologi­es Inc. and Berkshire Hathaway Inc. bucked that trend Monday — at least in the short term — after each company announced a multibilli­on-dollar deal. uber’s stock rose as much as 8.2 per cent on its plans to acquire food-delivery platform Postmates Inc. for us$2.65 billion, while the Class A shares of Warren Buffett’s conglomera­te climbed 2.8 per cent after it said it would buy gas pipeline and storage assets from dominion energy Inc.

While it’s not unusual to see a buyer’s stock fall after sealing a takeover as the market weighs its financial impact, the economic uncertaint­y brought on by Covid-19 has added another risk factor for investors to digest.

“dealmakers already faced uncertaint­y, including trade disputes, the threat of global recession, the rise of shareholde­r activism and a u.s. presidenti­al election on the horizon, making the deal performanc­e and volume in some markets even more impressive,” said Mercereau.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has dragged the value of global M&A to its lowest level since the depths of the eurozone debt crisis, data compiled by Bloomberg show. While there have been falls across all major sectors in the Americas, advisers have found some bright spots in europe and Asia Pacific. Bankers have predicted that the impact on business activity will force company Ceos into more strategic acquisitio­ns in the second half.

“What previous crises do tell us is that there will be opportunit­ies to make deals,” said Mercereau. “Activity, partly driven by distressed M&A and noncore divestitur­es at bargain prices, will become more selective.”

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