Business Standard

Blank-cheque firms look to India for next wave of targets

- BAIJU KALESH

Blank-check companies are increasing­ly looking to India for acquisitio­n targets, which will keep the country’s recent dealmaking streak going, according to Nomura Holdings.

Renew Power last week agreed to merge with a Uslisted special purpose acquisitio­n company in a deal that will give India’s biggest renewable power producer an enterprise value of $8 billion. Online grocer Grofers is also looking to go public in the US through a merger with a blank-check company, Bloomberg News reported in February.

“SPAC-LED transactio­ns are expected to increase in the coming years in India,” Utpal Oza, head of investment banking for India at Nomura, said in a phone interview. “Wherever you’ve got businesses which have caught the fancy of internatio­nal investors especially in sectors such as renewables, tech or e-commerce, where the corporate structure enables it to be merged quite easily, you will see SPAC activity.”

A blank-check company is a shell company that raises money from public investors with the goal of acquiring a business within two years. These deals — some sponsored by the rich and famous including Hong Kong billionair­e Richard Li and ex-credit Suisse chief Tidjane Thiam — have raised more than $66 billion in the US alone just this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Singapore could join the bandwagon soon. The country’s exchange is consulting the market on allowing SPACS to go public, and could see its first such listing this year if it gets enough support. As many as 10 Indian companies could go public through SPAC deals before the end of the year and the trend could accelerate if Singapore’s blank-check firm listings are permitted, Oza said.

In India, Nomura expects equal revenue contributi­ons from equity capital markets, mergers and acquisitio­ns as well as financing, Oza added. In a further boost to its business, the Japanese bank plans to hire four bankers across debt originatio­n, corporate finance and sector coverage, he said.

Nomura also expects more initial public offerings in India this year, with sentiment buoyed by the postdebut performanc­e of recently listed companies, said Mangesh Ghogre, its head of equity capital markets for India.

In 2020, companies raised about $4.6 billion through first-time share sales in the South Asian nation and their shares are now trading more than

50 per cent above their IPO prices on average, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Nomura ranked second as IPO arranger in India last year, just behind Kotak Mahindra Bank, according to the Bloomberg league table.

About $1.7 billion has been raised so far this year, while State Bank of India is preparing its mutual fund joint venture for an offering that could raise $1 billion, Bloomberg News reported last week.

“The IPO pop on the listing day has meant there’s been value left on the table for investors,” Ghogre said. “This has given a strong confidence for the IPOS in 2021 will also receive strong reception.”

 ??  ?? “Wherever you’ve got businesses that have caught the fancy of internatio­nal investors, especially in sectors such as renewables, tech or e-commerce where the corporate structure enables it to be merged quite easily, you will see SPAC activity” UTPAL OZA Head, investment banking (India), Nomura
“Wherever you’ve got businesses that have caught the fancy of internatio­nal investors, especially in sectors such as renewables, tech or e-commerce where the corporate structure enables it to be merged quite easily, you will see SPAC activity” UTPAL OZA Head, investment banking (India), Nomura

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