Hindustan Times (East UP)

India Inc explores options to acquire companies abroad

Companies with strong balance sheets or those backed by PE funds could look at overseas acquisitio­ns

- Swaraj Singh Dhanjal swaraj.d@livemint.com

Indian companies with strong balance sheets have shaken off the shock from the coronaviru­s pandemic to chase overseas acquisitio­ns, hoping to pick up attractive assets whose valuations have been hammered by the virus.

While the pandemic has dragged India’s outbound deal volume down 23% this year, there have been signs of a recovery in recent weeks. Renewable energy company Greenko Inc., for instance, is in the race to acquire NEC Energy Solutions, a struggling US-based battery maker, Mint reported on Thursday. A day before, the UK’s SKY News reported that Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Retail Ventures Ltd is eyeing bankrupt retailer Debenhams.

To be sure, Reliance has denied that it is looking at Debenhams.

The ramificati­ons of the crisis on businesses have not been uniform. Software services, drugs and packaged-food industry have either remained unscathed or caught the tailwind. Software services companies, for example, have seen demand for cloud computing and cybersecur­ity services rise after the pandemic. They have moved swiftly to fill in the gaps in their portfolios through small acquisitio­ns. “There will be interest as there is financial distress, and assets will be available for cheap. However, it will be very selective. Companies or groups with strong balance sheets or companies backed by private equity funds could look at such overseas acquisitio­ns,” said Anuj Kapoor, managing director and head of investment banking at UBS India.

While the pandemic has presented many opportunit­ies to acquire overseas companies at distress valuations, Indian companies are not rushing to buy them, and only a few are expected to have the funds and the confidence to take advantage of this, given the fragile global economic recovery is threatenin­g to stall amid a resurgence of coronaviru­s cases.

Also, Indian companies have rarely made large overseas acquisitio­ns in the past few years, as their purchases in the go-go years before the global financial crisis hit unravelled soon. Since then, marquee deals such as Tata Steel Ltd’s acquisitio­n of Corus or Hindalco’s acquisitio­n of Novelis have rarely been repeated.

Except for 2018, when firms acquired overseas assets worth $12.9 billion, outbound M&As have slid back into the slow lane.

According to Kapoor, sectors such as pharma and chemicals, which are seeing significan­t investor interest, could potentiall­y look to expand overseas. “For PE-owned firms, it could be a step towards eventual monetizati­on. If a tuck-in acquisitio­n makes business sense and improves the marketabil­ity of the company eventually to a strategic or financial investor, they may evaluate M&A,” he added.

The cash-rich technology sector has been the most acquisitiv­e. Companies such as Infosys, HCL Technologi­es and Tech Mahindra have made overseas acquisitio­ns. Just last week, HCL announced the acquisitio­n of Australia-based IT solutions provider DWS Ltd for around $137 million.

Sector bellwether Tata Consultanc­y Services Ltd is also scouring for acquisitio­n opportunit­ies. In an April interview, chief operating officer N. Ganapathy Subramania­m said while TCS is not interested in pure workforce augmentati­on, it is looking for firms with a complement­ary customer base with some intellectu­al property and patents. The company will also look into opportunit­ies that can lead to market expansion, he said.

“IT firms are cash-rich...and keep acquiring overseas companies to build capabiliti­es in weak areas. So, deals in digital, cloud and SaaS (software as a service) space keep seeing healthy activity,” said Ajay Garg, managing director at Mumbai-based i-banking firm Equirus Capital.

 ??  ?? Despite the availabili­ty of cheap assets, companies will be selective with acquisitio­ns given the fragile global economic recovery.
Despite the availabili­ty of cheap assets, companies will be selective with acquisitio­ns given the fragile global economic recovery.

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