Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Indian companies logged record $98 billion in deals so far this year

- Bloomberg feedback@livemint.com

:Indian companies have been involved in deals worth a record $97.6 billion this year. Top banker JPMorgan Chase & Co. is predicting more offshore interest in the nation, particular­ly in technology, media and telecom.

Walmart Inc.’s $16 billion acquisitio­n of a majority stake in Indian e-commerce company Flipkart Online Services Pvt. Ltd—a deal JPMorgan advised—has been the biggest so far, pushing the total past a previous annual peak of $92.3 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

India’s bankruptcy process has also spurred activity with more than $26 billion in distressed steel assets coming on the block, while a price war in telecom forced consolidat­ion.

“This year, if there is one stand-out product it is really M&A,” said Kalpana Morparia, the chief executive officer for South and South East Asia at JPMorgan, which climbed the top spot in India for the first time in at least a decade. “We are seeing some great examples of inbound M&A and a fair amount of domestic consolidat­ion, largely spurred by the bankruptcy process.”

Overseas buyers from Walmart to France’s Schneider Electric SE have made multibilli­on-dollar bets in India to tap into the promise of rising conIndian (in $ billion) 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10

0 2013 2014

*Data for 2018 is through July 27 2015

sumption by an increasing­ly interconne­cted middle class. The nation’s focus on improving infrastruc­ture and cleaning up $210 billion of soured loans in the banking system has also helped investors brush aside concerns about the economic fall out of a global trade war and rising crude-oil prices.

Already there are more billion-dollar deals being weighed, as UK pharmaceut­ical giant GlaxoSmith­Kline Plc examines selling its stake in its local consumer health subsidiary, worth about $3.1 billion, and Kraft Heinz Co. considers the sale of its children’s milk drink brand Complan in India, which may fetch about $1 billion.

Technology, media and telecom along with financial services will probably remain the 2016 2017 2018* Source: Bloomberg

most active sectors for inbound deal-making this year and next, JPMorgan’s Morparia said in an interview.

“Both play on the core macro and micro themes around consumptio­n and digitizati­on of India and we are still at early stages of evolution of these themes,” she said. “The power of data will play a critical role for India in the next two-to-five years.”

JPMorgan headed the league table with a 42% share of deals struck, climbing from 10th place in 2017. It was followed by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Citigroup Inc, while Arpwood Capital Pvt. was the highest-ranked local banker in 10th position.

The role played by financial sponsors such as private equity firms and pension funds in the deal space is increasing -both in terms of selling some investment­s as well as tying up with local companies to bid for assets on sale through the bankruptcy process. These are not just traditiona­l private-equity funds, which have been in India for the last 20 years, but include longer-term pension funds, said Morparia, who is the seniormost woman banker in South Asia with more than 43 years of experience in the sector.

Investment­s by private equity and venture capital funds rose by nearly 50% to $15.2 billion in the first half of this year, compared to $10.4 billion in same period last year, according to an EY report. The number of higher-value deals is also rising with 36 transactio­ns above $100 million, against 20 deals in the year-ago period, the report showed.

The two largest overseas acquisitio­ns by Indian companies for the year were announced earlier this month. India’s UPL Ltd has said it will acquire Arysta LifeScienc­e Inc. from Platform Specialty Products Corp. for about $4.2 billion in an all-cash deal, making it the largest outbound deal for the year so far. Hindalco Industries Ltd, controlled by billionair­e owner Kumar Mangalam Birla, agreed last week to acquire US aluminum producer Aleris Corp. for about $2.6 billion.

Morparia also shared her views on bond sales and the impact of a trade war:

MUMBAI

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