Sovereign investors' M&A
deals fall 26 percent by value in second quarter
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[July 08, 2016]
By Claire Milhench
LONDON (Reuters) - Sovereign investors,
including wealth funds, made $14.1 billion worth of acquisitions in
the second quarter, down 26 percent from the first three months of
the year but underpinned by a rebound in real estate deals.
Data compiled by Thomson Reuters shows sovereign investors, a
category that can include everything from state pension funds to
oil-backed investment vehicles, were involved in 39 deals between
April and June, six fewer than in the first quarter.
The single biggest deal was the $4.5 billion funding round for Ant
Financial Services Group, an affiliate of China's biggest e-commerce
company, Alibaba Group Holding, which attracted China's CIC Capital,
amongst others.
Some sovereign investors witnessed reduced inflows as a result of
lower oil prices and increasing demands from cash-strapped
governments - Russia for instance is proposing to empty one of its
two sovereign funds next year.
Volatile markets have also taken a toll, with big direct investors
such as Singapore's Temasek suffering a fall in the value of its
portfolio of almost $18 billion over the past year.
This could be making the sector more cautious about committing new
capital. However, industry experts suggested the publicly available
figures might not tell the whole story, with some deals flying below
the radar, such as those carried out by boutique fund managers on
behalf of sovereign wealth funds (SWFs).
"There's a steady secular flow into illiquid investments which
hasn't stopped, so the overall volumes should be higher," said
Elliot Hentov, head of policy and research in the official
institutions group at State Street Global Advisors.
"There are a lot of deals we don't see that have SWF participation."
Patrick Thomson, head of international institutional clients at JP
Morgan Asset Management, said there was no requirement for private
transactions to be reported, so some investments were not being
captured in public data.
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The overall volume was still 11 percent higher than the second quarter of 2015,
helped by a handful of very large transactions.
The second largest deal was the $3.5 billion investment in ride-hailing service
Uber by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, while the $2.5 billion sale of
BlackRock's 43-storey office building in Singapore to the Qatar Investment
Authority (QIA) was in third place.
"SWFs have relatively limited investment staff, and need to put quite a lot of
money to work, so they need an asset class that can absorb a lot of capital,"
Thomson said.
Real estate has also proved easier for SWFs to access than infrastructure and
private equity in recent years. An Invesco survey of sovereign investors found
that the average portfolio exposure to real estate had risen to 6.5 percent in
2015, from 3 percent in 2012.
"There is a greater stock of real estate and a greater number of places to
source deals," said Alex Millar, head of EMEA sovereigns, Middle East and Africa
institutional sales at Invesco.
Some Gulf SWFs were said to have held back from new property buys in Britain
before the referendum. But Norway's $830 billion fund said in March it was
undeterred, and Singapore's Gif said the turmoil may even bring buying
opportunities.
(Reporting by Claire Milhench; Editing by Susan Fenton)
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