Banks, downplaying recession, foresee record U.S. M&A
lending
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[July 21, 2018]
By Lynn Adler
NEW YORK (LPC) - Bank lending for US
mergers and acquisitions of high-grade companies will scale new heights
this year, as the voracious appetite for mega-deals persists even while
credit markets turn choppy and recession talk surfaces, bankers and
strategists said.
M&A lending to US blue chip companies could top $250 billion by year
end, according to Thomson Reuters LPC’s quarterly lending survey, in
what would be a record, far surpassing the prior high of around US$203bn
last year.
This year has already seen three of the 10 largest US investment grade
bridge loans of all time – extended to Walt Disney for Fox, US cable
company Comcast’s ongoing bid for European broadcaster Sky, and health
insurer Cigna for pharmacy benefits manager Express Scripts.
Banks’ liquidity and capacity to lend is plentiful, particularly after
Comcast withdrew its record all-cash US$66bn bid for Twenty-First
Century Fox media assets on Thursday and Broadcom’s $117 billion
takeover of Qualcomm was blocked by President Trump in March.
Broadcom had lined up as much as US$100bn in bank financing that fell
away when the deal came undone. Comcast had secured “highly confident”
letters from banks, which indicated the lead arrangers were confident
they could put together financing while the bidding war with Disney for
Fox media assets heated up.
Chipmaker Broadcom is now back in the market with a much smaller $18
billion term loan funding its planned purchase of business software
company CA Inc.
A wide range of companies, including media conglomerate Disney and
packaged food company Conagra Brands, are currently in the market with
large M&A financings. Disney has a bridge loan for up to $35.7 billion
and Conagra this week announced a US$1.3bn term loan that reduced the
commitments under its US$9bn 364-day bridge loan, all of which the loan
and bond markets are expected to absorb easily despite the volatility.
“You hear chatter around the peak of the credit cycle, but it doesn’t
seem to have impacted bank lending appetite on the investment-grade
side,” said Robert Kilcullen, a managing director in MUFG’s corporate
advisory group.
“The capital markets have gotten a little choppier, but it doesn’t feel
like, particularly on the investment-grade side, that anyone is getting
shut out or there is any sector that no one will touch.”
ACCESS GRANTED
The M&A deal machine revved up after a federal judge, in a highly
anticipated ruling, in June gave the go-ahead to the long-pursued merger
between AT&T and Time Warner. This month, the Department of Justice
appealed the ruling, giving lenders a pause although most expect the
tie-up to be upheld and see more mega-mergers ahead.
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Bankers said there is appetite to lend as much as $100 billion to $125 billion
in a single bridge financing, if such a large deal were to crop up again. A
dozen banks provided the $100 billion bridge loan for the Broadcom/Qualcomm
deal, which ultimately fell through.
There is also confidence that big borrowers of short-term bridge loans will
readily be able to access the bond markets when replacing the loans with
permanent financing, despite turbulence in recent months.
“High-grade companies won’t have problems going to market,” said one senior
banker. “Banks are still hungry for assets. I don’t see a pullback from lending
happening in the near future.”
If market volatility escalates, and M&A-related bond supply puts pressure on
yield spreads and pushes borrowing costs higher, that optimism could fade.
For now, “both high grade and high yield credit investors show so little concern
about fundamentals - or so-called ‘lower quality trends’ - that it almost
appears as if we are in the early recovery stage after a recession,” a Bank of
America Merrill Lynch Global Research report said.
REWARDS
Banks are reaping profits from the bountiful M&A lending and are expected to
continue to do so throughout the year.
Fees earned from arranging loans to high-quality companies reached $1.5 billion
in the first half of the year, a 44 percent jump from a year earlier and the
highest half-year total on record, according to Freeman Consulting Services,
which bases its estimates on Thomson Reuters data.
“Banks are willing to sit on larger commitments – there are big checks on the
table,” the senior banker said.
The M&A loan bonanza, fueled by President Trump’s tax cuts and improving
economy, is financing transformational deals as whole industries reshape to
adapt to threats from online retailers and grapple with technological change.
“The strength of the M&A market is really reflected in the types of deals we’re
seeing lately – including Amazon buying PillPack to move into pharma
distribution,” said Jeff Nassof, a director at Freeman Consulting. “These are
late stage transformational deals that we see when things are really
optimistic.”
Online retailer Amazon triggered a wave of match-ups last year as it continued
to put companies’ traditional business models under pressure. Its merger with
Whole Foods Market, announced in June 2017, shook up the supply chain industry
and put pressure on grocery markets.
(Reporting by Lynn Adler; Editing by Tessa Walsh and Michelle Sierra)
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