Dealmakers eye all-stock deals as US rate cut hopes fade
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[May 07, 2024] By
Shankar Ramakrishnan and Anirban Sen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - As markets dial down expectations for U.S. interest
rate cuts this year, America's largest corporations are poised to rely
more heavily on their stock and a bulging cash hoard instead of
expensive debt to finance acquisitions.
Since the start of 2023, the volume of mergers and acquisitions financed
by stock or a mix of cash and stock has touched its highest level in
more than two decades, according to data from LSEG.
All-stock M&A transactions accounted for $263.6 billion, or about 24% of
overall announced volumes so far this year - the highest percentage
year-to-date since 2001 when the comparable figure was 47.2%, according
to LSEG.
Cash-and-stock deals have accounted for 10.8% of total announced
transaction volumes this year, which is the highest level since
year-to-date 2021 when the figure was 17.5%. Put together, all-stock M&A
volumes, including the common stock value of cash-and-stock
transactions, has accounted for roughly 29% of total deal volumes so far
this year - the highest percentage since 2001 when the figure was 30.7%.
Several investment bankers, deal lawyers, and Wall Street analysts
expect this funding strategy to gather pace this year, as hopes of
near-term interest rate cuts fade and debt borrowing costs are expected
to remain higher for longer.
"When corporates feel good about their currencies, they tend to use
stock for deals - and at the same time, they don't want to get
over-leveraged (by taking on debt)," said Ivan Farman, co-head of global
M&A at Bank of America.
"People are being a little more cautious about how they approach their
capital structures," he added.
Since the start of 2023, all-stock mergers have accounted for 19.5% of
overall volumes - the prior ten-year average of all-stock M&A deals as a
percentage of overall volumes is 14.8%, according to LSEG.
Notable stock deals this year including Capital One's $35 billion
takeover of credit card rival Discover Financial; Diamondback Energy's
$26 billion acquisition of Endeavor Energy that was mostly funded with
stock; and BlackRock's $12.5 billion deal for Global Infrastructure
Partners that was also funded primarily with stock.
The trend has continued with companies showing an inclination to use
cash and stock for acquisitions.
In April, IBM said it will acquire HashiCorp for $6.4 billion using cash
on hand and BHP Billiton made an all-stock bid to acquire Anglo American
that was rejected.
As opportunistic buyers have aggressively pursued targets whose share
price has nosedived, they have often used stock as acquisition currency
to bridge differences on valuation with sellers.
"From the seller's perspective, a stock deal is a sharing of the value
creation from synergies - and if it's a cash deal, you're cashing your
shareholders out at a specific price for a specific premium," said Mark
McMaster, global head of M&A at Lazard.
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People walk around the Financial District near the New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S., December 29, 2023.
REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/File Photo
"For some of these strategic combinations, it's easier or more
compelling to offer stock, because it represents a combination, and
a true sharing of the synergies amongst the buyer and seller," added
McMaster.
TURN IN SENTIMENT
Overall M&A volumes are expected to rise 50% in 2024, Morgan Stanley
analysts said in a March report, largely due to pent-up demand from
last year when volumes touched a decade-low.
But expectations of how they will be financed has taken a sharp
U-turn from earlier in the year as some investors are pricing in
just one or two U.S. rate cuts this year compared to three.
So far this year, investment-grade rated companies raised nearly $71
billion of debt to fund M&A transactions at a faster pace than the
last three years, according to Informa Global Markets data.
This tally was expected to touch $175 billion to $200 billion by the
end of the year but now only another $60-70 billion of known
transactions are expected to be funded in the debt markets this
year, said Scott Schulte, head of U.S. investment-grade syndicate
desk at Barclays Capital.
It would take the total amount raised for mergers in 2024 above 2022
and 2023 levels but below the $173 billion in 2021, according to
Informa data.
Investment-grade companies may still take on debt but it could be
bonds with greater prepayment flexibility like term, bridge loans
and commercial paper with far shorter maturities, said Schulte.
For private equity firms, exiting highly leveraged transactions in
this higher-for-longer environment would eat into their total
returns, said Ruth Yang, global head of private market analytics at
S&P Global Ratings.
Leveraging up would increase rating downgrade risk so they could use
cash and stock for any acquisitions, she added.
Global listed non-financial corporations currently hold $5.6
trillion in cash on their balance sheets, while the biggest private
market investors have $2.5 trillion of dry powder at their disposal
for dealmaking, according to the Morgan Stanley report.
Companies may prefer smaller strategic transactions via “bolt-ons”
or divestitures, with the former funded with cash or stock, said
Edward Marrinan, credit strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities.
"Higher borrowing costs, a stringent regulatory environment and the
trend toward de-globalization leaves many companies more cautious
about undertaking large transformative acquisitions," said Marrinan.
(Reporting by Shankar Ramakrishnan and Anirban Sen in New York;
Editing by Anna Driver)
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