Merger and acquisition activity in India saw a sharp decline in the January-March period, amid subdued global deal market and uncertainty around general election results, according to a report.
According to EY’s 32nd Transaction Quarterly Report, M&A activity in the first quarter of 2019 fell to 242 deals with $9.9 billion, from 260 deals having a disclosed deal value of $21.6 billion in the year-ago period.
“After a record year for Indian M&A, deal makers paused a little in the first quarter of 2019, thanks to a subdued global M&A market. Besides, the uncertainty around general election results also appear to have added to the sub-par performance,” said Ajay Arora, partner and national leader, M&A, EY India.
However, going ahead, the deal environment in India remains favourable, the report said adding that 66 per cent of the Indian executives expect to actively pursue M&A in the next 12 months, a significantly higher reading than 32 per cent in April 2018 and the 10-year average of 40 per cent.
“The long-term prospects for the Indian transactions market look good on the back of stable economic growth outlook, ongoing consolidation and restructuring activities,” said Amit Khandelwal, partner and national leader, Transaction Advisory Services, EY.
Domestic activity continued to dominate the Indian M&A, with 158 deals accounting for an aggregate disclosed deal value of $7.1 billion. This contributed around 65 per cent to the total deal volume and about 72 per cent to the total disclosed deal value.
While consolidation remained the primary deals driver, financial deleveraging, faster pace of insolvency proceedings and opportunistic buys by the big industry players also added to the push.
The report further noted that while inbound deal value increased by 21 per cent, outbound deal value declined by 53 per cent on a year-on-year basis.
The US continued to be the most active cross-border M&A partner for Indian companies during the quarter, with a total of 28 deals (14 inbound and 14 outbound deals) totalling to $840 million. Japan and Germany emerged as other favourite trade partners.
The quarter also witnessed two mega deals (over $1 billion) in the domestic arena. The largest deal was the $3.2 billion merger of Bandhan Bank and Gruh Finance. It was followed by Tata group-led consortium’s $1.2 billion investment in GMR Airports, the report said.
Source: Business-Standard