Editor’s Note: Since the onset of the global credit crisis last fall, the five biggest mergers and acquisitions involving Chinese banks lost nearly half or more of their value.
x0 z; N, A+ a- f7 c" r# } Part of the reason is that financial services companies around the globe are struggling in the global financial crisis. But the challenges of realizing value from major cross-border M&A deals are also very real.
3 ]: L! { l2 V1 w* q8 C i+ I Johnson Chng and Philip Leung have developed extensive knowledge about banks and cross-border M&A deals. Johnson Chng is a partner in the Beijing office of Bain & Co, where he leads the firm’s financial services practice for Greater China. Philip Leung is a Bain partner based in Shanghai, where he leads the firm’s M&A practice for Greater China.
% U e+ H5 w% n8 C7 f A) u As economic turbulence continues to roil banks, insurers and asset managers across North America, Europe and Asia, Chinese banks face an extraordinary opportunity - and risky new challenges.
1 v, d( J# l" A Troubled international financial services companies looking to raise capital are selling attractive assets at bargain prices. Increasingly, those potential buyers are Chinese banks that want to expand.
4 q9 ]3 [8 M6 I d5 D7 x# X Chinese banks are well positioned to move on to the world stage. The balance sheets of China’s biggest State-owned and joint stock banks remain healthy, with cash and reserves exceeding standards set by international and domestic regulators.! Z* g6 y/ S7 P% r5 ~
As relatively new cross-border acquirers, however, they are beginning to step into traps that await novice offshore acquirers.
; @% u) H7 D. Z6 O8 r% [/ Z Since the onset of the global credit crisis last fall, the five biggest mergers and acquisitions involving Chinese banks lost nearly half or more of their value, partly due to fallout from the global meltdown.0 y- i* R, v# s* } k V+ N
Unforeseen economic reversals and the need to win the approval of skeptical regulators raise further challenges.
) B$ h( b8 d# n Still, the forces propelling Chinese banks’ offshore expansion are compelling.
% i9 ]0 d0 O- ?% y3 q* G The most urgent reason for banks to enlarge their transnational footprint is to serve the fast-expanding needs of their increasingly globalized corporate customers.
( I8 H+ ~+ W g, F Outbound direct investment by Chinese multinationals increased thirtyfold to $67 billion in 2008, and will likely approach $100 billion by 2012.& W4 t- }: a6 a" G6 V6 A5 F0 O
Expanding trade exerts another strong pull to move offshore. Export-import transactions increased by 23 percent annually over the past five years to nearly $3 trillion through 2008.
- I7 ^* s: V6 J2 ~) B/ j Global Chinese manufacturers and exporters are looking for banks to serve basic needs like trade settlement, foreign exchange guarantees and cash management that they are ill-equipped to provide today.0 U' k- ~$ L: c0 l
Foreign-based banks are making deep inroads serving Chinese corporations, and domestic banks will need to acquire the higher-value capabilities to become globally competitive over the long term.- q' ^; l9 X3 a. K
As trade continues to expand, demand for more sophisticated products and services - from financing far-flung supply chains, supplying working capital, and buying receivables - will increase on the domestic and international side./ y6 a9 b' G7 ]9 F4 J) B
Banks that focus on these three key issues face better odds of success in offshore M&A:
( Z, L W( V8 @8 \ First, develop a compelling investment thesis. The starting point for any bank’s outbound journey is to match their access to potential target markets with their strategic priorities for serving customers or building key capabilities.
3 {8 X+ @1 T- Y' @" h. z T Attractive markets are new regions where its key customer segments are expanding their presence either through direct investment or trade flows, enabling the bank to strengthen key capabilities or add new ones.! @9 V0 o0 j5 d0 E
What form expansion into a target market should take - a single big acquisition, a series of smaller takeovers or gradually building a presence through organic growth - is a second critical aspect of the investment thesis.# p5 \7 \6 m. p8 W+ D
The right approach results from the interplay between local market conditions and the bank’s strategic objectives.) }, i5 e) {# e% F1 C5 S! T& v
Bain’s analysis of deals completed to date shows that the rationale behind most Chinese offshore acquisitions has been to increase the scope of their businesses by adding new product lines or picking up new capabilities. |