Global leadership is on my mind. Not the extreme stuff. If you can’t avoid the headlines on the excruciating UK Conservative party leadership battle between “Honest Bob” Jenrick and “Jimmy Dimly” Cleverly, I can assure you it’s well worth the effort. Instead, I’m just back from the IMI National Leadership conference and one of the key speaker messages in our uncertain geopolitical world was to watch ‘personalities’ closely. And, believe them. So, rather than jump into geopolitics, this advice can also be applied to business and financial markets too. The return of large merger and acquisition activity (M&A) is a reliable ‘tell’ of executive confidence. These big deals are the real “believe them” leadership actions, not the quarterly analyst conference call types where management commentary is invariably upbeat, and the analysis even worse. So, with excellent timing a number of M&A developments are catching the eye….
Banking: We mentioned in recent weeks an interesting standoff between Unicredito and the German establishment after the Italian bank swooped in to take a 9% stake in Commerzbank. Let’s just say the biggest Commerzbank shareholder, the German government, were not happy. So, imagine the scenes in Berlin’s political corridors last week when Unicredito used derivative instruments to up their beneficial interest in Commerzbank to 21% and overtake the government’s 12% stake as the biggest shareholder in Commerzbank. This is highly unusual cross-border aggressive M&A tactics and suggests high levels of Italian banking confidence. Indeed, another Italian bank, Intesa, in recent days briefly became the most valuable bank in the eurozone. Not long ago the Italian banking system was in a mess as the world’s oldest bank, Monte dei Paschi di Siena, entered near-collapse restructuring in 2022.
Software: All the tech glory has been in hardware in 2024, and software has been feeling the pain. Valuations in SaaS have slipped, pipelines have sputtered and AI has become a deflationary impetus in the coding ecosystem. Uncertainty has bred deal paralysis. So, the sector would have been hugely relieved to see a big private equity buy-out of Smartsheet by Blackstone and Vista for a chunky $8.4 billion, and a 41% premium to its recent share price average. We will return to the significance of private equity doing buy-outs of large public listed companies, but for now let’s focus on high-risk sector consolidation where management teams are already under pressure…
Hardware: Yes, AI has been a winner for chip manufacturing superstars like Nvidia and Broadcom. However, as with all sudden technology shifts, there can be disruption to established players. Intel is a good example of model disruption. The share price is off 50% and the company has adopted a split company strategy across manufacturing(foundry) and chip design(product). As the sole US player with sufficient process/manufacturing technology, Intel has a future but possibly with a partner…..or predator. Apollo Global have been mentioned in the media as private equity financing partners, but recent reports suggest California’s Qualcomm have approached Intel in pursuit of a friendly takeover. That combination would be a $300 billion (+) chip monster supported by US government policy (US Chips & Science Act) and would cause a seismic shake up in the semiconductor manufacturing ecosystem.
Mining: The software sector might feel unloved over the past 18 months, but spare a thought for the mining sector. And, I’m not talking crypto. No, the basic materials critical to our decarbonised electrified future are supplied by a global mining industry which has been starved of investment capital for….. 15 years. That is about to change. Supra-sovereign legislation like the Critical Raw Materials Act (EU) are a siren sound to the frightening mis-match between our cleantech future and the metals needed to meet climate crisis targets. So, watch the ‘leader signals’ as gold and silver prices hit all time highs, and then check out the deal activity. AngloGold is buying Centamin for $2.5 billion while BHP and Lundin are jointly closing a $4 billion purchase of Canadian copper play, Filo. Also, there’s an interesting $2.8 billion green equipment partnership deal between Australian giant, Fortescue, and Swiss construction player, Liebherr. We’d better start believing……in our planetary survival.
UK: Our final M&A development is not a sector specific observation but highlights another unloved area of the investment world. The UK has been in the international investment ‘naughty corner’ thanks to its own historic lack of investment in domestic assets….and a world-first voluntary trade-reduction deal which nobody wants to talk about anymore. So, it was intriguing to read a recent piece of research from stockbroker, Peel Hunt, on UK deal activity. Apparently, there are currently a remarkable 19 ongoing bids for UK companies in the FTSE 350 index. Not all will happen, as Rightmove, Currys and Anglo American have demonstrated. But, the imminent take private deals for the Royal Mail and Hargreaves Lansdowne are a serious ‘tell’. Britain is in play.
The deal environment is definitely picking up. Early private equity research data from Pitchbook shows deal count in Q3 was up 8% and deal value up 20% compared to last year. Also, helpfully, the story on the exit side of things is progressing too – global private equity exits are up 13% in value and 3% in deal count. Now, consider that private equity houses have circa $4 trillion of unspent investment capital (“dry powder”) to deploy and things could get rather interesting in unloved parts of the market. Finally, keep an eye on the Middle East for more than conflagration reasons. Oil prices might be falling but investment in the region is rocketing. The recent FT Mining Summit 2024 featured a whopper statistic that 20% of the world’s cranes are located in just one country…. Saudi Arabia. Oh, and Abu Dhabi’s national oil company just bought Bayer’s plastics spin-off for $16 billion. Yep, plastics. If market personalities are telling you they are beginning to love the unloved, believe them.