China clampdown on overseas deals crimps Asia Pacific M&A volumes in 2017

Reuters  |  HONG KONG 

By Kane Wu

(Reuters) - Pacific dealmaking activity slipped in 2017 as outbound transactions nearly halved, led by as increased scrutiny of crossborder and clamped down on some of its most acquisitive - and indebted - conglomerates.

Chinese overseas M&slumped by more than third to $140 billion this year from record last year, data from showed, and investment bankers expect the dealmaking environment to remain cautious in 2018.

The slowdown in new deals, especially large-sized ones, could pressure Asian revenues of banks, who are facing growing competition from Chinese that are beefing up their M&businesses.

Chinese companies have faced lengthy approvals for their outbound deals after tightened capital controls late last year in an effort to stabilize weakening yuan. Sectors such as real estate, sports and media that previously saw heightened activity were hit particularly hard as in them were labelled "irrational".

"People are treading carefully amid capital controls. They don't want to be too flashy," said Samson Lo, of M&at

Overall M&volume in Pacific - involving either target or an acquirer in the region - hit $1.08 trillion in 2017, down 4.3 percent from last year, the data showed. Activity outside was propped up by banner transactions such as French property firm Unibail-Rodamco's $24 billion purchase this month of Australia's Westfield Corp.

It was the third consecutive year that Pacific dealmaking surpassed $1 trillion.

The region's outbound deals, however, plunged 46 percent, hurt by from global dealmaking compared to the record $218 billion the country did last year.

INCREASED SCRUTINY

Some of China's most acquisitive conglomerates, such as and whose recent growth was largely based on overseas purchases, have struggled to roll over the debt that fuelled those buys as lenders focused on overall high debt levels.

HNA, which alone contributed over $36 billion to China's outbound deals in the past two years, announced less than quarter of that amount in new acquisitions this year, data showed.

Overseas regulators also stepped up scrutiny of Chinese buyers this year. U.S. blocked Chinese-backed private equity firm in September from buying U.S.-based chipmaker citing potential national security threats.

This month, turned down HNA Group's $460 million purchase of vehicle firm owned by and Banking Group, citing uncertainty over HNA's ownership structure.

"You (buyer) need to establish high degree of credibility with sellers and provide as much clarity to onshore regulators as those abroad, and clarity on funding and other disclosures," said senior M&with in

Despite these challenges at home and abroad, China's $140 billion outbound volume this year is still its second largest in history, the data showed, as it continued to seek advanced technology and related to its Belt and Road initiative.

"There will be cautious recovery of outbound in 2018 with deals being done at $1 billion-$3 billion," said Lo from UBS, adding he would not rule out $10 billion deals.

retained its position as the region's top M&adviser, with 12.3 percent market share, followed by Group and International Capital Corp, the highest ranking the Beijing-based investment has ever achieved, according to data.

(Reporting by Kane Wu; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

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First Published: Fri, December 29 2017. 12:20 IST