Western banks make push into Japanese dealmaking as fee pool hits record

Reuters  |  HONG KONG/SINGAPORE/TOKYO 

By Sumeet Chatterjee, Anshuman Daga and Thomas Wilson

HONG KONG/SINGAPORE/(Reuters) - Western are bulking up in Japan, attracted by record fees and expectations of a rise in dealmaking as cashed-up companies in the world's third-largest economy step up their hunt for overseas targets.

including Credit Suisse, Deutsche and are among those looking to improve their share of a market dominated by local and a handful of entrenched internationals, including Goldman Sachs, and

While used to be bankers' first stop in Asia, its attractions have paled over the past decade compared with its great rival China, which accounts for the biggest share of the Pacific fee pool.

But interest is picking up again in the wake of blockbuster deals including Toshiba's $18 billion sale of its chip business to last year, SoftBank's mooted $18 billion float of its telecoms business, and Fujifilm Holdings' planned $6.1 billion takeover of Xerox Corp.

Bankers and headhunters estimate foreign headcount will rise as much as 15 percent this year in

"People have been somewhat caught by surprise by the level of strategic activity from Japanese companies over the past couple of years," said Richard Gibb, Deutsche Bank's of corporate in Pacific.

Last year, Japanese fees - covering M&A, equity and debt markets deals, and loans - rose 51 percent to a record $5.5 billion, according to data.

"There will continue to be a restructuring of corporate Japan, and on the back of this there will likely be both substantial acquisitions and divestitures," said Gibb.

Fees from Japanese work constitute the second-largest pool of revenues in While the $2.5 billion earned from M&A and equity deals last year may look small compared with $5.3 billion paid by Chinese companies, bankers say is still one of the most lucrative markets.

"Compared to domestic deals, fee levels for outbound deals have been relatively high and will likely expand along with deal size," said Koichiro Doi, of M&A at JPMorgan.

Fees for Japanese IPOs can reach 4 percent of the total raised versus at best an average of about 2 percent in Hong Kong. Japanese M&A deals can also offer fees of 2 percent - much higher than in and Southeast Asia, according to bankers.

"A shrinking domestic market stemming from a declining population has created a sense of urgency to pursue outbound acquisitions to capture new markets, new products as well as access to innovation," Doi said.

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Japan's fee ranking is dominated by local houses such as Mizuho, Nomura and (MUFG), but they have been losing market share to foreign rivals.

MUFG operates a joint venture with Morgan Stanley, allowing it to combine its sizeable domestic lending book with the Wall Street bank's global reach.

MUFG's share of fee pool dropped from 13.5 percent in 2008 to 8 percent last year, while Nomura saw a decline of five percentage points to 11 percent last year, the data showed.

The share of top five foreign in the total fee league table, meanwhile, has rise from 17 percent in 2008 to 19 percent last year, led by Morgan Stanley, Goldman and of America Merrill Lynch.

International are focusing on the rising number of cross-border deals and private equity transactions, both of which tend to offer more opportunity for foreign involvement.

"PE funds, particularly large global funds, have been quite active in the market in recent years," said Koichi Ito, Credit Suisse's of and capital markets. "They are now increasingly focused on not only buying companies but also on exiting their investments through a sale or IPO."

Deutsche recently hired a of financial sponsors coverage in and is looking to bring on board a new for covering financial institutions - Japanese and insurers are particularly active overseas.

Tim Eustace, a headhunter at Next Step in Tokyo, said more senior hiring was going on.

"Some European are very interested in rebuilding their financial sponsor coverage area, and they would be looking to hire at the senior associate to junior "

are also encouraged by signs that traditional Japanese companies are now more willing to break with "keiretsu" networks - where groups of businesses share close ties including and advisers.

In a rare move, Takeda Pharmaceutical's $5.2 billion acquisition of U.

S.-based did not involve any Japanese on the advisory side. The work instead went to Evercore Partners, JPMorgan, Goldman, and

Foreign also prize the ability to build relationships with Japanese clients.

"It's not easy to break into a Japanese company if you are a foreign entity, but once you have done that - after attending quite a few - they are very loyal and they reward quality advice, which is not common in this region," said the of regional at an European

(Reporting by in Hong Kong, Anshuman Daga in Singapore and Thomas Wilson in Tokyo; Editing by and Lincoln Feast)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, February 02 2018. 05:48 IST