In a locked-down world\, investment bankers ensuring the show goes on

In a locked-down world, investment bankers ensuring the show goes on

Billion-dollar deals aplenty for right business

Agencies  |  New Delhi 

business leaders, corporates
Investment bankers feel nothing can match working from office, but some of them have managed to reach ‘work from home’ efficiency of as high as 90-95 per cent of what could have been done if they were working from office.

A US-based cruise operator raised billions of dollars when its end market is virtually shut, at least for a few months, and a Malaysian oil firm did the same irrespective of what is happening to crude prices, while closer home has also got billions from for its Jio Platforms.

Asia’s oldest bourse is also busy helping several and SMEs get listed and also help raise more than Rs 50,000 crore through corporate bonds and commercial papers, and all this is happening when there is a nationwide lockdown and virtually the entire world is also locked down.


feel nothing can match working from office, but some of them have managed to reach ‘work from home’ efficiency of as high as 90-95 per cent of what could have been done if they were working from office.

Raj Balakrishnan, Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s investment banking head in India, said he and his colleagues feel ‘blessed’ to be able to work with a great deal of efficiency even from home during the lockdown, as they fully recognise that there is a broader economy and there are people, including doctors, health workers, police and even journalists, and providing essential services out there and doing a lot of work.

“Fortunately, most large banks and most large companies in India are pretty well equipped to have all their critical functions and departments work from home. All of us have remote access and most records are today stored digitally. And therefore, while it is obviously not the same as working in the office, I guess we in the finance world are lucky that we can work from home and can operate with a great deal of efficiency,” Balakrishnan said.


has managed a number of equity and debt market deals in India in the recent past, including IPO, block deal, share placements and a US debt placement worth $310 million for Adani Transmission.

Globally, it has helped and Carnival Cruises raise funds, among other big deals.

Giving a perspective about the lockdown and its impact on investment banking business globally and in India, Balakrishnan said most of the world is under lockdown right now and China is the only place where people have started coming back to office, but they went into lockdown in January itself and they are getting back after more than three months. “We (in India) have been under lockdown for only one month,” he said.

The veteran investment banker said while markets corrected significantly, most companies across the world went out and drew down their credit lines and improved their liquidity positions.

“But, the rallied quickly around the middle of March. Through the second half of March and April, we had a very strong period for global investment grade bonds. Highly rated companies with investment grade ratings, went out and tapped the and raised liquidity. So, after drawing on revolving credit lines, bond market fundraising happened,” he said.

Similarly, deal activity began in the US and spread to Europe and then to other places. Last week, Bank of America helped —despite the stress in oil prices — successfully raise $6 billion from the bond market. This indicates that for a quality issuer, even for a hard hit sector, a large bond offering even now, Balakrishnan said.

He further said the leveraged finance market has also begun seeing a revival, while companies have started raising equity and doing other equity-linked transactions.

“One major transaction Bank of America did in this space recently is for a US-based cruise company, Carnival Cruises,” he said.

“In India, we have had an excellent run in the last four months. In March, we successfully reopened the Indian equity capital markets by pricing a $300 million block trade in for Aberdeen on a sole basis.

“Also, we helped SBI Cards raise $1.4 billion via an IPO, which was the largest in the last ten years. In February also, we had helped D-Mart raise over $1 billion through a QIP and an OFS route," he said.

Balakrishnan said many companies are right now waiting to declare their results and after that they will look to raise funds through equity or bonds and shore up their capital structure. At the same time, M&A dialogues continue as companies evaluate assets and deals which are of strategic importance.

"Deals which made strategic sense before Covid-19 will do so even after Covid-19 too," he added.

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First Published: Mon, April 27 2020. 23:01 IST