The truth about Asian investment banking
China’s $1.7 trillion hangover

China’s $1.7 trillion hangover

Up to 40% of China’s $1.7 trillion LGFV loans are at high risk of default. What’s a panicking Beijing to do?

December 2009

M&A: Stock offerings will fund 2010 M&A boom

by Dawn Cowie

Leverage concerns suppress loan, bond options; Well-capitalized firms will have pick of best targets


One of the few points of consensus about the 2010 outlook among European investors is that organic growth opportunities will be thin on the ground. Most fund managers, it seems, would prefer to back a well-known management team with a clear acquisition strategy.

"If a management team has successfully executed a buy-and-build strategy, it may be possible to get blind funding for acquisitions but there is not a lot of trust out there"

Rupert Mitchell, Jefferies International

"There was a definite shift in investor appetite towards growth financing in the US at the tail end of May. European investors have also become more willing to look at riskier areas of the market to find growth in the past couple of months," says Rupert Mitchell, head of equity capital markets at Jefferies International. "However, many businesses are going to be heavily dependent on small bolt-on acquisitions to drive inorganic growth next year."


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