Bumper City bonuses expected from takeover frenzy
after pound hits record low
UK firms now temptingly cheaper, with a ‘wave of bids’
from overseas buyers meaning payouts for bankers
Alex Lawson
Tue 27 Sep
2022 06.00 BST
Bankers
could rake in bumper bonuses from a “wave of bids” by overseas buyers for UK
businesses made temptingly cheaper as a result of the plunge in the pound
against the dollar. A fresh frenzy of merger and acquisition activity would
mean a ramp-up in payouts for City dealmakers.
Sterling
fell by nearly 5% at one point on Monday to $1.0327, its lowest since Britain
went decimal in 1971. The currency has fallen by more than a fifth against the
dollar this year.
Richard
Bernstein, the founder of the asset management firm Crystal Amber, said: “We
can expect to see a wave of bids from overseas buyers for UK businesses. Their
profits obviously won’t be worth as much in dollars, so asset-backed situations
and brands are most valuable.”
In
February, British bankers collected some of the biggest bonuses since before
the 2008 financial crisis partly on the back of a cascade of takeovers from
private equity firms and US corporate buyers triggered by the value of UK
stocks plummeting because of Covid lockdowns.
Banks’
advisory fees were expected to have taken a knock this year after Russia’s
invasion of Ukraine shook financial markets, notably denting confidence in
stock market listings. However, Liz Truss’s decision to remove the cap on
bonuses and the anticipated increase in takeover activity could provide a
fillip for British bankers.
Bernstein
said: “If the deals emerge, bankers could see much bigger bonuses, which feels hard
to justify right now, when so many people are suffering from the cost of living
crisis.”
The hedge
fund tycoon Crispin Odey said the pound’s fall “obviously” increased the
likelihood of takeovers. “We’re in the game where [the value of] assets remains
up there, even if in real terms they’re going down,” he added.
Odey said
the performance of UK stock markets relative to those in the US, where the
tech-focused Nasdaq has slumped this year, showed British firms had retained
their value.
City
sources said consumer brands exposed to the impact of rising import costs and
interest rates, as well the cost of living crisis, could be particularly
vulnerable to a takeover. “Brands like Halfords, which has seen its share price
fall from 350p to 145p this year, or Ocado, which has also seen a big slump
since its highs last year and has long been rumoured as a target for Amazon,
look like prime candidates,” said one fund manager.
City
advisers may also be hired from companies looking to shore up their defences
against a hostile takeover from an overseas buyer. Robey Warshaw, the boutique
advisory firm that employs the former chancellor George Osborne, has landed
several such mandates over the last year, including from BT and Sainsbury’s.
Both
established British brands have overseas tycoons on their share register who
some view as unpredictable: the French billionaire Patrick Drahi has become the
majority shareholder in BT, while the Czech investor Daniel Křetínský holds
stock in Sainsbury’s.
“There’s
now a strong case for a government wealth fund to acquire holdings in UK businesses
at cheap prices at these depressed levels and then be prepared to bank profits
for the UK taxpayer in the coming years,” Bernstein added.
However,
buyers may be deterred by the National Security and Investment Act 2021, which
came into force this year and is designed to closely scrutinise and intervene
in foreign takeovers of key UK assets.
Peel Hunt
analysts said takeover activity had cooled in August from its peak in June, but
that “demand from overseas bidders has remained firm”.
Nearly half
the new offers for listed companies were in the technology sector, including
the Canadian company Open Tech Corporation’s £1.8bn deal for the UK software
firm Micro Focus International and the US private equity firm Thomas Bravo’s
early-stage talks to buy cybersecurity specialist Darktrace.
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