Global
investment banks are scrambling to get a piece of the action from
India’s booming technology start-ups, having missed out on the initial
flurry of deal-making to their better-connected but much smaller
domestic rivals.
Banks
including Goldman Sachs, Citigroup and Morgan Stanley are looking to
hire more bankers in India and are now regularly attending “bake-offs”
to pitch for advisory roles on deals, according to several banking
industry sources.
Foreign
money has been pouring into India’s fast-growing e-commerce sector,
with investors ranging from Japan’s Softbank Corp to Singapore’s Temasek
Holdings and GIC Private Ltd piling in.
Many
large global investment banks have stayed away from work in the
emerging sector though due to the relatively small deal sizes.
Now
they are stepping up efforts to build relationships while the companies
are still young – learning lessons from China where many of them are
struggling to compete with small boutique banks as Internet deals pick
up speed.
“Several
of these companies will be large IPO candidates in the next 12 to 24
months, so the big banks have to start positioning themselves for this,”
said Harish HV, a partner in India at advisory firm Grant Thornton.
The
number of venture funding deals for technology start-ups in India in
the first quarter of 2015 was the highest in nine quarters and exceeded
the number of such deals in China, according to data from CB Insights.
The total value of investments in India topped $1 billion for the third
straight quarter.
LOCAL RIVALS
To
compete with local rivals like Avendus Capital and Kotak Mahindra
Capital, foreign banks are now pitching for relatively small deals at
start-ups, hopeful they will eventually lead to more lucrative work,
banking sources said.
Avendus,
which focused on the tech sector before the deal momentum picked up,
ranks fourth in the advisory league table for announced technology deals
in India so far this year. That’s ahead of bigger global rivals
including Credit Suisse, Bank of America Merrill Lynch and JPMorgan,
according to Thomson Reuters data.
While
Credit Suisse topped the fee income table with $7.7 million in India
technology advisory fees in 2014, Avendus ranked second with $3.7
million from seven deals, according to data from Thomson Reuters/Freeman
Consulting Co.
“We
first looked at the sector and said ‘okay the sector is going to be
sizeable. Who are the leading companies in this?,'” said Aashish Bhinde,
head of Avendus’s digital and technology practice.
“Global investment banks were completely missing from the scene.”
Now
foreign investment banks are starting to make in-roads. Jefferies’
India arm advised home shopping firm Naaptol.com to raise about $20
million last month from Japan’s Mitsui & Co Ltd and some existing
investors.
Citigroup
Inc, which advised Indian online payment services provider One97
Communications in raising funds from Alibaba Group affiliate Ant
Financial Services in February, is “very focused” on the internet space
in India, said Madhur Deora, its managing director for investment
banking in India.
Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs did not respond to requests for comments on their work with Indian technology start-ups.
WESTERN STYLE FEE
While
India has fewer Internet users than China, online sales could rise to
over $100 billion in 2020 from $2.9 billion in 2013, making it the
fastest-growing market globally, according to a Morgan Stanley research
report.
This
has led to global banks vying to offer services like loan financing to
online retailers like Flipkart and Snapdeal, hoping this could help them
secure mandates on any future IPOs, sources said.
“Fees
on these IPOs would be much more Western style than the commoditized
deals in India,” said an M&A banker with a large foreign bank, also
one of the advisers on Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding’s
record $25 billion IPO last year.
For
large IPOs, Indian tech companies would need the marketing muscles of
big foreign banks. But the local banks have likely cemented strong
enough relationships that their foreign rivals can not push them out
entirely.
“I
would be surprised if any investment bank out there is not rapidly
building up their digital and tech practice given the pace and momentum
with which the transactions are happening, which is good for the
industry,” said Bhinde of Avendus.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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