Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Private equity deals in Asia-Pacific hit new high in 2014

Private equity deals in Asia-Pacific hit new high in 2014

PRIVATE equity deals inked in the Asia-Pacific region hit an all-time high of US$81 billion last year, topping the previous mark of US$77 billion in 2007, according to Bain & Company.
The number of deals grew 14 per cent to 742, and average deal size increased to US$110 million, from US$77 million in 2013.
Temasek Holdings claimed the region's biggest deal with its US$5.7 billion investment in Hong Kong-based beauty retailer AS Watson Group. A Temasek-led consortium also paid US$1.2 billion to buy an additional stake of agribusiness company Olam International in Singapore.
China, Asia-Pacific's largest market, roared back to life in 2014 after a hiatus in 2013 as deal value reached US$41 billion, a 33 per cent jump from the market's previous peak in 2011.
Six mega-deals in China, larger than US$1 billion, accounted for most of the investment growth. The number of transactions also rose 30 per cent from China's five-year average to 350. Exit value, bolstered by Alibaba's US$25 billion IPO, surged to US$61 billion, more than triple 2013's value.
Singapore-led activity, producing two mega-deals worth US$2.3 billion, helped push South-east Asia's overall investment value to US$5.9 billion, slightly better than 2013, but still 7 per cent below the five-year average.

US: Stocks dip on earnings caution

US: Stocks dip on earnings caution

[NEW YORK] US stocks finished modestly lower on Tuesday as cautious sentiment about earnings season offset major deals involving FedEx and Informatica.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average dipped 5.43 points (0.03 per cent) to 17,875.42.
The broad-based S&P 500 dropped 4.29 (0.21 per cent) to 2,076.33, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index shed 7.08 (0.14 per cent) at 4,910.23.
Delivery service company FedEx rose 2.7 per cent as it announced it would buy Dutch rival TNT Express for 4.4 billion euros (S$6.5 billion).
Tech company Informatica surged 4.3 per cent after it announced it would be acquired by a company controlled by private-equity firm Permira and the Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board for about US$5.3 billion.
But investors are edgy ahead of what is expected to be a tepid earnings season. On Wednesday, after the market closes, Alcoa will be the first major company to report.
AFP

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