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29 March 2024

ME equity capital markets at $5bn

Published
By Staff

Middle East equity capital markets issuance reached $4 billion during the second quarter of 2012, nearly four times the value seen during the previous quarter, Thomson Reuters said in its 2012 investment banking analysis for the Middle East region.

According to the report, Middle Eastern M&A activity reached $8.5 billion during the second quarter of 2012, an increase of 45 per cent on the previous quarter, and marking the strongest quarter since 1Q 2010.

Russell Haworth, Managing Director, Middle East & North Africa at Thomson Reuters, said: "Investment banking has seen strong activity across Middle Eastern markets during the second quarter of 2012. This is clearly evident by the strong M&A activity during the second quarter which took the total value of M&A to $14.3 billion by the first half of 2012, an increase of 137 per cent over the same period in 2011 when activity totaled $6 billion."

Equity capital markets activity during the first half of 2012 totalled $5 billion, down 40 per cent from the first six months of 2011. The top Middle Eastern ECM transaction was $1.9bn follow-on from Qatari telecoms company Qtel.

Bolstered by this deal, telecoms was the most active sector in the Middle East during the first half of 2012 with 44 per cent, followed by the financials sector with 26 per cent. As sole-lead bookrunner for Qtel's follow-on offering, Qatar National Bank topped the Middle Eastern Equity Capital Markets ranking.

Financials is the most targeted industry in the Middle East M&A activity with $4.3bn or 30 per cent of the activity so far during 2012, followed closely by Telecoms with 29 per cent. Egypt is the most active Middle Eastern country, based on target, with $4.0bn for 28 per cent of first half activity. Credit Suisse topped the Any Middle Eastern Involvement M&A Ranking during the first half of 2012 with $4.78bn, while HSBC took second place with $4.13bn. HSBC topped the Middle Eastern target M&A Ranking, controlling 29 per cent of the market. The largest Middle Eastern targeted deal so far this year was National Bank of Kuwait's $2.1bn offer for Kuwaiti Islamic lender, Boubyan Bank in June.

Middle Eastern debt issuance reached $6 billion during the second quarter of 2012, a 45 per cent decline from the strong first quarter total of $10.9bn. It took first half 2012 activity to $16.9 billion, up 51 per cent on the same period in 2011.

Islamic debt issuance reached $14.5bn from 34 issues, an increase of 25 per cent from the same period in 2011, and the strongest first six month total since 2008. The top Islamic issuer nation during the first half of 2012 is Malaysia with 45 per cent of the activity, while the strongest industry is the financials sector. HSBC took the top spot in the Islamic bond ranking for the first half of 2012 with 10 issues, which raised $1.9bn.

Middle Eastern syndicated lending during the first half of 2012 reached just $186.8m, a 98 per cent decrease from the same period in 2011 ($10.2bn), and the slowest first half in more than a decade. As book runner on Citadel Capital's $175m refinancing loan in January, Citi took the top spot in the Middle Eastern Loan Bookrunner ranking for first half 2012.

Finally, the Middle Eastern investment banking fees reached $234.8m during the first half of 2012, a 5 per cent increase from the first six months of 2011 when fees reached $223.7m. M&A fees totalled $59.6 million during the first half, accounting for 25 per cent of the overall fee pool. M&A fees were down 19 per cent compared to the same period in 2011 ($74 million).

Middle Eastern debt capital markets fee activity during the first half of 2012 totalled $54.9 million, more than double the $25.1 million seen during the first half of 2011. Fees from syndicated lending and equity capital markets totaled $61.3 million and $59 million, respectively.

Deutsche Bank topped the Middle Eastern DCM fee rankings for the first half of 2012, earning 10 per cent of the fees. HSBC topped the Middle Eastern M&A fee rankings with $5.3m, while Qatar National Bank and Saudi British Bank topped the equity capital markets and syndicated lending fee league tables, respectively.