| by James
Politi and David Wells
Reprinted with special permission of the Financial
Times
Arnold Schwarzenegger, governor of California and
Hollywood film star, loves Humvees, the wide-bodied
military vehicles made famous in the Gulf war. But
he does not love them as much as Jimmy Elliot, head
of JP Morgan Chase's North American mergers and acquisitions
business.
Earlier this month, Mr. Elliot's bankers helped
two private equity specialists on the sale of AM General,
the Humvees' manufacturer, and, with General Motors,
the builder of the smaller Hummer H2 - the commercial
version favoured by hip-hop impresarios such as Wyclef
Jean, whose own car sports a shark tank.
Renco Group, JP Morgan Chase's client, and MacAndrews
and Forbes formed a joint venture that values AM General
at $935 million. That is a pittance compared with
the takeover by Sanofi-Synthelabo, the French pharmaceutical
giant, of Aventis, which cost $70.7 billion. But these
days Wall Street's fancies are as often taken by smaller
transactions - known in the jargon as "middle-market"
deals - as by multi-billion dollar assignments.
Investment bankers lust for the bragging rights of
a big deal. But their wallets are not so large that
they cannot find room for a smaller transaction. Merrill
Lynch, JP Morgan Chase, Citigroup, Credit Suisse First
Boston and others are all investing heavily in efforts
to target mid-sized businesses - hiring extra staff
or reorganising their operations.
The reason is simple: in a world where several banks
share the credit for large deals, who would not love
a $5 million fee for being the sole adviser on a $400
million transaction, especially when there are scores
of such opportunities? Wall Street has long known
that, in any normal year, about half of the fees generated
by investment bankers come from the shallow end. But
during the abnormal bull market years of the late
1990s, when megamergers and initial public offerings
were two-a-penny, the largest investment banks shed
their ties with smaller US companies.
Times have changed, however. These days, the majority
of fees are coming from smaller transactions. In 2003,
61 percent, or $5.6 billion of all advisory fees for
mergers and acquisitions around the world came from
deals worth $1 billion or less, according to Dealogic,
a UK-established company which tracks such figures.
That was a record, and it caught the attention of
many key bankers. As Mr. Elliot says: "Transactions
between $200 million and $1 billion are the most profitable
from a margin point of view. "This is because
you potentially have the opportunity to be sole adviser
and you will be dealing in situations where incentive
fees will allow you to make more money than otherwise."
Although Dealogic's analysis excludes transactions
with undisclosed sums, bankers across Wall Street
see the number as significant when compared with figures
from the previous five years, when the proportion
of small deals compared with overall merger and acquisition
volumes ranged from 45 percent to 54 percent.As well
as the opportunity for exclusivity on a small deal,
there are several other reasons for the surge in interest
from Wall Street's bankers. One is that the three-year
bear market in equities meant deal sizes often drifted
down into the middle market category. Also, investment
bankers had to expand their client base because large
companies, threatened by Sarbanes-Oxley and other
issues, were refraining from making purchases and
raising money. Another factor has been the recent
frenzy of buying and selling of assets by US private
equity houses.
According to M&A market analysis - compiled by
Robert W. Baird, a Milwaukee-based investment bank
- the volume of middle market deals involving these
specialist financiers has more than doubled from $30
billion in the first half of 2003 to $63.5 billion
in the first half of this year. Whether the trend
of big investment banks courting small companies continues
is anybody's guess. Wall Street tends to be fickle
about wooing small companies, which often have better
relationships
with smaller banks - such as Wachovia or Wells Fargo
- or boutique
investment banks founded by castaways from the New
York giants.
Many small businesses bristle at the idea of a leading
investment bank
showing up on the doorstep, cap in hand. But several,
impressed by the
attention of powerful banks, are giving them a chance.
And even though
the US economy has tepid signs of recovery and larger
mergers have
splashed across the front pages of newspapers this
year, Wall Street
has not given any outward indication that it is about
to abandon its
new strategy to pursue middle market business.
Over the past year, Merrill Lynch has made an effort
to build on the
strong relationships it has with small companies through
its brokerage
and commercial lending businesses. It wants to leverage
its well-known
brand with smaller businesses around the world.
While Merrill Lynch has been an adviser on seven
of the year's 10
largest announced transactions including Sanofi-Aventis,
Greg Fleming,
Merrill's co-head of global investment banking, says
he needs smaller
clients to diversify his revenue sources and sustain
his department
when the larger deals disappear. Besides, he says,
the small companies
often grow into Fortune 100 or 500 companies.
"In every major developed economy - including
the US, Germany and
Japan - there is a significant number of middle market
companies,"
says Mr. Fleming. "We think it's an attractive
segment in and of
itself and also a feeder for large companies later."
But even while
they are still small growing companies, they need
a fair amount of
financing, whether high-yield debt, structured products,
or even an
IPO, says Mr. Fleming. They also need help with mergers
and
acquisitions.
The reason that investment banks are likely to remain
committed to the
middle market sector is that they have a better shot
at being a
client's sole adviser - which carries the greatest
remuneration.
With large deals, there are so many others involved
in the process.
Take Sanofi-Aventis. Seven banks acted as advisers
on the transaction
and there were lawyers as well. In addition, while
bankers are more
tempted to cut fees on large deals to earn league
table credit - a
ranking system that is a key marketing tool for Wall
Street - there
are fewer reasons to do so on small deals.
But bankers are loath to say that the middle market
is a less
competitive environment. Marc Granetz, global head
of Credit Suisse
First Boston's M&A business - which has been the
top global fee earner
for deals smaller than $1 billion since January 2003,
according to
Dealogic - says: "Along with the large investment
banks, regional
banks and boutiques are competing in the same space.
Also, clients are
no less demanding than in large transactions: they
care a lot about
these deals. Often management has a lot invested in
the company."
Moreover, the private equity houses do not necessarily
fit the
traditional model of relatively un-savvy consumers
of banking services
that have been such a fertile ground for investment
bankers hungry for
more fees.
"Private equity groups are very sophisticated
consumers of investment
banking services and they don't tend to pay especially
lucrative
advisory fees if we are providing financing,"
says Mr. Granetz. Not
all the Wall Street banks are enthusiastic about the
middle market
sector. Morgan Stanley, for instance, has resisted
the temptation to
establish a broad middle market capability, preferring
instead to
pursue small companies in selective high-growth sectors
such as
bio-technology.
But the enthusiasts are - in spite of the skeptics
and the
sophisticated clientele - busily building their business.
Citigroup,
which is vigorously expanding its efforts to work
with smaller
companies, admits that the strategy works best when
helping the seller
rather than the buyer. Frank Yeary, co-head of global
mergers and
acquisitions at Citigroup, says: "The middle
market offers a great
opportunity, especially for sell-sides, where we often
find clients
receptive to incentive fee arrangements.
"Meanwhile, financial services companies with
links to smaller
businesses, such as lending arrangements or brokerage
accounts, are
looking to find creative new ways to tap those contracts
for more
business.
Merrill's Mr. Fleming is tapping into relationships
developed by the
company's army of brokers and Merrill Lynch Capital
Partners, a
lending arm: "They have relationships with CEOs
and chief financial
officers which they have developed in their community,
are often
helpful in introducing people, and are one of the
reasons we can
differentiate ourselves." With this leg-up, Mr.
Fleming is targeting
companies that raise money by selling high-yield debt.
His goal is to
push Merrill up the league tables.
Likewise, JP Morgan Chase, which also has strong
ties with smaller
companies because it lends them money, is focusing
on the middle
market business - and with some success. On the same
day that the AM
General transaction was announced it also advised
Paint Sundry Brands,
a manufacturer of paint brushes and rollers that is
in the portfolio
of Lindsay Goldberg & Bessemer, a private equity
firm.
Sherwin-Williams, a paint-maker, agreed to pay $300
million for Paint
Sundry. The bank won the business in part because
of a long-standing
lending relationship.
For JP Morgan and others, using their other businesses
will be one way
of differentiating themselves. In a market that is
quickly getting
crowded, this will be critical if they want to sign
another
Humvee-style humdinger of a deal.
(c) The Financial Times
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