Mergers and acquisitions targeting technology companies have hit a record high in Asia Pacific, Dealogic data shows, and dealmakers expect this M&A pace to continue as the pandemic spurs a shift toward virtual activities in the economy.
HONG KONG: Mergers and acquisitions targeting technology companies have hit a record high in Asia Pacific, Dealogic data shows, and dealmakers expect this M&A pace to continue as the pandemic spurs a shift toward virtual activities in the economy.
Tech M&A has totalled US$136.2 billion in 2020, more than double the year-ago levels, according to data provider Dealogic.
Tech deals accounted for 28per cent of the regions’ overall M&A transactions, which totalled US$482.4 billion as of Wednesday, the highest share in at least a decade, the data shows.
This boom “is a result of technology changing the way our economy works”, said Jung Min, co-head of M&A and Technology, Media and Telecom at Goldman Sachs in Asia (ex-Japan).
“For a consumer, it affects how you shop, pay, eat, move and entertain. For a business, it affects how you recruit top employees, source your supply chain, manufacture and, of course, sell to customers,” he added.
For businesses to ensure they have the required scale to win in this environment, M&A is “transformational”, he said.
Corporate executives are also bullish on the sector, a survey by law firm Baker McKenzie shows.
The survey of 800 senior executives in Asia Pacific shows over three quarters of the respondents predicting tech deals would increase markedly in the next 12 months.
In the survey, conducted in the first quarter and published on Thursday, 92per cent said technology, media and telecoms companies would drive their own deal activity, while 57per cent said they would acquire new technology and associated expertise.
“This signals major consolidation across the tech sector, as fast growth companies snap up rival firms and complementary platforms, and move into new markets,” the report said.
In April, Grab Holdings, the largest ride-hailing and food delivery firm in Southeast Asia, went public in the world’s biggest US$40 billion merger with a special purpose acquisition company.
Grab’s rival Gojek and e-commerce leader Tokopedia have also announced a merger to create a multi-billion dollar tech company in Indonesia’s largest-ever deal.
Mega deals in the pipeline also include a possible take-private of Japan’s Toshiba Corp.
Toshiba has hired UBS to advise on a strategic review, amid calls from shareholders to explicitly seek offers from potential suitors after it dismissed a US$20 billion take-private bid from CVC Capital this year.
(Reporting by Kane Wu; Editing by Himani Sarkar)