FT: US dealmaking hits $243bn monthly record


US dealmaking hits $243bn monthly record

US dealmaking hit an all-time monthly record in May, surpassing the previous highs seen during the peak of the dotcom bubble and the zenith of the debt boom that led to the 2008 financial crisis.
The overall value of deals in US-bound mergers and acquisitions activity amounted to $243bn in May compared to $226bn during the same month in 2007 and $213bn in January 2000, the previous biggest and second biggest months respectively, according to

The data underline how frenzied US dealmaking has become as cheap debt and bullish boardrooms fuel an M&A boom of a size not seen since just before the last two equity market crashes.
The main drivers were mega-transactions such as Charter’s three-way $90bn acquisition of cable companies Time Warner Cable and Bright House and Avago’s $37bn deal to acquire Broadcom, the largest tech deal since the dotcom boom.
Bankers and lawyers said they expected 2015 to be a record year with chief executives under pressure to expand their businesses and deals constituting the fastest and easiest way to achieve that growth.
Chris Ventresca, global co-head of M&A at JPMorgan, said equity markets were rewarding deal-driven expansion at a time when organic growth remained subdued. However, prices have been rising sharply as the acquisition spree has accelerated.
“As premiums for deals go up, companies will come under increasing scrutiny and will have to defend the synergies and rationale of deals,” he said.
The M&A boom has come amid a borrowing binge by US companies, as treasurers lock in cheap, longer-term funding ahead of an expected interest rate rise by the Federal Reserve. Economists believe the US central bank will start tightening monetary policy in September, a move likely to rattle markets that have become accustomed to low interest rates.
Average company bond yields have halved since 2007 to about 3 per cent in the US, and there has been more than $100bn of corporate bond issuance every month for the past four months — the longest ever streak of issuance above that mark. Bank of America Merrill Lynch predicts that June will become the fifth month in a row.
“Issuers should realise that the window to lock in low long-term yields for any purpose is closing,” Hans Mikkelsen, a senior strategist at BofA, wrote in a recent note.

Acquisitions have been mostly financed by shares, ample cash reserves and bond markets, but some of the pre-financial crisis debt structures have also staged a comeback.
Global issuance of collateralised loan obligations — or CLOs, bundles of loans made to poorly-rated companies that are sold off in slices to investors — almost doubled last year to $99.3bn, according to Dealogic. Although below the heydays of 2006-07, the market’s renaissance has helped lubricate the resurgent M&A boom.
The Fed’s plans to increase interest rates could dent the plans of corporate dealmakers, however, and hurt some of the riskier companies laden with buyout debt. Standard & Poor’s predicted that its gauge of defaults for lowly-rated companies will rise from 1.8 per cent in March this year to 2.8 per cent by March 2016.
Nonetheless, most analysts and money managers expect the frenzy to continue, given the pent-up demand for fixed-income investments, even when monetary policy tightens. “Short-term rates should rise, but long-term yields are likely to be more anchored over the next one to two years,” said Russ Koesterich, chief investment strategist at BlackRock.

>>> US After Hours Summary: HTGM +4.2%, PVH +4.0%, QUNR +1.1% followin

After Hours Summary: HTGM +4.2%, PVH +4.0%, QUNR +1.1% following earnings/guidance

After Hours Gainers:

Companies trading higher in after hours in reaction to earnings: HTGM
+4.2%, PVH +4.0%, QUNR +1.1%

Companies trading higher in after hours in reaction to news: DRNA +8.2% (presented preliminary safety and efficacy data from DCR-MYC Phase 1 study in patients with advanced solid tumors at ASCO: Evidence of clinical anti-tumor activity seen in two patients with advanced pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors), HTGC +7.2% (announced that Robert Lake has joined the Co as chief credit officer), HTGM +4.2% (co and MD Anderson Cancer Center entered into a sponsored research agreement to investigate new molecular diagnostics for lung cancer), MDVN +0.5% (announced data from a Phase 2 study of enzalutamide for the treatment of triple-negative breast cancer were presented at ASCO; clinical benefit rate at 16 weeks was achieved in 35% of evaluable patients)

After Hours Losers:

Companies trading lower in after hours in reaction to news: RGLS -9.3% (Kleanthis G. Xanthopoulos to step down as President and CEO; Paul Grint appointed President and CEO), TUBE -8.9% (filed for $75 mln offering of common stock), QUNR -6.5% (filed for offering of American Depositary Shares, each representing three Class B ordinary shares), QTS -4.6% (announced public offering of 5.5 mln shares of common stock by it an a selling shareholder), CG -4.3% (announced an offering of 7 mln common units), HERO -3.5% (announced rate reductions for Hercules 261, Hercules 262 and Hercules 266 contracts), FGP -3.3% (co has commenced an underwritten public offering of 6.325 mln common units; also announced its operating subsidiary will offer $400 mln in aggregate principal amount of senior unsecured notes due 2023), BXMT -2.3% (to commence a public offering of 10 mln shares of Class A common stock), AER -2.2% (announced launch of an underwritten secondary offering by AIG of 50 mln ordinary shares; co to repurchase $750 mln of the shares being sold by AIG), ODFL -2.1% (co updated its expectations for year-over-year growth in less-than-truckload revenue per hundredweight, excluding fuel surcharges, for its second quarter of 2015 to a range of 5.0% to 5.5% from the previously disclosed range of 5.5% to 6.5%),  

>>> US Close Dow+0.16% S&P+0,21% Nasdaq+0.2% Russell+0.25%


Closing Market Summary: Stocks Inch Higher on Light Volume


The stock market began June on a modestly higher note with the S&P 500 adding 0.2%.

Index futures spiked just before 7:00 ET, reacting to chatter that a deal between Greece and its creditors will be announced today. That rumor was struck down within 15 minutes of making the rounds, but equity futures did not retrace that morning spike until the cash market opened for action.

The major averages returned to their flat lines once the cash session began, but persistent relative strength among influential groups like health care (+0.4%), technology (+0.3%), consumer discretionary (+0.3%), and industrials (+0.4%) helped the market climb to a fresh high during the afternoon. However, it is worth noting that the Monday advance occurred amid light volume with just 665 million shares changing hands at the NYSE floor. As for Greece, the country is expected to be presented with a final proposal prepared by leaders from France, Germany, and the EU.

Eight sectors registered gains with industrials (+0.4%) ending atop the leaderboard thanks to a rebound in transport stocks. The Dow Jones Transportation Average rallied 1.1% with airlines pacing the move after the Chief Executive Officer of Southwest Airlines (LUV 37.85, +0.88) said the company plans to limit its seat capacity growth. Shares of LUV gained 2.4% while the Dow Jones Transportation Average narrowed its Q2 decline to 4.0%.

Elsewhere among cyclical sectors, consumer discretionary (+0.3%) and technology (+0.3%) also displayed relative strength with M&A activity underpinning the tech sector. Specifically, Altera (ALTR 51.68, +2.83) spiked 5.8% after agreeing to be acquired by Intel (INTC 33.90, -0.55) for $54/share in an all-cash transaction valued at $16.70 billion.

Overall, four of six cyclical sectors ended in-line with or ahead of the S&P 500 while energy (-0.2%) and materials (unch) struggled to keep pace. The energy sector was pressured in the early going by weakness in crude, but the sector narrowed its loss as the energy component also recovered its intraday decline, settling at $60.24/bbl.

Moving to the countercyclical side, consumer staples (unch) and telecom services (-0.5%) lagged throughout the session while health care (+0.4%) and utilities (+0.2%) registered gains. The health care sector finished among the leaders even as biotechnology spent the day among the laggards. The iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology ETF (IBB 364.81, -0.22) shed 0.1%.

Treasuries spent the day in a steady decline, sending the 10-yr yield higher by five basis points to 2.18%.

Economic data included Personal Income/Spending data, Core PCE Prices, Construction Spending, and the ISM Index:
  • Personal income increased 0.4% in April after being flat in March while the Consensus expected an increase of 0.3% 
    • According to the wage data from the April employment report, aggregate earnings increased roughly 0.3%, which translated into a 0.2% increase in total employee compensation 
    • Personal spending was flat in April after increasing an upwardly revised 0.5% (from 0.4%) in March while the consensus expected an increase of 0.2% 
    • Core PCE prices rose 0.1% while the consensus expected a reading of 0.2% 
  • Construction spending increased 2.2% in April after increasing an upwardly revised 0.5% (from -0.6%) in March while the consensus expected an increase of 0.8% 
    • That was the largest monthly increase in construction spending since a similar gain in May 2012 
  • The ISM Manufacturing Index increased to 52.8 in May from 51.5 in April while the consensus expected an increase to 51.9 
    • Despite poor regional manufacturing reports, the national index showed a fairly well rounded acceleration in manufacturing activities 
Tomorrow, the Factory Orders report for April (consensus 0.0%) will be released at 10:00 ET.
  • Nasdaq Composite +7.3% YTD 
  • Russell 2000 +3.8% YTD 
  • S&P 500 +2.6% YTD 
  • Dow Jones Industrial Average +1.2% YTD

>>>> US industrial deals May roundup

US industrial deals May roundup

This is a roundup of US deals in May where an industrials company was involved either as a seller or a buyer and completion is pending, according to Mergermarket data. The date given is the last update published by this news service.

BAE Systems (19/05/2015)

BAE Systems (LON:BA) received first-round bids for its US businesses, according to a report by this news service. The segments will likely be valued at 8x to 9x EBITDA and are mostly being looked at by private equity firms.

TerraTherm (15/05/2015)

TerraTherm, a Massachusetts-based provider of thermal remediation services, has mandated Houlihan Lokey for a sale process., according to a report by this news service. The company, backed by venture capital groups Bison Capital and MassVentures, is said to have EBITDA of less than USD 50m.

ENTACT (15/05/2015)

ENTACT, the TGF Management and Austin Ventures-backed provider of field remediation and geotechnical construction services, is in a sale process with William Blair advising, according to a report by this news service. The company has around USD 30m in EBITDA and is likeliest to appeal to private equity suitors.

Arizona Chemical (15/05/2015)

Arizona Chemical, held by American Securities, has launched its sale process with Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse co-advising, according to a report by this news service. Reuters initially reported in December that the company was exploring a sale and could be valued at more than USD 1.5bn. Books have been sent to both financial and strategic suitors.

Osmose Holdings (11/05/2015)

Osmose Holdings, the utility services group held by Oaktree Capital, is in a sale process with Harris Williams, according to a report by this news service. The company has around USD 60m in EBITDA.

Frequency Electronics (08/05/2015)

Frequency Electronics (NASDAQ:FEIM) has drawn interest from Mercury Systems (NASDAQ:MRCY) in its sale process with SunTrust that launched in March, according to a report by this news service.

TruckPro (08/05/2015)

TruckPro, the distributor of heavy-duty truck parts owned by Harvest Partners, has mandated Robert W. Baird and Barclays to explore a sale, according to a report by this news service. The company has around USD 50m in EBITDA and could fetch 7x EBITDA in the event of a sale. While mostly financial suitors will be drawn to the company, it could appeal to a large strategic player like LKQ (NASDAQ:LKQ).

Centor (08/05/2015)

Centor, a manufacturer of pill bottles, hired Morgan Stanley for a sale process slated to launch at the end of the month, according to a report by this news service. The company has around USD 60m in EBITDA.

Furmanite (07/05/2015)

Furmanite Corporation (NYSE:FRM) has retained Lazard as financial adviser to evaluate a nonbinding letter of interest from an unidentified potential acquirer, according to a press release.

Truck-Lite (07/05/2015)

Truck-Lite, a truck signals manufacturer co-owned by Penske and Kelso & Company, has retained RW Baird to explore a sale, according to a report by this news service. A sale could value the company, which has about USD 70m in EBITDA, at around USD 600m.

HydroChem (01/05/2015)

HydroChem, owned by Centerbridge Partners, has collected first-round bids in its sale process, which launched last month. Management presentations are expected to be held over the next few weeks for the company, which is reportedly working with Houlihan Lokey and Harris Williams on the effort and has around USD 70m in EBITDA.

>>> SocGen Lists Likely European M&A Targets

SocGen Lists Likely European M&A Targets

SocGen analysts led by Fabrice Theveneau list European sectors w/ likely M&A activity involving public cos. Following list highlights deals with at least 50% probability.
  • Beverage sector: AB InBev/SABMiller
  • Software & IT services: Dassault Systems/Aveva; Accenture/Altran Tech
  • Healthcare: Sanofi/Regeneron, Siemens or GE/EOS Imaging
  • Oil Services: Boskalis/Fugro, Siem Industries/Subsea; Rosneft/Seadrill, Bourbon/Jaccar
  • Financials: Euronext/BME
  • Real Estate: Hammerson/Eurocommercial
  • Chemicals: Monsanto/Syngenta

FT : US dealmaking hits $243bn monthly record

US dealmaking hits $243bn monthly record

A Time Warner Cable logo outside the company's offices in Columbus, Ohio,©Bloomberg
US dealmaking hit an all-time monthly record in May, surpassing the previous highs seen during the peak of the dotcom bubble and the zenith of the debt boom that led to the 2008 financial crisis.
The overall value of deals in US-bound mergers and acquisitions activity amounted to $243bn in May compared to $226bn during the same month in 2007 and $213bn in January 2000, the previous biggest and second biggest months respectively, according to Dealogic data.

The data underline how frenzied US dealmaking has become as cheap debt and bullish boardrooms fuel an M&A boom of a size not seen since just before the last two equity market crashes.
The main drivers were mega-transactions such as Charter’s three-way $90bn acquisition of cable companies Time Warner Cable and Bright House and Avago’s $37bn deal to acquire Broadcom, the largest tech deal since the dotcom boom.
Bankers and lawyers said that they expected 2015 to be a record year with chief executives under pressure to expand their businesses and deals constituting the fastest and easiest way to achieve that growth.
Chris Ventresca, global co-head of M&A at JPMorgan, said equity markets were rewarding deal-driven expansion at a time when organic growth remained subdued. However, prices have been rising sharply as the acquisition spree has accelerated.
“As premiums for deals go up, companies will come under increasing scrutiny and will have to defend the synergies and rationale of deals,” he said.
The M&A boom has come amid a borrowing binge by US companies, as treasurers lock in cheap, longer-term funding ahead of an expected interest rate rise by the Federal Reserve. Economists believe the US central bank will start tightening monetary policy in September, a move likely to rattle markets that have become accustomed to low interest rates.
Average company bond yields have halved since 2007 to about 3 per cent in the US, and there has been over $100bn of corporate bond issuance every month for the past four months — the longest ever streak of issuance above that mark. Bank of America Merrill Lynch predicts that June will become the fifth month in a row.
“Issuers should realise that the window to lock in low long-term yields for any purpose is closing,” Hans Mikkelsen, a senior strategist at BAML, wrote in a recent note.
Acquisitions have been mostly financed by shares, ample cash reserves and bond markets, but some of the pre-financial crisis debt structures have also staged a comeback.
Global issuance of collateralised loan obligations — or CLOs, bundles of loans made to poorly-rated companies that are sold off in slices to investors — almost doubled last year to $99.3bn, according to Dealogic. Although below the heydays of 2006-07, the market’s renaissance has helped lubricate the resurgent M&A boom.
The Fed’s plans to increase interest rates could dent the plans of corporate dealmakers, however, and hurt some of the riskier companies laden with buyout debt. Standard & Poor’s predicted that its gauge of defaults for lowly-rated companies will rise from 1.8 per cent in March this year to 2.8 per cent by March 2016.
Nonetheless, most analysts and money managers expect the frenzy to continue, given the pent-up demand for fixed income investments, even when monetary policy tightens. “Short-term rates should rise, but long-term yields are likely to be more anchored over the next one to two years,” said Russ Koesterich, chief investment strategist at BlackRock.

FT : FireEye: Unhappy returns

FireEye: Unhappy returns

Issuing bonds to help bondholders hedge their positions suggests a lack of options for raising funds
 
No tech sector is hotter than cyber security. So why is FireEye, a young Silicon Valley cyber security darling, resorting to an unusual debt structure to shore up its balance sheet? The company is burning through cash quickly, as it spends on marketing (95 per cent of revenues) to fuel growth (sales are more than doubling every year). FireEye’s losses are growing nearly as fast as sales: net losses were equal to revenues last year. That is partly because more than half of revenues are from subscriptions and services; multiyear contracts for which the marketing is done up front.

None of this is unusual in Silicon Valley. What is less common is FireEye’s solution for shoring up its balance sheet: a “happy meal” bond offering. The bond deal, which priced last week, will issue $800m of convertible debt to two investors, possibly hedge funds, at “happy” interest rates of 1 per cent and 1.6 per cent. FireEye will then use $150m of the proceeds to sign a prepaid forward contract with a bank to buy back its own shares in 2020 and 2022. Meanwhile the bank buys the shares on the market (in anticipation of the buyback) and can then lend them on to the bondholders to help them hedge their position (for example via a short sale of the stock.)
The essence of the happy meal is that the company issuing the bonds helps the bondholders to hedge their positions. The happy meal structure has an unhappy reputation — often companies use it because they have no other options. Perhaps lenders were unwilling to lend to them at good rates; perhaps there was too much short interest in the stock already, making it difficult for bondholders to hedge. Either way, the use of such sweeteners is concerning when debt is so cheap. The immediate downside for FireEye is that it will be spending $150m on a prepaid forward share buyback — money that would be better invested in the underlying business. A year ago FireEye was doing the opposite: raising equity through a secondary offering.
FireEye says it is in a growth period and will become profitable by 2018. It will need cash to get there: S&P Capital IQ estimates that the company will post a free cash outflow of $157m this year and $63m next, with only a small inflow in 2017. If it is issuing a happy meal convertible now, what will happen if those outflows turn out to be worse than expected?

(BFW) *MUSK TELLS CNBC CHRYSLER HASN’T ASKED TO MERGE WITH TESLA


BN 06/01 18:40 *ELON MUSK FINISHES INTERVIEW WITH CNBC
BN 06/01 18:40 *MUSK SAYS TELLS CNBC FOCUSED ON MAKING BEST CARS POSSIBLE
BN 06/01 18:39 *MUSK TELLS CNBC SAYS MARCHIONNE `MAY KNOW MORE THAN I DO'
BFW 06/01 18:39 *MUSK TELLS CNBC CHRYSLER HASN’T ASKED TO MERGE WITH TESLA
BN 06/01 18:39 *MUSK: TESLA, SCTY GET `PITTANCE' OF INCENTIVES VS. OIL & GAS
BN 06/01 18:38 *MUSK TELLS CNBC CHRYSLER HASN'T ASKED TO MERGE WITH TESLA
BN 06/01 18:37 *MUSK TELLS CNBC LIKELY WIN AGAINST CAR DEALERS IN MOST PLACES
BN 06/01 18:37 *MUSK DECLINES TO COMMENT TO CNBC ON NEW MODEL PRODUCTION
BN 06/01 18:37 *MUSK TELLS CNBC CAR DEALERSHIP BATTLE `DIFFICULT'
BN 06/01 18:36 *MUSK SAYS MOST CAR CO.'S FIND MAKING ELECTRIC CARS AN ANNOYANCE
BN 06/01 18:34 *MUSK TO CNBC: INCENTIVES WEREN'T CREATED SPECIFICALLY FOR TESLA
BN 06/01 18:33 *MUSK TELLS CNBC ONLY BARGAINED FOR STATE LEVEL INCENTIVES
BN 06/01 18:32 *MUSK TO CNBC: `INCENTIVES' CAUSE GOOD THINGS TO HAPPEN FASTER
BN 06/01 18:31 *MUSK TO CNBC ON INCENTIVES: NOT NECESSARY BUT HELPFUL
BN 06/01 18:30 *MUSK TELLS CNBC GETTING INCENTIVE PACKAGE FROM NEVADA, NOT CASH
BN 06/01 18:30 *MUSK TELLS CNBC: `WE ARE NOT GETTING ANY CHECK FROM NEVADA'
BN 06/01 18:29 *MUSK TELLS CNBC MONEY FROM NEVADA GOV'T SPREAD OVER 20 YEARS
BN 06/01 18:27 *ELON MUSK SPEAKS IN INTERVIEW WITH CNBC
BN 06/01 18:27 *MUSK TELLS CNBC LA TIMES ARTICLE `MISLEADING AND DECEPTIVE'

Musk Tells CNBC That Chrysler Hasn’t Asked to Merge W/ Tesla
2015-06-01 18:46:05.822 GMT


By Libby Sallaberry McGowan
(Bloomberg) -- Tesla CEO Elon Musk tells CNBC focused on
making best cars possible.

* Says Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne “may know more than I do”
* Says “we are not getting any check from Nevada,” says
money fron Nevada spread over 20 years
*
* Only bargained for state-level incentives; says
incentives weren’t created specifically for TSLA
* NOTE: Musk’s comments in response to L.A. Times article
saying Musk cos. collect $4.9b in govt subsidies


For Related News and Information:
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To contact the reporter on this story:
Libby Sallaberry McGowan in New York at +1-212-617-8044 or
lsallaberry@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Brad Skillman at +1-212-617-2763 or
bskillman1@bloomberg.net
Libby Sallaberry McGowan