Impact of the Russia-Ukraine conflict on M&A activity

 | Aug 12, 2022 12:31

With economies across the globe still struggling to recover from the effects of the pandemic, the Russia-Ukraine conflict has dealt another blow. The leading economic powers – the EU, the US, the UK, Canada, Switzerland, Japan, Australia and Taiwan – have imposed strong sanctions as a result. The US has banned imports of oil, LNG and coal from Russia, and banned new US investments in Russia’s energy sector. The UK has announced stopping oil imports from Russia by end-2022, and the EU plans to reduce dependence on energy from Russia by 2027.

Sanctions are also imposed on Russian banks, high-tech exports and debt and equity markets. Some key Russian banks were removed from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) financial messaging system that facilitates interbank payments. Sanctions on Russia’s central bank impacted the country’s USD600bn in forex reserves, leading it to hike its base lending rate to 20% from 9.5%. The stock market was shut for around a month. Foreign investors were banned from selling local securities, and payment of dividends and interest on bonds was stopped.

The conflict has adversely impacted prices of crude oil, food, metals and commodities, increasing inflationary pressures globally and forcing global central banks to take rapid measures to ensure economic support and increase interest rates to curb inflation. This has affected corporate earnings, and margins have started shrinking to their lowest levels. Sectors that rely on these commodities, metals and crude oil as raw materials such as the FMCG, petrochemical and electronics sectors face the most challenges.

The adverse economic environment has not left global M&A activity unscathed. Global deal making was down 20% y/y in value to USD1.07tn in 1Q 2022 and down 24% y/y to USD1.2tn 2Q 2022. About 10 deals worth USD5bn+ have been put on the back burner since the conflict started. Europe experienced a higher impact, with UK-based electrical engineering firm Spectris calling off a deal worth c.USD2.4bn to acquire Oxford Instruments in March 2022.

The global market share of Russia’s M&A deals declined to 0.4% in 1H 2022 from a high of 5.6% in 2012. 2012 was a record-breaking year, following Rosneft’s blockbuster USD56bn acquisition of TNK-BP, the largest M&A deal ever announced in Russia’s history. The following chart shows market share since 2006, covering the impact of two major global events – the 2008 financial crisis and the pandemic – on deal activity. Deal activity in Russia was already low since 2014, when Russia invaded and subsequently captured Crimea from Ukraine. Global M&A activity was higher by around 30% (by deal count) and 45% (by value) in 2014 compared with 2013. This indicates the world was already less interested in executing M&A deals with Russia.

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