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Europe’s dealmakers begin tough redemption journey



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The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.

By Liam Proud

LONDON, Aug 19 (Reuters Breakingviews) -Dealmakers at big European investment banks may finally have stopped losing market share. The next task is to keep growing – and convince shareholders to care.

Recent years have been rough for the collective market share of Barclays BARC.L, BNP Paribas BNPP.PA, Deutsche Bank DBKGn.DE, Société Générale SOGN.PA and UBS UBSG.S. Squeezed on one side by U.S. behemoths like Goldman Sachs GS.N, and by boutiques like Centerview Partners on the other, the quintet’s collective haul of global M&A fees was just 8.3% in 2023, according to Dealogic, compared with 12.2% in 2019. Over the same period, the European banks’ share of worldwide equity underwriting fees almost halved to 5.7%.

The tide may be turning. So far in 2024, Dealogic data shows that the five lenders’ share of M&A fees has risen by 0.2 percentage points to 8.5%. That’s not much, but it would be the first increase in years, and compares with an average annual decline of about 1 percentage point between 2019 and 2023. In equity underwriting, the group’s share leapt by 1.4 percentage points to 7.1%, led by a strong performance from Barclays.

It may, of course, be a blip. But the optimistic case is that Europeans have been recruiting new rainmakers and bulking up their offerings. Deutsche, for example, bought UK-focused adviser Numis and hired Alison Harding-Jones, Citigroup’s former head of M&A for Europe, the Middle East and Africa. Barclays last year overhauled the leadership of its investment bank by bringing in Cathal Deasy, formerly global head of M&A at Credit Suisse, and has added a raft of new senior talent since then. UBS, meanwhile, has swelled its ranks through the acquisition of its local rival.

The forward indicators are encouraging, too. LSEG tracks the volume of announced deals, indicating where fees might go in the future. The five banks on average saw an M&A market-share increase of 2.1 percentage points so far in 2024. That was helped by BNP’s role advising Brookfield Asset Management on its planned $7 billion purchase of French solar and wind specialist Neoen, and Barclays’ place on Silver Lake’s $13 billion take-private of media mogul Ari Emanuel’s Endeavor.

The wrinkle is that shareholders have historically taken a relatively dim view of the advisory and underwriting businesses. That’s because their earnings are volatile and, in the case of leveraged-finance underwriting, prone to occasional losses. One way to change that perception would be to prove that CEO-whisperers can serve the wider bank too. At UBS, that might include landing more wealth-management business off the back of M&A advice. Deutsche’s rainmakers, meanwhile, could help the corporate bank win more clients for steadier earners like treasury services. That would help turn a league-table win into shareholder value.

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CONTEXT NEWS

Barclays, BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank, Société Générale and UBS collectively generated 8.5% of total investment-banking revenue from global mergers and acquisitions so far this year, according to Dealogic data. That compared with an 8.3% fee share in the full year of 2023.

For the equity capital markets business, which includes underwriting initial public offerings and other share sales, the equivalent fee share rose to 7.1% so far in 2024 compared with 5.7% in 2023.


Graphic: Market-share trough for Europe’s big investment banks? https://reut.rs/3YFXi7U


Editing by Francesco Guerrera and Oliver Taslic

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