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Treasury & Capital Markets
Higher equity offerings lift Chinese investment banking fees
Rise in ECM underwriting fees offsets decline in DCM fees
Chito Santiago   12 Apr 2021

China investment banking activity generated US$4.7 billion in fees during the first quarter of 2021, up 16.6% from the same period a year ago, and represented the highest start since records began in 2000. The increase was driven by higher underwriting fees from equity capital market ( ECM ) transactions, which rose 153% to a record US$2 billion compared with the first quarter of 2020.

Figures released on April 9 by Refinitiv, a London Stock Exchange Group business, showed that debt capital markets ( DCM ) contributed the biggest amount of underwriting fees during the three-month period at US$2.1 billion, but they were 2.1% down from the corresponding period a year ago. Syndicated lending fees totalled US$462 million, up 64.1% from January-March 2020, while advisory fees for completed M&A deals plummeted to a seven-year low of US$150.3 million – down 51.2% year-on-year.

CITIC topped the league table for China’s investment banking fees with a total of US$350.5 million in estimated fees for a 7.5% wallet share of the total fee pool and up 24.8% from the first three months of 2020. Bank of China came next with US$322.6 million ( up 1.9% ), followed by China International Capital Corporation ( CICC ) with US$206.9 million ( up 26% ).

Chinese equity and equity-linked proceeds witnessed a record start and raised US$72.2 billion in the first quarter of 2021, a 142.8% increase compared to the same period last year. The number of equity offerings surged 75.7% from the comparative period last year, making it the busiest first quarter period ever.

Total initial public offerings ( IPOs ), including secondary listings issued by China-domiciled companies, has had its strongest-ever start to a year, and raised US$33.7 billion, a three-fold increase in proceeds from the first quarter of 2020 amounting to US$11.2 billion, as companies issued new listings at a record pace. A-share IPOs hit a decade-high with US$11.5 billion, up 25.2% from a year ago, alongside a 120.8% increase in the number of A-share issuances.

Chinese IPOs and secondary listings in Hong Kong – both on the mainboard and GEM – also saw a record start, raising US$18 billion in the first quarter of 2021, a significant increase compared with only US$1.6 billion in the same period last year. This was led by Kuaishou Technology’s US$6.2 billion IPO, making it the biggest equity offering globally during the first quarter of 2021.

Follow-on offerings amassed US$24.2 billion in proceeds, up 126.9% year-on-year. Chinese convertibles, or equity-linked deals, rose 81.7% from a year ago to US$14.4 billion, the highest start since 2019, when proceeds reached US$21 billion.

High technology accounted for 30.7% of the China ECM activity, raising US$22.1 billion in proceeds. This represented a 621.9% increase from a year ago. Industrials captured an 18.8% market share as proceeds amounted to US$13.5 billion, up 132.9% from the first quarter of 2020. Healthcare rounded out the top three sectors with a 15.4% market share worth US$11.1 billion in proceeds, or a 121.9% growth from a year ago.

CICC led the rankings in China ECM underwriting in the first quarter this year, with US$7.6 billion in related proceeds or a 10.5% market share, followed by Morgan Stanley with US$6.6 billion ( 9.2% ) and CITIC with US$5.9 billion ( 8.2% ).

Debt capital markets

Primary bond offerings from China-domiciled issuers raised US$466.7 billion during the first quarter of 2021, an 8.9% decline from last year’s record start of US$512.4 billion, as the number of bond issuances slowed down 21.3% year-on-year.

Bond transactions from the financial sector accounted for 37.5% of China’s bond proceeds with US$175.1 billion, up 4.5% from the first quarter of 2020. Governments and agencies captured a 34.1% market share and totalled US$159.3 billion, down 26.6% from the previous year. Industrials accounted for an 11% market share with US$51.3 billion in proceeds, up 42% from the comparative period a year ago.

CITIC topped the first quarter league table for China bonds underwriting with US$37.3 billion in related proceeds for an 8% market share, followed by Bank of China with US$29.9 billion ( 6.4% ) and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China US$29.5 billion ( 6.3% ).

The overall China-involvement M&A activity started strong this year with announced deals amounting to US$133.4 billion in the first quarter, an 80.1% increase compared to a low first-quarter period last year. This is the highest first-quarter period since 2016, which amounted to US$197.4 billion, in terms of value and a record start by the number of announced deals, which grew 58.4% year-on-year to 1,804.

Chinese outbound acquisitions reached US$16.1 billion, up 206.5% compared to a year ago, making it the highest first-quarter period since 2018, when the value amounted to US$22.5 billion. China is currently ranked sixth place among the most acquisitive nations for global cross-border activity this year, after being one of the largest acquirers of overseas assets during its peak in 2016. Chinese acquisitions along Belt & Road nations saw 17 deals with a cumulative total of US$1.1 billion this year, up 239.2% in value from a year ago, and accounted for 6.7% of the total Chinese outbound acquisitions.

Foreign firms acquiring Chinese companies amounted to US$8.4 billion in the first quarter of 2021, a 6% increase from the corresponding period a year ago, while the number of inbound deals grew 9.5% during the same period. Domestic transactions witnessed record activity with US$108.7 billion, up 93.5% in value from 2020, as number of deals increased 72.3%.

Deal-making activity involving China saw high technology as the most targeted sector, which captured a 22.5% market share valued at US$30 billion. This was up 277.2% compared to the same period of 2020 as the number of deals more than doubled. Materials sector followed close behind with a 21.2% market share and US$28.3 billion in value, which was up 155.8% year-on-year. Industrials accounted for a 16.8% market share with US$22.3 billion, up 126.4% from a year ago.

CITIC led the any-China involvement announced M&A league table during the first quarter of 2021, with US$21.8 billion in related deal value for a 16.4% market share. It was followed by CICC with almost US$21 billion ( 15.7% ) and J.P. Morgan with US$7.5 billion ( 5.6% ).