Investment banking fees in Sub-Saharan Africa reached an estimated US$128.2 million during the first quarter of 2020, a decline of 15 per cent from last year’s strong start.

Advisory fees earned from completed mergers and acquisitions (M&A) transactions generated US$33.5 million, down 38 per cent year-on-year, while syndicated lending fees declined 47 per cent to US$35.7 million.

The authors of the report, Refinitiv, note that Equity capital markets underwriting fees more than tripled to reach US$36.7 million, a first quarter total only exceeded twice since the company’s records began in 2000.

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Bond underwriting fees increased 20 per cent to US$22.3 million, again the third-highest first quarter fee total since our records began.

Almost one-quarter of fees in the region during the first quarter of 2020 were earned from government and agency deals.  Almost two-thirds of all fees were generated in South Africa.

JP Morgan earned the most investment banking fees in the region during the first quarter of 2020, a total of US$17.9 million or a 13.9 per cent share of the total fee pool.

The value of announced M&A transactions with any Sub-Saharan African involvement reached US$4.8 billion during the first three months of 2020, 48 per cent less than the value recorded during the same period in 2019, and a four-year low.

Deals signed also declined 12 per cent over the same period.

Monthly M&A declined in value for two consecutive months, with March 2020 marking the lowest monthly M&A total since August 2009.  Africatel Holdings’ US$1.0 billion sale of PT Ventures to Angolan Sonangol in January was the largest deal in the region during the first quarter of 2020.

Deals with a Sub-Saharan African target declined 74 per cent by value to a 17-year low of US$1.7 billion, as domestic M&A within the region declined 86 per cent from last year and the combined value of inbound M&A deals failed to pass the US$1 billion mark, a level achieved in all but four years since the turn of the century.

The largest Sub-Saharan African deal of the quarter was announced at the beginning of January – MTN’s sale of its tower businesses in Uganda and Ghana to AT Sher Netherlands Cooperatief for US$523 million.

Deals in the materials sector accounted for 39 per cent of Sub-Saharan African target M&A activity during the first quarter of 2020.  South Africa was the most targeted nation, followed by Uganda and Nigeria.

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Outbound M&A totalled US$1.8 billion during the first three months of 2020, 19 per cent more than the value recorded at this time last year, despite a 27 per cent decline in the number of deals.

With advisory work on seven deals with a combined value of U$993.0 million, JP Morgan holds to the top spot in the financial advisor ranking for deals with any Sub-Saharan African involvement during the first quarter of 2020.

As to equity capital markets, Sub-Saharan African equity and equity-related issuance totalled US$727.8 million during the first quarter of 2020, 32 per cent less than the value recorded during the same period last year and a three-year low.

The number of deals recorded also declined by one-third to the lowest first quarter tally since 2013.

One initial public offering was recorded during the first quarter.  Malawian telecoms company, Airtel Malawi, raised US$28.7 million on the Malawi Stock Exchange in February. Goldman Sachs took first place in the Sub-Saharan African ECM underwriting league table during the first quarter of 2020.

In debt capital markets, The African Development Bank raised $3 billion in a “Fight covid-19” social bond at the end of March to help alleviate the economic and social impact the coronavirus pandemic will have on livelihoods and economies in the region.

With this deal, and Ghana’s US$3 billion Eurobond in February, Sub-Saharan African debt issuance totalled US$8.9 billion during the first quarter of 2020, up 44 per cent from the value recorded during the same period in 2019, and the second-highest first quarter DCM total in the region of all-time.

BofA Securities took the top spot in the Sub-Saharan African bond underwriter ranking during Q1 2020 with US$1.2 billion of related proceeds, or a 14 per cent market share.

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I have 10 years of experience in multimedia journalism and I use the skills I have gained over this time to meet and ensure goal-surpassing editorial performance. Africa is my business and development on the continent is my heartbeat. Do you have a development story that has to be told? Reach me at njenga.h@theexchange.africa and we can showcase Africa together.

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