M&A Bankers Confront a Fragile, Stop-Start Year

Investment bankers must at times bore themselves with their talk of “strong pipelines” and “active conversations,” the ever-present characteristics of even the worst markets. But following a deeply disappointing 2023 for mergers, acquisitions and capital raisings, the new year belief in a rebound is more fervent than normal. After all, 2024 can’t be any worse, can it?

On the plus side, there really does seem to be a lot of pent-up activity waiting to break out — there were bursts of it already late last year. The expectation of a recovery has led bank executives to boost bonuses for unproductive rainmakers to stop them from quitting, while boutique advisory firms have continued hiring.

However, confidence among chief executives, investors and bankers will remain fragile and prone to evaporation at any sign of trouble. It’s likely to be a very stop-start year for deals of all kinds even if things go generally well.

This is how last year ended, too. A short wave of initial public offerings in September and October brought four big share listings, including sandal company Birkenstock Holding Plc and chipmaker Arm Holdings Plc, before bankers and investors lost their nerve again. All four fell below their offer price and apart from Arm have struggled to recover. Total global IPO volume for 2023 of $132 billion was the worst since 2012, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Last Year Was Dire For New Stock Market Listings

October also saw the two biggest takeovers of the year — Exxon Mobil Corp.’s $68 billion acquisition of Pioneer Natural Resources Co. and Chevron Corp.’s $53 billion deal for Hess Corp. And yet, M&A for the full year was anemic, with global volume totaling less than $3 trillion for the first time since 2013.

It Was Also The Worst In Nearly a Decade For Deals