Even In Brexit's Shadow, Surprisingly, U.K. M&A Activity Thrives

 | Nov 06, 2019 10:01

This post was written exclusively for U.K. Investing.com

The U.K. market appears somewhat overlooked and unloved when looking at recent surveys of global fund manager allocations. Thanks to ongoing Brexit angst and political confusion, it sits among the most underweight markets compared with benchmark norms. Despite this however, and no doubt surprising to some, the U.K. market has been chock-a-block full of merger and acquisition activity.

So far this year, in the billion pound or above market cap zone, Merlin Entertainments (LON:MERL), Greene King (LON:GNK), RPC (LON:RPC), Entertainment One (LON:ETO), Millennium & Copthorne (LON:MLC), LSE Group (LON:LSE), and Inmarsat (LON:ISA) have attracted bids from overseas buyers, a proportional run rate not matched in any other major global equity market.

So how can an out-of-favour market be so seemingly loved by corporate buyers? The missing link can of course be attributed to the low value of the pound since the Brexit referendum, which you can think of as akin to one of those yellow reduced price stickers you often see in supermarkets. However - as with all sensible corporate transactions - it is about much more than just price and the pound’s inverted relationship with the FTSE, considering the U.K. economy is lauded for its flexibility and open capital markets.

But can it continue? At first glance the 165 pence per share takeover approach for defence company Cobham (LON:COB) by U.S. peer Advent International seems relatively straightforward. Large, lumpy contracts with governments lend themselves to consolidation, but the controversy in this deal has been the rearguard action by the Cobham family (with less than 2% of the shares) to block the deal on grounds of national security.