Kenya bagged two-thirds of the deals. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- Analysis by advisory firm I&M Burbidge Capital shows the number stood at 31 for the four months, compared to 26 last year.
- Private equity deals were the most common at 17, followed by mergers and acquisitions at 10, two partnerships or strategic alliances and one each for joint venture and capital restructuring.
- Kenya accounted for 21 of the 31 deals, followed by Ethiopia, Rwanda and Tanzania with four, three and two deals respectively.
The number of corporate deals in East Africa went up by a fifth
in the first four months of the year compared to a similar period last
year, with Kenya accounting for two thirds of the disclosed agreements.
Analysis by advisory firm I&M Burbidge Capital shows the number stood at 31 for the four months, compared to 26 last year.
Private
equity deals were the most common at 17, followed by mergers and
acquisitions at 10, two partnerships or strategic alliances and one each
for joint venture and capital restructuring.
Kenya accounted for 21 of the 31 deals, followed by Ethiopia, Rwanda and Tanzania with four, three and two deals respectively.
"Deal
activity in April brought the total number of deals for the year thus
far to 31 with a total disclosed deal value of about $360 million
(Sh38.5 billion), most of these being private equity investments,” said
I&M Burbidge in the report.
“The transactions were spread out across eight sectors with the financial services sector recording six transactions," it said.
The
firm added that most of the announced deals were well underway before
the eruption of the Covid crisis as transactions in the region,
particularly equity ones, tend to, on average, take about a year or
slightly more to complete.
I&M Burbidge expects
firms that are providing critical services during the virus crisis to
attract more investor interest, offering hope that the deal pipeline
will not dry up in coming months as a result of the travel restrictions
and capital drought.
"An increasing interest,
particularly by development finance institutions, in companies that are
now crucial during this time (of Covid-19) such as delivery and
logistics companies has been noted and is expected to increase as more
investors are drawn in by the humanitarian and economic value of such
investments," said I&M Burbidge.
The value of
disclosed deals last year stood at $847.4 million (Sh90.7 billion) in
the first four months, largely on the back of a Sh51.7 billion deal in
January 2019 by Indonesian oil giant Medco Energi to buy London-listed
Ophir Energy.
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