By Kemi Owonubi
The economic and social impact of the
COVID-19 pandemic continues to be felt globally. In West Africa, beyond a
health crisis, the economic aftershocks will continue to be felt
through reduced
foreign trade and investment, and declining local income
and reduced consumption levels.
Our regional economies are predominantly
reliant on commodity exports, which are exposed to price volatilities
and changes in global supply & demand dynamics. Oil & Gas
commodity exporting countries like Nigeria and Ghana, have been
significantly impacted by dampened prospects for a near term recovery in
oil prices; and with Cote d’Ivoire, face supply chain disruptions and
forecast lower demand for agricultural commodity exports like cocoa, due
to weakened global consumer demand. The impact of the pandemic is also
felt on tourism and travel, given the restrictions on movement and
drastic reductions in labour force on the back of the downturn. It is
within this context, that we reflect on the prospects for West African
mergers and acquisitions (“M&A”).
Pre COVID-19 M&A outlook
The top five sectors for M&A in 2019
were energy and power, media and entertainment, fast-moving consumer
goods (FMCG), real estate, and industrial materials. The total value of
announced M&A deals by value in 2019 (for Sub-Saharan Africa) was
$79.6 billion, a 142% increase over the 2018 value. All the above-listed
sectors, except for media and entertainment, feature consistently in
the rankings each year. 7 of the top 10 acquisitions (which were all
strategic, company-led deals), were cross geography transactions, that
enabled the acquirer to expand its business, into the target’s country
and region.
Pre-COVID-19 regional outlook
The African economic outlook for 2020
was similar to 2019. Real GDP growth was estimated at 3.4% for 2019 and
projected to accelerate to 3.9% for 2020 . Leading the way were six
economies, amongst the world’s ten fastest growers, including the three
West African nations of Ghana, Cote d’Ivoire and Benin.
Positive investor sentiment in Africa
was growing supported by improving macro and political conditions and
favourable population demographics. Appreciable deal activity was
expected in broad-based energy and power, FMCG and financial services
sectors, telecommunications, media and entertainment.
The adjusted regional outlook
Deal activity is typically a direct
result of underlying corporate performance (within the context of the
macro fundamentals), growth prospects and the availability of
well-priced capital. The 2020 GDP outlook for sub-Saharan Africa is
expected to contract and has been revised downwards to between -2.1% and
-5.1%.
M&A post-COVID
We anticipate that the conditions
created by COVID-19 will present select opportunities for the discerning
investor, who must be prepared to take advantage of such opportunities
once they appear or are created. Such opportunities will include
restructurings, bargains involving distressed sales, or as new segments
and businesses, that emerge from opportunities presented by disruptions
to existing business models.
Relative to a pre-COVID world, where
M&A was broadly directed by the objectives of scale, and driven by
economic optimism, in the post-COVID world, M&A will become to some
extent, a tool for survival, given the constraints on capital, and the
requirements for cost control and optimisation. There will be
opportunities for domestic companies with strong balance sheets &
cashflows, and for companies outside the region looking to expand
geographically, with the prospects to acquire assets at favourable price
levels.
This is how we anticipate that the sectors will be affected.
The Non-Discretionary Sectors
Non-Discretionary sectors within (i)
Consumer Goods – food and beverages, grocery retail, personal and home
care (ii) Healthcare – manufacture and retail of pharma products,
healthcare infrastructure including hospitals and diagnostics (iii)
Agriculture and agro processing (iv) Telecommunications – communications
including voice and data, telecoms infrastructure; and (v) Logistics
and Transportation – distribution infrastructure, warehousing.
These sectors will experience varying
levels of impact, due to the pandemic. There will be opportunities to
leverage and improve their business and operational models, to take
advantage of the opportunities presented, through organic improvements,
vertical acquisitions across the value chain or opportunistic
acquisitions to build scale.
There is an especially positive outlook
for local manufacturers in countries with a high import bill for
consumer products. This is so as import substitution becomes a big
theme, due to severely reduced FX earnings for governments. A
depreciated currency, a trade deficit position and declining reserves
will mean countries can no longer support non-essential imports. This
presents an opportunity for local manufacturers to produce better
quality goods (for sale to an existing consumer market), at higher price
levels, capturing higher margins.
The Discretionary Sectors
Discretionary sectors such as (i) Travel
and Leisure – tourism, hospitality, aviation (ii) Real Estate –
residential, commercial (iii) Construction (iv) Discretionary Retail (v)
Non-Essential Financial Services (vi) Media and Entertainment – cinemas
and theatres; and (vii) Oil and Gas – upstream and related services.
These sectors have been impacted by declining incomes and levels of activity due to the restrictions to movements. We expect these sectors will likely only see a return to ‘normalcy’ in the latter half of 2021, or even later, depending on the depth, impact and duration of the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
These sectors have been impacted by declining incomes and levels of activity due to the restrictions to movements. We expect these sectors will likely only see a return to ‘normalcy’ in the latter half of 2021, or even later, depending on the depth, impact and duration of the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Innovation and Technology Enabled Sectors
Tech-enabled sectors such as (i)
E-Commerce – including online retail, tech-enabled logistics and
transportation (ii) Digital Financial services – including consumer
lending platforms & Payment Platforms (iii) Media and entertainment –
over the top (“OTT”) platforms (iv) Digital Education; and (v) ICT –
Security and IT software solutions. Businesses in these sectors are
evolving into high-value high-growth companies, driven by technology,
and further enhanced by the solutions they provide to COVID-19 related
challenges.
Where to Next?
Despite the adjusted outlook, we still see the opportunity for
sizeable M&A deals in the non-discretionary sectors, as demand will
be relatively resilient across critical sectors such as healthcare,
grocery and food retail, other consumer staples, telecommunications and
logistics. Companies in the discretionary sectors, who entered the
crisis with high leverage levels, may present bargains for investors,
with restructurings, and where the business is a good fit into their
existing strategy. There will also be consolidation opportunities,
fueled by a need to survive. We anticipate a general realignment of
property prices in the real estate sector, as investment properties are
realised for more optimal uses of cash.
We envision deals in the emerging tech
enabled sectors, though some may still be in the early phase of growth
to be sizeable. On a upside, growth in technology enabled businesses
will be accelerated by the newer, growing needs of a post-COVID
consumer.
In conclusion, M&A will remain
active. We believe that while the typically deal heavy sectors may slow
down, activity will continue, driven by value opportunities and
consolidations. Overall, West Africa remains a resilient region, and
will respond to the challenges at hand with astuteness and innovation.
Owonubi, the Head Corporate Finance, RMB Nigeria writes from Lagos
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