M&A activity lowest since 2009
Merger and acquisition activity has been at its lowest in the Asia-Pacific in the first quarter of this year since third-quarter 2009, a new report shows.

A new Mergermarket report reveals a total of 354 deals worth US$66.6bn were announced in the region, down 23.6 per cent on Q1 2011 (US$ 87.1bn) and 6 per cent on the previous quarter (US$ 70.9bn in Q4 2011). In Q3 2009, there were just $65.4bn worth of deals.
The Mergermarket report shows Asian M&A market continued its downward trend in the first quarter of this year, with total deal value down, compared to Q4 2011, four-fifths in Australia, nearly three-quarters in South Korea, two-thirds in Hong Kong.
China was relatively steady, down just a fraction from US$ 22.5bn to US$ 21.9bn. The growth exception was India, where Sesa Goa’s announced acquisition of Sterlite Industries (India) for US$ 10.3bn, spurred total deal value to increase tenfold compared to the previous quarter.
Asia-Pacific (excluding Japan) inbound cross-border deals in Q1 2012 added up to US$ 10.6bn, down 55.6 per cent from Q1 2011 (US$23.9bn) and the lowest level since Q1 2009 (US$ 8.4bn). The region’s outbound cross-border total deal value was US$ 10.7bn in the first quarter of this year, a 47.4 per cent decrease on Q1 2011 (US$ 20.3bn) and the lowest total since Q3 2009 (US$ 7bn).
While the usual suspects continue to account for the biggest share of Asia-Pacific M&A, there was noticeably more activity in
In Australia, Rothschils was the number one financial adviser by value, with four deals worth US$5bn. Goldman Sachs came in second, with 3 deals worth US$2.3bn. Macquarie Group had 2 deals worth US$1.4bn.