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Can Asia save banks’ bacon?

28 March 2008

Just about every investment bank with pretensions to be an investment bank (except, of course, Bear Stearns) is expanding in Asia. Is this wise?

Not necessarily. Capital markets fees in Asia are already falling – figures from Thomson Financial, reported by Reuters last week, showed fees from equity and debt issuance in Asia ex-Japan are down 16% and 52% respectively on the first quarter of 2007.

Fees from M&A advisory work are still rising in Asia, however – thanks to China (where M&A deals rose by a third) and – more specifically – to Aluminum Corp’s massive US$14.32bn acquisition, with Alcoa, of a 12% stake in Rio Tinto.

Mark Renton, head of Citigroup’s Asia Pac investment banking arm, has declared himself “cautiously optimistic” about Asia’s future.

But is cautious optimism enough when everyone’s looking to Asia for salvation? Morgan Stanley says it intends to “throw more resources” into Asia; JPMorgan’s hiring 1,700 people; BarCap’s adding 1,500. Even UBS, which already has a big presence in the region, hasn’t ruled out further expansion.

It may all end horribly. If capital markets activity remains in the doldrums Asia’s companies won’t have the cash to engage in M&A activity. And then what will all those thousands of extra bankers do?

Comments (3)

What you omit to say is that Asia has been consistently strong for banks. Last year, for example, Citi's net $4.6bn profit from Asia was an important reason why it didn't report an annual loss.

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Comments (3)

  • What we are seeing in Asia is simply the reemergence of a bubble that has now popped in the West. It will inflate for a while, but won't last for long as the air goes out of Western markets.

    KB 06 Apr 2008

    RECOMMEND Recommended 0 times | Alert Moderator

  • Should your doomsday scenario of an Asian slowdown materialise, sthen all the expatriates without local knowledge will be driven out of the Asian markets, leaving Asian bankers and Asianised Westerners to continue serving local clients.  Nothing wrong with that, right?

    Anonymous 06 Apr 2008

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  • What you omit to say is that Asia has been consistently strong for banks. Last year, for example, Citi's net $4.6bn profit from Asia was an important reason why it didn't report an annual loss. Makes sense for other banks to get out of the moribund markets of Western Europe and the US.

    Bob 28 Mar 2008

    RECOMMEND Recommended 0 times | Alert Moderator

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