Investment banking fees up 6% in 2019 over higher fees in debt segment

Debt capital market underwriting fees totalled $201.2 million, up 108.7 per cent from a year ago - the best-ever first three quarters since records began in 2000

Fund, money, investment
Axis Bank took the top spot in India’s investment banking fee league table, with 9.6 per cent market share and $75.5 million in related fees. Photo: Shutterstock
Ashley Coutinho Mumbai
2 min read Last Updated : Oct 31 2019 | 1:54 PM IST
The country's investment banking fees rose 5.8 per cent to $783.5 million in the first nine months of 2019, from the year-ago period, led by higher fees in the debt segment, according to a report by Refinitiv.

Debt capital market underwriting fees totalled $201.2 million, up 108.7 per cent from a year ago — the best-ever first three quarters since records began in 2000.

Equity capital market (ECM) underwriting fees stood at $134.2 million, a 4.7 per cent decrease from the same period last year.

Syndicated lending fees fell 5.2 per cent from the comparative period last year and generated $209.9 million. Merger and acquisition (M&A) advisory fees were down 15.6 per cent to $238.2 million, from the record high set a year ago.  

Axis Bank took the top spot in India’s investment banking fee league table, with 9.6 per cent market share and $75.5 million in related fees.

ICICI Bank was second, with an 8.4 per cent market share.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch leads the ranking for ECM underwriting, with $1.9 billion in fees and 11 per cent market share, followed by Morgan Stanley, with 10.5 per cent share.

The ECM segment has seen a mop-up of $17.4 billion this year, up 23.3 per cent from the comparable period in 2018. Initial public offerings totalled $2.2 billion, down 49.3 per cent from a robust period last year.

Rights offerings raised $7.4 billion to date and accounted for 42.4 per cent of India’s ECM proceeds, after two of India’s biggest rights offering on record priced this year — Vodafone Idea’s $3.6-billion and Bharti Airtel’s $3.5-billion issuances.

Primary bond offerings from India-domiciled issuers hit record high and totalled $66.7 billion during the first nine months of 2019, a 104.4 per cent increase in proceeds from a year ago.

India announced M&A activity is at $61.2 billion so far this year, a 46.1 per cent year-on-year decline after witnessing a record first nine months period last year. Target India M&A stood at $57 billion, down 42.7 per cent from the same period last year.

The largest India-targeted deal so far this year is Brookfield Asset Management’s $3.7 billion (~252.2 billion) acquisition of Reliance Industries’ tower infrastructure trust.

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Topics :Morgan StanleyInvestment Banksdebt riskinvestment bankersEquity capital market ECM

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