Rebound in global IPO market

Capital raised in most markets up in second quarter; global jump of 120% to $40b

The listing of Frasers Logistics & Industrial Trust and Manulife Reit in Singapore in the April-June quarter raised US$668.7 million and US$469.9 million (S$901 million and S$633 million) respectively and were among Asia-Pacific exchanges' top 10 deals fo
The listing of Frasers Logistics & Industrial Trust and Manulife Reit in Singapore in the April-June quarter raised US$668.7 million and US$469.9 million (S$901 million and S$633 million) respectively and were among Asia-Pacific exchanges' top 10 deals for the quarter. ST FILE PHOTO

Several factors are creating a stop-start market for initial public offerings (IPOs) across the globe this year, according to a report yesterday by EY.

After the weakest first quarter since 2009, the IPO market swung back to life in the April-June quarter with a 120 per cent jump in capital raised to US$29.6 billion (S$40 billion) via 246 deals - up 29 per cent on the number of deals in the first three months of the year.

Still, IPO activity at the mid-year point remains significantly below that of the same period last year, EY noted in its quarterly Global IPO Trends report.

At 437 deals, IPO volumes are 38 per cent lower and at US$43 billion, total capital raised is almost two-thirds that of the first half of last year.

In the second quarter of this year, the Asia-Pacific was up 20 per cent in terms of capital raised, EMEIA (Europe, the Middle East, India and Africa) was up 187 per cent and the United States was up 755 per cent, with the United Kingdom and Greater China the only major IPO markets to buck this trend. The most significant gains were made by Australia and New Zealand, which saw proceeds increase by 820 per cent.

However, the drag from an exceptionally slow first quarter meant that for the first six months of this year, even the buoyant Australian and New Zealand markets were down close to a third on the same period last year in terms of capital raised, with EMEIA down 50 per cent, the Middle East down 55 per cent, the Asia-Pacific down 65 per cent and the US down 66 per cent.

With 229 IPOs raising US$17 billion in the first half of the year, the Asia-Pacific was the most active region by number of deals and second behind EMEIA in terms of capital raised. Although this represents a decrease of 37 per cent and 65 per cent respectively on the same period last year, this is broadly in line with the global trend, said EY.

For the quarter, proceeds rose to US$9.3 billion and at 122 IPOs, the number of deals rose by 14 per cent, while capital raised increased by 20 per cent compared with the previous quarter.

Investor sentiment appears less cautious than in some other regions and there is a healthy pipeline of companies ready to go public when the timing is right, said EY.

Singapore saw its largest new listing in three years when Frasers Logistics & Industrial Trust raised US$668.7 million in June. Earlier in the quarter, Manulife Reit raised US$469.9 million. Combined, both deals raised US$1.14 billion and were among Asia-Pacific exchanges' top 10 deals for the quarter.

Said Mr Max Loh, EY Asean and Singapore managing partner: "The outlook for the IPO market in Asia-Pacific is brightening following a period of uncertainty... Barring an uptick in volatility and erosion of confidence, the stage does seem set for an increase in IPOs in the second half of the year."

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on July 06, 2016, with the headline Rebound in global IPO market. Subscribe