Mexican Big-ticket deals take larger share of M&A market in early 2015

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LATIN AMERICA

MEXICO: Big-ticket deals take larger share of M&A market in early 2015

Big-ticket deals valued at more than USD 500m have taken a larger share of the transactional market year-to-date in 2015. Six closed and announced transactions in January added up to total deal value of USD 9.53bn, compared to only four deals exceeding the USD 500m threshold totalling USD 3.78bn in the January-February period of 2014.

 


BRAZIL:
Technology on a Roll
The volume of technology sector acquisitions in Brazil rose 150% in the first two months of 2015 compared to the same period last year.

Rankings / League Tables

Latin America Ranking – 2015

Financial Advisory – Year to Date (YTD)
BTG was ousted from its top spot in the Latin America financial advisory ranking by Banco Santander, which advised on five deals valued at USD 4.49bn in the first two months of 2015.
Legal Advisory – Year to Date (YTD)
 
A completely new set of US legal advisors comprised the top-10 ranking for the first two months of 2015 compared to the same period last year. Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton was the only legal advisor with a repeat appearance, falling from fifth to sixth in the top-10 ranking between the two periods.

Brazil Ranking – 2015

Financial Advisory – Year to Date (YTD)
BTG Pactual rose to the top of the financial advisory ranking in Brazil for the first two months of 2015, bumping Itau, which held the top position for the corresponding period of 2014, to second place. Spain’s Banco Santander rose from eighth to take the number three spot over the same period of 2014.
Legal Advisory – Year to Date (YTD)

 

Mattos Filho jumped from fourth in January-February, 2014 beating out the competition to take the leading position in the first two months of 2015 by advising on seven deals worth USD 3.92bn. For the same period in 2014 it advised on eight transactions worth USD 2.48bn.

 

 

Mexico Ranking – 2015

Financial Advisory – Year to Date (YTD)

 

Citigroup moved into the top financial advisory position with its sole USD 1.23bn transaction in the first two months of 2015. In the same period of 2014 it shared the top spot with Centerview partners, also with one deal valued at USD 1.68bn.

Legal Advisory – Year to Date (YTD)

Creel, Garcia-Cuéllar, Aiza y Enriquez rose from number two to top Mexico’s legal advisory ranking in the first two months of 2015, advising on four deals worth a combined USD 2.48bn. Galicia rose from the number four stop to take the number two position in the YTD ranking by number of deals, while topping the chart by value with a whopping USD 5.2bn combined deal value from three transactions.

TTR Dealmaker Q&A – Richard Hall (Cravath, Swaine & Moore)

Richard-Hall

TTR Dealmaker Q&A

February, 2015

Cutrale-Safra Acquire Chiquita Brands International

USD 1.26bn

Richard Hall
Cravath, Swaine & Moore

On 6 January Cavendish Acquisition Corp, an investment vehicle formed by Brazil-based Cutrale and Safra Group closed the acquisition of Charlotte, North Carolina-based Chiquita Brands International (NYSE:CQB) in a deal worth USD 1.26bn, including USD 685.91m in equity and USD 582.59m in net debt. Cravath, Swaine & Moore partner Richard Hall advised the buyers on this historic deal, resulting in the delisting of one of the world’s largest banana producers.
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Q: At what stage was Cravath retained?

A: Cravath was first approached about this transaction on behalf of Cutrale-Safra in late July, 2014, referred by Michael Rubinoff who works as a full-time advisor to the Safra Group. I’d done a number of actual and potential transactions with him for Banco Santander in the 2009-2011 time frame, during the global financial crisis, in his prior life at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Cravath had not previously done any work for the Safra Group or Cutrale.

Q: How did Cravath land the mandate?

A: From my perspective, I did not feel that we were in a process, or beauty contest of any kind. Once we cleared out conflicts we were retained immediately. It was late in their consideration to launch a bid. The way it was presented to me by Michael, they were inclined very favorably towards bidding and at this time had decided to retain financial and other advisors. They came to us and said, “we’ve decided we would like to buy this company, help us navigate the tactical and legal challenges that stand in our way of acquiring the company.”

Q: On what basis did Cutrale-Safra launch its bid?

A: Let me address that from three dimensions: First, from the perspective of the shareholders of Chiquita, we believed the Fyffes transaction undervalued Chiquita.

Second, we believed we were better owners than shareholders of Fyffes. That speaks to a view that is more strategic in nature in terms of the relative importance in the banana distribution chain of growers versus logistics versus marketing versus retailing. At Cutrale-Safra, they believed that the growers are the most important part and that logistics is the second-most important part. Fyffes broadly viewed marketing and logistics as more important than growing. For example, if you look at the percentage of Fyffes throughput that comes from Fyffes-owned or Fyffes-managed real estate, it’s much lower than for major competitors like Dole or Del Monte.

“At Cutrale-Safra, they believed that the growers are the most important part and that logistics is the second-most important part”

Fyffes has much more of a business that is a spot purchase from growers. Cutrale-Safra have a view of the industry that it’s more important for big players in the industry to have more ownership over the plantations. By and large, all the big players in the industry – they get the production either from plantations they own, plantations they have long-term contracts with, or plantations with spot or short-term contracts, re-pricing all the time to make money. If you own, you can make money a different way by running your plantations better. Fyffes sits in the camp that willl take a higher percentage of output from spot markets. Because of that disagreement, we thought we were a better owner, one that could provide more value in the long run to all the players in the banana distribution chain.

“We believe these businesses are better located in a private company or in a much larger company that has a portfolio of other related assets”

The third issue is that we believe pure-play banana companies are just not well valued in the marketplace, because the industry is very seasonal and very cyclical, it’s hard for the capital markets to value these businesses over time. We believe these businesses are better located in a private company or in a much larger company that has a portfolio of other related assets. From a capital markets perspective we’d be a better owner; we’d be able to manage the cycle. Cutrale-Safra, they’re private, and as a private company they’re able to ride out the cyclicality and seasonality of the business. From a capital markets perspective, Chiquita-Fyffes would have been a large, close to pure-play banana company.


Q: How did the debt on Chiquita’s books affect the buyers’ appetite for the deal?

A: They viewed it as undervalued regardless and they had lots of money. They will in the near term run the business less leveraged, mainly because they will be generating less free cash flow because they will be reinvesting more in growing.

Q: How close was the Fyffes-Chiquita deal to closing when Cutrale-Safra stepped in with a competing bid?

A: We announced our offer in the second week in August. Chiquita had already mailed out their proxy material for their meeting, so their meeting was originally scheduled for three weeks after our offer was submitted. This meeting was to be held for Chiquita shareholders to approve the Fyffes transaction.

Q: What made this transaction unique?

A: First, it is somewhat rare in the US for interlopers to jump agreed bids. Jumping a bid is itself somewhat rare. It is quite rare that in the context of a jumped bid, the bidder has to take it all the way to a proxy fight.

Certainly for a transaction of this size, it is extremely rare to have an interloper go all the way to a shareholder meeting and win the vote; and even more rare that, having taken it all the way to a proxy fight, the jumped bidder actually wins the proxy fight.

“It is extremely rare to have an interloper go all the way to a shareholder meeting and win the vote; and even more rare that, having taken it all the way to a proxy fight, the jumped bidder actually wins the proxy fight.”

A second very interesting feature was that it unfolded in such a short period of time. Normally proxy contests in the US are very slow and drawn out processes of months and months. A few people deserve thanks for that, but it was largely a function of the timetable set out in the proposed Chiquita-Fyffes transaction.

Q: What are the market implications of the deal?

A: The most significant market implication of this transaction gets back to strategic vision for the industry. Chiquita, under its new owners, will be looking to invest in and grow its existing plantations. This is likely to lead to more direct competition at the growing level alongside the other two big players which are focused on growing, Dole and Del Monte, at the expense of players like Fyffes, which are more focused on logistics. If Cutrale and Safra are correct, power will shift away from logistics-focused Fyffes, towards growers.

If Chiquita is successful in buying up more plantations, and entering into longer-term contracts with growers, it will put pressure on companies like Fyffes and will lead to growers being better off. Growers will be able to command better pricing, and will grow capacity, either by buying farms, buying established growers or entering into more long-term contracts. Brazil could be an opportunity; it’s wherever they can find the land.

Q: How will this transaction impact Chiquita operations, production and distribution?

A: In terms of the basic banana distribution chain, the Cutrale-Safra vision is to invest in the growing – in the farms. You can expect to see more capital expenditure, more firepower on long-term contracts for people on the ground managing the production.

There will be modest synergistic gains on the logistics side, combining the logistics, administrative costs and expertise; the nuts and bolts of how you manage ships, rather than the ships themselves. Cutrale has its own logistics business that is primarily focused on the transportation of oranges, from a variety of places, including Brazil. The actual ships that transport oranges and bananas are different, but the management is common to both.

Chiquita’s corporate headquarters will be scaled back, and with the de-listing there will no longer be a need for public reporting which will result in cost savings. Leaving aside the headquarters synergies, we weren’t anticipating great synergies.

The ultimate unknown here for Cutrale-Safra is, are they right that investing in the farms, in the growing, has a bigger payback than investing elsewhere?

Q: What practice areas at Cravath were instrumental in its work on behalf of the buyers?

A: The three big practice areas were the M&A, finance and tax. We did some amount of work on the executive compensation and benefits, and if necessary we had a litigation side ready.

Q: What opportunities does the transaction present for the growth of Chiquita and associated businesses?

A: With the private ownership and the capital available from Cutrale-Safra, there’s an opportunity for substantial investment on the grower side that Chiquita wouldn’t have made and Chiquita-Fyffes wouldn’t have made because of their different strategic vision.

“The contest in the medium term will play out between the two competing visions for the industry”

The contest in the medium term will play out between the two competing visions for the industry. Most of the production of bananas sits with independents, people who aren’t locked into long-term contracts. At the moment there’s a lot of opportunity for Fyffes to get hold of a lot of production.

Q: Will Fyffes look to another deal to lock in a significant chunk of production?

A: Based on public statements, we do not believe that Fyffes thinks they are on the wrong side of that strategic vision. If they do not change their mind, they remain comfortable with this approach to the market, they obtain most of their production on a short-term basis and they will continue to own a significantly lower percentage of their throughput than Chiquita, Dole or Del Monte.

 

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Latin America – January 2015 Report

Latin-America-Report-January-2015

In January, US-based companies were the most acquisitive in the Latin American market, with 24 deals recorded, and followed by European acquirers with 12. Highlights include AT&T’s acquisition of Nextel México, for USD 1.88bn, and of lusacell for USD 2.5bn.
The Latin American transactional market was particularly active, with a total of 145 deals registered, which generated approximately USD 10.93bn. As far as countries, (…)

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México – El número de fusiones y adquisiciones aumentan en 2014 un 28.6% respecto al año anterior

Market-Report-Mexico-Fourth-Quarter

Informe anual sobre el mercado transaccional mexicano

  • En total en 2014 se han registrado 225 operaciones por importe de USD 30,103.61m
  • En el ámbito de private equity la actividad ha crecido un 49% respecto a 2013

Madrid, 22 de enero de 2014.- El año 2014 ha dejado un buen sabor de boca en el mercado transaccional mexicano y en total se han registrado 225 fusiones y adquisiciones, entre anunciadas y cerradas, lo que supone un aumento interanual del 28.6%, según el informe anual de TTR (www.TTRecord.com). En cuanto al volumen de inversión este año se ha situado en USD 30,103.61m, frente a los USD 43,831m de 2013, pero hay que recordar que el pasado año se produjo la transacción de compra de Grupo Modelo la cual sola tuvo un importe de USD 20,100m.

Por segmentos, el mercado alto ha registrado un ligero aumento en el número de operaciones pasando de las 16 de 2013 a las 18 de este año, lo que muestra un interés de las empresas en realizar transacciones de importes elevados. Tal es el caso de la compra por parte de la estadounidense PPG Industries de la mexicana Consorcio Comex por un importe de USD 2,300m.

En cuanto a los sectores más activos en 2014 destacan Tecnología e Internet, con 26 transacciones cada uno, seguido por el financiero y seguros con 23 y distribución y retail con 15. Una tendencia que se ha repetido mes a mes durante todo el año.

En el ámbito cross-border, las empresas británicas y estadounidenses han sido las que más adquisiciones han realizado en México; sin embargo, las compañías mexicanas han optado por Estados Unidos y España para llevar a cabo sus planes de internacionalización.

Las cifras positivas también se han repetido en el mercado de private equity y venture capital donde el número de operaciones en 2014 ha crecido casi un 49% respecto al año anterior. Entre las inversiones más destacadas se encuentra la compra por parte del private equity suizo Partners Group de una participación mayoritaria en el capital social de Fermaca, compañía gasística mexicana, por USD 750m.

El mercado de capitales no ha alcanzado las cifras de 2013, sin embargo se han presenciado transacciones relevantes como la salida a bolsa de Fibra Prologis por USD 664,52m o la ampliación de capital realizada por City Express por USD 176m aproximadamente.

 

Perspectivas para 2015

Tras un año de crecimiento en el área de fusiones y adquisiciones, se espera que 2015 también traiga buenas noticias con la conclusión de operaciones que se han quedado en el tintero en 2014 y con la ratificación de las reformas realizadas por el Gobierno de México en ámbitos tan relevantes como la energía y las telecomunicaciones y que permitirán a inversores extranjeros desembarcar en el país latinoamericano.

Entrevista con Pablo Rión & Asociados

El partner de Pablo Rión & Asociados, Alexander von Griesheim, ha comentado para TTR: “Sin duda 2015 debería ser el año en que México encabece el mercado transaccional en América Latina. Creo que el pipeline actual así lo demuestra”.

Transacción destacada

En el cuarto trimestre de 2014, TTR ha seleccionado como transacción destacada la compra por parte de PPG Industries del 100% de Consorcio Comex por USD 2,300m. En la operación han participado como asesores legales White & Case México, Hogan Lovells US y Basham Ringe y Correa.

Ranking de asesores financieros y jurídicos

El informe publica los rankings de asesoramiento financiero y jurídico de 2014 de M&A, Private Equity y Mercado de capitales, donde se informa de la actividad de las firmas destacadas por número de transacciones y por importe de las mismas.

 

 

Para más información:

Leticia Garín

TTR – Transactional Track Record

Tlf. + 34 91 279 87 59

leticia.garin@ttrecord.com

www.TTRecord.com

 

TTR – Transactional Track Record es un servicio premium online de apoyo a las decisiones de inversores, empresarios y asesores. Incluye la mayor base de datos de transacciones del mercado hispano-portugués, así como el acceso a los detalles financieros de las empresas implicadas.

TTR Dealmaker Q&A – Carlos Mello (Lefosse Advogados)

TTR Dealmaker Q&A-Carlos Mello

TTR Dealmaker Q&A

January, 2015

Cielo forms JV with BB Elo

USD 4.48bn

Carlos Mello
Lefosse Advogados

Carlos Mello, partner at Lefosse Advogados, advised Cielo on its USD 4.48bn credit card issuing joint venture with Banco do Brasil subsidiary BB Elo Cartões e Participações, which closed on 19 November. A graduate of University of São Paulo with an LLM from Columbia University, Mello joined Lefosse in 2010. His practice focuses primarily on capital markets and M&A.
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Q: How did this JV originate and to what end?

A: Banco do Brasil has been increasingly doing this sort of partnership to have the ability to run companies more like private companies do. It’s what happened in insurance with Mapfre and with Votorantim in investment banking. As a state-held company, Banco do Brasil has very strict protocols when contracting services; it’s a complicated process and takes a long time. It’s very natural that it would look for this type of partnership in the credit card business as well. For BB Elo, it allows it to manage the issuing business in a more private-like environment, and for Cielo it adds a complementary line of business to its other services.

“For BB Elo, it allows it to manage the issuing business in a more private-like environment, and for Cielo it adds a complementary line of business”

Q: At what stage was Lefosse retained?

A: We first started working on the transaction in March, 2014. The negotiations kind of stopped in mid-May-June for commercial reasons, and resumed around November. A lot of the economic terms had been defined, they were pretty advanced prior to our involvement.

 

Q: Why was Lefosse selected for the mandate?

A: It’s a very strategic deal in a very particular industry; the credit card business is very complicated. There are not many lawyers with expertise in this segment – I happen to be one of them. I did the IPOs of all the credit card acquirers and was contacted directly; there was no beauty contest. I did Cielo’s joint venture with American Express; I did its IPO and bond issuance. These were two listed entities, this was right up my ally. We were co-counsel in the transaction alongside a team from Barbosa, Müssnich & Aragão led by Francisco Müssnich.

 

Q: What was unique about this transaction?

A: This was a deal that was made possible because of changes in the Brazilian industry with the implementation of new regulation. The credit card industry was unregulated until last year. The new regulation made the interconnections between the different actors more clear – it gave Banco do Brasil the framework to form this joint venture. It’s a highly new deal into a recently regulated industry.

 

Q: What brought about the new regulation?

A: The Central Bank wants to have supervisory authority over all the systems of payment. The credit card industry as an unregulated business is something they were looking into, to set the parameters, from a supervisory and financial health viewpoint. On doing that, they created the opportunity for certain banks like Banco do Brasil. The Central Bank had been reviewing, studying and analyzing the credit card industry for about 10 years. Credit card issuers will now be subject to similar oversight as banks, with minimal capital requirements, submission of monthly balance sheets to the Central Bank which may audit, request additional information or a capital increase. At the end of the day its better for the consumer and the merchants to be more secure and connected to the banking industry. It’s just a natural development following the Central Bank’s creation of the Brazilian Payment System over 10 years ago.

 

Q: What other transactions could this deal precipitate?

A: I think the expectation is that other banks will join this joint venture. It may be easier for banks to join the JV rather than pursue similar deals on their own, depending on the scale of the business. It could be onerous for each bank to maintain the complicated structure independently, depending on which cards they issue.

 

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