(Courtesy of Getty Images Bank) The firm dollar is causing South Korean companies to postpone or cancel their plans to buy overseas firms for future growth as the US currency’s appreciation has amped up acquisition costs.
There were nine takeovers of foreign firms by domestic companies in deals each worth more than 100 billion won ($70 million) with a combined value of 6.9 trillion won so far this year, according to Market Insight, the capital market news provider of The Korea Economic Daily.
Overseas acquisitions have sharply slowed in 2022 as the dollar has risen nearly 20% against the South Korean won currency so far this year. The dollar’s strength jacks up expenses for those deals as buyers usually make payments in foreign currencies. Buyers, which aim to raise money through loans in foreign countries for takeovers, need to bear more costs due to the dollar’s gains.
The dollar/won exchange rate, which closed the South Korean currency market at 1,431.3 on Thursday, is expected to rise above the 1,500 level for the first time since the 2008-09 global financial crisis, given the US Federal Reserve’s hawkish stance to stem inflation.
RECONSIDER OVERSEAS M&A DEALS
That prompted South Korean companies to reconsider acquisition deals, which have been planned or are even in progress.
Food behemoth CJ CheilJedang Corp. will reassess a plan to buy another US company for billions of dollars following its $1.8 billion acquisition of US frozen food maker Schwan’s Company in 2019. The global electronics giant LG Electronics Inc. and South Korea’s major online platform operator Kakao Corp. dropped plans to acquire companies in the country at costs of up to billions of dollars to accumulate cash holdings.
SK Hynix Inc. has paid $7 billion so far for a $9 billion takeover of Intel Corp.’s NAND flash memory chip business. The world’s second-largest memory chipmaker dodged a bullet -- it would have spent more than 1 trillion won more due to the dollar's strength if it had delayed the payment.
Bundles of $100 bills at South Korea's Hana Bank's headquarters in central Seoul (Courtesy of Yonhap) BANE TO LOCALS, BOON TO FOREIGNERS
South Korean companies have been facing difficulties in pushing through major overseas acquisition deals with financial investors. PE firms need to raise money through acquisition financing or project funds, but investors have become reluctant to join their fundraising due to the surging dollar.
SJL Partners was supposed to pay for part of the SD Biosensor’s acquisition of Meridian, but it is unclear if the PE firm could raise enough money. SK Hynix was also known to have withdrawn a plan to secure more money for the Intel deal earlier this year from investors including PE firms.
On the other hand, the dollar’s strength has created better opportunities for foreign companies and PE firms to buy South Korean companies at a bargain.
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