fbpx
2iB Partners to join panel of experts to speak at Southeast Asia M&A Corporate Investment Conference 2017: 2-3 November

2iB Partners to join panel of experts to speak at Southeast Asia M&A Corporate Investment Conference 2017: 2-3 November

In this event, Managing Director, Yang Yen Thaw of 2iB Partners will join a panel of other experts to speak on cross-border M&A in South East Asia. 2iB continues to strengthen and develop it’s presence and network in cross-border M&A through strong synergistic partnerships with key players. 

 

EXPLORING CURRENT TRENDS & STRATEGIES FOR

INVESTMENT AND M&A IN SOUTHEAST ASIA

Southeast Asia is a dynamic market with nearly 700 million people, now this region is becoming the world’s most attractive destination for foreign investment. Greenfield investment and M&A activities increased rapidly in the past five years in this region. A lot of multinational companies are increasing the investments in this region due to the cost advantage and continuous opening policy, SEA now receives more foreign direct investment than China. Meanwhile, China is shifting the role from an investee to an outward investor. Following the ‘One Belt, One Road’ plan, China will become another big investor in Southeast Asia besides Japan. For multinational companies, how to capture the potential direct investment and M&A opportunities and managing their investment portfolios and maximize long-term value? And how to meet the legal, finance and culture challenges for the cross-border investments, these are very rich and interesting topics.

This year’s Southeast Asia Corporate Investment Merger & Acquisition Conference 2017 will be held in Singapore. This conference is an exclusive event for the corporate executives from the global multinational corporations to learn the latest trends and regulations affecting the cross-border investment in Southeast Asia. The event is also a valuable opportunity for business networking by exchanging the practical experience and lessons of direct investment, M&A, JV partnership in this region. Senior executives from MNCs, PE, VC and professional advisors for finance & tax, legal, management consulting, investment banking will join this year’s exciting event. We are looking forward to your participation!

 

 

 

Speaker list:

Speaker Details
Mr. Angelo Dell’ Atti Global Head, Corporate Finance, IFC (International Finance Corporation)
Mr. Johnson Chng Managing Director, Silk Road Finance Corporation
Mr. Patrick Ip Managing Director, China-ASEAN Investment Cooperation Fund
Mr. Ryoichi Nishizawa Global Head of M&A, Mitsubishi Corporation
Mr. Seth Sunderland Executive Director, Investment Banking, M&A Asia, UBS
Mr. Saurabh N. Agarwal Managing Director, Warburg Pincus
Mr. Hadi Cahyadi Managing Partner and Founder, Helios Capital
Mr. Kevin Murphy Managing Director, Andaman Capital Partners
Mr. Edwin Vanderbruggen Senior Partner, VDB Loi Co.,Ltd
Mr. Alex Kimura Chief Strategy Officer, Asia, Aviva
Mr. Sikh Shamsul Foreign Investment Division, Malaysian Investment Development Authority
Mr. Greg Ohan Director, Vietnam, Jones Lang LaSalle

and many more!

 

For Registration:

Event is organized by Valuetang LLC. For registration and enquiries please contact : charles.shangguan@valuetang.com and jenny.wang@valuetang.com

For partnerships, speaker and general business enquiries with 2iB Partners:

Contact Person Dylan Tan
Designation COO
Email Dylan@2ibpartners.com

YOU MAY LIKE

Is having a Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) program just a cost to your company?

Is having a Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) program just a cost to your company?

Developing great companies that give back is more about devising a clear Corporate Social Responsibility (“CSR”) program aligned with the company’s goals and values rather than forcefully integrating CSR with their business strategies and goals. Instead of passing it off as a short term marketing gimmick, CSR should be seen as a long term investment strategy.

read more
When Mergers & Acquisitions don’t work

When Mergers & Acquisitions don’t work

Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A) aim for financial stability of a business and wealth maximization of shareholders. It provides a potentially bigger and diversified market share. In these days, it is the most commonly use methods for the growth of companies. M&A are a dominant means of globalization and is key to scaling up and internationalization.

The potential problems of M&As are aplenty. Ego issues, inflated books, race against time, misrepresentations, etc. As long as the business looks profitable, the merged / acquisition parties are happy but when profits go south, then the finger pointing begins.

M&As should be familial not financial. If M&As are driven purely by finance, it is going to be a disaster for the business. Finance in business rarely takes a long-term view. It is the maximization of profits in the shortest time. Finance people laugh all the way to the bank. Maybe it is solely driven by time value of money. But great businesses are the greatest collateral damage if such a view is adopted.

M&A Reasons

Collaborations and synergies, often touted as reasons for M&As, are highly advantageous to M&A parties. This brings in, among other things, cost savings + efficiencies (CSE), value, returns and profitability. CSE brings in sharing of resources, centralization of corporate functions and systems, elimination of duplicate overheads, optimization of over-capability, shared networks, business op­timization, managing financial risk, elimination of double incidence of taxation, shared technology and human resource reallocation. These can bring about high profitability by itself.

M&A Headaches

i-contact

Though the term “merger” implies a creation of a single entity from two or more equals this does not work in practice. There is no i-contact – both in terms of seeing eye to eye and discarding egos; both of speaking on the same eye level and equal egos. In most merger discussions, getting the two to see eye to eye itself is a daunting task. There will always be a bigger equal in terms of higher revenues or profits, or in terms of potential growth or their war-chest. And when the captains of the business come to an understanding, the professionals will come in with their own set of needs and wants to potentially scuttle the deal. This is worse in an acquisition. There will always be a difference of opinion in every aspect of valuation depending upon the buy or the sell side. Warren Buffet’s “price is what you pay, value is what you get” would probably be the anti-thesis of such business deals.

Non-prima inter pares

The big problem and headaches for M&A reasons are many a times the perception of primus inter pares. There is always the issue of one being bigger than the other. Whether it be in terms of revenues or profits or growth or talent or arrogance of cash. Substantial amount of time is spent in sorting out the babel from benefits. Hence when 2 or more parties get into a room, it is very difficult for them to have a balanced discussion or negotiation and this leads to high protraction of deal completion.

Human Capital

Human capital (HC) deals with all three tenses – past, present and future. It is strategic and takes into consideration issues beyond logic as well. HC is probably the first collateral damage in an M&A. While M&As are supposed to bring in CSE of scale, paradoxically, most of the valuable existing experience in a company is lost in redundancies, lay-offs, retrenchment, human resource conflicts. This capital which has high return on investment, must be captured and reallocated in an M&A.

Professionals assisting in M&As are also part of HC. If the professionals’ vision is not aligned with M&A parties, the M&A is headed towards dangerous times. Such professionals, even with good intentions, will take the M&A one step forward, but 3 steps back.

On a different note, an interesting development in HC companies getting into an M&A would be the development of big data and analytics and its application on the experience of individuals. With most interested individuals expressing / uploading their thoughts in some form of the other on the web, one day sufficient processing speed and bandwidth can give us the benefit of this experience.

Time

Time is money, time is the enemy. But it is a long-term investment. In the haste to close a deal, most M&As gloss over critical issues. Time is also the culprit in closing deals over weekends resulting in missing out potential added costs, disputes, rushing go-to-market, pushing to agreements without careful consideration and relationship building (cf. guanxi below). Time is not speed and speed is not time. What is important, is speed based on calculated timing. An M&A built on relationships takes time, but it calculates the long-term benefits of working well together resulting in a high average speed.

Legal

The importance is always understated and misunderstood, especially in international M&As.

Merged & Acquired – Solution

  • M&As are delicate subjects. In these cases, I say that the shortest distance between two points is never a straight line. Diplomatic skills, EQ, empathy, motivational theory applications, change management and cultural integrations are pre-requisites for a successful M&A. This actually saves time in the long run and are the multiple points that in fact bring the main 2 points together.
  • Capture and reallocation of HC in merged or acquired companies. This capital which has high return on investment in an M&A.
  • Guanxi – Like most Chinese expressions, guanxi is complex. Simply put, it means “relationships” (but without hierarchy). Build understanding and acceptance before M&A. It forms what I call Human Due Diligence.
  •  Find professionals that give you the paradoxical and elusive “Collaborative M&A with Organic Growth” that consider contribution by all parties to an M&A to help each other increase output, increase customer base, improve and develop new products and successfully deploy HC.

 

Yang Yen Thaw Managing Director – 2iB Partners

 

For partnerships, speaker and general business enquiries with 2iB Partners:

Contact Person Dylan Tan
Designation COO
Email Dylan@2ibpartners.com

YOU MAY LIKE

Is having a Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) program just a cost to your company?

Is having a Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) program just a cost to your company?

Developing great companies that give back is more about devising a clear Corporate Social Responsibility (“CSR”) program aligned with the company’s goals and values rather than forcefully integrating CSR with their business strategies and goals. Instead of passing it off as a short term marketing gimmick, CSR should be seen as a long term investment strategy.

read more

Pin It on Pinterest