Stay in the know
We’ll send you the latest insights and briefings tailored to your needs
“Asian buyers have refocused on European, Middle Eastern and Asian targets, while multinationals wary of China tariffs are shifting to Southeast and North Asia. It's a swift and practical response to the search for growth.”
In a record year, Japanese outbound M&A more than doubled year on year, with deals worth US$179 billion announced in the first nine months of 2018 compared to just US$69 billion in the whole of 2017.
This increase includes two global top-ten deals:
"Asia M&A thrived in 2018. Despite being in the eye of the geopolitical storm, China M&A prevailed, with outbound deals rebounding after a quieter year in 2017. Japan M&A recorded its strongest year since 1980, up 140% year on year, while Korea and the Southeast Asia nations shrugged off local political concerns to finish strongly."
Geopolitical tensions are unlikely to hold back Asian dealmakers for long in 2019 either.
The region's stock of truly global companies has exploded in recent years, and both old and new are hungry for growth. Japan and Korea's long-established conglomerates have been joined by new giants from China and Southeast Asia, and all are playing hard, both home and away.
Asia is no longer simply a target for disruption by Western companies and markets - it boasts effective global disruptors of its own. Alipay is accepted in Beverly Hills, while Didi, Grab and Go-Jek have taken on Uber across Asia.
Financing is unlikely to be a problem in the coming year. Asian corporates remain less highly leveraged than their Western counterparts, while bank lending is stable.
Private equity is burgeoning across Asia, with newly powerful home-grown funds, sovereign wealth funds, asset management companies and securities companies jostling with Western industry icons at the deal table.
TMT was the top deal sector this year and will remain the star of this disruption economy in 2019. We also expect strong activity in financial services, industrials, infrastructure and real estate. 2019 will demand a focus on deal mechanics. Asia's dealmakers will need to be nimble yet cautious. Deals will take longer to close, given the unpredictable political slant to foreign investment, national security and anti-trust reviews.
Concerted activity by financial buyers, if it emerges, could create more complex deal-making processes. Domestic and international shareholder activism is also on the rise in Asia markets, demanding extra caution by boards.
The contents of this publication are for reference purposes only and may not be current as at the date of accessing this publication. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action based on this publication.
© Herbert Smith Freehills 2025
We’ll send you the latest insights and briefings tailored to your needs