1
34 Friday 7 October 2016 NICOLE BULLOCK — NEW YORK Shares of Nutanix, a California-based cloud storage company and tech “uni- corn”, recently soared 131 per cent in its Wall Street debut. It was the largest first- day “pop” for 2016 and the second larg- est for a US tech company since 2000 — the twilight days of the internet boom. The performance comes in what has been a terrible year for US listings in general and technology deals in particu- lar, leaving more attention on unicorns, privately held tech start-ups that have achieved valuations of more than $1bn. According to Dealogic, both are run- ning at the slowest pace since just after the financial crisis when dealmaking dried up. Bankers’ fees year-to-date have not even broken the $1bn mark. The decline is partly the result of renewed market volatility, especially at the start of 2016 when more deals were withdrawn than executed, and a nerv- ousness on the part of investors even as the underlying market has rallied to fur- ther highs. A potentially more enduring factor is the fact that the emerging tech compa- nies that were once the bedrock of this market — represented these days by Uber, Snapchat, Airbnb and others — have been able to raise billions of dollars at attractive valuations privately, avoid- ing the costly and demanding aspects of being a public company. Nascent momentum building for the IPO market and a string of successful tech deals could begin to test the vexing question of whether the downturn in US listings is cyclical or secular. “We will see a much more balanced and consistently active global IPO calen- dar as we get into year end. I just don’t see the end of the IPO product that peo- ple are calling for,” says Evan Damast, global head of equity and fixed income syndicate at Morgan Stanley. “The pri- vate capital markets’ alternative is just a mode of execution. The ability of com- panies to raise money in that fashion has extended the timeline to going pub- lic but not eliminated the need to go public.” The large unicorns are not expected to go public soon, but some smaller tech companies have started to list again. Their success is raising hopes that the market will begin to recover. Five venture capital-backed tech deals listed in September, and four of them priced above their range, notes Matthew Kennedy, an analyst at Renais- sance Capital, which runs IPO-focused exchange traded funds. Coupa Software priced shares at the top of the projected range, achieving a valuation above the latest private fund- ing round, as did Nutanix last week. Coupa shares doubled on debut yester- day. Fears of a so-called down round are believed to have kept some unicorns away from listing. “The past month has represented a major shift in the IPO market compared to the early part of the year,” Mr Kennedy says. “We weren’t seeing tech deals and we weren’t see this much advance demand.” The recent flurry of activity still comes against a low base. So far this year, US-listed IPOs are down 45 per cent from the same period a year ago at about $16bn to the lowest level since 2009. Tech IPOs total just over $3bn. Companies and their bankers also have priced recent IPOs conservatively, which helps to explain the gains. “Broadly speaking, public tech multi- ples are still below 2014-15,” Mr Kennedy says. “So these new deals are often coming public below peers, and below historical levels, despite higher growth.” It is self-fulfilling, though: new deals pique investor interest and get more companies thinking about going public. “In 2015, the vast majority of IPOs were trading below their issue price, and that cooled investor sentiment, but per- formance this year has been much stronger,” says Jeff Zajkowski, co-head of equity capital markets in the Ameri- cas at JPMorgan. Renaissance’s data show 2016 deals are up 39 per cent on average with tech IPOs up 88 per cent. A recent listing from Noble Mid- stream, the first direct energy IPO in nearly a year, is also a promising sign. These deals dried up with the tumult in the oil price, which has roiled energy companies. Additional reporting by Adam Samson Analysis. Equities Unicorn tech IPOs raise Wall St recovery hopes Growing demand looks set to test whether the dip in US listings is cyclical or secular MEHREEN KHAN Portugal’s economy is stuck in a “vicious circle” of high debt, low growth and stall- ing economic reforms, a rat- ing agency has warned ahead of a decision on the country’s borrower status. Fergus McCormick, chief economist at DBRS, said growth had decelerated and government bond yields had risen, placing “downward pressure” on Portugal’s investment-grade rating. DBRS of Canada is the only one of the four rating agen- cies recognised by the Euro- pean Central Bank that still gives Portugal such a rating. A downgrade on October 21 would threaten Lisbon’s eligibility for the ECB’s quan- titative easing programme. “They really are in a vicious circle, stuck with low growth, and have large struc- tural problems,” said Mr McCormick. Portugal’s 10-year bond yield was up 6 basis points at 3.52 per cent yesterday, an eight-month peak, having climbed from 2.7 per cent since mid-August. ECB asset purchases have kept a lid on Portugal’s bond yields since March 2015. But investors have begun to take a dimmer view on the coun- try, which was forced into a €78bn international bailout in 2012. “The market has shunned Portugal bonds,” said Marc Chandler at Brown Brothers Harriman, who noted that domestic banks held a lot of their government’s debt. “The sovereign-bank link has not been severed.” Higher government bor- rowing costs and a credit squeeze on banks have raised the prospect of another bailout for Lisbon two years after it exited its last one. “The only way to ease these tensions and regain access to the ECB liquidity and QE programme would be for the Portuguese govern- ment to request a second bailout,” said Yvan Mamalet at Société Générale. Such a drastic move would be politically “unpalatable” for the anti-austerity govern- ment, he added, but with a “weakening budgetary situa- tion and a funding squeeze on banks, a new programme would eventually be needed — likely triggering a political crisis and early elections, which in turn could prolong the funding squeeze”. Mr McCormick said there were “two negatives and one positive” on DBRS’s outlook for Portugal, and it was hope- ful that the Socialist-led gov- ernment would begin to plug its budget deficit and carry out reforms to boost growth and productivity. The economy grew just 0.2 per cent in the second quarter, adding pressure on the debt pile, which is more than 130 per cent of GDP. Annual growth is set to slow to 1 per cent this year from an earlier estimate of 1.5 per cent, and 1.1 per cent next year, according to the International Monetary Fund. Portugal had not yet embarked on “comprehen- sive” plans to restructure lenders, hampered by Europe’s new “bail-in” laws, which prevented govern- ment aid for banks before investors took a hit, added Mr McCormick. “We are not panicking. We have a stable trend but I do worry about the medium term.” Capital markets Portugal rating at risk as pressures mount W hen an event is labelled a milestone in markets, the tag tends to refer to signifi- cance in hindsight or to a development’s potential, but not something that really matters on the day. China, however, is racking up those landmarks at such a rate that each one is gaining greater market-moving pow- ers. A collective noun could be justified: a (long) march of milestones, perhaps? The latest example is the renminbi’s formal inclusion as a global reserve currency last weekend when it was added to the other four currencies that back the International Monetary Fund’s special drawing rights. Next will be the opening of the Shenzhen stock connect link with Hong Kong, due by year-end, which will give international inves- tors direct access to the southern city’s fast-growing tech- nology stocks. A milestone already passed this year was the opening of the vast onshore bond markets to far greater foreign investment. Chinese milestones matter more than in other markets because of the country’s size and growing global financial heft. The onshore bond markets total $7.5tn and are the third-largest in the world, while China’s stock markets are the second largest, worth $7.3tn. The renminbi’s addition to the SDR basket, the first such move in more than 30 years, marks a new level of global acceptance. Aside from their size, this year’s landmarks suggest deep changes taking place in mainland markets and in regula- tors’ attitudes towards foreign capital. This is the common thread increasing the market- moving potential, as the indi- rect effects of the changes out- weigh the sums involved. That effect was on show this week with the weakening of the renminbi following its SDR inclusion. Analysts expected that adding the currency to the basket would cre- ate demand for perhaps $30bn of renminbi from institu- tions that used SDRs as a unit of account. The buying will take months, so it is not of a sum nor a timescale to move the market in either direction. Yet this week the offshore renminbi drifted steadily to its lowest level in more than two months as investors bet that officials would relax their grip on the currency’s levels now that inclusion confirmed its rising status in the world. Another example is the interbank bond market. New rules in effect mean foreign investors no longer need to seek approval from Beijing for a quota to invest in onshore bonds — an arduous process. In a sign of Beijing’s willing- ness to experiment with delegation, would-be bondhold- ers need approval only from an authorised agent bank. It was giant shift, but take-up was expected to be slow, held back by unfamiliarity with local issuers and fears over credit quality. Yet just last week a survey by Deutsche Bank revealed that global investors planned to double their onshore holdings in the next year. Not every milestone has been passed. The biggest miss this year was MSCI’s decision not to include mainland stocks in its global emerging markets index because of concerns over capital controls and market regulation. Call that two steps forward, one step back. The link with Shenzhen will test whether equity inves- tors are warming to the milestone effect. Initial reaction was muted, but bankers were reporting gradually rising interest in the stocks to be traded. For Shenzhen, and for other future landmarks, the real test is one of local versus international investors. MSCI’s decision was based mainly on the wishes of investors out- side the region, many of whom have long been sceptical about China. Deutsche’s bond survey, meanwhile, polled local-cur- rency investors who were more familiar with markets, while those reading the renminbi runes most closely were also based in the region. That suggests the impact of China’s liberalisation milestones is building in the region, if not further afield. Milestones don’t snowball — at least not in metaphors allowed by newspaper editors. However, that awkward analogy works here. There will doubtless be more steps backwards. But there is very much a sense that forward momentum is growing. [email protected] INSIGHT Jennifer Hughes China’s year of the milestones is having a cumulative impact Shenzhen link will test whether equity investors are warming to the effect Y Fast FT Our global team gives you market- moving news and views, 24 hours a day, five days a week. ft.com/fastft Y Alphaville Our irreverent financial blog. Join Paul Murphy and Bryce Elder for the daily Markets Live session at 11am. ft.com/alphaville Y beyondbrics News and comment from more than 40 emerging economies, headed by Brazil, Russia, India and China. ft.com/beyondbrics Y Podcast The Hard Currency podcast takes a look at what is driving the global currency market. ft.com/podcasts Y Lex Video Analysis and opinion from the team on the hot issues affecting companies and markets. ft.com/lexvideo More comment and data on ft.com FT graphic Source: Dealogic Biggest US IPOs this year $1.3bn Gain in share price from offer to current $1.2bn $1.2bn $759m $719m $690m Jul 11 Line Corp Total value ($) MGM Growth Properties US Foods Holding Valvoline Pantheon CF Corp Apr 19 May 25 May 19 Sep 22 Jul 20 22.05% 2.13% 5.14% 40.62% 1.90% 50.61% Top 10 US IPO listings, 2016 % change, IPO to latest price 0 100 200 300 Acacia Comms (May 12) Twilio (Jun 22) Clearside Biomedical (Jun 01) Nutanix (Sep 29) Impinj (Jul 20) Reata Pharma (May 25) AveXis (Feb 10) TPI Composite (Jul 21) Proteostasis Therapeutic (Feb 10) Novan (Sep 20) Slow and steady ‘Ability to raise money [privately] has just extended the timeline to going public’

UnicorntechIPOsraiseWallStrecoveryhopes INSIGHT Slow and … · 2018. 8. 30. · Novan (Sep ) Slow and steady `Abilityto raisemoney [privately] hasjust extended thetimeline togoing

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  • 34 Friday 7 October 2016

    NICOLE BULLOCK — NEW YORK

    Shares of Nutanix, a California-basedcloud storage company and tech “uni-corn”, recently soared 131 per cent in itsWallStreetdebut. Itwasthe largest first-day “pop” for 2016 and the second larg-est for a US tech company since 2000 —thetwilightdaysof the internetboom.

    The performance comes in what hasbeen a terrible year for US listings ingeneral and technology deals in particu-lar, leaving more attention on unicorns,privately held tech start-ups that haveachievedvaluationsofmorethan$1bn.

    According to Dealogic, both are run-ning at the slowest pace since just afterthe financial crisis when dealmakingdried up. Bankers’ fees year-to-datehavenotevenbrokenthe$1bnmark.

    The decline is partly the result ofrenewed market volatility, especially atthe start of 2016 when more deals werewithdrawn than executed, and a nerv-ousness on the part of investors even astheunderlyingmarkethasralliedto fur-therhighs.

    A potentially more enduring factor isthe fact that the emerging tech compa-nies that were once the bedrock of thismarket — represented these days byUber, Snapchat, Airbnb and others —have been able to raise billions of dollarsat attractive valuations privately, avoid-ing the costly and demanding aspects ofbeingapubliccompany.

    Nascent momentum building for theIPO market and a string of successfultech deals could begin to test the vexingquestion of whether the downturn in USlistings iscyclicalorsecular.

    “We will see a much more balancedandconsistentlyactiveglobal IPOcalen-dar as we get into year end. I just don’tsee the end of the IPO product that peo-ple are calling for,” says Evan Damast,global head of equity and fixed income

    syndicate at Morgan Stanley. “The pri-vate capital markets’ alternative is just amode of execution. The ability of com-panies to raise money in that fashionhas extended the timeline to going pub-lic but not eliminated the need to gopublic.”

    The large unicorns are not expectedto go public soon, but some smaller techcompanies have started to list again.Their success is raising hopes that themarketwillbegintorecover.

    Five venture capital-backed techdeals listed in September, and four ofthem priced above their range, notesMatthew Kennedy, an analyst at Renais-sance Capital, which runs IPO-focusedexchangetradedfunds.

    Coupa Software priced shares at thetop of the projected range, achieving avaluation above the latest private fund-ing round, as did Nutanix last week.

    Coupa shares doubled on debut yester-day. Fears of a so-called down round arebelieved to have kept some unicornsaway from listing. “The past month hasrepresented a major shift in the IPOmarket compared to the early part oftheyear,”MrKennedysays.“Weweren’tseeing tech deals and we weren’t see thismuchadvancedemand.”

    The recent flurry of activity stillcomes against a low base. So far thisyear, US-listed IPOs are down 45 percent from the same period a year ago atabout $16bn to the lowest level since2009.TechIPOstotal justover$3bn.

    Companies and their bankers alsohave priced recent IPOs conservatively,whichhelps toexplainthegains.

    “Broadly speaking, public tech multi-ples are still below 2014-15,” MrKennedy says. “So these new deals areoften coming public below peers, and

    below historical levels, despite highergrowth.”

    It is self-fulfilling, though: new dealspique investor interest and get morecompanies thinkingaboutgoingpublic.

    “In 2015, the vast majority of IPOsweretradingbelowtheir issueprice,andthat cooled investor sentiment, but per-formance this year has been muchstronger,” says Jeff Zajkowski, co-headof equity capital markets in the Ameri-casat JPMorgan.

    Renaissance’s data show 2016 dealsare up 39 per cent on average with techIPOsup88percent.

    A recent listing from Noble Mid-stream, the first direct energy IPO innearly a year, is also a promising sign.These deals dried up with the tumult inthe oil price, which has roiled energycompanies.Additional reporting by Adam Samson

    Analysis. Equities

    Unicorn tech IPOs raise Wall St recovery hopes

    Growing demand looks set

    to test whether the dip in US

    listings is cyclical or secular

    MEHREEN KHAN

    Portugal’s economy is stuckin a “vicious circle” of highdebt, low growth and stall-ing economic reforms, a rat-ing agency has warnedahead of a decision on thecountry’sborrowerstatus.

    Fergus McCormick, chiefeconomist at DBRS, saidgrowth had decelerated andgovernment bond yields hadrisen, placing “downwardpressure” on Portugal’sinvestment-graderating.

    DBRS of Canada is the onlyone of the four rating agen-cies recognised by the Euro-pean Central Bank that stillgivesPortugal sucharating.

    A downgrade on October21 would threaten Lisbon’seligibility for the ECB’s quan-titativeeasingprogramme.

    “They really are in avicious circle, stuck with lowgrowth, and have large struc-tural problems,” said MrMcCormick.

    Portugal’s 10-year bondyield was up 6 basis points at3.52 per cent yesterday, aneight-month peak, havingclimbed from 2.7 per centsincemid-August.

    ECB asset purchases havekept a lid on Portugal’s bondyields since March 2015. Butinvestors have begun to takea dimmer view on the coun-try, which was forced into a€78bn international bailoutin2012.

    “The market has shunnedPortugal bonds,” said MarcChandler at Brown BrothersHarriman, who noted thatdomestic banks held a lot oftheir government’s debt.“The sovereign-bank linkhasnotbeensevered.”

    Higher government bor-rowing costs and a creditsqueeze on banks haveraised the prospect of

    another bailout for Lisbontwo years after it exited itslastone.

    “The only way to easethese tensions and regainaccess to the ECB liquidityandQEprogrammewouldbefor the Portuguese govern-ment to request a secondbailout,” said Yvan MamaletatSociétéGénérale.

    Such a drastic move wouldbe politically “unpalatable”for the anti-austerity govern-ment, he added, but with a“weakening budgetary situa-tion and a funding squeezeon banks, a new programmewould eventually be needed— likely triggering a politicalcrisis and early elections,which in turn could prolongthefundingsqueeze”.

    Mr McCormick said therewere “two negatives and onepositive” on DBRS’s outlookfor Portugal, and it was hope-ful that the Socialist-led gov-ernment would begin to plugits budget deficit and carryout reforms to boost growthandproductivity.

    The economy grew just0.2 per cent in the secondquarter, adding pressure onthe debt pile, which is morethan130percentofGDP.

    Annual growth is set toslow to 1 per cent this yearfrom an earlier estimate of1.5 per cent, and 1.1 percent next year, according tothe International MonetaryFund.

    Portugal had not yetembarked on “comprehen-sive” plans to restructurelenders, hampered byEurope’s new “bail-in” laws,which prevented govern-ment aid for banks beforeinvestors took a hit, addedMr McCormick. “We are notpanicking. We have a stabletrend but I do worry aboutthemediumterm.”

    Capital markets

    Portugal rating at riskas pressures mount

    W hen an event is labelled a milestone inmarkets, the tag tends to refer to signifi-cance in hindsight or to a development’spotential, but not something that reallymattersontheday.

    China, however, is racking up those landmarks at such arate that each one is gaining greater market-moving pow-ers. A collective noun could be justified: a (long) march ofmilestones,perhaps?

    The latest example is the renminbi’s formal inclusion asa global reserve currency last weekend when it was addedto the other four currencies that back the InternationalMonetary Fund’s special drawing rights. Next will be theopening of the Shenzhen stock connect link with HongKong,duebyyear-end,whichwillgive international inves-tors direct access to the southern city’s fast-growing tech-nology stocks. A milestone already passed this year wasthe opening of the vast onshore bond markets to fargreater foreign investment.

    Chinese milestones matter more than in other marketsbecause of the country’s size and growing global financialheft. The onshore bond markets total $7.5tn and are thethird-largest in the world, while China’s stock markets arethe second largest, worth $7.3tn. The renminbi’s additionto the SDR basket, the first such move in more than 30years,marksanewlevelofglobalacceptance.

    Aside fromtheir size, thisyear’s landmarkssuggestdeepchanges taking place in mainland markets and in regula-tors’ attitudes towards foreigncapital. This is the commonthread increasing the market-moving potential, as the indi-rect effects of the changes out-weighthesumsinvolved.

    That effect was on show thisweek with the weakening ofthe renminbi following itsSDR inclusion. Analystsexpectedthataddingthecurrencytothebasketwouldcre-ate demand for perhaps $30bn of renminbi from institu-tions that used SDRs as a unit of account. The buying willtake months, so it is not of a sum nor a timescale to movethe market in either direction. Yet this week the offshorerenminbi drifted steadily to its lowest level in more thantwo months as investors bet that officials would relax theirgrip on the currency’s levels now that inclusion confirmeditsrisingstatus intheworld.

    Another example is the interbank bond market. Newrules in effect mean foreign investors no longer need toseek approval from Beijing for a quota to invest in onshorebonds — an arduous process. In a sign of Beijing’s willing-ness to experiment with delegation, would-be bondhold-ersneedapprovalonly fromanauthorisedagentbank.

    It was giant shift, but take-up was expected to be slow,heldbackbyunfamiliaritywith local issuersandfearsovercreditquality.Yet just lastweekasurveybyDeutscheBankrevealed that global investors planned to double theironshoreholdings inthenextyear.

    Not every milestone has been passed. The biggest missthis year was MSCI’s decision not to include mainlandstocks in its global emerging markets index because ofconcerns over capital controls and market regulation. Callthat twosteps forward,onestepback.

    The link with Shenzhen will test whether equity inves-tors are warming to the milestone effect. Initial reactionwas muted, but bankers were reporting gradually risinginterest inthestockstobetraded.

    For Shenzhen, and for other future landmarks, the realtest is one of local versus international investors. MSCI’sdecision was based mainly on the wishes of investors out-side the region, many of whom have long been scepticalaboutChina.

    Deutsche’s bond survey, meanwhile, polled local-cur-rency investors who were more familiar with markets,while those reading the renminbi runes most closely werealso based in the region. That suggests the impact ofChina’s liberalisationmilestones isbuilding intheregion, ifnot furtherafield.

    Milestones don’t snowball — at least not in metaphorsallowed by newspaper editors. However, that awkwardanalogy works here. There will doubtless be more stepsbackwards. But there is very much a sense that forwardmomentumisgrowing.

    [email protected]

    INSIGHT

    JenniferHughes

    China’s year of themilestones is havinga cumulative impact

    Shenzhen linkwill test whetherequity investorsare warmingto the effect

    Y Fast FT Our globalteam gives you market-moving news and views,24 hours a day, five daysa week. ft.com/fastft

    Y Alphaville Ourirreverent financial blog.Join Paul Murphy andBryce Elder for the dailyMarkets Live session at11am. ft.com/alphaville

    Y beyondbrics News andcomment from morethan 40 emerging

    economies, headedby Brazil, Russia, Indiaand China.ft.com/beyondbrics

    Y Podcast The HardCurrency podcast takes alook at what is drivingthe global currencymarket. ft.com/podcasts

    Y Lex Video Analysisand opinion from theteam on the hot issuesaffecting companies andmarkets. ft.com/lexvideo

    More comment and data on ft.com

    FT graphic Source: Dealogic

    Biggest US IPOs this year

    $1.3bn

    Gain in share price from o�er to current

    $1.2bn $1.2bn

    $759m $719m $690m

    Jul 11

    Line Corp

    Total value ($)

    MGM GrowthProperties

    US FoodsHolding

    Valvoline Pantheon CF Corp

    Apr 19 May 25 May 19Sep 22 Jul 20

    22.05% 2.13% 5.14% 40.62% 1.90%50.61%

    Top 10 US IPO listings, 2016% change, IPO to latest price

    0 100 200 300

    Acacia Comms (May 12)

    Twilio (Jun 22)

    Clearside Biomedical(Jun 01)

    Nutanix (Sep 29)

    Impinj (Jul 20)

    Reata Pharma (May 25)

    AveXis (Feb 10)

    TPI Composite (Jul 21)

    Proteostasis Therapeutic(Feb 10)

    Novan (Sep 20)

    Slow and steady

    ‘Ability toraise money[privately]has justextendedthe timelineto goingpublic’

    OCTOBER 7 2016 Section:Markets Time: 6/10/2016 - 19:08 User: swordsd Page Name: MARKETS3, Part,Page,Edition: LON, 34, 1