Credit Suisse tops mid-2009 league table

Contact: Brenon Daly

In the midyear update to our league table, Credit Suisse Securities has emerged as the busiest adviser in tech M&A for the first two quarters of 2009. It was a dramatic rebound for Credit Suisse, which fell out of the top 10 in 2008 after ranking third in 2007. The bank owes much of its standing to its role in helping to sell Sun Microsystems to Oracle, which was the tech industry’s largest deal since mid-2008. (Our league table is based on acquisitions of US-based IT businesses that were announced – but not necessarily closed – in the first half of the year.)

But it wasn’t just the one whopper deal that put Credit Suisse on top. In fact, the bank not only advised on the highest amount of tech M&A spending ($10.4bn), it also advised on the largest number of transactions (10). That’s even more noteworthy since Credit Suisse did not participate in the wave of consolidation that has swept through investment banking over the past year. The next two firms in our rankings both bolstered their tech banking practices by doing some M&A of their own.

Banc of America Securities, which ranked second on our midyear league table, has enjoyed a significant boost in its tech advisory business since it closed its purchase of Merrill Lynch on January 1. The combined entity advised on six deals worth some $8.3bn so far this year. Just behind Banc of America is JP Morgan Securities, which added Bear Stearns in a distressed sale in mid-2008. JP Morgan ranked third, with five deals valued at $8bn. We will have the full standings and analysis on the midyear league table in a special report that will be included in tonight’s Daily 451 sendout.

League table standings, midyear 2009

Bank Number of deals Amount of spending
Credit Suisse Securities 10 $10.4bn
Banc of America Securities 6 $8.3bn
JP Morgan Securities 5 $8bn

Source: The 451 M&A KnowledgeBase

Credit Suisse: Leaping up the league table

by Brenon Daly

While most of the focus of Oracle’s mammoth purchase of Sun Microsystems has been on the impact on the tech landscape, we’d like to note that the pending transaction is also likely to radically reshape another market: tech banking. True to form, Oracle didn’t use an outside adviser, while Sun tapped George Boutros and Storm Duncan from Credit Suisse Securities. That means CS gets sole credit for the largest tech deal of 2009, vaulting to the head of our league table.

To put the pending Oracle-Sun deal into perspective, consider that the equity value ($7.4bn) is larger than the total announced equity value of all US IT transactions that CS advised on in 2008 ($6bn). In our annual league table report, CS ranked as the 11th-busiest tech adviser, after finishing third in 2007. In the early going of 2009, CS is the bank to catch. (It also has a co-credit, along with Barclays Bank, for helping to sell Interwoven to Autonomy Corp, which was banked by Deutsche Bank Securities and Morgan Stanley. That was the largest deal of the first quarter.)

Tech banking, of course, is only a small part of the overall operations at Zurich-based Credit Suisse Group. And on Thursday, the institution had some good news for Wall Street. It reported better-than-expected earnings of some $1.7bn for the first quarter. Several other rival banks also posted positive results. The ADRs of CS added 15% in late-afternoon trading on Thursday, meaning they have risen by one-third in value since the start of 2009.