The jump in investment banking revenue across the Asia-Pacific region this year is giving many banks a reason to be cheerful. After two relatively weak halves in 2013, revenues have come roaring back, filling coffers and stoking optimism across the board. But a closer look at this rising tide shows it is not lifting all boats.
Dealogic figures show total net revenues for investment banking in Asia-Pacific ex-Japan reached just over $5.1 billion in the first half of 2014. By comparison, the first half in 2013 totalled just $4.6 billion and the second half of 2013 was even lower, at slightly under $4.3 billion.
Most of the boost this year can be put down to a spike in equity capital markets activity, where net revenue was over $2 billion, substantially higher than in any of the previous four half-year periods. Net revenue from debt capital markets rose to around $1.6 billion, higher than the $1.1 billion in the second half of 2013, but M&A net revenue dropped to just $660 million, also lower than any of the previous four half-year figures. Net revenue for syndicated lending stayed roughly level with previous years at $823 million.