RBS taps 3 ABN veterans for India investment banking

Mon May 19, 2008 10:45am BST
 
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By Tony Munroe

HONG KONG (Reuters) - Royal Bank of Scotland, which last year bought parts of ABN AMRO, has named three bankers from the Dutch firm to key roles in its corporate finance team in India, an important battleground for global investment banks as business slows in the west.

Cash-rich Indian companies have become increasingly bold on the global M&A stage, with Bharti Airtel Ltd in talks to acquire South African cellphone operator MTN Group in a deal that could value MTN at as much as $50 billion (25 billion pounds).

India's IPO market has been shakier as the Sensex is off 14 percent since the start of the year, although new issuance is running ahead of last year's levels thanks to Reliance Power's $3 billion January share sale.

"Clearly, the M&A pipeline remains very, very strong," said Madan Menon, who joined RBS last year from rival UK bank Barclays to head RBS's new global banking and markets business in India.

"The ECM (equity capital markets) pipeline remains robust, but given where markets are, it's not unusual to see that pipeline growing towards the latter half of the year," he added in a telephone interview on Monday.

RBS said it has appointed Manoj Agarwal as head of global corporate finance for India. He is currently based in Hong Kong, where he handles financial sponsors-led M&A advisory in Asia.

RBS also said that Anjani Kumar would head its M&A operations in India, and Dilip Kadambi would head its equity capital markets business in the country. Kumar moves from ABN's M&A advisory group in London, while Kadambi currently works in ABN's ECM business in India.

Also, RBS said Varsha Valecha had joined as a business leader in ABN's India ECM team from local brokerage Enam Securities.  Continued...

 
A share trader is pictured behind a mock one dollar bill and a mock 500 Euro note symbolizing a consumer credit note, at the German stock exchange in Frankfurt, December 18, 2008. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
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