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Media, telecom banker shares thoughts on deal-making in 2017

"Politics and technology can be destabilizing forces... They challenge our economic and civil orders," Bourkoff said.

Aryeh Bourkoff.
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But it will also be ripe with opportunity, especially in the TMT and consumer spaces.

That's the message Bourkoff gave his team in a year-end letter sent out in December.

"Politics and technology can be destabilizing forces... They challenge our economic and civil orders," Bourkoff, who is a former vice chairman at UBS, wrote.

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"I have always believed that in order to best serve the firm and our clients, we must understand new uncertainties, create strategies to account for them and remain nimble and alert to sudden shifts in the landscape."

He referred specifically to the election of Donald Trump as US president and said that political shift could lead to a repatriation of cash, among other things. That could free up cash for mergers and acquisitions — especially for companies like Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Cisco, and Oracle, which combined hold some $500 billion in cash overseas.

But it's not just going to be mergers, Bourkoff wrote:

"We'll see companies test what it means to have the appropriate ratio of debt to equity. We'll see PIPE (Private Investment in Public Equity) deals become more popular as a way to bridge the gap between investors with short-term needs and CEOs with long-term vision. This is a huge opportunity for private capital markets."

He said the market is underpricing the risk these shifts pose as they create volatility and dislocation in asset prices.

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Within the media industry, specifically, Bourkoff said that technologies and distribution platforms will continue to evolve but the global appetite for content will remain constant.

"In this paradigm, value shifts to the bookends – the underlying content and the technology platforms that touch the end user – and the middle-man is increasingly pressured," he said.

That could affect future dealmaking.

He said large media brands — like Time Warner, Comcast, and Verizon — and tech giants — like Apple, Netflix, and Facebook — have scale, access to capital, and global audiences. But they need to innovate and adapt to younger audiences and changing consumer preferences.

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Their disruptors are companies like Snap, Buzzfeed, Jaunt VR, and Thrillist.

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